Starship News

/ Starship News
  • Thread Starter
#81  
/ Starship News
  • Thread Starter
#83  
DOJ sues SpaceX.

SpaceX Apparently blocked immigrants and refugees from being hired for jobs.

SpaceX does handle military contracts. But from Astro Angry's video looks like they excluded qualified applicants welders cooks crane operators etc .

The DOJ actively seeking people that feel they were mis treated.
This could endanger current Federal contracts including those with NASA.
 
/ Starship News #84  
DOJ sues SpaceX.

SpaceX Apparently blocked immigrants and refugees from being hired for jobs.

SpaceX does handle military contracts. But from Astro Angry's video looks like they excluded qualified applicants welders cooks crane operators etc .

The DOJ actively seeking people that feel they were mis treated.
This could endanger current Federal contracts including those with NASA.
The reports I have read have been short of details, as usual. Course, I just read an article about Marines getting a Congressional Medal of Honor, but in the report, it was a Gold Medal. So either something was edited out of the story, or the writer, does not know anything about the Congressional Medal of Honor....

The DOJ sounds like they are going after Musk and SpaceX. It certainly would help certain companies, who have been living off the tax payer for decades, if SpaceX lost US Government contracts.....
 
/ Starship News #85  
Last edited:
/ Starship News #86  
SpaceX did a hot fire test on Super Heavy Booster 9 today. Test only lasted 2.74 seconds and four Raptor engines failed to ignite or shut down early.

SpaceX completes successful hot fire test of its massive Starship rocket
By my read of the linked article that was referring to an August 6th test.
The first stage in action on Friday—dubbed Booster 9, as it is the ninth to be built as part of SpaceX's iterative design methodology—underwent its first static fire test on August 6. That hot fire test ended prematurely, after 2.74 seconds. Moreover, four of the rocket's 33 main Raptor engines either did not ignite or shut down prematurely.
Yesterdays test
SpaceX later confirmed that all 33 Raptor engines ignited during the test and that all but two ran for the full six-second duration.
 
/ Starship News
  • Thread Starter
#88  
Great SpaceX coverage with the firing video.

States they throttled up to about 50%, so still more power than the Saturn V Musk states over a 1000 changes to the vehicle since last launch attempt.
More speculation on a launch date.

Indian Moon rover deployed

 
/ Starship News #89  
Space

India's Chandrayaan-3 takes the moon's temperature near lunar south pole for 1st time​

Monisha Ravisetti
Mon, August 28, 2023 at 12:35 PM EDT·3 min read

 Tracks in lunar soil made by the Pragyan rover.

Tracks in lunar soil made by the Pragyan rover.
On Aug. 23, thanks to the success of Chandrayaan-3, India made a strong mark in space history. Not only did it become the first nation to land a spacecraft near the south pole of the moon, but also the fourth to create imprints on Earth's gleaming companion at all. However, the lunar lander's touchdown was only step one of its ultimate story.
Since reaching the moon's south pole, Chandrayaan-3 has been hard at work – having deployed a rover named Pragyan to explore the cratered surface, harnessed integrated cameras to send back videos of its environment and even started completing research objectives planned for a two-week stay on the orb.
On Saturday (Aug. 26), for instance, scientists with the Indian Space Research Organization presented a video on X (formerly known as Twitter) of Pragyan roaming around the mission's landing point, which has been named the Shiv Shakti Point. In the video, the gold-colored moon explorer is seen on the other end of two delicate tracks it has created in lunar soil since exiting the lander that ushered it over there, named Vikram. The gingerly way Pragyan treads on a desolate gray world is almost charming.
Shortly after releasing this update, ISRO also posted a sort of checklist on X saying that, after successful completion of a safe and soft landing as well as Pragyan's deployment, Chandrayaan-3 has begun conducting scientific experiments on site. "All payloads are performing normally," the agency posted on X.
 
/ Starship News
  • Thread Starter
#90  
Really Interesting life story of Gwynne Shotwell and how she was tasked with Starship on top of the other SpaceX endeavors.

Definitely one of the reasons and deserves credit for why SpaceX has been so successful.

Additional coverage of other individuals that have and will continue to contribute.

 
Last edited:
/ Starship News
  • Thread Starter
#91  
Restacked booster 9 and ship 25 .

Elon's X post, Makes it sound
like the only thing needed is a Federal launch approval.
It does seem SpaceX is ready to launch.

Booster should have a better chance of maintaining control this time.
SpaceX dropped the hydraulic vector control and has switched booster 9 to full "Electric Thrust Vector Control" of each individual Raptor.
Good redundancy hopefully.

The last launch there was no engine Vector control because the Hydraulic Control Unit exploded shortly after launch- wiping out any possibility of controlling the rockets flight path.
New fire control system plus new vent holes and Flight Termination system are installed.
Hot staging ring is integrated as well.

Lets Go FAA.

Kick the tires and Light the Fires...
 
/ Starship News #92  
I saw a post on Friday that said that FAA has completed its review and is requiring Space-X to make 63 changes. This included changes to the launch pad, the rocket, some safety systems. It looks like Space-X has made a good deal of these changes already, not sure how many more they have to go and what it will take to get the FAA to sign off on the changes.
 
/ Starship News #93  
I saw a post on Friday that said that FAA has completed its review and is requiring Space-X to make 63 changes. This included changes to the launch pad, the rocket, some safety systems. It looks like Space-X has made a good deal of these changes already, not sure how many more they have to go and what it will take to get the FAA to sign off on the changes.
The report made it clear that the 63 changes were required, but not sufficient for launch approval and additional steps would be necessary.

Technically, the report was lead by SpaceX, with FAA participation. So my spin is that yes, the FAA will ask for more changes beyond what was in the report.

All the best,

Peter
 
/ Starship News #94  
Looks like more Federal agencies are delaying Starship with regulatory approval. The FAA required the deluge water system and now some environmental agencies are requiring review the deluge sysetm.

Ahead of the hearing before the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Space and Science, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service told Spaceflight Now its regulatory approval process for the second Starship test flight could potentially last until the spring of 2024.
 
/ Starship News
  • Thread Starter
#95  
SpaceX made their case in front of congress.

It was pointed out that further delays to launch approvals will hurt the US in the race getting back to the moon. testing is being slowed

China is also planning moon missions

Angry astronaut coverage and he makes good points about safety concerns with moving to quickly "as the world turns..."

 
/ Starship News #96  
Yes, well, it is not just the FAA after the last attempt.

SpaceX now has a number of three and four letter agencies investigating, with lots of citizens up in arms and vocal about the dangers of any launch from that facility. They are crossways with a lot of folks and I don't see it going away quickly, "space race" or not. I think that this is all a predictable result of a certain person's tendencies toward running fast and breaking things, and then, perhaps, asking for permission.

And, no, based on what has been shown, I personally don't expect the revised deluge system to be sufficient. If they fluff the next launch with more launched debris, I would expect them to either not get permission for a third launch at Boca Chica, or not for a long time, or both. The thing about needing lots of engines for thrust is that you actually need them to work at liftoff, as in almost all of them.

I think that there is a fair amount to work through on both sides of the fence, but that's just me...

All the best,

Peter
 
Last edited:
/ Starship News #97  
FAA is done with safety and is continuing on environmental in conjunction with the fish and wildlife service.

No earlier than mid November for second OFT - we'll see.
 
/ Starship News
  • Thread Starter
#100  
Last edited:

Marketplace Items

2003 Toro Groundsmaster 7210 72in. Zero Turn Commercial Mower (A61567)
2003 Toro...
MULTIQUIP LIGHT TOWER (A60736)
MULTIQUIP LIGHT...
2003 International 9200I (A53317)
2003 International...
2014 FREIGHTLINER CASCADIA (A60736)
2014 FREIGHTLINER...
2020 DRAGON ESP 150BBL ALUMINUM (A58214)
2020 DRAGON ESP...
8 TOOTHED BUCKET FOR MINI EXCAVATOR (A58214)
8 TOOTHED BUCKET...
 
Top