Quote from: Robotbeat on 10/08/2012 03:41 amIt looked like there was more unburnt propellant before it actually was shut down.When Elon asserts F9 shut down the engine, I interpret him to mean it shut down flow of propellant to the engine. Is it fair to assume they do that fuel-rich, i.e. cut the oxidizer flow first?
It looked like there was more unburnt propellant before it actually was shut down.
Official confirmation from Elon is that an anomaly occurred in an engine and it was shut down prematurely by the onboard computer. Nothing about an explosion in that official statement.
Quote from: Kabloona on 10/08/2012 03:15 amZephyrus just posted a link to a slo-mo YouTube video of the event, and it clearly shows an engine plume brightening and changing shape BEFORE the chunks start to fly. In that slo-mo, it looks very much like an engine exploding and blowing out chunks of corner fairing, etc.Still consistent with a fairing failure. If the fairing hits the nozzle, the effect on the plume propagates backwards at several km/sec, whereas the fairing itself is only accelerating from "rest" due to the force of the flow and the acceleration of the rocket, so is not anywhere near as fast.So you'll see the plume deform before you see the fairing cross in front of the engine.
Zephyrus just posted a link to a slo-mo YouTube video of the event, and it clearly shows an engine plume brightening and changing shape BEFORE the chunks start to fly. In that slo-mo, it looks very much like an engine exploding and blowing out chunks of corner fairing, etc.
Quote from: meekGee on 10/08/2012 03:49 amQuote from: Kabloona on 10/08/2012 03:15 amZephyrus just posted a link to a slo-mo YouTube video of the event, and it clearly shows an engine plume brightening and changing shape BEFORE the chunks start to fly. In that slo-mo, it looks very much like an engine exploding and blowing out chunks of corner fairing, etc.Still consistent with a fairing failure. If the fairing hits the nozzle, the effect on the plume propagates backwards at several km/sec, whereas the fairing itself is only accelerating from "rest" due to the force of the flow and the acceleration of the rocket, so is not anywhere near as fast.So you'll see the plume deform before you see the fairing cross in front of the engine.But if you look at the trajectory of the pieces being ejected, they're being blown OUTWard, not just backward by the slipstream, and in multiple pieces that sure suggest an RUD.
I have made a slow motion video of the anomaly. Please tell me if I this is not fair use and I will remove it immediately.Of course we will have to wait for an official assessment but I would say that something has definitely happened and it is not just some clouds. Sorry for the slowed down audio, I could not find the exact mencoder option to kill it.(P.S. Moved from the other thread due to moderator indications).
Quote from: zephyrus on 10/08/2012 03:06 amI have made a slow motion video of the anomaly. Please tell me if I this is not fair use and I will remove it immediately.Of course we will have to wait for an official assessment but I would say that something has definitely happened and it is not just some clouds. Sorry for the slowed down audio, I could not find the exact mencoder option to kill it.(P.S. Moved from the other thread due to moderator indications).looks to me was just ice falling off the rocket while passing max-q.
looks to me was just ice falling off the rocket while passing max-q.
I have made a slow motion video of the anomaly.
Quote from: zephyrus on 10/08/2012 03:06 amI have made a slow motion video of the anomaly. ... which clearly indicates the anomaly was caused by a ghoul - you can hear it clearly at 1:16, and if you play it backwards it says: "Engine one is toast".
Kabloona - I'm going to partially back away from my first "single cause" argument.It only holds if the engine ballistic protection is placed all around the engine (as might be the case if it's part of the engine itself).If it's only between engines (as would be the case if it's part of the 3x3 thrust structure) then the turbine failure could knock out the fairing without requiring a second failure, and so this is equally likely.
at one point one of the console guys jumped out of his chair like something on his screen just went very bad...but there was no other indication of an anomaly, so I shrugged it off...now I'm wondering if that was the propulsion guy seeing Engine 1 shutdown on his screen...
Quote from: Kabloona on 10/08/2012 04:16 am at one point one of the console guys jumped out of his chair like something on his screen just went very bad...but there was no other indication of an anomaly, so I shrugged it off...now I'm wondering if that was the propulsion guy seeing Engine 1 shutdown on his screen...I was wondering if there was any footage like that. Also, they had the com loops configured so that none of the important contingency chatter made it to the public airwaves. (But of course the ijit with the "small fires on the deck" made it through anyway.)
Simply amazing that this (explosion) didn't turn into a a loss of mission. They'll probably call it a success because it "proves" the robustness of their design.I call it by the skin of their teeth!
Quote from: Hooperball on 10/08/2012 04:20 amSimply amazing that this (explosion) didn't turn into a a loss of mission. They'll probably call it a success because it "proves" the robustness of their design.I call it by the skin of their teeth!No evidence of explosion yet, and no reason to think that this was one hair from LOM.What do you call all that debris flying sideways away from the rocket?S