I mean, we can land the F9 on the White House lawn right now, right? Does it really matter what's underneath?
pads are painted with a radar-reflective coating.
SpaceX proposes regular employment of First Stage recovery by returning the Falcon 9 First Stage to SLC-4 West (SLC-4W) at VAFB for potential reuse, up to twelve times per year. This includes performing boost-back maneuvers (in-air) and landings of the Falcon 9 First Stage on the pad at SLC-4W.
The proposal is for up to 12 RTLS in the next year (the Incidental Harassment Authorization is good for one year from the date of issue).
I happened to end up on the Wikipedia article for the VAFB landing pad a little while ago. It jumped out at me that the pad was signed to a five year lease in February, 2015. Nothing in the article mentions a renewal or extension of that lease.Considering that the five years will be up in only eleven months, does anyone know for how long the lease was extended or if a new agreement was reached?
Quote from: StuffOfInterest on 03/28/2019 01:37 pmI happened to end up on the Wikipedia article for the VAFB landing pad a little while ago. It jumped out at me that the pad was signed to a five year lease in February, 2015. Nothing in the article mentions a renewal or extension of that lease.Considering that the five years will be up in only eleven months, does anyone know for how long the lease was extended or if a new agreement was reached?I haven't heard about it, but I imagine they'd extend it. The alternative would be to dogleg out of Florida or Boca Chica, which would be less than ideal. I'm not even sure you'd be able to dogleg out of BC, eventually you have to overfly Mexico. Not sure how far downrange overflight becomes OK.
Quote from: WormPicker959 on 03/28/2019 06:16 pmQuote from: StuffOfInterest on 03/28/2019 01:37 pmI happened to end up on the Wikipedia article for the VAFB landing pad a little while ago. It jumped out at me that the pad was signed to a five year lease in February, 2015. Nothing in the article mentions a renewal or extension of that lease.Considering that the five years will be up in only eleven months, does anyone know for how long the lease was extended or if a new agreement was reached?I haven't heard about it, but I imagine they'd extend it. The alternative would be to dogleg out of Florida or Boca Chica, which would be less than ideal. I'm not even sure you'd be able to dogleg out of BC, eventually you have to overfly Mexico. Not sure how far downrange overflight becomes OK.VAFB is for polar launches, most of their launches required landing on JRTI. So either they will extend it or use the opportunity to modify their environmental assessment to launch SuperHeavy & Starship.
... The alternative would be to dogleg out of Florida or Boca Chica, which would be less than ideal. ...
Quote from: WormPicker959 on 03/28/2019 06:16 pm... The alternative would be to dogleg out of Florida or Boca Chica, which would be less than ideal. ...No, StuffOfInterest's question was about the SLC-4W lease where the SpaceX LZ-4 landing zone is (which has had only one landing to date), not the SLC-4E lease where the SpaceX launch pad is (with 14 Falcon 9 launches to date), so the primary alternative is landing on JTRI (possible close to shore for those RTLS capable missions).
The new pads were built with greater reflectivity in the pad material itself. That and the white paint could easily be reflective as well.