Total Members Voted: 105
Voting closed: 10/21/2024 09:58 pm
Early November, for my birthday.Early November would be for a Ship to test engine relight in 0 g.
I went with late December to make it a Christmas present. In reality, I'm so bad at these predictions that I'm not even trying to be serious anymore.
I voted early January because we were all way too optimistic last time and people often take vacations around Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's
Quote from: jongoff on 10/14/2024 09:58 pmOk, Starship Flight Five is on the books, so I'm creating a poll for Flight 6 timing. In this case I decided not to mince phrasing between IFT-6 vs Flight 6. Just saying when will the next Starship flight be? Theoretically, if they don't change parameters from what they submitted to the FAA for the launch license for Flight 5, there won't be a new launch license required, and I believe the FAA said that the Flight 5 mission fell within the parameters outlined by SpaceX so they weren't requiring any sort of investigation after this flight.I provided more granularity further to the right on this one since literally everyone got the previous one wrong. I'm going to leave this one live for one week, once again to force people to make decisions based on imperfect information.~JonI think you’re presuming the details of the mission profile for IFY-6. The answer depends on what is to be accomplished. In other words, if IFY-6 is going to attempt a lunar landing… that might take a couple days less than if IFY-6 is going to land on Mars.Does the lunar landing have to be fully reusable once it lands back on Earth? Or maybe the reusability can wait for IFY-7. Michael Bay might want to be present for next the Starship landing.
Ok, Starship Flight Five is on the books, so I'm creating a poll for Flight 6 timing. In this case I decided not to mince phrasing between IFT-6 vs Flight 6. Just saying when will the next Starship flight be? Theoretically, if they don't change parameters from what they submitted to the FAA for the launch license for Flight 5, there won't be a new launch license required, and I believe the FAA said that the Flight 5 mission fell within the parameters outlined by SpaceX so they weren't requiring any sort of investigation after this flight.I provided more granularity further to the right on this one since literally everyone got the previous one wrong. I'm going to leave this one live for one week, once again to force people to make decisions based on imperfect information.~Jon
They aren't going to launch for the sake of doing so. They are going to launch because they stand to learn something from the flight. Typically they've made a number of incremental changes between flights and have validated those changes through the subsequent flight.Right now, the most obvious technical hurdles are thermal protection (both booster engines as well as the recurring flap issue). They'll probably want to work through those issues, which will take at least a month, ignoring any off-the-cuff deadlines Musk decides to tweet. They'll probably also want to add onto the flight plan, which means the FAA will require some time to process it.All in all, late December is the earliest I can envision.
They may have included the excess propellant for increased aerodynamic stability on reentry, so the natural progression of testing would be to reduce it, even without attempting to reduce heating. And if they don't reduce it enough by reducing propellant load on reentry, I think they would just pre-chill the outer engines.
I'll jump in here and suspect Early December. Need to be done first: Complete the outfit of the next starship with the new ablative and heat shield. The Static Fire was already completed last week. Current issues with booster engine warping and excess fuel dump at landing (extra credit).Proposed Accomplishment: Re-ignite engines and de-orbit:The only significant accomplishment they can achieve using the existing license is flying again to test out re-lighting the Ship's engines to deorbit the ship. Initially, with no engine intervention, the default orbit would take them to a splashdown off the Hawaii coast. Then, at the appropriate moment over the South Atlantic, they re-orient the ship and re-start the engines to bring the starship to a splashdown in the Indian Ocean as IFT-5.Possible issues:Indonesian overflight was brought up earlier this year.IFT-7 can jump forward and start using V2.Tony
Quote from: catdlr on 10/16/2024 10:47 amI'll jump in here and suspect Early December. Need to be done first: Complete the outfit of the next starship with the new ablative and heat shield. The Static Fire was already completed last week. Current issues with booster engine warping and excess fuel dump at landing (extra credit).Proposed Accomplishment: Re-ignite engines and de-orbit:The only significant accomplishment they can achieve using the existing license is flying again to test out re-lighting the Ship's engines to deorbit the ship. Initially, with no engine intervention, the default orbit would take them to a splashdown off the Hawaii coast. Then, at the appropriate moment over the South Atlantic, they re-orient the ship and re-start the engines to bring the starship to a splashdown in the Indian Ocean as IFT-5.Possible issues:Indonesian overflight was brought up earlier this year.IFT-7 can jump forward and start using V2.TonyMy guess is that if they wanted to do the engine relight like that, even though the reentry point would be the same, they'd probably have to get an updated FAA license, because there's a chance the engine relight won't work, and a chance that it'll partially work, so they'll have to do the analysis on both of those scenarios to make sure the E_c is in an acceptable range. That said, I don't think the hold-up last time was on the normal FAA analysis, but on the environmental stuff, so if it's just an FAA license update, it might still be possible to make it happen within two months. I hope they do that though, because they really need to have orbit insertion and deorbit proven out so they can transition to flights where they're delivering revenue generating payloads (Starlink or 3rd party) and where the EDL/recovery stuff is bonus experimentation, like they had with Falcon 9.IOW, I hope you're right about them going for that in this next flight.~Jon