If SpaceX are "aiming for three flights a day for a Starship" then they are presumably going to have to be able to launch in pretty much any weather. I can imagine them having "weather pathfinder" launches where they deliberately launch tankers in slightly worse weather than their previous record in order to gather data, for example.
Nathan's article at https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2020/05/why-weather-rules-exist/ is a good read on the reasons for current weather restrictions, but in the future world of Starship they are going to have to work around most of these things. The fact that a launch of some vehicle somewhere once failed due to a particular weather-related problem is no longer going to be allowed to get in the way.What are the key challenges going to be, and what options are available to deal with them? What weather problems will Starship have to face that commercial airliners don't routinely deal with?
Quote from: steveleach on 03/23/2021 07:18 amIf SpaceX are "aiming for three flights a day for a Starship" then they are presumably going to have to be able to launch in pretty much any weather. I can imagine them having "weather pathfinder" launches where they deliberately launch tankers in slightly worse weather than their previous record in order to gather data, for example.I think nobody has done this because why to risk a rocket anfìd a payload, and nobody wants to use a an expensive only to test. Spacex could do this with starshipQuote Nathan's article at https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2020/05/why-weather-rules-exist/ is a good read on the reasons for current weather restrictions, but in the future world of Starship they are going to have to work around most of these things. The fact that a launch of some vehicle somewhere once failed due to a particular weather-related problem is no longer going to be allowed to get in the way.What are the key challenges going to be, and what options are available to deal with them? What weather problems will Starship have to face that commercial airliners don't routinely deal with?airliner can avoid the core of the storm, rockets can't.
Quote from: steveleach on 03/23/2021 07:18 amIf SpaceX are "aiming for three flights a day for a Starship" then they are presumably going to have to be able to launch in pretty much any weather. I can imagine them having "weather pathfinder" launches where they deliberately launch tankers in slightly worse weather than their previous record in order to gather data, for example.QuoteI think nobody has done this because why to risk a rocket anfìd a payload, and nobody wants to use a an expensive only to test. Spacex could do this with starship I think this is son of the extreme reliability launch policy by companies. You don't want to lose a rocket, expecially when after a single failure nobody will want to launch with you (or you will need to lower the cost), or at least will look you suspicius. Apollo 12 was launched in the middle of a storm, and survived. But it is always better to not risk. Scrubs are better than failures. (expecially if NASA is involved, if a f9 fails NASA will imediatly look if there is risk for future crew flights.
If SpaceX are "aiming for three flights a day for a Starship" then they are presumably going to have to be able to launch in pretty much any weather. I can imagine them having "weather pathfinder" launches where they deliberately launch tankers in slightly worse weather than their previous record in order to gather data, for example.QuoteI think nobody has done this because why to risk a rocket anfìd a payload, and nobody wants to use a an expensive only to test. Spacex could do this with starship I think this is son of the extreme reliability launch policy by companies. You don't want to lose a rocket, expecially when after a single failure nobody will want to launch with you (or you will need to lower the cost), or at least will look you suspicius. Apollo 12 was launched in the middle of a storm, and survived. But it is always better to not risk. Scrubs are better than failures. (expecially if NASA is involved, if a f9 fails NASA will imediatly look if there is risk for future crew flights.
I think nobody has done this because why to risk a rocket anfìd a payload, and nobody wants to use a an expensive only to test. Spacex could do this with starship
But it is always better to not risk.
Scrubs are better than failures.
airliner can avoid the core of the storm, rockets can't.
If SpaceX are "aiming for three flights a day for a Starship" then they are presumably going to have to be able to launch in pretty much any weather...
The design goal for Starship is 3 flights per day on average, which equates to roughly 1000 flights per year, at greater than 100 tons per flight. This means every 10 ships would yield 1 megaton per year to orbit.
The fact that a launch of some vehicle somewhere once failed due to a particular weather-related problem is no longer going to be allowed to get in the way.
We have to bear in mind that the majority of Starship flights are going to be tankers, so the risk appetite is going to be very different to anything we've seen previously.
The Russians have no problem launching Soyuz in all manner of awful weather and it has a near-flawless safety record to show for it. Surely it can't be impossible if they're doing it.
Quote from: steveleach on 03/23/2021 07:18 am The fact that a launch of some vehicle somewhere once failed due to a particular weather-related problem is no longer going to be allowed to get in the way.Not true. They will always be susceptible to lightning, winds aloft and ground winds.
1. They launch in those conditions as well. It mostly has to do with the fact that the Soyuz family of boosters has its origins in the R-7 ICBM and it's, uhhh, "not really acceptable" to have an ICBM system that can be scrubbed because of bad weather. Real "screen door on a submarine" energy.2. Lack of all-weather launches in the west is mostly a function of the pathological risk-aversiveness that permeates NASA and western spaceflight in general and it's that pathological risk-aversiveness that has so hindered our expansion into the cosmos that SpaceX is trying so hard to move away from.Soyuz can night launch astronauts to the ISS in whiteout blizzard conditions while NASA scrubs due to high altitude wind shear on otherwise clear days. If SpaceX wants to hit their launch cadence targets for Starship, it's going to need to be able to safely launch during snowfall and tropical storms, etc.