Total Members Voted: 571
Voting closed: 04/21/2020 12:43 am
Quote from: sdub on 04/26/2020 01:29 amMary's pictures this afternoon provide a nice view of the welded shut hatches to the fuel tanks...Were those hatches into the tanks, or the areas in between the tanks?
Mary's pictures this afternoon provide a nice view of the welded shut hatches to the fuel tanks...
Mary's pictures this afternoon provide a nice view of the welded shut hatches to the fuel tanks, quite the contrast from the Mk1 design. I assume at some point that these would move back to a more accessible design for inspections, but the current design is not much more than a plate welded in. Certainly faster to build and makes sense for a prototype when there is a decent chance you'll never have to open it again.
Can a cone be tiled with hexagons and pentagons, like a soccer ball?
You cant tile a cone with hexagons... but do you have to?
Quote from: rakaydos on 04/26/2020 02:03 amYou cant tile a cone with hexagons... but do you have to?You certainly can. As long as hexagons are not exactly regular and you don't worry about the very tip of the cone. Start with the bottom of the cone and put a row of hexagons side by side to complete the circumference, just as you would do with bricks. Then put the next row of slightly smaller hexagons on top (as you would do with bricks), and so on. Hexagons will be nearly regular and almost flat, but decrease in size as you progress.In fact, a circular cone (or rather a part of it, if you care about the seam) can be easily tiled with regular hexagons: take a piece of paper, draw a regular hexagonal pattern on it, cut out a circular sector of an appropriate size, and roll it into a cone, just like one constructs a paper hat for a kids party. Now, SS fairing is not exactly a cone, so imagine you start with a rubber sheet instead of paper. After you make a rubber cone, stretch it a bit. Hexagons will stretch and deform as well, but remain hexagons.Quote from: Norm38 on 04/26/2020 02:19 amCan a cone be tiled with hexagons and pentagons, like a soccer ball?A cone can be tiled with absolutely anything. As long as you don't worry about regularity.
Quote from: ShSch on 04/26/2020 03:02 amQuote from: rakaydos on 04/26/2020 02:03 amYou cant tile a cone with hexagons... but do you have to?You certainly can. As long as hexagons are not exactly regular and you don't worry about the very tip of the cone. Start with the bottom of the cone and put a row of hexagons side by side to complete the circumference, just as you would do with bricks. Then put the next row of slightly smaller hexagons on top (as you would do with bricks), and so on. Hexagons will be nearly regular and almost flat, but decrease in size as you progress.In fact, a circular cone (or rather a part of it, if you care about the seam) can be easily tiled with regular hexagons: take a piece of paper, draw a regular hexagonal pattern on it, cut out a circular sector of an appropriate size, and roll it into a cone, just like one constructs a paper hat for a kids party. Now, SS fairing is not exactly a cone, so imagine you start with a rubber sheet instead of paper. After you make a rubber cone, stretch it a bit. Hexagons will stretch and deform as well, but remain hexagons.Quote from: Norm38 on 04/26/2020 02:19 amCan a cone be tiled with hexagons and pentagons, like a soccer ball?A cone can be tiled with absolutely anything. As long as you don't worry about regularity.If it's a real cone, then you can use regular hexagons, to a good approximation.As long as the shape can be made from a simply bent sheet of metal (1 axis of curvature), then you can imagine pre-tiling it with regular hexagons, and then bending it... The hexagons will have to bend out of plane, but they won't have to distort... And this bending, over the size of tile, doesn't vary much, and can be accommodated by the studs.Over the cone, the tiles will take on a "spiral" shape... It will be beautiful.The transition from cylinder to cone, however, will not be clean, tiling wise.
Quote from: meekGee on 04/26/2020 03:08 amQuote from: ShSch on 04/26/2020 03:02 amQuote from: rakaydos on 04/26/2020 02:03 amYou cant tile a cone with hexagons... but do you have to?You certainly can. As long as hexagons are not exactly regular and you don't worry about the very tip of the cone. Start with the bottom of the cone and put a row of hexagons side by side to complete the circumference, just as you would do with bricks. Then put the next row of slightly smaller hexagons on top (as you would do with bricks), and so on. Hexagons will be nearly regular and almost flat, but decrease in size as you progress.In fact, a circular cone (or rather a part of it, if you care about the seam) can be easily tiled with regular hexagons: take a piece of paper, draw a regular hexagonal pattern on it, cut out a circular sector of an appropriate size, and roll it into a cone, just like one constructs a paper hat for a kids party. Now, SS fairing is not exactly a cone, so imagine you start with a rubber sheet instead of paper. After you make a rubber cone, stretch it a bit. Hexagons will stretch and deform as well, but remain hexagons.Quote from: Norm38 on 04/26/2020 02:19 amCan a cone be tiled with hexagons and pentagons, like a soccer ball?A cone can be tiled with absolutely anything. As long as you don't worry about regularity.If it's a real cone, then you can use regular hexagons, to a good approximation.As long as the shape can be made from a simply bent sheet of metal (1 axis of curvature), then you can imagine pre-tiling it with regular hexagons, and then bending it... The hexagons will have to bend out of plane, but they won't have to distort... And this bending, over the size of tile, doesn't vary much, and can be accommodated by the studs.Over the cone, the tiles will take on a "spiral" shape... It will be beautiful.The transition from cylinder to cone, however, will not be clean, tiling wise.Unique shape of each tile was a headache for the Shuttle many decades ago. Maybe, it is not today in the era of CAD/CAM.
Quote from: Coastal Ron on 04/26/2020 02:12 amQuote from: sdub on 04/26/2020 01:29 amMary's pictures this afternoon provide a nice view of the welded shut hatches to the fuel tanks...Were those hatches into the tanks, or the areas in between the tanks?The area between the tanks is only 1/4" thick.
Is it plausible that they are spraying antifreeze to avoid ice formation during cryo tests?
Having a large number of intricate tile shapes might not be a problem by itself as long as they don't require a manual repairs. Unlike on the Shuttle there is no chance of getting hit by debris during launch.For tiling a rounded cone they could do it using the same slightly warped hexagon at each height point.But they might eventually go for unique shapes of varying thickness anyway in order to optimize mass.
Quote from: DreamyPickle on 04/26/2020 07:35 amHaving a large number of intricate tile shapes might not be a problem by itself as long as they don't require a manual repairs. Unlike on the Shuttle there is no chance of getting hit by debris during launch.For tiling a rounded cone they could do it using the same slightly warped hexagon at each height point.But they might eventually go for unique shapes of varying thickness anyway in order to optimize mass.It's actually mathematically impossible to tile a rounded cone with any sort of uniform warped hexagon. If you try it, you'll find that it works alright at the beginning, but as the surface continues curving, your hexagons will become more and more distorted until you're forced to add pentagons to the mix. This is a direct consequence of the Euler Identity.There's just no way to avoid requiring a large number of different tile shapes when trying to tile a surface with non-zero curvature. (A cylinder has, mathematically speaking, zero curvature, just to be clear on this. Not so for a rounded cone)
Quote from: Keldor on 04/26/2020 09:07 amQuote from: DreamyPickle on 04/26/2020 07:35 amHaving a large number of intricate tile shapes might not be a problem by itself as long as they don't require a manual repairs. Unlike on the Shuttle there is no chance of getting hit by debris during launch.For tiling a rounded cone they could do it using the same slightly warped hexagon at each height point.But they might eventually go for unique shapes of varying thickness anyway in order to optimize mass.It's actually mathematically impossible to tile a rounded cone with any sort of uniform warped hexagon. If you try it, you'll find that it works alright at the beginning, but as the surface continues curving, your hexagons will become more and more distorted until you're forced to add pentagons to the mix. This is a direct consequence of the Euler Identity.There's just no way to avoid requiring a large number of different tile shapes when trying to tile a surface with non-zero curvature. (A cylinder has, mathematically speaking, zero curvature, just to be clear on this. Not so for a rounded cone)Mathematically you're correct.But engineers like to cheat 1 type of tile in 2 forms, whole and cut in half.PS: I'd like to emphasize that only 200deg of SS needs to be tiled.
Quote from: DusanC on 04/26/2020 09:31 amQuote from: Keldor on 04/26/2020 09:07 amQuote from: DreamyPickle on 04/26/2020 07:35 amHaving a large number of intricate tile shapes might not be a problem by itself as long as they don't require a manual repairs. Unlike on the Shuttle there is no chance of getting hit by debris during launch.For tiling a rounded cone they could do it using the same slightly warped hexagon at each height point.But they might eventually go for unique shapes of varying thickness anyway in order to optimize mass.It's actually mathematically impossible to tile a rounded cone with any sort of uniform warped hexagon. If you try it, you'll find that it works alright at the beginning, but as the surface continues curving, your hexagons will become more and more distorted until you're forced to add pentagons to the mix. This is a direct consequence of the Euler Identity.There's just no way to avoid requiring a large number of different tile shapes when trying to tile a surface with non-zero curvature. (A cylinder has, mathematically speaking, zero curvature, just to be clear on this. Not so for a rounded cone)Mathematically you're correct.But engineers like to cheat 1 type of tile in 2 forms, whole and cut in half.PS: I'd like to emphasize that only 200deg of SS needs to be tiled.Does that work the same on a stronger curvature near the tip of the nose cone or will the vertical distance between the rows of half tiles be lower than 1 row?