Words are that SpaceX Hakuto-R and OneWeb missions are further delayed.Just what's wrong with SpaceX these days? Maybe Elon should focus more on his space activities and less on Twitter... It's becoming really frustrating to see these delays... https://twitter.com/TGMetsFan98/status/1600145824666636291
I wonder why they're decided to delay the upcoming Starlink launch by a day even though the Range published their ability to support the double header in Twitter
Correct me if I’m wrong, but is Crew Dragon Resilience reserved for non-ISS missions only?I ask that because it flew Inspiration4 and is scheduled for Polaris Dawn. Another reason for my question is that Endeavour is manifested for Crew-6 while Endurance eventually wraps up Crew-5 and Freedom is being refurbished. It makes me assume the latter three spacecraft will carry out the ISS crew rotations.
The SWOT launch from Vandy slipped onto the 16th. SpaceX might not have the mission control staff to do three (!) launches in the same day.
So my thinking was/is that they have something slightly out of spec, maybe transient that only triggers a fault on some flights, and they might have tracked it back to a supplier issue - That would account for the longer standdown we've just seen as they need to go back and investigate.All speculation on my part!Quote from: ZachS09 on 12/01/2022 12:16 pmQuote from: JayWee on 12/01/2022 12:02 pm Quote from: kevinof on 12/01/2022 04:26 amA supplier problem? Just a wild guess but smells like they are not happy with something feeding into the system. What's weird is that it's always like day before launch. If it was a supplier problem, they'd check all stages at once.Actually, mere hours before launch.
Quote from: JayWee on 12/01/2022 12:02 pm Quote from: kevinof on 12/01/2022 04:26 amA supplier problem? Just a wild guess but smells like they are not happy with something feeding into the system. What's weird is that it's always like day before launch. If it was a supplier problem, they'd check all stages at once.Actually, mere hours before launch.
Quote from: kevinof on 12/01/2022 04:26 amA supplier problem? Just a wild guess but smells like they are not happy with something feeding into the system. What's weird is that it's always like day before launch. If it was a supplier problem, they'd check all stages at once.
A supplier problem? Just a wild guess but smells like they are not happy with something feeding into the system.
Just what's wrong with SpaceX these days? Maybe Elon should focus more on his space activities and less on Twitter
It's becoming really frustrating to see these delays...
Actually, mere hours before launch.
- Really fascinated to see how much faster the Vulcan can debut than the launchers depicted here. They have a very ambitious first-year launch rate queued up...
Has spacex just given up on recovering the center core at this point? Are there any future missions that even attempt that?
It's a pretty small window of utility where it might make sense, the gain from expending the core is huge.
Center core moving too fast return. Falcon Heavy is a 3 (or 2.5) stage rocket, but full & rapid reusability on Earth demand a 2 stage rocket.1st stage returns to launch site immediately via boostback & 2nd stage orbits until ground track passes back over launch site to return.
QuoteHas spacex just given up on recovering the center core at this point? Are there any future missions that even attempt that?
Quote from: FutureSpaceTourist on 01/16/2023 07:15 pmQuoteHas spacex just given up on recovering the center core at this point? Are there any future missions that even attempt that?There is little economic incentive to recover the center core.
FH missions are relatively rare, and SpaceX can charge as much as they need to to make a nice profit, because FH has no competition.
It appears that they make the FH cores to order instead of having an inventory, probably because the contracts require availability on a specific launch date (that then slips).
FH does have one type of competition. Users can figure out how to use F9 instead for some requirements by modifying either the payload or their operations. But F9 is likely to have a higher overall profit margin for SpaceX, so they have no incentive to try to keep these payloads on FH.
1. This is not correct either when the U.S. Government is the customer, since the U.S. Government specifies the profit margin for their contracts. Of course if a Falcon Heavy launch (just the launch, not the custom services) costs more than a Falcon 9 launch, which it does, then SpaceX will get more profit out of a Falcon Heavy launch, but the profit margin is likely the same.2. Launch services are negotiated separately from the launch service itself, 3. but would also be validated by the GSA for profit margin.
There is little economic incentive to recover the center core.