These antennas were used by NASA during the Apollo and space shuttle programs. They are being re-purposed by SpaceX. The antennas will moved to another location, reassembled and refurbished for tracking during future SpaceX launches and missions.
But are they at LC-40 for good, or are they just parked there prior to relocation elsewhere such as their new spaceport? Sounds like the latter.
Quote from: docmordrid on 10/04/2012 06:43 pmBut are they at LC-40 for good, or are they just parked there prior to relocation elsewhere such as their new spaceport? Sounds like the latter. They aren't "parked" but set up.There would be no need to park them at LC-40 if they were to be moved else. Spacex has plenty of other areas to store hardware, such as behind AO.Why do people think Spacex is always going for the home run, when they all they do is hit doubles?
Consistent doubles will win the game over a home run.
Quote from: Jim on 10/04/2012 06:47 pmQuote from: docmordrid on 10/04/2012 06:43 pmBut are they at LC-40 for good, or are they just parked there prior to relocation elsewhere such as their new spaceport? Sounds like the latter. They aren't "parked" but set up.There would be no need to park them at LC-40 if they were to be moved else. Spacex has plenty of other areas to store hardware, such as behind AO.Why do people think Spacex is always going for the home run, when they all they do is hit doubles?Consistent doubles will win the game over a home run.
Experience in operating such setups in preparation for their own launch site.
Odd, Why would they do this? They have far more important things to spend money on (FH, dragon rider, raptor, etc). Is there any real advantage to owning this since they can get it from NASA already?
Quote from: JBF on 10/04/2012 06:57 pmQuote from: Jim on 10/04/2012 06:47 pmQuote from: docmordrid on 10/04/2012 06:43 pmBut are they at LC-40 for good, or are they just parked there prior to relocation elsewhere such as their new spaceport? Sounds like the latter. They aren't "parked" but set up.There would be no need to park them at LC-40 if they were to be moved else. Spacex has plenty of other areas to store hardware, such as behind AO.Why do people think Spacex is always going for the home run, when they all they do is hit doubles?Consistent doubles will win the game over a home run.His point is that people very often think SpaceX is going to do something all of a sudden revolutionary. Their actual pattern of development is more to do evolutionary steps.Merlin pressure-fed ablative -> Merlin pump-fed ablative with pump from Barber-Nichols -> Merlin regen with Barber-Nichols pump -> Merlin regen with SpaceX in-house pumpFalcon 1 -> Falcon 9 -> Falcon 9 v1.1 -> Falcon Heavy (planned)Dragon cargo -> eventually Dragon crewed (with abort) -> maybe Dragon crewed vertical landing -> maybe Red Dragon platform for unmanned interplanetary missionsGrasshopper -> Grasshopper 2 (planned) -> maybe eventually Falcon 9 reusable first stage -> maybe eventually Falcon 9 fully reusable (using many of the techniques learned with DragonRider vertical landing to be used for the upper stage)They play up their "revolutionary" aspect, but they are very much evolutionary when it comes to actual development. And it will take time, even if they do succeed.But they're not going straight to a new spaceport (if they ever do)... They're STILL building up their current one, and plan to upgrade it. It's a double or a single, not a home-run.
Quote from: watermod on 11/19/2013 02:15 amIt looks more like objected programming then evolutionary steps to me...Instance of the object and add some methods or swap out a member object for a new member object or overload the object. One could even place the landing stages for re-use into the destructor method used by the class LaunchFalconRocket.Considering that SpaceX is founded by Silicon Valley types it makes sense.Translation please
It looks more like objected programming then evolutionary steps to me...Instance of the object and add some methods or swap out a member object for a new member object or overload the object. One could even place the landing stages for re-use into the destructor method used by the class LaunchFalconRocket.Considering that SpaceX is founded by Silicon Valley types it makes sense.
Quote from: beancounter on 11/19/2013 04:56 amQuote from: watermod on 11/19/2013 02:15 amIt looks more like objected programming then evolutionary steps to me...Instance of the object and add some methods or swap out a member object for a new member object or overload the object. One could even place the landing stages for re-use into the destructor method used by the class LaunchFalconRocket.Considering that SpaceX is founded by Silicon Valley types it makes sense.Translation please I'm CS and that still only makes marginal sense. It's rather a stretch to apply object oriented design principals to rocket designs.P.S. Fix your quotes.