Amateur Rocket Launch a Failure; NASA Debuts Shuttle-cam 174
Anonymous Coward writes "CNN has posted the story of the failure of the amateur rocket launch that was reported in a previous Slashdot story. 'The launch was spectacular and the rocket was performing as planned. However, the rocket experienced motor failure during the flight and the flight was terminated," said Eric Knight, co-leader of the CSXT mission.' NASA is planning to mount a camera on the external fuel tank and broadcast an October 2nd shuttle launch.
This guy sounds really pissed (Score:2, Funny)
I feel bad for them, but he sounds like he should be sitting in a large black leather chair penting his fingers or petting a persian cat while saying this
I Was There (Score:5, Informative)
I helped out at this launch attempt as part of the recovery team and I can tell you the following:
Amateur rocketry, like all rocketry, is used to failure
If you've met or heard of Ky, you'd realize that he has had plenty of successes and failures to deal with. And Ky is just the CEO of sorts to what amounts to a massively talented technical team. Having gotten the rocket off the ground was an accomplishment itself; the FAA puts enormous safety restrictions on the launch, of which very few are satisfied at any given moment.
The failure itself wasn't that dangerous either. The rocket did not explode like a fireball. It just made a sort of "pop" sound and broke into pieces. The selection of the launch site has a lot to do with ensuring that such pieces don't come down and harm anyone.
Space tourism setback? (Score:1, Funny)
(yeah yeah karma-- but I just couldn't resist)
Stand back, I am an engineer. (Score:5, Funny)
SONOFABITCH!!
GODDAMMIT!!
fuck
crap
*sigh*
Not the first... (Score:2)
SONOFABITCH!!
GODDAMMIT!!
fuck
crap
*sigh*
I believe those terms were also used by American engineers working on the post-Sputnik failures.
And I wouldn't be surprised if one of the Wright brothers made the same comments pre-Kitty Hawk.
So... 'terminated' eh? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:So... 'terminated' eh? (Score:1)
Re:So... 'terminated' eh? (Score:2)
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Re:So... 'terminated' eh? (Score:2)
Self-Destruct? (Score:1)
I think it's pretty cool if this was some sort of self-destruct mechanism. The article doesn't really say if it self-destructed by itself, or if it was triggered from the ground.
I just wonder if they had to recite "Picard four-seven-alpha-tango" to activate it.
Re:Self-Destruct? (Score:1)
"Thank you for pressing the self-destruct button, the ship will self-destruct in 7 minutes..."
Re:Self-Destruct? (Score:3, Interesting)
AFAIK, for flights such as these, even when the flight path has a low population index, you STILL need to have a "remote detonation" capability to keep it for veering off course and crashing into important things/people.
With rockets, since the fuel is itself reactive/explosive, they can usually keep the explosives package fairly small and secure against false authorizations (your "Picard four-seven-alpha-tango).
I'm more bummed that all the instrumentation was destroyed, so it's going to be *very* difficult for them to figure out why the motor barfed. I wonder what they were collecting from ground sensors... It would definitely be neat to see how their avionics package compares to say Carmack's http://www.armadilloaerospace.com lander...
Re:Self-Destruct? (Score:2)
Nah, it was Zero-Zero-Zero-Destruct-Zero.
Of course, they also had to get two other launch crew officers to concur.
Re:Self-Destruct? (Score:1)
-Paul Komarek
Re:Self-Destruct? (Score:1)
Re:Self-Destruct? (Score:1)
Awesome (Score:1)
Re:Awesome (Score:2)
Re:Awesome (Score:1)
Re:Awesome (Score:3, Informative)
Too Bad (Score:5, Insightful)
Just look at the original proposal and plans, and look what they've cut it back to. All it is a big jobs project. And the Space Shuttle technology is so old they are having to scrounge eBay for old computer parts.
I'm sorry, but it just makes me sick. And we actually think NASA some day will send someone to Mars. Yeah right. We need someone to come along and either replace NASA entirely, or at the very least scare them into cutting back the beaurocracy and actually performing again.
Re:Too Bad (Score:2)
And is it just me, or do most of CNN's stories not display properly under Mozilla?
Re:Too Bad (Score:2)
I think it's just you. Works fine for me (using Mozilla 1.1 in KDE).
Re:Too Bad (Score:1)
Re:Too Bad (Score:2, Insightful)
But, I do definitely agree, the porkbarrelling of each of the individual Centers and the requisite Congressional non-tech savvy rulings have caused a majority of the current NASA issues. That and a decade+ of Dan Goldin.
Check out http://www.nasawatch.com
Great site, always interesting scoops.
Re:Too Bad (Score:1)
This is the kind of thing discussed in Space [amazon.com] by James Michener. Given the state of our corporate-sponsored democracy, they simply have too many people to please, and too many backs to scratch. The public wants sci-fi extravagance (but not to pay for it), vendors want their equipment used, and plenty of other industries (aerospace, technology, chemical engineering) all want their slice of the pie. All this with an ever-shrinking budget and increasing political micromanagement. Politics as usual in the U.S. government
Re:Too Bad (Score:1)
Look at Russia's space program.
Everything is about money these days, and nobody cares about putting up flags on the sea of tranquility... People only care about themselves and launching their Moft sattelites.
Terminated? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Terminated? (Score:1)
"burning metal tube of death, screaming through the atmosphere at the speed of sound looking for some poor schmuck to land on" isn't bad either, but a bit long winded.
I'll keep it in mind...
There's been a few of names in the same vein lately. "Flying pyramid of death" was a well known one, and at the last LDRS [ldrs21.org] there was one called something like "purple rocket of extremely painful indigestion".
Question: Fund for Cheney-Rumsfeld Dictatorship (Score:1, Funny)
to the Moon for the Cheney-Rumsfeld dictatorship
currently residing in the:
The White House [whitehouse.org]?
Secret?? (Score:1, Insightful)
Calling John Carmack! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Calling John Carmack! (Score:1)
These guys doing what Carmack is with a fraction of the money.
Re:Calling John Carmack! (Score:1)
Re:Calling John Carmack! (Score:1)
Re:Calling John Carmack! (Score:2)
Fuel and funds? (Score:2)
Would also be interesting to know how they got rocket fuel. I'd assume that NASA or somebody is contributing (is it still amature if they do), as this stuff isn't really available at your nearest Esso station, although at one time Jet fuel was more publicly available.
Preparing funds for next year: "Sir, have you got any bottles for recycling?" - phorm
Re:Fuel and funds? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Fuel and funds? (Score:2)
RTFA. They used solids. The mixture isn't that difficult, curing them is the hard part.
Re:Fuel and funds? (Score:1)
Re:Fuel and funds? (Score:2)
Ky has said it cost over $250,000. Just building the rocket and motor probably cost $20k, but everything else adds up.
John Carmack
Re:Fuel and funds? (correction) (Score:2)
John Carmack
[detrolling] (Score:2)
Re:[detrolling] (Score:1)
How could an amateur rocket fail? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:How could an amateur rocket fail? (Score:1)
It's too easy people.
Re:How could an amateur rocket fail? (Score:2)
Maybe they confused feet and metres?
Secret Nevada location? (Score:1)
Who else wonders about sabotage? (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Who else wonders about sabotage? (Score:4, Insightful)
-Paul
Re:Who else wonders about sabotage? (Score:1)
Who's that guy skulking off to the side? (Score:1)
Re:Who else wonders about sabotage? (Score:2)
Re:Who else wonders about sabotage? (Score:1)
Whaddya mean "failure"? (Score:3, Funny)
Motto: "To boldly die like no man has died before"
nasa tv only (Score:2)
Re:nasa tv only (Score:4, Interesting)
Web Sources for NASA TV [nasa.gov], or http://www.nasa.gov/ntv/ntvweb.html for the link-fearing.
What they need is a PR expert (Score:5, Funny)
Setbacks are only to be expected ... (Score:2)
To accomplish something major like this setbacks (sometimes expensive) are inevitable.
Its not space... but close (Score:2, Informative)
Failure: is it an option? (Score:2)
External camera. (Score:1)
According to plan? (Score:1)
Ah, yes, it performed according to plan just like my motherboard's IDE controller when it died on me and I had to get a new motherboard, and turn this one into a network computer. Yup, all according to plan...
PR for NASA... (Score:3, Interesting)
For an agency that is in desperate need of government funding, however, I think it is a wonderful idea.
Little things like the camera will only get people interested in space and science and bring public support for NASA.
I cannot wait to see the video. The animation was great as it was.
Now I just need to find a friend with a true satellite dish. A web-cast days later will not be the same.
Re:PR for NASA... (Score:2)
You can watch NASA TV live [nasa.gov] every day, for free.
Though you'll get -much- better quality from a nice C-band feed, at least you can get Realvideo of the event live.
Assuming their servers aren't full.
Which, especially after this posting, they most certainly will be...
The rocket was destroyed, yes... (Score:1)
Dropping the tank? (Score:2)
Why drop the tank? I know it's empty but imagine leaving the external tank connected to the shuttle. Dock the shuttle to the ISS. Send the shuttle crew home on a fre Soiuze(sp?) return vehicles.
Using the next few shuttle missions and dedicated American and Russian supply rockets, re-fuel the external tank on the docked shuttle with hydrogen and oxygen.
During this refuel, resupply stage a dedicated, unstaffed rocket is launched with a lunar lander module. The module is sent in to lunar orbit. The module would be launched with minimal fuel to get it to the moon and in orbit.
Finally, with one last shuttle mission load the stored shuttle with the space hab unit (not used much recently). Install a crew and send the shuttle to the moon for an extended stay. They meet up with the lander module, dock and fuel the module from the external tank. Then send down 3-4 people. to rove the moon. On return, the lander is left in lunar orbit, again fuel-less. The crew return to the ISS.
If they could get three people there for a two weeks or so with those small Apollo capsules, imagine what kind of crew we could send like this, and the science they could do. This mission idea also extends the ISS in to being the first interplanetary space dock (well, sort of).
We could then have two sets of on-going shuttle missions: One set from Earth to ISS. One set from ISS to the Moon.
"Rocket Science" (Score:1)
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:2)
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:1)
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:1)
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:5, Insightful)
Or if a restaurant exploded because of a faulty natural gas valve.
Or if an airliner had a mechanical problem that caused it to crash into a suburban neighborhood.
Or if a cosmetic medical device caused unforseen side effects later on.
Liability insurance, my man. Liability insurance.
Guess who doesn't have to have it: NASA
Guess who doesn't have to pay if they fuck up: NASA
Guess who picks up the tab if they do: you and me
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:2)
not collecting stamps is a hobby
Yes! I finnaly completed my collection! I don't have ANY of them!
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Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:1)
By this same argument... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:1)
Do you think that being at NASA is the only way people can learn about modern aerospace engineering, that somehow they are magically endowed with special knowledge that hasn't been in the public domain for at least 50 years?
And the ESA, RSA, the Australians, the Indian space ministry and the Chinese seem to all be doing pretty good jobs as well... not to mention the countless other enthusiasts and engineers who've been studying rockets for a few decades.
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:3, Funny)
Oh? Feet != Meters
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:3, Funny)
Well duhhh! Everyone knows a meter equals a yard, not a foot!
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Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:1)
I won't even mention the Polar Lander. A fucking faliure to convert to metric is not excusable!
NASA deserves what it gets. Give me amateur rocketry, because NASA couldn't do it to save their asses.
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:1, Insightful)
Do you even know what the "unexcusable" mistake was?
The problem with Mars Polar Lander occured because Lockheed Martin send a file containing a table of information to NASA in which, basically, the units weren't labeled. (This is unfortunately actually not a rare practice among programmers, because handling units in computer codes is usually a pain in the ass.) Lockheed used imperial units, and someone at NASA assumed they were in metric.
The problem wasn't that someone at NASA was too dumb to convert between pounds and newtons. The problem was that someone at Lockheed didn't appropriately label units, and someone else made an incorrect assumption about what the units were.
The same thing could have happened if Lockheed had listed the forces in the file in milli-newtons, and the guy at NASA assumed in was in newtons. The use of Imperial unots was not the problem.
The miscalculation was by a very small amount. It couldn't be detected until the spacecraft was deep within Mar's gravity well. It was too late to correect for.
The deep reason for the problem, though, was severe underfunding. The project did not have enough people to do proper testing, and corners got cut. The level of testing is much better for the rovers flying to Mars next year.
So you're saying... (Score:2, Interesting)
Great plan, Mr. Heller, but even NASA had to start fresh at one point, and even today they fuck up now and then.
A far better plan would be to assign a voluntary 'chaperone' in the form of an experienced NASA representive work with these people and look things over until he's certain they'd be fine on their own.
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:1)
The rocket is designed to travel 50 or 60 miles straight up (more or less). Even if it went haywire and flew 60 mile horizontally, it would probably just smash into a cactus. I mean, how many people live within 60 miles of a dry lake bed?
-dc
check your history (Score:1)
That's why they do this a gazillion miles out in the salt flats. The rocket was expected to fly to a height of 60 miles. If it was aimed incorrectly the rocket would spend much more time in lower (denser) air and would presumably have a reduced lateral range.
Nasa employs some of the smartest and most experienced people in the world and I would not trust anyone else to be launching rockets in to the sky.
NASA didn't start out with experience-- they gained it along the way. Most of NASA's early "rocket scientists" were Avro Aerospace employees who fled Canada in disgust after we canned the Arrow program. These guys brought lots of experience, but practically none of it directly applicable to the task of putting a man on the moon.
I believe NASA should have a monopoly on space travel as they are the only ones who seem to get it right.
Puh-lease. NASA's record is hardly stellar. They have had more success than others only because they've had more attempts. If you lift up the corner of the carpet you'll see lots of dirt under there...
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:3, Insightful)
That's the same bunch who screwed up metric --> english conversion and crashed a martian lander, right?
Boeing employs some of the smartest and most experienced people in the world....
Thats the same bunch who had a hydraulic system fail and a plane crashed right?
NASA has launched more missions than anybody else, and they have had more successful missions that any body else. They have also had more failures than anyone else, but thats thanks to a little thing called the law of averages.
Face it, NASA has been sending things in the sky for 40 straight years now. In all that time, they landed on the moon, helped fly four craft to the farthest reaches of the solar system, landed 3 successful missions on Mars, and have helped run two successful space stations.
All this, with only 7 astronauts lost. How many people do you spposed died in the first 40 years of aviation? How about the first 40 years of automobiles?
So don't give me any of this "NASA can't even even get metric conversion right" crap. For the last four decades, NASA has regularly pulled off shit that other countries only dream of.
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:3, Informative)
Still, a remarkably good safety record.
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:1)
Doh - forgot about that one. Thanks.
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:3, Insightful)
NASA has launched more manned missions than anybody else, but the Russians have launched nearly TEN TIMES as many space mission.
This is when someone adds "Yeah they had to, because their electronics suck, so they need to replace their sats more often", but that doesn't change the point about launches.
John Carmack
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:2)
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:1)
Re:amateur rocketetry is irresponsible (Score:1)
But in general, I know(*) the hardships Ky had to go thru to get all the numerous permits he needed to get to launch, and it's a crying shame that this kind of thing is so hard to do. And in America of all places. It's just weird that an amateur rocketeer, doing cool, new things, need to demonstrate having taken so many safety measures, when any shmoe can drive a car or fly an aircraft which is way more (potentially) destructive with impunity.
Now, I can certainly see that the FAA (or whomever) may want to limit "any yahoo" do to this, but that's just not the case here. Ky and many other serious amateurs have been doing this for a long time, and they've done a pretty good job. The bar is just at the wrong level.
Damn shame it failed, good luck next time, Ky!
(*) Not really, but I've heard him talk about it over a couple of beers, and it sounded pretty bad.
Re:it's still damn fast (Score:2, Insightful)
And I say 2400 mph is the average speed, 3205 the claimed max speed.
Re:it's still damn fast (Score:1)
Re:it's still damn fast (Score:1)
Several things:
In short, there's not enough information here to do the proper math. Your "simple" math is just that -- "simple", and not applicable.
Re:it's still damn fast (Score:1)
Re:Yet another NASA sabotage? (Score:2, Informative)
Neat trick, considering he died in 1963.
That just goes to show their power (Score:2)
Re:Yet another NASA sabotage? (Score:2)
Re:Yet another NASA sabotage? (Score:2)
Re:Yet another NASA sabotage? (Score:2)
It appears that young people like you don't read too well. Us old folks screwed up the school systems, ya know.
I had the date right: Nov 22, 1963. The original poster was wrong.
Re:Yet another NASA sabotage? (Score:1)
CyberDave