Starchaser Rocket Capsule Drop Tests Successful 120
thaig writes "Starchaser Industries reports that their NOVA 2 rocket capsule has completed two manned drop-tests from an altitude of 10,000 feet. The capsule was put through a number of manoeuvres during its descent to fully validate the steerable ram-air parachute canopy that made it possible to fly the craft like a glider.
Starchaser Industries' Thunderbird project is a contender for the $10 million X-PRIZE.
Here's the earlier story."
Starchaser (Score:5, Informative)
Cancelled due to the snigger value (Score:2)
Re:Starchaser (Score:3, Interesting)
Also remember that the early space programmes were the public face of ICBM programmes. It became clear that trident was going to be our nuclear deterent, so there was little point in continuing the rocketry side of things. The deterent we had in the meantime was characteristicly heath-robinson [compuserve.com]. I'm a huge fan of the 'delta lady' myself - the vulcan, but they
Re:Starchaser (Score:1)
Re:Starchaser (Score:4, Interesting)
I think you mean Polaris, and we already had launched HMS Resolution in 1968. The programme was actually cancelled to try and stem a gaping hole in government spending.
Best wishes,
Mike.
Re:Starchaser (Score:2, Interesting)
You may not remember, but Russia did the same with their Buran shuttle [aerospaceguide.net] (and here are some interesting pictures [raz.cx] of the jet-powered prototype almost identical to the one that flew to orbit [except, of course, for the propulsion system]). So they still had / have other means of getting into space - but all the same - it was a lot of effort for nothing.
Re:Starchaser (Score:2, Funny)
Scene: Top secret rocket testing range somewhere in
the home counties. The Mk IV rocket squats
on it's launching pad.
WC Ponsonby-Psmythe: What ho chaps spiffing what?
So this is the old jalopy what?
Gen. Fforbes-Fforbes: Jolly good show. I say you
eggs what times the orrf?
Private Erk: 0600 m'lud. (tugs forelock)
Ponsonby-Psmythe: Top hole. Here comes the boffin.
Prof. Quatermass: (Reading instructions on box)
Re:Starchaser (Score:2)
Re:Starchaser (Score:2)
Correct, except the programme was cancelled by a Conservative government.
However sad, it was probably the right thing to do, the economy was in a terrible state, Harold Wilson's devaluation had undermined confidence in the Pound, we w
This article is awful... (Score:1, Interesting)
What maneuvers is it capable of?
What is a steerable ram-air parachute canopy? How does it work?
How is this better than what has been done before?
How does this contribute to the overall goal of winning the X-Prize?
This sad stub for an article leaves me with much more questions than answers. Can't the editors find a fully fl
Re:This article is awful... (Score:1)
http://www.ukskydiving.com/squarelge.htm
It's basically a nylon wing that stays rigid because of forward motion. Air is "Rammed" into the front, which makes the wing inflate, which in turn instead of just falling glides forward. This means it stays inflated.
If you look at the picture, you can see the dude has two handles. These allow him to pull down on the tail of the parachute, and change the shape of the parachute, changing the angle of attack. Pulling the le
Obligatory slashdotting joke (Score:5, Funny)
Article text in case of Slashdotting (Score:5, Informative)
The manned drop tests were carried out at the Red Lake drop zone in Arizona USA on the 22nd and 24th July 2003. The capsule was deployed from the rear cargo door of a Fairchild C123K aircraft at an altitude of 10,000 feet.
The capsule was put through a number of manoeuvres during its descent to fully validate the steerable ram-air parachute canopy that made it possible to fly the craft like a glider. Nova 2 was then brought in for a precision landing. Steve Bennett, Managing Director of Starchaser Industries, said, "We are pleased with how the capsule has performed, we've completed two very successful flights. These drop tests mark a significant milestone in Starchaser Industries manned space programme. We have proved the different key systems in our rocket programme and now have the technology to push forward in our bid to win the X PRIZE"
Weighing in at 250 kg and measuring 3-meters in length, the single seat Nova 2 capsule has become Britain's first manned rocket capsule and has been developed to test a variety of systems for use in project Thunderbird; Starchaser Industries entry into the US $10 million X PRIZE, which is on offer to the first non-governmental organisation capable of launching three people into space.
Steve Bennett is available for comment following the success of the manned drop tests, video footage and digital stills are available, please contact Lee Kirby on 08700 278766288 or email lee@starchaser.co.uk
How handy (Score:2)
Yeah, because after all, nobody wanted to see the pictures, right? :-)
Re:How handy (Score:1)
Re:Article text in case of Slashdotting (Score:1)
I mean. Willyalookatdafacts:
contact *Lee Kirby* , X prize.
Sony owe Stan $10,000,000 (alledgedly).
What's goin on here?
Wrong (Score:3, Informative)
Details (Score:4, Insightful)
This would seem to be the second hardest part. (Hardest being geting the thing orbial in the first place.)
-Peter
Re:Details (Score:2)
If you completed high school, you should know that orbit involves traveling around 17 thousand miles per hour sideways.
Re:Details (Score:2)
I re-read the article and don't see the info that you alluded to anywhere. Damn reading comprehesion skills.
Anyway, since you are clearly an expert, will they just be able to deploy the 'chute at the apex of the flight? When you say 100k do you mean 100,000 ft? Seems like they could, since there is still a fair amount of atmosphere there.
-Peter
Re:Details (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Details (Score:2)
Don't blame the rest of us for your education - high schools in Norway actualy covers the orbital mechanics as a special subset of the mechanics of movement if you pick natural sciences as one of your classes...
Anyway, the X-price [xprize.org] is a competition to build and launch a 'spaceship' carreing 3 people to a minimum height of 100 kilometer (abb. km or just k) twice in the course of two weeks. Deploying a chute while 62.5 miles up in the air isn't all that smart - either you'll rip the chute or use a long time an
Re:Details (Score:1, Troll)
k = prefix meaning 1000 (kilo)
m = linear unit meter
km = linear unit kilometer
I won't blame you for failing to detect the sarcasm, I understand that is very difficult do do in a non-native language.
-Peter
Re:Details (Score:2)
Re:Details (Score:1)
Re:Details (Score:2)
It sounds like it's a glider. I suppose it continues to glide for awhile, letting the atmosphere slow it down until the speed has been sufficiently reduced.
Re:Details (Score:2, Funny)
Just what we all need (Score:2, Funny)
Another [starchaser.co.uk] Thunderbird [mozilla.org] Project [mech.ubc.ca]
Re:Just what we all need (Score:1)
That said, the only SF spaceship other than the original Thunderbirds I've heard Steve ever rave about was the Whitestar from Babylon-5.
Steve has always said (if memory serves) that they'd launch in 2004 (or earlier finances permitting), and I'm really pleased to see that he's continue to follow his dr
Re:Just what we all need (Score:1)
Heh, I still chuckle when I think about the Starchaser rocket behind the bar there - they used to have a real one, then the transport to take it to the launch site broke down and several big guys had to carry it through the streets of Manchester / Salford.
Thunderbird project? (Score:1)
More of this is needed (Score:3, Interesting)
However, there are other more important things that our government should be spending money upon. Education, health care and welfare programs are all vastly more important than space exploration. Space programs are a luxury, and in these tough economic times its a luxury that Americans should do without.
The fact that this program was successful shows that the private sector can shoulder the spaceflight burden. Hopefully our government will recognize this and begin to shift funding to programs that are more worthy.
Re:More of this is needed (Score:1)
The government actually makes money by launching commercial payloads into space -- how do you think all of those cell phone satellites, etc. get up there? Obviously, the program as a whole is a loss, thanks to wastes like the ISS; however, if the government were to drop research and simply operate as a commercial entity, launching private payloads,
Re:More of this is needed (Score:2)
Re:More of this is needed (Score:1)
Thunderbird the rocket? (Score:2, Funny)
Phoenix the browser or the database?
Mozilla the browser or
Re:Thunderbird the rocket? (Score:2)
Launch Date? (Score:2)
1.) Can you get insurance, both life and rocket insurance for this type of amateur space travel?
2.) What if they get stuck in space and can't re-enter orbit safely, is NASA/Russia going to make a rescue attempt?
3.) If they do make it and then land, does this mean that it is of course more than possible for any average joe to go to space?
4.) What's next, M-Prize, first man to mars and back?
Re:Launch Date? (Score:3, Interesting)
2.) They aren't going into orbit so there is no way to get stuck. It's a simple projectile trajectory, up and down like a cannon ball.
3.) That's the point of the X-Prize.
4.) We can only hope!
Re:Launch Date? (Score:1)
Insurance is only a way of evenly distributing the cost of damages across a group. If 1000 people buy house insurance and one house gets burned down at a cost of $200 000, the insurance pays for the damage with the $200 it collected from each homeowner. If only one rocket gets launched into space and crashes/burns at a cost of $1 million........
Re:Launch Date? (Score:2)
Warning bells. (Score:3, Informative)
Isn't this the same Steve Bennett who was planning to launch his X-prize rocket on what amounted to the same kind of engines used by the high-power model rocket community, despite the community trying to tell him that they wouldn't scale the way he wants them to? The guy who was prevented from doing further launch tests because he set the firing range he was using on fire? The guy who was ripped apart in the last three articles about him for not having an adequate understanding of what he's doing?
This does not bode well for his scheduled launch attempt.
Re:Warning bells. (Score:4, Interesting)
37-ft. Nova rocket blasts off! [hobbyspace.com]
Churchill liquid engine test success [xprize.org]
Nova II capsule test drop success [space.com]
The next few months will be very exciting. Starchaser plans to integrate all three of the above accomplishments in one project: the manned launch of the Nova rocket -- outfitted with the new Churchill engines -- carrying the Nova II capsule as payload!
Re:Warning bells. (Score:1, Informative)
No they weren't. I know some guys who went up to one of his open days, his last launch of his Nova apparently used a cluster of Aerotech M-class or similar motors they said, and the guys who went along to his open day, and who are rocketry enthusiasts themselves, said "yeah right" he's still using a cluster of solids by the looks of it. These guys are HPR people, so they have some clues.
> Starchaser has definitely improved its reputation sinc
Re:Warning bells. (Score:1)
That's correct, he used solids -- but only for that launch in 2001 . If you look at the Starchaser web-site, the Nova launch was to verify the airframe, electronics, recovery, etc. You can think of the solid engines as a one-time crutch to get the rocket off the ground. Now that the more powerful liquids are ready, the next Nova launch will be equipped with those.
>...he has apparently threatened...I'll ch
Re:Warning bells. (Score:2)
So it looks like they'll be getting propellant soon. And anyway, check out some of the cool pictures [armadilloaerospace.com]!
Hmmm. Bouncy ride? (Score:2)
economics of rewarding (Score:5, Funny)
You get 35 million for Saddam, only 10 million for turning into a shooting star.
Re:economics of rewarding (Score:2)
However this is a big if, capturing Saddamn may not make any difference what-so-ever.
Re:economics of rewarding (Score:1)
At least that was what the US government would be doing if getting people in space was what it really wanted to do.
Frankly, if I'd been ruling the world, I'd shift technology, research and humanity as a whole into high gear _BEFORE_ salvaging Iraq and removing Saddam's testacles, but hey, that's just me.
Re:economics of rewarding (Score:2)
It's not just you. It's me, too. Frankly, I don't care about what happens to Saddam Houssein (sp?). He can just rot for the rest of his life, assuming he isn't dead yet, as a washed-up has-been whom everybody hates. If I were ruling the world, I'd scrap the FAA regulations that are one of the biggest obstacles to provat
$10 Million is not a lot (Score:1)
This is not about breaking a record as much as it is about encouraging people to turn space access into a commercial proposition.
Re:economics of rewarding (Score:1, Funny)
Re:economics of rewarding (Score:2, Funny)
2
3
4
Sadman would make a good test 'pilot'. (no need for a chute)
In Soviet Russia... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:In Soviet Russia... (Score:1)
optimistic & redundant (Score:3, Funny)
How about
So far all they've done is chuck it off the back of a plane.
Anyway to get the 10 megabucks the thing only has to be
capable of launching three people into space.
No mention of gettin em back
Now where can i find three volunteers????
XPRIZE Guidelines (Score:1)
5. The crew must return to the Earth's surface from both flights in good health as reasonably defined and judged by the X PRIZE Review Board. The flight vehicle must return from both flights substantially intact, as defined by and in the sole judgment of the X PRIZE Review Board, such that the vehicle is reusable.
Re:XPRIZE Guidelines (Score:1)
After all it says x-prize *guidelines*
Guidelines are pretty flexible, forget all the nasty engineering stuff.
Slip the judging panel 50 bucks and a bottle of bourbon each, problem solved.
That still leaves about $9,999,750 in prize money for the taking.
Now where can i find three volunteers?
Re:optimistic & redundant (Score:2)
IIRC The X-Prize goes to the team that can launch three people into space, bring them back(intact), and be able to launch again in under 2 weeks.
Though it would be fun to be able to shoot three idiots into space and leave them there...
looming disaster? (Score:3, Insightful)
Being from the little town where Bennet is from
Re:looming disaster? (Score:2, Insightful)
Thunderbird Project is moving along quite nicely (Score:2, Funny)
My money's still on Rutan (Score:3, Interesting)
They're the only ones who have shown credible progress in respect to actually getting a craft flying towards the heavens. Most of the other X-Prize entrants are either playing with models or dreaming
Re:My money's still on Rutan (Score:1)
Re:My money's still on Rutan (Score:1)
Re:My money's still on Rutan (Score:2)
Re:My money's still on Rutan (Score:1)
What's the problem? (Score:2)
Unless of course if you're supposed to live through it. That may be somewhat more difficult.
Confusing name (Score:1)
Triumph Thunderbird (Score:1)
ram those foils .. (Score:2, Informative)
"ram-air parafoils" are nothing but a regular recantgular parachute canopies that are used every day in regular skydiving sports ( ive used one exactly 33 times and its been working like charm
It flies like a regular airplane wing, just that the lifting profile isnt fixed. The wing is "open" in front, and the airflow makes the wing "rigid". Thats the general principle anyways. You steer it with pulling the "brakes" on one or oth
Re:ram those foils .. (Score:1)
Informative? What the fuck? (Score:2, Insightful)