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Communications Space Technology

SpaceX Successfully Launches Its Used Block 5 Rocket (theverge.com) 85

SpaceX successfully launched one of its used Falcon 9 rockets from Cape Canaveral tonight at 1:18AM ET, deploying the Merah Putih communications satellite just over half an hour later. This marks the first time that SpaceX reused one of its new powerful Block 5 boosters -- the final upgrade of the Falcon 9 that is supposed to be able to go to space and back up to 100 times. "The Falcon 9's first stage booster also performed another successful landing on one of the company's drone ships in the Atlantic, becoming the 28th booster that SpaceX has ever recorded," The Verge adds. From the report: For this mission, SpaceX is using the very first Falcon 9 Block 5 rocket it's flown, a vehicle that sent up a large communications satellite for Bangladesh in May from Florida. The vehicle landed on one of SpaceX's drone ships after the flight, and the company has since done inspection and refurbishment on the vehicle over the last three months to get it ready for flight again. Eventually, SpaceX hopes to do as little refurbishment on these Block 5 vehicles as possible, if any at all. Limiting the amount of inspection and tweaking needed between re-flights could significantly up the cost savings that SpaceX gets from reusing its rockets. Less money is needed if fewer people and materials are needed to turn around the rockets each time. Ultimately, SpaceX hopes to fly each Block 5 vehicle a total of 10 times before any refurbishment is needed. As for the satellite, it will reportedly provide telecommunications services to parts of Indonesia and South Asia.
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SpaceX Successfully Launches Its Used Block 5 Rocket

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  • by ScentCone ( 795499 ) on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @02:16AM (#57083412)
    This just never gets old. But they've got to do something about losing that drone barge video literally seconds before the booster puts down. Such a tease.
    • by Tugrik ( 158279 ) <tugrik.gmail@com> on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @04:15AM (#57083778)

      Someone actually made a video about why this happens. Found it while looking around after another 'aaaaiugh video cut out!' moment with tonight's landing.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

      • by Barny ( 103770 )

        That was fascinating, and makes a lot of sense. As those things come down, they brake late from supersonic speed, so it's not just the thrust setting the boat wobbling, but four loud thumps hitting the deck as the pressure waves catch up. Thanks for the link.

    • its old. interest is dying with each launch.
      which is what it should be, if this is going to be a successful commercial operation.

      stable sustainable success is boring. risky novelty is interesting.
      continuous volatility and excitement, indicates high risk of failure.

      hardly anyone watch soyuz launches.

      • totally agree.
        The best thing that can happen is for these launches to get boring because it is the same thing over and over.
        Right now, SX has really only a couple of interesting launches coming up. I want to watch the FH, as well as Dragon V2.
        FH really needs to launch at least 3x before it starts to be boring. And V2 is very important to getting ISS and new space going.
        After these, the next interesting thing might be the lunar launches, but I would say BFR is far more interesting. And BO's new Glenn
      • by Jerry ( 6400 )

        its old. interest is dying with each launch.
        which is what it should be, if this is going to be a successful commercial operation.

        stable sustainable success is boring. risky novelty is interesting.
        continuous volatility and excitement, indicates high risk of failure.

        hardly anyone watch soyuz launches.

        A LOT of people went out to the Denver Stapleton Airport to watch the first landing of the Boeing 747 airliner, in October of 1970. The newness lasted about a week. After that only occasionally did people stood on the side of the road near the end of the runway to watch a 747 fly over head.
        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Big advances for humanity.

  • https://spaceflightnow.com/201... [spaceflightnow.com]

    he Merah Putih satellite launched Tuesday will provide C-band telecommunications services over Indonesia and India. The new telecom craft was built by SSL in Palo Alto, California.

    SSL completed construction of the Merah Putih satellite ahead of schedule, according to Telkom Indonesia, also known as PT Telkom. The new satellite will replace Telkom 1, which failed in a mysterious debris-shedding event in geostationary orbit last year.

    Officials from Telkom Indonesia expected th

  • by sabbede ( 2678435 ) on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @07:37AM (#57084460)
    I'm curious to know what it costs to insure a SpaceX payload launched on a reused rocket vs. a traditional rocket.
    • reused rocket vs. a traditional rocket

      I like "tested vs untested."

    • The last mention of it I can good is from last October and states that -- as of October 2017 -- the insurance price was exactly the same for a flight-proven rocket as a new rocket. Odds are that remains the case today, since there've been no Falcon 9 launch failures since.

The unfacts, did we have them, are too imprecisely few to warrant our certitude.

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