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Space

SpaceX Completes First Stacked Starship Fueling Test (engadget.com) 58

On Monday, SpaceX fueled a fully stacked Starship for the first time. Engadget reports: The "wet dress rehearsal" saw the company load the vehicle's Super Heavy and Starship stages with more than 10 million pounds of liquid oxygen and methane fuel. Additionally, SpaceX ran through some of the countdown procedures it will need to complete on launch day. "Today's test will help verify a full launch countdown sequence, as well as the performance of Starship and the orbital pad for flight-light operations," SpaceX posted on Twitter. As Space.com notes, Monday's test means SpaceX is on track to complete an orbital flight of Starship sometime in the coming months.
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SpaceX Completes First Stacked Starship Fueling Test

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  • Allow me... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sconeu ( 64226 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @03:25AM (#63238426) Homepage Journal

    Monday's test means SpaceX is on track to complete an orbital flight of Starship sometime in the coming months.

    s/complete/attempt/

    • Yep, and not that I want it to happen; but just imagine what it would be like if all that fuel went BOOM!

    • by quenda ( 644621 )

      There is a substantial chance the Starship will achieve orbit on the first attempt. Or at least the almost-orbit that is planned. The earlier Raptor flights were OK until the landing :)
      The hard parts come after that: reentry, landing, orbital refuelling, rapid reuse, ...

      • Re:Allow me... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by poptopdrop ( 6713596 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @08:28AM (#63238840)

        And whichever part fails or does not fail, it will be exciting viewing.

        Everyone who wished they were alive to enjoy the Apollo missions: This Is BIGGER !

        • Re:Allow me... (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @10:58AM (#63239226)

          And whichever part fails or does not fail, it will be exciting viewing.

          Everyone who wished they were alive to enjoy the Apollo missions: This Is BIGGER !

          And having watched all the Apollo activity back then, what today's young whippersnappers fail to appreciate is the wealth of real-time video today's missions provide. We see stage separation today from the orbital stage itself, seeing the booster separate, dangling lines flapping in the slipstream as the booster descends, then split screen of the booster landing while the second stage is firing. What we saw in the time of Apollo were the launches from a faraway ground point at KSC. Staging was a distant blur separating from another wobbly blur. This was followed by cartoony simulations of what was going on during docking and orbital reconfiguration, interspersed with long shots of engineers smoking up a storm in Mission Control.

        • Everyone who wished they were alive to enjoy the Apollo missions: This Is BIGGER !

          I was alive to enjoy the Apollo missions. And, yes, this is bigger. Looking forward to the third flight, I am. Once is chance, twice is lucky, three times is starting to look like a lot of things becoming obsolete overnight (like SLS, for instance).

      • by sconeu ( 64226 )

        OP here. I suspect you're right. I, personally, think that they will make orbit. Whether the booster lands successfully, or Starship lands successfully is an open question.

    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      Did they finally get their FAA compliance signoff to launch? It seemed like the feds were burying them in red tape in order to give SLS a head start to launch first.

  • 10 million pounds of fuel? That number seems excessive

    • 10 million pounds of fuel? That number seems excessive

      Value measured in English Pound notes /s

    • by quenda ( 644621 )

      10 million pounds of fuel? That number seems excessive

      4500 is a better number :), as in tonnes. I can't imagine why they used such a small and archaic unit.
      But that is propellant, of which only 20% is fuel and the remainder liquid oxygen.

      So "only" 900 tons of fuel. On the plus side, methane is very cheap compared to hydrogen or kerosene.

  • It's not heavy. It's my Starship.

    I'll see myself out.

  • Ten million pounds. That's really hard for me to imagine. How many Olympic swimming pools is that?

    • by FlynnMP3 ( 33498 )

      It's 770 African elephants or nearly 11 Boeing 747 planes (fueled).

      • by BranMan ( 29917 )

        At 4 African Elephants / pool, that's 192 and a half Olympic swimming pools. You may be able to fit more than 4 in a pool - I believe they have to lay down so they are not sticking up over the lip of the pool (which would spoil the conversion factor).

        Anyone know the official conversion factor? It appears I finally found something Google *doesn't* know.

  • Ok, so what media company owns the old Republic serials... and when are their lawyers going to sue for violation of copyright and trademark, given the design is straight from old Flash Gordon, I think, serials?

  • an explosion of 10 million tons of fuel would only increase property values.

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