When Science Fiction Becomes Science Fact (in public, no less)

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georged

Lifer
Mar 7, 2013
6,014
16,296
Crazy engineering stuff---CERN discoveries, laser weapons tests, and so forth---are only revealed after the fact (if at all) as written reports.

Not this time.


What am I talking about?

Remember the impossibly huge Saturn 5 that was one fourth the size of the Empire State Building?


Screenshot 2024-10-14 at 6.55.15 PM.png


That's how big.

And they not only returned the booster portion to Earth in re-usable condition, but set it back gently in a supporting tower/cradle.

Holy

Shit


 

mawnansmiff

Lifer
Oct 14, 2015
7,676
8,250
Sunny Cornwall, UK.
It was a great thing to witness, of that there is no doubt, but I do wonder how much of that rocket will actually be reused.

I mean, all that incredible heat, all those stresses on the metals used in construction, must have rendered 90% of the whole to be trashed.....no?

Jay.
 

BingBong

Lifer
Apr 26, 2024
1,306
5,677
London UK
It was a great thing to witness, of that there is no doubt, but I do wonder how much of that rocket will actually be reused.

I mean, all that incredible heat, all those stresses on the metals used in construction, must have rendered 90% of the whole to be trashed.....no?

Jay.
Yes, but at least they can pop it in the recycling bin.
 
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Jebi

Lurker
Jun 13, 2024
36
38
Oklahoma
It was a great thing to witness, of that there is no doubt, but I do wonder how much of that rocket will actually be reused.

I mean, all that incredible heat, all those stresses on the metals used in construction, must have rendered 90% of the whole to be trashed.....no?

Jay.

I would be inclined to disagree. Re-entry modules are generally built for the task. Rocket boosters are built to be reusable nowadays and they generate more heat than the friction from re-entry. So if you solve the incredibly destructive power of hitting water or earth then you should be able to do a check and reuse the rocket. Especially since most of the re-entry stress is only on the outer shell meaning that you can reuse all the internals for more and more.

Even if they replace the entire outer shell, it would be cost effective as they can recycle metal very easily. Material science has come such a long way since the Saturn program which is what makes most of space flight and space advances possible. Re-usable rockets being one of the giant leaps from a couple decades ago.
 
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jackattack

Starting to Get Obsessed
Jun 15, 2024
167
871
Austin, TX
It was a great thing to witness, of that there is no doubt, but I do wonder how much of that rocket will actually be reused.

I mean, all that incredible heat, all those stresses on the metals used in construction, must have rendered 90% of the whole to be trashed.....no?

Jay.
SpaceX's entire business model is based on making spaceflight affordable by re-using rockets...so I imagine they save quite a bit of it for re-use.
 
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VDL_Piper

Lifer
Jun 4, 2021
1,500
14,605
Tasmania, Australia
It was a great thing to witness, of that there is no doubt, but I do wonder how much of that rocket will actually be reused.

I mean, all that incredible heat, all those stresses on the metals used in construction, must have rendered 90% of the whole to be trashed.....no?

Jay.
In a post from Elon on Twatter he said it looked very good with only some warping on rocket heat shields which he stated “are easily replaced”. So I’d say the turn around on this rocket will be pretty swift.
 
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georged

Lifer
Mar 7, 2013
6,014
16,296
FWIW, the former Chief Mission Architect at JPL (20+ years) told me that Elon & Co. are getting things done that haven't been seen at NASA since the Apollo days, and that he's just getting started.
 
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Sobrbiker

Lifer
Jan 7, 2023
3,944
51,368
Casa Grande, AZ
Well, I guess when one realizes that the foundational work for the Saturns was done on slide rules, and today we’ve got processors we could only dream of five years ago….
 

Jebi

Lurker
Jun 13, 2024
36
38
Oklahoma
I want to see the code.

I think you would be amazed with how simplistic it would be. My guess would be something like this:
  1. Input from sensors.
  2. Digital Signal Process (DSP) them through something like a Proportional-Integral-Derivative (PID) controller.
  3. Adjust thrusters to accomodate.
  4. Repeat
Though that being said, to fine tune those equations with really calibrated sensors controlling a system that must be around servo levels of precision of rocket boosters, etc.. It's incredible that it all comes together. I think this is more a win for control circuits and mechanics than crazy programming but I could and am willing to be wrong.
 

PipeIT

Lifer
Nov 14, 2020
5,095
30,341
Hawaii
SpaceX is amazing! 👍

Don’t mean to go off topic, but what about NASA after all these years, finally taking to space again, now with the Europa Clipper, I mean Wow! 😮


And then, how about this for Sci Fi - Ai-Da, like Holy Crap! 😮


 

rmpeeps

Lifer
Oct 17, 2017
1,145
1,845
San Antonio, TX
Quite a feat of engineering and perseverance.
I drove down to Boca Chica the day before the launch to see the rocket stacked and ready to fly, and got into Isla Blanca Park early to witness the takeoff and catch landing.
After all the bone rattling volume of the launch and re-entry, along with the sonic booms, there was the distinct knowledge that I’d just witnessed history.

1729495492148.jpeg
 
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