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General control line discussion => Open Forum => Topic started by: Brett Buck on September 17, 2013, 09:46:41 AM
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If you are near the Space Coast, and you aren't doing anything at ~3:04 Wednesday morning, might look over towards Cape Canaveral, because our satellite is supposed to go up then. This is a good webpage for it:
http://www.spaceflightnow.com/
They will refer to it as an Atlas 5 mission. In reality the rocket part is both the cheap part, and only last 45 minutes. The expensive end of it is the satellite, the third Advanced EHF (or ninth MILSTAR if you like). Weather does not look too favorable for tomorrow morning, but there's still some chance it will go. If not it will be on successive mornings about the same time, getting 4 minutes later
Brett
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I hope that the "condensed" assembly and test time equals *adequate* assembly and test!
I will settle for watching the Antares out of Wallops. We will be able to see it at a much more dignified hour of the day.
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I hope that the "condensed" assembly and test time equals *adequate* assembly and test!
I was rather dismayed that they were shooting for a 10% reduction a year. At some point that will cause a problem.
The satellite is pretty much the opposite. It's been sitting around for an abnormal amount of time because of our previous little issue.
Brett
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I was rather dismayed that they were shooting for a 10% reduction a year. At some point that will cause a problem.
You don't need to start worrying until they fire half of the QA staff and put up posters saying "Quality is Job 1".
Been there, done that.
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I follow things like this closely through my special connection:
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If I happen to be up that late tonight, I'll take a peak to the south from my dorm. Got a perfect view to see it from Daytona, where the rocket is perfectly visible from.
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If I happen to be up that late tonight, I'll take a peak to the south from my dorm. Got a perfect view to see it from Daytona, where the rocket is perfectly visible from.
Any self respecting college puke should be up at 0304 hrs(!) Be sure to take pictures for the rest of us! <=
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They can lift a MILSTAR with an Atlas?? They must have tipped the nitro can. What do they use for the transfer orbit??
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Atlas V launch vehicle is an Atlas in name only. No longer a 1 1/2 stage vehicle, its conventional construction and uses an RD-180 engine which is around 1 million lbs thrust. Its more comparable to an R-7 in terms of lifting power.
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If you are near the Space Coast, and you aren't doing anything at ~3:04 Wednesday morning, might look over towards Cape Canaveral, because our satellite is supposed to go up then. This is a good webpage for it:
Brett
Brett,
I am not near the Space Coast, I am on the Space coast. Plan to watch it, as I do for most launches. Noise does reach our home and rattle the windows, winds permitting.
Roger V.
Merritt Island,FL
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It is now 3:18am with a delay due to upper winds and cumulus clouds. I am going to bed as I am too tired to stay up and watch the launch from my room.
I will be at the one where they send another Mars rover/satellite, which is sometime in November I believe.
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They can lift a MILSTAR with an Atlas?? They must have tipped the nitro can. What do they use for the transfer orbit??
It's "MILSTAR Block III"m AKA AEHF - vaguely based on the commercial A2100 spacecraft. It doesn't go straight into geosynchronous orbit like MILSTAR, it goes into an elliptical transfer orbit and raises itself into the final orbit using a liquid-propellant apogee kick motor, and Hall Current Thrusters using a continuous low thrust. The on-orbit mass is about the same as a MILSTAR, and the separation mass is actually higher than a MILSTAR, but the booster doesn't give it nearly the same boost.
It's an Atlas 5, which not like the Atlas of old at all, and more powerful. But not nearly as powerful at a Titan IV.
Brett
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It is now 3:18am with a delay due to upper winds and cumulus clouds. I am going to bed as I am too tired to stay up and watch the launch from my room.
I will be at the one where they send another Mars rover/satellite, which is sometime in November I believe.
No worries, you gave it the old college try!
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I'm hoping for a complete success. I want LMCO to continue to be the top Aerospace company so that my retirement checks will continue to arrive.
F.C.
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I'm hoping for a complete success. I want LMCO to continue to be the top Aerospace company so that my retirement checks will continue to arrive.
F.C.
Hi Floyd,
I'll second that. y1
I plan to attend Retiree Luncheon on 10/1, Med Insurance status sure to be a topic. ???
Launch "sounded" good, have no data/info yet. Brett will probably update.
Roger V.
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No worries, you gave it the old college try!
I did have a couple friends go to the launch and see it.
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During my early years at Lockheed (Missiles & Space Co.), I worked at the Vandenberg Tracking Station, usually during launch times. I guess I got enough of watching big Roman Candles taking off.
F.C.
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So far, so good:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0swRnkKoTc
(skip to about 1:15)
It was held up a little over an hour for cumulus clouds, and a problem with processing the weather balloon data. The separation video at the end is the best we have gotten so far.
Brett
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Cool! 8) So what are the small debris particles during the final separation? Ice, chunks of propellent or frags of ?
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Cool! 8) So what are the small debris particles during the final separation? Ice, chunks of propellent or frags of ?
Frogs LL~
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Frogs LL~
Nonsense. Only Wallops launches have frogs in the rocket plume.
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Frogs LL~
Good eyes Bob!
I wonder, did you see frogs the night we watched a shuttle launch from Port Canaveral? LL~
Roger
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Frogs LL~
Actually, armadillos. Not kidding.
http://io9.com/rocket-frog-is-old-news-meet-rocket-armadillo-1348058215
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Good eyes Bob!
I wonder, did you see frogs the night we watched a shuttle launch from Port Canaveral? LL~
Roger
No frogs, just an awesome experience y1
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My place is 1/2 mile south of Jetty Park on the beach. I got up a 3am and went out on my balcony in Cape Canaveral. It was worth the wait . The sky lit up and the belated roar of that Atlas got shook my brother out of bed. Hopefully many more to come.