Updates Orbital Sciences' Cygnus CRS Flight 1 through Flight 8 updates.

Kyle

Armchair Astronaut
Addon Developer
Joined
Mar 17, 2008
Messages
3,912
Reaction score
339
Points
123
Website
orbithangar.com
Little OT: The US media coverage (especially CNN) is absolutely dreadful of this. CNN is carrying the story as "rocket with classified equipment explodes." So p*ssed that I had to turn off the television.
 

N_Molson

Addon Developer
Addon Developer
Donator
Joined
Mar 5, 2010
Messages
9,279
Reaction score
3,247
Points
203
Location
Toulouse
As for the explosion, I find it ironic that this rocket, which used engines which were essentially clones of Soviet N1 engines, failed in a similar manner as the N1-5L disaster.

Now running 30 of those engines at the same time in 1970 is one thing, running 2 of them in 2014 is another...
 

Astro SG Wise

Future Orion MPCV Pilot
Joined
May 26, 2014
Messages
489
Reaction score
1
Points
0
Website
www.aesd.blogspot.com
Either way, with the classified equipment, the lead engineer wanted the place secured for the purpose of security of classified information as well as the preservation of investigation information. It doesn't matter, but I still thought it was interesting.
 

Donamy

Addon Developer
Addon Developer
Donator
Beta Tester
Joined
Oct 16, 2007
Messages
6,906
Reaction score
201
Points
138
Location
Cape
Little OT: The US media coverage (especially CNN) is absolutely dreadful of this. CNN is carrying the story as "rocket with classified equipment explodes." So p*ssed that I had to turn off the television.

Sad isn't it ?
 

DaveS

Addon Developer
Addon Developer
Donator
Beta Tester
Joined
Feb 4, 2008
Messages
9,434
Reaction score
688
Points
203
1. I don't know.
2. Whether or not NASA does, it has already been posted to YouTube.
3. I did not know that... maybe a classified mission a la early Space Shuttle DoD missions?

As for the explosion, I find it ironic that this rocket, which used engines which were essentially clones of Soviet N1 engines, failed in a similar manner as the N1-5L disaster.
The classified items were specified as cryptographic in nature meaning something like GPS or COMSEC hardware. GPS despite its wide-spread usage in the civilian sector, is a military project run by the USAF.
 

Astro SG Wise

Future Orion MPCV Pilot
Joined
May 26, 2014
Messages
489
Reaction score
1
Points
0
Website
www.aesd.blogspot.com
Part of me is happy that NASA hasn't selected orbital sciences for astronaut launches. Do SpaceX and Boeing have better quality spacecraft and launchers? We don't want any of our astronauts to suffer the same fate as Cygnus.
 

Donamy

Addon Developer
Addon Developer
Donator
Beta Tester
Joined
Oct 16, 2007
Messages
6,906
Reaction score
201
Points
138
Location
Cape
Accidents happen!
 

Astro SG Wise

Future Orion MPCV Pilot
Joined
May 26, 2014
Messages
489
Reaction score
1
Points
0
Website
www.aesd.blogspot.com
The classified items were specified as cryptographic in nature meaning something like GPS or COMSEC hardware. GPS despite its wide-spread usage in the civilian sector, is a military project run by the USAF.

Yes! That is the word! Cryptographic. Thanks. :tiphat:
 

DaveS

Addon Developer
Addon Developer
Donator
Beta Tester
Joined
Feb 4, 2008
Messages
9,434
Reaction score
688
Points
203
Part of me is happy that NASA hasn't selected orbital sciences for astronaut launches. Do SpaceX and Boeing have better quality spacecraft and launchers? We don't want any of our astronauts to suffer the same fate as Cygnus.
Every launch vehicle will eventually suffer something like this. It has nothing to do with the contractor.
 

N_Molson

Addon Developer
Addon Developer
Donator
Joined
Mar 5, 2010
Messages
9,279
Reaction score
3,247
Points
203
Location
Toulouse
We don't want any of our astronauts to suffer the same fate as Cygnus.

No, but there was time for a LES to fire, and even to be manually trigerred if it failed to detect the failure.
 

boogabooga

Bug Crusher
Joined
Apr 16, 2011
Messages
2,999
Reaction score
1
Points
0
Orbital is not building a good track record with NASA. This is the third failed NASA mission in about 5 years, including two Taurus failures.
 

Donamy

Addon Developer
Addon Developer
Donator
Beta Tester
Joined
Oct 16, 2007
Messages
6,906
Reaction score
201
Points
138
Location
Cape
Every launch vehicle will eventually suffer something like this. It has nothing to do with the contractor.


I wouldn't go that far. Remember Morton Thyocol knew about the O rings.
 

GLS

Well-known member
Orbiter Contributor
Addon Developer
Joined
Mar 22, 2008
Messages
5,914
Reaction score
2,908
Points
188
Website
github.com
So, my uninformed analysis :tiphat::
1) there's a vent valve that is pulsing just after liftoff... tank overpressurization? (could be nominal)
2) exhaust changes color and brights a lot just before the "BUM". Seems to indicate a change in mixture ratio to the LOX side, hotter combustion, metal melts....

Not sure how/if these 2 observations relate to each other.
 

Urwumpe

Not funny anymore
Addon Developer
Donator
Joined
Feb 6, 2008
Messages
37,605
Reaction score
2,327
Points
203
Location
Wolfsburg
Preferred Pronouns
Sire
Looks like a combustion chamber or turbopump catastrophic failure...

I agree, the initial small explosion looks much like a turbopump/turbine failure, but could also be a detached high pressure fuel pipe.
 

DaveS

Addon Developer
Addon Developer
Donator
Beta Tester
Joined
Feb 4, 2008
Messages
9,434
Reaction score
688
Points
203
I wouldn't go that far. Remember Morton Thyocol knew about the O rings.
They did try to stop it but got bullied into GO recommendation by two NASA centers, MSFC and KSC. In fact, MSFC knew about the fallibility of the seals back in 1983 but it got buried and the criticality rating changed from CRIT 1 to CRIT 1R meaning it had redundancy.
 

N_Molson

Addon Developer
Addon Developer
Donator
Joined
Mar 5, 2010
Messages
9,279
Reaction score
3,247
Points
203
Location
Toulouse
1) there's a vent valve that is pulsing just after liftoff... tank overpressurization? (could be nominal)

Not a tank failure, the explosion definitively comes from 1 of the engines.
 

GigaG

New member
Joined
Jul 6, 2011
Messages
72
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Now running 30 of those engines at the same time in 1970 is one thing, running 2 of them in 2014 is another...

Yes, but it is still ironic. Not to say that they were related, but the incidents are eerily similar - this is likely a simple creepy coincidence, considering that, as you said, the rockets, technology, and background are completely different-

N1-5L: Rocket lifts off, engine explodes, control system shuts down all but one engine, rocket falls back and destroys launchpad.

Cygnus Orb-3: Rocket lifts off, something explodes near bottom of rocket, rocket falls back and seems to have caused severe damage to the launch pad.
 

Donamy

Addon Developer
Addon Developer
Donator
Beta Tester
Joined
Oct 16, 2007
Messages
6,906
Reaction score
201
Points
138
Location
Cape
They did try to stop it but got bullied into GO recommendation by two NASA centers, MSFC and KSC. In fact, MSFC knew about the fallibility of the seals back in 1983 but it got buried and the criticality rating changed from CRIT 1 to CRIT 1R meaning it had redundancy.

Only a few tried.
 

Alfastar

да
Joined
Jan 26, 2011
Messages
463
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
3rd Rock from sun
Everything did looking good for this Antares launch, it did lifting off the pad normally like all other Antares launches.

Until suddenly something blow up and then falling the Antares back on the ground in fire, and then exploded of the impact.

If I look good the reply video's on Youtube, you see that the explosion started under, causing the Antares lost (nessesaly) trust and fails on the ground almost directly.

Did likely those AJ-26-58 engines blown up again? (Just a suggestion, there is no official cause yet)
 
Top