MaverickSawyer
Acolyte of the Probe
Looks like they broke whatever protective cover was over the camera lens! :lol:
Looks like some crazy frictional / compressive heating on the grid fins coming in.
How is landing rocket stages ever going to be boring or commonplace?
Does anyone remember not too long ago when we were beginning to think that maybe barge recoveries were just never going to work? Now it's 3 to 1 land vs. sea.
Amazing.
Not too long ago, we had members who thought that the thrust of the engines needs to be reduced to allow for hovering. Now they're landing with 3 engines firing.
This is why you don't leave rocket science to armchair rocket engineers.
Does anyone remember not too long ago when we were beginning to think that maybe barge recoveries were just never going to work? Now it's 3 to 1 land vs. sea.
Amazing.
One of the things that makes me so proud about the Apollo program is that we put our heads together, rolled up our sleeves, struggled, and ultimately achieved great things. I think our government is not able to do things like this anymore,
The government didn't put men on the moon, it just paid for the ride. It's not the the government can't do it, they're just too busy wasting 1.5 trillion dollars on Lockheed Martin F-35.
Was there any damage to the Falcon 1st stage from the awkward landing
From looks of it t, did the thrust unit touch the deck? Any damage to rockets?
It definitely came down hard on that landing - There a jump (and after vibration) in the on-board video of about 1m. The barge video gives you nothing, but if it has a recorder on the ship that will have a crystal clear picture.
4 scenarios - Switched off engines to early, Ran out of fuel, or not enough time to stop - or camera is a problem (we haven't seen this yet).
Although it landed I'd say we're looking at 3-2, and in reality 0-4, until a used stage flies again... The original purpose of this exercise.
Remember that the inefficient NASA took about 6 months to turn around a more complex shuttle.. We're sitting on 4 months now with SpaceX with a first stage.
That what I was also thinking.. They should put a crane mechanism on the barge that can lay the stage down in a 'cradle'...(if Falcon makes it back to port).