Oh no...not V2s!!! We care where these land!Planned is at the end of October, the last V2 launch. Of course, plans change....
Oh no...not V2s!!! We care where these land!Planned is at the end of October, the last V2 launch. Of course, plans change....
Oh no...not V2s!!! We care where these land!
Well, thats not my department.
"Well, after all, you couldn't trust those! Those were made by the government! Since we're much smarter than the government, it was perfectly reasonable to assume that we could get away with it!"Sounds like they repeat the lessons learned from the R&D process of the Space Shuttle now.
Come on, do better than just making shit up. 1:50:
- Initially Musk claimed the reason for steel outer skin was because it doesn't need a heat shield. Turns out it does.
Yes, and? This has been a design thing from when it was a carbon fibre render, and so has returning to the launch tower, not a product of the past 5 years. How does a gliding, unpowered descent work here?To make the ship reusable, they've traded heavy wings for extra fuel and fins. Except the landing now relies on the engines working and pulling off a complicated maneuver instead of semi-gliding down.
I've never heard that. Not saying it's impossible he said something like this, but it would be fairly obvious that it's BS. Even if it could take it, you heat steel up like that, you don't have the same kind of steel anymore afterwards, I think Musk would have been aware of that.Initially Musk claimed the reason for steel outer skin was because it doesn't need a heat shield.
We also need to remember that the fantasy that Musk has been chasing is interplanetary missions to Mars with a thin atmosphere and the Moon with no atmosphere. Until they can get out of our gravity well they are going to have to cope with our thick and chunky oxidizing atmosphere. The stainless steel IS really tough stuff, and it certainly can handle greatly elevated temperatures as compared to aluminum alloys like in the shuttles. It very much needs a TPS, but not nearly as much as a shuttle as it can tolerate higher interior side temperatures without structural consequence, though thermal protection of internal systems, crew, and cargo is another matter.I've never heard that. Not saying it's impossible he said something like this, but it would be fairly obvious that it's BS. Even if it could take it, you heat steel up like that, you don't have the same kind of steel anymore afterwards, I think Musk would have been aware of that.
Just make all those out of stainless steel...thermal protection of internal systems, crew, and cargo is another matter
Could just use Starship to deliver stainless steel to Mars and call re-entry the self-smelting feature.Just make all those out of stainless steel...
Well, when most of the cryogenic propellants boil away on the way to Mars, it might have a very low density indeed.In theory, you could build a reentry vessel out of stainless steel. But, you would need to use large curve radii to prevent nasty hot spots and a very low mass to density ratio.
Come on, do better than just making shit up. 1:50:
In theory, you could build a reentry vessel out of stainless steel. But, you would need to use large curve radii to prevent nasty hot spots and a very low mass to density ratio.
A real spacecraft would likely NEVER allow that, with all the other engineering requirements.