Mar 31, 2021 05:10 PM
Here's RGV Aerial Photography's flyover video of the debris field.
Just from looking at it, it looks like very little debris is on the landing pad, east or south of it. The biggest piece remaining is what's left of the nose, a little ways north and west of the pad. The raptors are west of the pad and we see lots of debris across the road by Lab's Padcam, NSF's and Tim Dodds' cams. (The video CC posted shows some of it raining from the sky... steel rain.) With the exception of the nose, there aren't any large fragments at all, the thing shattered into many relatively small pieces.
So my layman's conclusion is that it was still moving southeast to northwest in such a way that it wasn't likely to come down on the landing pad when a powerful detonation ripped it apart. Not just a hollywood 'whoomph' fireball either, but a real high-explosive 'crack' that shatters steel. That's consistent with the Flight Termination System actuating (which is the theory that I favor), but the possibility remains that it exploded for a different reason.
It's reassuring to see that the Orbital Launch construction areas appear fine. And while small bits are scattered around the tank farm, it appears undamaged.
While lots of debris landed all around Hoppy, Hoppy still lives. Hoppy actually appears to have been near the bullseye around which debris is scattered. Suggesting that the fatally stricken Sn11 was trying to make its way back to its friend when it exploded. Poor sad Hoppy...
The Daily Hopper...
https://twitter.com/daily_hopper/status/...32/photo/1
Even the cams across the road appear to be pretty much ok. Tim Dodd was worried for a while there since his cam went offline when the explosion happened. But it appears that he had a directional antenna dish stabilized by guy wires pointed at South Padre Island beaming his video back and a piece of Sn11 hit one of the wires and changed where the dish was pointing. The gear itself is all fine. Tim can't believe it.
https://twitter.com/Erdayastronaut/statu...7894612992
Here's Tim doing his livestream when Sn11 blew up and he lost his video feed.
https://twitter.com/considercosmos/statu...7356867594
This is a photo taken by Lab this morning when they let people back in showing Tim's antenna.
![[Image: ExwnS4uWQAkPhi9?format=jpg&name=4096x4096]](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/ExwnS4uWQAkPhi9?format=jpg&name=4096x4096)
And here's a video shot by a SpaceX employee showing a crowd of rocket workers at the Build Site across the road from Stargate "watching" the flight. They couldn't see any more than we could and many were also watching the SpaceX stream on their phones. The video shows their reactions.
Just from looking at it, it looks like very little debris is on the landing pad, east or south of it. The biggest piece remaining is what's left of the nose, a little ways north and west of the pad. The raptors are west of the pad and we see lots of debris across the road by Lab's Padcam, NSF's and Tim Dodds' cams. (The video CC posted shows some of it raining from the sky... steel rain.) With the exception of the nose, there aren't any large fragments at all, the thing shattered into many relatively small pieces.
So my layman's conclusion is that it was still moving southeast to northwest in such a way that it wasn't likely to come down on the landing pad when a powerful detonation ripped it apart. Not just a hollywood 'whoomph' fireball either, but a real high-explosive 'crack' that shatters steel. That's consistent with the Flight Termination System actuating (which is the theory that I favor), but the possibility remains that it exploded for a different reason.
It's reassuring to see that the Orbital Launch construction areas appear fine. And while small bits are scattered around the tank farm, it appears undamaged.
While lots of debris landed all around Hoppy, Hoppy still lives. Hoppy actually appears to have been near the bullseye around which debris is scattered. Suggesting that the fatally stricken Sn11 was trying to make its way back to its friend when it exploded. Poor sad Hoppy...
The Daily Hopper...
https://twitter.com/daily_hopper/status/...32/photo/1
Even the cams across the road appear to be pretty much ok. Tim Dodd was worried for a while there since his cam went offline when the explosion happened. But it appears that he had a directional antenna dish stabilized by guy wires pointed at South Padre Island beaming his video back and a piece of Sn11 hit one of the wires and changed where the dish was pointing. The gear itself is all fine. Tim can't believe it.
https://twitter.com/Erdayastronaut/statu...7894612992
Here's Tim doing his livestream when Sn11 blew up and he lost his video feed.
https://twitter.com/considercosmos/statu...7356867594
This is a photo taken by Lab this morning when they let people back in showing Tim's antenna.
And here's a video shot by a SpaceX employee showing a crowd of rocket workers at the Build Site across the road from Stargate "watching" the flight. They couldn't see any more than we could and many were also watching the SpaceX stream on their phones. The video shows their reactions.
![[Image: SpaceXDebris-1024x453.png]](https://www.cameroncounty.us/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/SpaceXDebris-1024x453.png)
![[Image: liebherr-lr-11350-DSC0300.jpg]](https://www.liebherr.com/external/products/products-assets/1150792/IMG_390x390/liebherr-lr-11350-DSC0300.jpg)
![[Image: liebherr-lr-11350-usabiaga-spainlandscape_Web.jpg]](https://www.liebherr.com/external/products/products-assets/1150794/IMG_390x390/liebherr-lr-11350-usabiaga-spainlandscape_Web.jpg)
![[Image: lr-11350-auslegersystem-us-s1968.jpg]](https://www.liebherr.com/external/products/product-related-entity-assets/1177282/lr-11350-auslegersystem-us-s1968.jpg)