YazataAug 25, 2025 04:46 AM (This post was last modified: Aug 25, 2025 05:32 AM by Yazata.)
Yeah, it wasn't totally unexpected. So they already had a backup day tomorrow. An FAA air traffic advisory has already gone out saying Flight 10 will be Monday 6:30 PM CDT, 7:30 PM EDT, 4:30 PM PDT.
Elon says "Ground side liquid oxygen leak needs to be fixed. Aiming for another launch attempt tomorrow."
YazataAug 25, 2025 09:05 PM (This post was last modified: Aug 25, 2025 09:12 PM by Yazata.)
The problem yesterday appears to have been a leaky 300mm/12inch cryo flex line in the SQD (ship quick disconnect) umbilical. A crew of workers scrambled furiously all night to replace it, and today's launch appears to be back on track.
YazataAug 27, 2025 12:33 AM (This post was last modified: Aug 27, 2025 02:46 AM by Yazata.)
Good lift off
All engines running
good stage sep
good booster return and simulated engine-out controlled splashdown
SECO - second stage engine shutdown
The cargo bay door opened!
All Starlink simulators successfully deployed!
In-space relight test good
Reentry underway
First serious problem - part of the engine skirt just blew off during reentry - that's where they intentionally left some tiles off for test
Getting aft flap burn-through. Trailing edge of the flap is glowing and ragged.
Starship is subsonic and still under control - entering its belly flop
Flip - n - burn!
Soft landing in the Indian Ocean right by the floating camera (powered by Starlink)!
Toppled over and exploded
Initial assessment: While there were issues, they achieved all of their test objectives! The honor of the Version.2 ships is convincingly restored by 37's heroic performance!
YazataAug 27, 2025 02:07 AM (This post was last modified: Aug 27, 2025 05:14 AM by Yazata.)
Mauricio was up in his plane (right outside the temporary flight restriction, he's careful about that) and caught the launch from the air. He actually live-streamed it! (RGV Aerial Photography photo)
View of what I believe is the heat shield side of the ship landing in the Indian Ocean. Pretty cooked, definitely not immediately reflyable. (There's LOTS of discussion on the internet about why it turned orange.) Screenshot from the SpaceX feed.
^ ^ ^ ^ ^
I almost forgot what one of those landings in the ocean looked like, it has been so long. And accurately right beside the lone buoy with a camera.
When I was working at KIT, we were testing composite materials made of a copper matrix infused with tungsten fibers as part of plasma facing components in a fusion reactor...
For commissioning tests of the electron beam heating device, we used a not actively cooled sample block of this material with a tungsten plate on top and heated it up pretty well.
...Some of the copper melted and evaporated.
Since you need vacuum for the electron beam gun, the vapors have been nicely deposited in a thin orange layer on all the surfaces.
The metallic test tiles on Starship might contain substantial amounts of copper in a similar sort of composite and this should provide more than enough material to coat half of the heat shield just from a handful of tiles.
Regarding the white nose cone: This might be deposits from evaporated steel since the nose might have seen more heating and then the diffuse reflection of the sun on the differently curved surface could make it look like this.
confused2Aug 27, 2025 11:58 PM (This post was last modified: Aug 27, 2025 11:59 PM by confused2.)
There seem to be little things zipping around in the cargo bay .. probably not insects .. any ideas? Even entering the atmosphere at 20,000 kph there seem to be things drifting around quite slowly.