TechCrunch News 2024年10月26日
‘Yikes’: While gaming, Musk inadvertently broadcasts ‘scary’ near-abort of Starship booster landing
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

马斯克在社交媒体发布的视频中,背景音频显示SpaceX工程师向其汇报Starship最近的飞行测试情况。工程师提到测试中存在一些问题,如部件配置错误、助推器降落时外皮部件撕裂等,但好在未造成严重后果。该测试于10月13日进行,SpaceX完成了雄心勃勃的任务目标,且下一次Starship测试飞行的时间安排将不受FAA限制。

🎈马斯克发布的视频中包含SpaceX工程师对Starship飞行测试的汇报。工程师称最近的Starship飞行测试中,一个配置错误的部件导致在提升旋转压力时没有正确的上升时间,火箭险些因之而中止并尝试坠毁在发射塔旁。

🚀在助推器降回地球、发动机启动前,助推器外皮的一个盖子撕裂,该盖子位于一些单点故障阀上方,幸运的是这些阀及线束未受损,且公司已有解决计划。

🌟10月13日进行的Starship第五次集成测试飞行(IFT-5)中,SpaceX设定了雄心勃勃的任务目标并成功实现,创造了历史。下一次Starship测试飞行的时间安排将不受FAA限制。

Elon Musk occasionally posts clips of his video game plays to his social media platform X — but a recent clip includes background audio of a SpaceX engineer telling Musk how the most recent Starship flight test was “one second away” from an abort. The clip, posted on Friday, was caught by Reuters’ Joey Roulette on X, but it’s not clear if the conversation between Musk and Starship engineers occurred that same day.

“I want to be really upfront about scary shit that happened,” the unnamed engineer said, seemingly as Musk played Diablo IV. He went on to explain that a misconfigured component didn’t have the right “ramp up time for bringing up spin pressure” on the booster.

“We were one second away from that tripping and telling the rocket to abort and try to crash into the ground next to the tower,” the engineer says. 

“Wow,” Musk says in response. “Yikes.” 

The same engineer went on to say that right before engine startup on the booster’s descent back to Earth, a cover on the skin of the booster ripped off, apparently in a place that had been spot welded. “We wouldn’t have predicted the exact right place, but this cover that ripped off was right on top of a bunch of the single point failure valves that must work during the landing burn. So thankfully, none of those or the harnessing got damaged, but we ripped this chine cover off over some really critical equipment right as landing burn was starting. We have a plan to address that.” 

Musk was being briefed on the fifth Starship integrated test flight, referred to as IFT-5, which took place on October 13. SpaceX set its most ambitious mission objectives yet for that test, including returning the Super Heavy booster to the launch site and catching it with a pair of oversized “chopstick” arms that jut out from the launch tower. 

The company pulled it off, and made history as a result. The full context of the conversation is not clear, as the clip posted to X is only about three minutes long, but it shows that even seemingly flawless rocket launches (and in this case, booster landings) can come perilously close to disaster. And that after each test, SpaceX is furnished with a “butt load,” as the engineer put it, of post-flight data to inform future testing.

“We’re trying to do a reasonable balance of speed and risk mitigation on the booster” prior to the next flight attempt, the engineer said. The engineers note that this will be the first Starship test flight whose schedule is not set by the FAA. While SpaceX has typically outpaced the regulator in terms of launch readiness, versus the FAA’s launch license approval schedule, the FAA actually gave approval for IFT-5 and IFT-6 at the same time. 

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

Starship SpaceX 飞行测试 马斯克
相关文章