![]() |
|
|
|
Lots of snow Porsche away
|
+1 to your thoughts Jeff, well said.
I have 20+ years working in commercial aviation as well, and I have never met an engineer who would cut a corner relating to safety in any reckless way. The standard I work to and the standard of all those I have worked with is "would you fly your familly on it". This is the level we always work too.... Arm chair quarter backing is fun for those that know nothing and risk nothing....These people are exploring space for passion and knowledge...do you honestly think this is the highest ROI branson could achieve with this kind of investment? No he does it because he loves aviation, and development that reduces the costs of space travel is very much moving forward technologically.
__________________
76 911S 86 GMC K1500 78 XS750 cafe racer to be 79 XS750 because one is just not enough |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: KINGSTON,PA
Posts: 1,642
|
Quote:
I've done my share of flying, still not a comfortable experience. Great points made by Jeff and gordner about safety and family.
__________________
94 turbo 3.6 74 carrera RS race car 05 denali XL "We are here to laugh at the odds and live our lives so well that Death will tremble to take us." Charles Bukowski |
||
![]() |
|
Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: an island, upper left coast, USA
Posts: 73,189
|
Quote:
That said, I see this effort as so far away (lagging) from the efforts of the likes of Boeing. Essentially, the SS1 / SS2 teams have been working hard on a cheap way to touch space. --and they did touch space with SS1. From Burt Rutan 2003; " Safety, of course is paramount, but minimum cost is critical. " per Scaled Composites: SpaceShipOne All of these types of ventures are a balance between risk vs cost. There is that saying about life - it's a balance between risk and boredom. The people at Scaled/Virgin made decisions about that balance. So, while I agree that it's stupid to MMQB that these people shouldn't have taken risk, the spectacular failure points to a very high likelihood of cutting one too many corner. --what that is, I would really like to know. For me, and my experience with carbon-fiber clad aramid honeycomb, I look at that wreckage and see far too fragile of a structure for handling that much energy. Of course I have nothing quantitative. Maybe the failure will prove to be something completely unrelated; but still, for my personal risk assessment, you couldn't pay me to go super-sonic in that craft. OTOH, I would jump at a chance to ride in a 50 year old tech SR-71.
__________________
Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2¢ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee. ![]() |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
|
Looks like pilot error in this case. Something that can happen to any vehicle regardless of when or how it was made.
__________________
Brent The X15 was the only aircraft I flew where I was glad the engine quit. - Milt Thompson. "Don't get so caught up in your right to dissent that you forget your obligation to contribute." Mrs. James to her son Chappie. |
||
![]() |
|
Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: an island, upper left coast, USA
Posts: 73,189
|
What happened? Did he fly it into a tree?
__________________
Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2¢ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee. ![]() |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: PNW
Posts: 2,977
|
Of course not. I think what the other post claimed, the post that caused the emotional level to rise in this thread, was that corporate interests would like to capitalize on the privatization of the space program and that when profit takes a high degree of priority then the possibility of failures due to cost pressure can occur. I don't think the claim was that lowly engineers were greedy and didn't care about accidents and fatalities. (That would be a stupid claim to make.) Cost pressure/profit maximization has caused accidents in commercial aviation in the past and I think the claim was that it certainly might cause them again as private corporations venture into space flight.
__________________
'84 Carrera Cabriolet |
||
![]() |
|
![]() |
Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: an island, upper left coast, USA
Posts: 73,189
|
Quote:
Speaking of stability, there is this from Wikipedia: Quote:
Also note, that the highest (design) G-loading (6g) is when feathered and hitting the atmosphere at ~Mach4 -- it was moving at ~Mach1 when this anomaly happened. --Maybe Mach-tuck produced enough moment on the body to overcome the feather.. . meh That doesn't add up, in my lil brain. Well, other than the people with the supersonic shuttlecock want to reassure the hell out of believers that everything is solid as a rock . ..unless something goes wrong - then it's Pioneering new technology. ...and pilot error. Perhaps the politics of protecting manufactured narrative have begun. :-/
__________________
Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2¢ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee. ![]() |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
|
Perhaps if you don't understand the dynamics of the situation you should go read up on aerodynamics. Plus, he didn't pull the release a couple seconds early. He pulled it a couple minutes early.
__________________
Brent The X15 was the only aircraft I flew where I was glad the engine quit. - Milt Thompson. "Don't get so caught up in your right to dissent that you forget your obligation to contribute." Mrs. James to her son Chappie. |
||
![]() |
|
Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: an island, upper left coast, USA
Posts: 73,189
|
Quote:
It has been a couple decades since my applied aerodynamics engineering - and that was mostly for my interest in turbomachinery. Feel free to set me straight. ![]()
__________________
Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2¢ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee. ![]() |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
|
It has been a couple decades for me as well, but anyone that has had about any engineering course can tell when you have that much deflection at that altitude it is going to stress the airframe beyond the design limits. Just like the plane Geoffry DeHaviland (sp?) crashed. Or the M21 with far less deflection, albeit at a higher speed.
Far different situation than coming down from 100km at speed or going out of control at a slow speed glide.
__________________
Brent The X15 was the only aircraft I flew where I was glad the engine quit. - Milt Thompson. "Don't get so caught up in your right to dissent that you forget your obligation to contribute." Mrs. James to her son Chappie. |
||
![]() |
|
Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: an island, upper left coast, USA
Posts: 73,189
|
Deflection? Of the structure? Or are you suggesting a sudden change in angle of attack, due to the release of the feather lockout? --I'll assume the later.
The center of drag, of the feathers, is well above and behind the pivot point. So how does this induce a change to the angle of attack? Also of note, it has been stated that the feathers need to be driven upward.
__________________
Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2¢ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee. ![]() Last edited by island911; 11-05-2014 at 02:58 PM.. |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
|
Watch this video if you don't understand how it works.
__________________
Brent The X15 was the only aircraft I flew where I was glad the engine quit. - Milt Thompson. "Don't get so caught up in your right to dissent that you forget your obligation to contribute." Mrs. James to her son Chappie. |
||
![]() |
|
![]() |
Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: an island, upper left coast, USA
Posts: 73,189
|
Nice glide. Speed?
Here, at 38 seconds, and under rocket power, the pilot calls unlock. (feathers go up during glide.)
__________________
Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2¢ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee. ![]() |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
|
Now lets talk about a Mach plus ejection survival!
I think there is only one case of a non-pressurized cabin non-protection capsule mach plus ejection survival I think of a weekend warrior in an F-15 off of the east coast that survived I think. I would say not knowing this ship, that the pilots survival was something!
|
||
![]() |
|
Run smooth, run fast
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: South Carolina
Posts: 13,447
|
Quote:
Those that witnessed it said that the craft dropped from the support vehicle the way it was designed to and when it had fallen far enough below it, the engine fired off for very few seconds (not the pre-planned length of time required to take it to the prescribed altitude), then stopped prematurely. Then it fired up again and promptly exploded. I'm not sure when the feathering occurred, but the way I heard it, it wasn't that the copilot feathered it "a couple seconds early" it was that the engine malfunctioned. Maybe the malfunction procedure is to feather it at some point to bring it back once some kind of shutdown procedure is concluded. I don't know if there is any "help" in these videos... Virgin Galactic spaceship crashes
__________________
- John "We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline." |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Docking Bay 94
Posts: 7,011
|
Quote:
__________________
Kurt Last edited by KNS; 11-06-2014 at 07:20 AM.. |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
|
From NTSB
Hart: Review of cockpit forward looking camera shows that the feather was unlocked by the copilot. #SpaceShipTwo Hart: Normal procedures are to unlock feathers after Mach 1.4 so aerodynamic forces do not extend feathers prematurely. #SpaceShipTwo Hart: Engine burn was nominal up until feather extension. #SpaceShipTwo
__________________
Brent The X15 was the only aircraft I flew where I was glad the engine quit. - Milt Thompson. "Don't get so caught up in your right to dissent that you forget your obligation to contribute." Mrs. James to her son Chappie. |
||
![]() |
|
Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: an island, upper left coast, USA
Posts: 73,189
|
Quote:
Here is a similar story from decades past. (Mach survival, unstart..) Quote:
__________________
Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2¢ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee. ![]() Last edited by island911; 11-06-2014 at 08:42 AM.. |
||
![]() |
|
Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: an island, upper left coast, USA
Posts: 73,189
|
__________________
Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2¢ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee. ![]() |
||
![]() |
|
Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: an island, upper left coast, USA
Posts: 73,189
|
FWIW, I have read that the reason the new fuel was being tested was due to the mothership not being able to reach the design release alt of 50,000 ft. (therefore the SS2 rocket needs to make up the difference)
__________________
Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2¢ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee. ![]() |
||
![]() |
|
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Rate This Thread | |
|