PDA

View Full Version : NASA rocket goes kaboom -- name it Hope and Change


DJofSD
10-28-2014, 06:51 PM
http://www.mediaite.com/tv/shocking-video-shows-nasa-rocket-exploding-on-launch/

The new NASA's right on top of it. Right.

JustRalph
10-28-2014, 07:04 PM
Muslim outreach

Marshall Bennett
10-28-2014, 07:09 PM
I watched that as it happened on a local network. The first thing that came to mind is what a waste. $$$$$$$$$$.

Clocker
10-29-2014, 11:03 PM
An old story about astronaut Alan Shepard:

According to Gene Kranz in his book, Failure Is Not an Option, "When reporters asked Shepard what he thought about as he sat atop the Redstone rocket, waiting for liftoff, he had replied, 'The fact that every part of this ship was built by the lowest bidder.'"

Looks like similar concerns might have been in order for the recently deceased supply rocket.

The tale of the engines that propelled the Antares rocket, which exploded in a spectacular ball of flame in Virginia Tuesday night, begins four decades ago, thousands of miles away, in the land of communism and Sputnik. There, in the Soviet Union, rocket scientists conceived and built dozens of rocket engines meant to power Russian astronauts into the cosmos. But it didn’t work out that way.

Instead, all four launches of the mighty N1 Soviet rocket, which used an earlier iteration of the first-stage engines used in Thursday’s launch, failed between 1969 and 1972. And as the Soviet Union abandoned the idea of putting cosmonauts on the moon, those engines languished in Russia “without a purpose,” reported Space Lift Now.

That was until they were snapped up by Dulles-based Orbital Sciences, which built the rocket that exploded. It uses two modified versions of those Russian engines to propel missions to the International Space Station, according to the company’s user’s guide. To be clear, investigators say they do not know what caused Tuesday’s explosion, which destroyed hundreds of millions of dollars worth of equipment. But some observers are questioning those Soviet-era engines.

Full story here. (http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2014/10/29/antares-rocket-explosion-the-question-of-using-decades-old-soviet-engines/)