A true shame I didn't have enough time between work and the launch to try to see it on the horizon line. Did anyone get to see this even in person or on their horizon?
I saw many reports of seeing the rocket flying, even as far as in NYC!
A true shame I didn't have enough time between work and the launch to try to see it on the horizon line. Did anyone get to see this even in person or on their horizon?
Interesting. Launch was KSP-style, with a suborbital lob, then a coast to near apogee before firing the second stage.
Second that.Possibly the worst pick of a camera for liftoff I've seen haha...
Interesting. Launch was KSP-style, with a suborbital lob, then a coast to near apogee before firing the second stage.
I have no problem with ZoidbergWhy not Zoidberg?
The long coast phase is actually necessary because the second stage is a Castor 30A solid rocket motor. The short 120-150 seconds burn time are a maximum, since you would otherwise have to make the second stage wider in diameter (A wider SRB with centrale bore can burn longer, a longer one produces more thrust). And you can't simply let the first stage burn longer to fill the gap.
I think it's telling that Orbital isn't too ambitious with this as say SpaceX is with the Falcon series. It seems to be meant to launch Cygnus to ISS orbit and that's it. Without restart capability or even the ability to cut the second stage burn short, it appears as if different mission profiles/payload masses would be very difficult without a major redesign of the rocket.
Orbital has been on the block for a while and knows how hard this stuff is.
Edit: BTW, does this rocket remind anyone else of the Jarvis S?
Actually I was a bit premature on that. Looks like they have plans for a hypergolic, restart-able third stage.
Exactly. Also you can off-load solid fuel from a stage or fly S-turns with the solid rocket motor stage to waste a bit of impulse, if you should launch much smaller payloads.
What about adding extra ballast?
The SRM as second stage has just the disadvantage, that it is pretty inaccurate and produces a lot of residual thrust by outgassing after the burn.