Yes, it's yet another Moon to Mars challenge.
In this one though, you'll have to get a little bit out of the Hohmann-type transfer "comfort zone" and setup and fly a mission that minimizes the Time Of Flight (TOF) for the journey, using all the ΔV at your disposal.
A typical Earth-Mars journey takes about 7-8 months and uses roughly 3.6km/s of ΔV for the TMI burn (from LEO). How much time can you save, if you use the Moon as your starting point?
I've setup a DeltaGlider, landed on Pad #2 at BB, with 3600 m/s of ΔV in her tanks.(60 kg of RCS fuel included). Your goal is to land at Olympus base on Mars with minimum TOF.
You are free to use the scenario editor and advance the date to any launch window you want, but you must land on Mars BEFORE the 1st of January 2020.
The TOF counter will start the moment you ignite your main/hover engines and stop as soon as you have landed safely, within 50 km of Olympus base.
The scenario comes with a Lua script that checks if the challenge goal has been achieved and returns you a "score" with your Time Of Flight.
Unzip the attached file in your Orbiter directory and run the "BB_t
lympus-TOF challenge" scenario.
You must have limited fuel checked and autorefuel on Lpad unchecked in the parameters tab.
You will get a "Mission failure" message if:
• You add fuel with the scenario editor.
• The date is later than 1/1/2020
• You hit the surface of a planet/moon with a high vertical speed. (more than 10 m/s)
• You land more than 50 km away from Olympus base.
HELP/HINTS:
Surrogate ships to help in mission planning are acceptable.
A deadstick rollout landing on Mars is acceptable (and recommended), as long as you land with a low vertical speed.
Keep in mind that this challenge is not about just making the journey. It is about making it at the shortest TOF possible.
This link from flytandem is very useful for making a plan with a surrogate ship in TransX
This post from BrianJ is for making a Moon to Mars TransX plan without the help of a surrogate ship.
If we assume ~100-150 m/s of ΔV for corrections and plane changes, the lower limit for the TOF of this journey should be ~120 days.
Have fun, happy orbiting

In this one though, you'll have to get a little bit out of the Hohmann-type transfer "comfort zone" and setup and fly a mission that minimizes the Time Of Flight (TOF) for the journey, using all the ΔV at your disposal.
A typical Earth-Mars journey takes about 7-8 months and uses roughly 3.6km/s of ΔV for the TMI burn (from LEO). How much time can you save, if you use the Moon as your starting point?
I've setup a DeltaGlider, landed on Pad #2 at BB, with 3600 m/s of ΔV in her tanks.(60 kg of RCS fuel included). Your goal is to land at Olympus base on Mars with minimum TOF.
You are free to use the scenario editor and advance the date to any launch window you want, but you must land on Mars BEFORE the 1st of January 2020.
The TOF counter will start the moment you ignite your main/hover engines and stop as soon as you have landed safely, within 50 km of Olympus base.
The scenario comes with a Lua script that checks if the challenge goal has been achieved and returns you a "score" with your Time Of Flight.
Unzip the attached file in your Orbiter directory and run the "BB_t
You must have limited fuel checked and autorefuel on Lpad unchecked in the parameters tab.
You will get a "Mission failure" message if:
• You add fuel with the scenario editor.
• The date is later than 1/1/2020
• You hit the surface of a planet/moon with a high vertical speed. (more than 10 m/s)
• You land more than 50 km away from Olympus base.
HELP/HINTS:
Surrogate ships to help in mission planning are acceptable.
A deadstick rollout landing on Mars is acceptable (and recommended), as long as you land with a low vertical speed.
Keep in mind that this challenge is not about just making the journey. It is about making it at the shortest TOF possible.
This link from flytandem is very useful for making a plan with a surrogate ship in TransX
This post from BrianJ is for making a Moon to Mars TransX plan without the help of a surrogate ship.
If we assume ~100-150 m/s of ΔV for corrections and plane changes, the lower limit for the TOF of this journey should be ~120 days.
Have fun, happy orbiting

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