Om testen anses som 100% vellykket vet jeg ikke all den tid ikke alle 33 tente samtidig. Det som er uthevet i gult tilsier at ting funket som det skulle selv om 2 motorer ikke tente. (Red.)
SpaceX's huge Starship booster conducts historic 31-engine burn (video)
By Mike Wall
published about 11 hours ago
Starship just took a giant step toward its
first-ever orbital flight test.PLAY SOUND
SpaceX's giant Starship vehicle just took a huge step toward its
first-ever orbital test flight, which could take place as soon as next month.
A Starship first-stage
prototype known as Booster 7 ignited 31 of its 33 Raptor engines during a
"static fire" test today (Feb. 9) at SpaceX's Starbase facility in
South Texas.
The goal was to fire all
33 Raptors during the test, which occurred at 4:13 p.m. EST (2113 GMT; 3:13
p.m. local Texas time). But SpaceX will take it.
"Team turned off 1
engine just before start & 1 stopped itself, so 31 engines fired overall.
But still enough engines to reach orbit!" company founder and CEO Elon Musk said via Twitter(opens
in new tab) just after the test wrapped up.
The static fire lasted about seven seconds, the duration that SpaceX had mapped out beforehand, according to the company(opens in new tab). And Booster 7 emerged from the huge cloud of kicked-up dust in one piece, which is something to celebrate as well.
Sjekk video her: https://tinyurl.com/ytunz8t7
Related: SpaceX's 1st orbital Starship looks supercool in these
fueling test photos
SpaceX's
Booster 7 Super Heavy prototype ignites 31 of its 33 engines during a static
fire test at the company's Starbase site on Feb. 9, 2023. (Image credit:
SpaceX)
SpaceX views Starship as a
potentially revolutionary transportation system, one that could make Mars colonization and
other ambitious off-Earth feats economically feasible. The stainless-steel
vehicle consists of two elements: A giant booster called Super Heavy and a
165-foot-tall (50 meters) upper-stage spacecraft known as Starship.
Both Starship and Super Heavy are designed to be fully reusable, and
both are powered by SpaceX's next-generation Raptor engine — 33 for the
booster and six for the upper stage.
For months, SpaceX has
been preparing Booster 7 and a Starship prototype called Ship 24 for an orbital
flight test. Such work has included a fueling test with the duo, which the
company achieved on Jan. 23, and a
number of static fires — prelaunch trials in which engines are ignited briefly
while a vehicle remains anchored to the ground.
Ship 24 fired up all six
of its Raptors at Starbase last September, for example, and Booster 7
ignited 14 of its 33 engines two
months later. That was the big first stage's static-fire high until today's
test, which apparently checked a crucial box on the road to an orbital attempt.
See more
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landing in high-altitude test flight
That highly anticipated
flight could occur as early as next month,
provided today's test went as well as it appeared to (a verdict SpaceX won't
render before analyzing all the data) and remaining checkouts go well, founder
and CEO Elon Musk has
said.
During that test mission,
the Booster 7-Ship 24 duo will become the most powerful rocket ever to fly,
taking the mantle from NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, which
debuted Nov. 16 on the agency's Artemis 1 moon
mission.
SLS generated 8.8 million
pounds of thrust on that liftoff. Super Heavy's 33 Raptors produce about 16.5
million pounds of thrust at full power, according to SpaceflightNow(opens
in new tab).
Booster
7 will come back to Earth in the Gulf of Mexico shortly after liftoff, if all
goes according to the test-flight plan. Ship 24 will circle our planet once and
then splash down in the Pacific Ocean near the Hawaiian island of Kauai.
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