[AR] Re: [UK OFFICIAL] Re: Re[2]: Re: ORS-4 ("Super Strypi") Hawaii launch delayed

  • From: Lars Osborne <lars.osborne@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: arocket@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2015 13:05:05 -0800

An interesting bit of new information: Someone who used to work on Kerbal
Space program noticed some skin-lift from the ob-board camera. Look at the
bottom of the frame and you can see it bulging outwards:

https://twitter.com/NASASpaceflight/status/661933766538092545

Thanks,
Lars Osborne

On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 12:32 PM, Ken Biba <kenbiba@xxxxxx> wrote:

Did not ask you to. Just adding different information.

Ken Biba
Novarum, Inc.
415-577-5496


On Nov 4, 2015, at 12:10 PM, Anthony Cesaroni <acesaroni@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:

Not buying it. J



Anthony J. Cesaroni

President/CEO

Cesaroni Technology/Cesaroni Aerospace

http://www.cesaronitech.com/

(941) 360-3100 x101 Sarasota

(905) 887-2370 x222 Toronto



*From:* arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>] *On Behalf Of *KEN BIBA
*Sent:* Wednesday, November 04, 2015 1:48 PM
*To:* arocket@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
*Subject:* [AR] Re: [UK OFFICIAL] Re: Re[2]: Re: ORS-4 ("Super Strypi")
Hawaii launch delayed



I have just received from preliminary information from the UH team - it
appears that first stage burn completed successfully, and a deshrouding
maneuver (used by Sandia for suborbital flights) at staging failed to
properly align the second stage - and tumbling began.



More information may change this analysis … but this is current.



K



On Nov 4, 2015, at 9:56 AM, Lars Osborne <lars.osborne@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:



Probably FOD. Did anyone else see all the particles in the exhaust?


Thanks,

Lars Osborne



On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 9:38 AM, KEN BIBA <kenbiba@xxxxxx> wrote:

I seem to remember, from my quick research on this flight, that the
intended roll rate for the first stage boost was 2.5 Hz with a suggestion
of a slowing to 1 Hz at the end of first stage burn. But those were
annotations of a briefing slide of uncertain age.



Also … this flight was actually pulled forward from 2016 - with a
statement that the increased risk was worth it. I wonder if the risk item
is the cause.



K



On Nov 4, 2015, at 9:22 AM, Paul Mueller <paul.mueller.iii@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:



More speculation without data (which is fun!):

We understand gravity turns pretty well--it would be a colossal error if
they set the elevation angle of the launch rail to the wrong setting.

I would think a fin loss would mean the failure would happen much more
quickly, rather than what looked like slowly increasing divergent coning
motion (aka roll-pitch coupling).

I think it was roll-pitch coupling, but not because the roll rate was too
slow. If the roll rate is slow (and there's a decent amount of aerodynamic
damping), or if the roll rate is very high, there won't be significant
roll-pitch coupling. It's the in-between rate that's resonant with the
pitch natural frequency (think Bode plots from back in school) that ruins
your day. Many unguided sounding rockets like the Super Loki spin up
immediately (using a corkscrew rail) to get past the resonant roll rate
right from the start. It looks to me that the roll rate started out at less
than 1 Hz (60 rpm) (from the onboard video) and then increased to over 2 Hz
(120 rpm) and then the coning motion started. It lasted for a few seconds
before loss of video. So the roll rate increased until it reached the
pitch-roll resonant frequency and it was all over. At least that's my guess!

The animation looked pretty bogus to me--was the center of mass really
that far forward (that close to the nose cone)?



On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 9:47 AM, Aplin Alexander T <
ATAPLIN@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Classification: UK OFFICIAL

Handling Instruction: *DISCLAIMER - this is a personal e-mail and only
represents the views of the sender*

FWIW the Black Arrow had a solid third stage.



On my mind as I had the pleasure of a close encounter with the spare Black
Arrow on display at the London Science Museum earlier this week).


http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/objects/space_technology/1972-325.aspx?keywords=black+arrow



BTW I also saw a Russian TK Lunar lander on (temporary) display at the
‘Cosmonauts’ exhibition there – the contrast in size to the (relatively)
huge US LM mock-up on display elsewhere was striking.


http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/visitmuseum/Plan_your_visit/exhibitions/cosmonauts.aspx







*Alex Aplin*



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