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ragnarmcryan t1_j7rvju3 wrote

I would like to congratulate us for our taxpayer dollars making this possible

Edit: snowflakes will downvote

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bomberstudios t1_j7ryo8x wrote

I read “firing all 33 Starship engineers” and thought that was very on brand for their CEO.

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sweetplantveal t1_j7s2u0r wrote

The Raptor engines are unusual in that they can throttle down to 40% but as far as I know they still rely on turning some on and some off during different flight stages. If not takeoff and max q, for sure during landing. That coordination has to be super complex...

For context, the engine has been under development for a decade and testing for five years. It's a smaller engine than usual on heavy lift vehicles. It's height is 10 feet. The F1 engine from the Saturn V is almost twice as tall, could fit a Raptor sideways in its nozzle, and develops over 3x the thrust. But where the Saturn V has 5 F1s on the bottom, BFR has 33 Raptors. About twice the thrust in total.

This test is a big deal for Space X. A TON of their future plans hinge on the Raptor.

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funkboxing t1_j7sfap8 wrote

I'm not a c suite expert and not all c titles are equivalent between companies/industries, but as I understand it Shotwell is responsible for ensuring revenue, development, and production goals are on track. She hires and manages engineering project managers, and sets realistic expectations and sources for income to support those projects.

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bigbangbilly t1_j7sktcy wrote

Seems like those starship engines need to find new employment soon /s

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simplegrocery3 t1_j7sra1g wrote

I've misread it as firing all 33 Starship engineers at once

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MakingItElsewhere t1_j7st4ku wrote

For anyone as confused as I am: Yes, there are literally 33 engines at the bottom of that thing. And 6 more in the upper stage.

Here's an image which helped me: Naked Engines!

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coldblade2000 t1_j7sw8ka wrote

> Gwynne Shotwell

From what I understand: As COO (Chief Operating Officer), she's basically in charge of running the company itself and making sure it's running at peak performance. Who to hire, tracking internal goals, evaluating the performance of middle management, etc. Whenever a company has plenty of people not doing anything, has big work bottlenecks, has useless managers, is ignoring laws & oversight, or is otherwise running in an inefficient manner, it is the COO's role to make sure those things get fixed. An engineer may or may not be good at that job. Management-oriented engineers, like industrial engineers, logistics or systems engineers would probably do well at a COO job, as long as they have plenty of managerial experience. A mechanical or electronic engineer that are top of their field but aren't necessarily managers would probably not be able to keep up in that role.

A CEO (Chief Executive Officer) is tasked with executive tasks, and is the primary ambassador for the company. By executive, I mean they are in charge of "making sure things are happening (being executed)". They ultimately decide and shape the directions the company will take in the medium and long term (acquisitions, looming market threats, new product lines, etc), and are also in charge of making sure stockholders and other stakeholders are kept happy. Often enough, they will be the ones who will ultimately face potential big investors, and represent their company in public (interviews and interrogations). CEOs are paid so disproportionately much not because their job is necessarily super hard (it depends, some are way more hands-on than others), but because their decisions carry the largest impact on the company's performance in the long run, so the pressure they are under is massive. A COO hiring a bad project lead, or a CTO (Chief Technology Officer) choosing a cloud service provider that was ultimately terrible, will not be as catastrophic to the company medium-term as a CEO deciding to branch out into a market the company is woefully unequipped to handle, or the CEO failing to secure crucial investments to finish a large project.

So Elon is CEO of SpaceX, Tesla and now Twitter, and he's famously a very involved CEO, at least in one of them at a time (he kind of neglects SpaceX and Tesla while he focuses on Twitter). Very likely, he made the final call on approving SpaceX's Starlink, which deviated from their core rocket-building business. He was also likely the one who ultimately decided Tesla should focus on expanding their production with Gigafactories, and launching Powerwall to branch into infrastructure projects. Not only that, but in these cases, he was certainly very involved in steering the course these projects would take, based upon the recommendations of his subordinates. You'll also recognize that it will be hard for you to name a single current Tesla, SpaceX or Twitter employee aside from him, and that is by design (especially since his companies have the habit of firing their PR teams). As CEO, he focuses all negative attention the company attracts on himself, and ideally liberates his team from that negative attention.

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coldblade2000 t1_j7sxt8l wrote

They got seed money from NASA, and plenty of contracts, but not much that could be considered a "subsidy". At worst, they may have gotten some fat contracts as an investment by NASA, who desperately needed private companies to fill the LEO hole, and quick.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_SpaceX#Funding

Supposedly, by 2012, about half of their funding had been government contracts that provided down payments, while the rest were private investments. A year later, they would be undercutting the costs of the Ariane 5 and Proton-M

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CeeJayDK t1_j7tum7k wrote

See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LbH1ZDImaI8 or https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Owji-ukVt9M

But if I understand it right, the temperatures when you drive a propellant turbine can get so hot they melt or otherwise break the turbine, so to get around this they normally burn the propellant in the preburner in a less optimal way with either too much oxygen or too much fuel.

The full flow engine however does both at the same time using two preburners and two turbines and the combined fuel and oxygen mix that reaches the main combustion chamber is optimal for the best combustion and it's super hot and in a gaseous form which helps it burn even more efficiently.

The downside is that it's probably twice the complexity and it's startup cycle is also very complex and must be managed precisely.

But it gets the most amount of thrust out of the available fuel of any current engine design today with the least amount of heat stress on the turbines - which you could use for added safety .. OR use to push the turbines even more to crazy pressures and more power. SpaceX does the latter.

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MakingItElsewhere t1_j7u7drk wrote

I'd like to think advancements in technology are going to allow for faster response times in the event something doesn't do what it's supposed to do.

But I guess we'll all see how today's test goes, and what is learned from it.

Fingers crossed it goes well!

1

TheAssholeofThanos t1_j7u8oyk wrote

Alot of what made the N1 dangerous were things that SpaceX has been specifically trying to avoid. The N1s were never actually static fired before launch tests (individual components were tested separately, and it was assumed they would work in accordance). The Superheavy and Starship program has been slowly stepping up their series of static fires. This is also the 2020s, where we dont have to rely on technology like pyrotechnic valves (used because they were lighter) and have massive advances in guidance and metallurgy.

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KedynTR t1_j7ubotj wrote

These tech layoffs are getting ridiculous, not even engines can keep a job.

1

drawkbox t1_j7uehzp wrote

Indeed there has been lots of progress since. It just seems needlessly complex, so many potential failures from all the valves/seals/connections/feeds/controllers/bonds etc. All the complexity of one engine, times thirty three.

1

coldblade2000 t1_j7w9l0y wrote

>you accepted government funding to research

It'd be nice if you actually pointed to this "research funding". I looked over and all the money SpaceX was given by NASA was "service contracts" which are fulfilled or being fulfilled, or the Commercial Crew Program. In this one, SpaceX didn't receive money in the first round. In the second, seed money was first given to a few companies like BlueOrigin, Boeing and SpaceX to develop technologies for crewed vehicles. In SpaceX's case, their proposal was making their ALREADY EXISTING Dragon capsule human-rated, and finishing its abort system. The Falcon 9 had already flown various resupply missions to the ISS by then. The rest of their funding was NASA paying SpaceX to render services, or specifically making changes to SpaceX's vehicles for NASA's purposes

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Emble12 t1_j7wa6hc wrote

Yes, it’s a government agency and allocated government funding. It’s then up to NASA to use that funding, such as investing in and buying contracts from private companies.

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Bensemus t1_j7wdlho wrote

> If not takeoff and max q, for sure during landing.

They aren't turning any engines off during launch. Max Q doesn't' require a greater than 40% reduce in thrush.

Engines are turned off during separation. Then some are turned back on for the boost back burn and maybe a reentry burn. Then finally some are used for the landing burn.

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Bensemus t1_j7we29w wrote

They need multiple engines for landing. An empty Falcon 9 is already too light to hover or descend on a single Merlin engine at minimum throttle.

Both Starship and SuperHeavy can hover and descend with multiple Raptor engines firing. This gives them engine out capability while landing and a much safer landing profile. There's no need to perform a suicide burn where you only have a brief moment to get it right or you are crashing.

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Bensemus t1_j7webin wrote

lol "same service". Boeing cant' even manage that. They are years behind delivering crews to the ISS despite getting more money initially and even managing to go back to NASA and get an extra billion.

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Emble12 t1_j7xvzgu wrote

Depends on the contract, for most old space contracts NASA takes operations and so should have more ownership, but for new space contracts the company takes most operations and so has a right to control their assets.

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Bensemus t1_j8flh1j wrote

It's not that simple. Blue Origin had issues in the HLS contract because they tried to avoid NASA's R&D sharing requirements. NASA allows some stuff to be reserved as trade secrets but not everything. Accepting NASA money means you need to share technology with NASA.

1