Dragon Crew v.2.0

Автор igorvs, 30.04.2014 07:08:57

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tnt22

Цитировать Chris G - NSF‏ @ChrisG_NSF 2 мин. назад

Demo-2 crew launch Dragon will likely be delivered to KSC by the end of the month.

Чебурашка

Говорят про "early March" для DM-2 если завтра всё пройдёт ОК ;)

tnt22

ЦитироватьЧебурашка написал:
Говорят про "early March" для DM-2 если завтра всё пройдёт ОК
Лень было ковырять изюм из булки, но... Ключевое слово "если"... и касается оно не только IFA. В начало марта хотелось бы верить, но гложет червячок сомнений...

https://spaceflightnow.com/2020/01/17/pending-test-outcomes-nasa-says-spacex-could-launch-astronauts-in-early-march/
Цитировать...
The In-Flight Abort Test is the last major planned test flight of a full-up Crew Dragon spacecraft before NASA clears the vehicle to carry astronauts.

According to Reed, SpaceX is finishing up work on the Crew Dragon capsule assigned to the Demo-2 mission at the company's headquarters in Hawthorne, California.

"We just recently completed heat shield mate, where we attach the heat shield to the spacecraft, and we're on track for completing the vehicle and delivering it later this month from Hawthorne to the Cape (the Kennedy Space Center)," Reed said. "There are number of checkouts that we do as part of that process."

The Crew Dragon will be outfitted for Hurley and Behnken's mission, filled with propellant for its maneuvering thrusters and abort engines, then mated with a Falcon 9 booster before liftoff from pad 39A.

Amid the hardware checkouts in Florida, NASA engineers will reviewing data packages submitted by SpaceX to verify the Crew Dragon meets the space agency's safety requirements. NASA officials have not said how long that process will take.

Lueders said SpaceX will conduct two more drop tests of the Crew Dragon's Mark 3 parachutes, which were strengthened after an earlier chute design failed during testing. The Mark 3 chutes are also flying on the Crew Dragon for Saturday's abort test.
...
"We're getting ready to do, working with SpaceX ... a couple more system-level tests with brand new chutes," Lueders said. "We'd like to really characterize getting a brand new chute system and getting a couple of tests. So we're working on that with SpaceX."

The Mark 3 parachutes aboard the Crew Dragon spacecraft for Saturday's abort test have flown before.

"So what we'd like to do is, you really want to know what's your initial capability," Lueders said. "We're very happy with the strength and capability of the chutes, but what we'd really like to do is go take a brand new set of chutes straight off the shelf, never used — same design that we've been testing, but just made — and then run some tests with that."

SpaceX announced last month that it completed its 10th consecutive successful multi-parachute drop test using the Crew Dragon's new Mark 3 parachute design.

In a tweet Dec. 29, SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk wrote that the Crew Dragon spacecraft assigned to the Demo-2 mission should be at Cape Canaveral and "physically ready" for flight in February.

"But completing all safety reviews will probably take a few more months," Musk tweeted.
...
"Right now, we're focused on when this vehicle going to be ready, and then we'll be working together as an agency and with SpaceX about how do we best use it," Lueders said. "But the first thing I've got to do is get through this test, and then we'll go look at it, along with the other tests we talked about — the chute tests and other things.

"And then when we get a better idea of when the vehicle is really going to be ready to fly, we'll go look at and work with the space station program — and obviously NASA leadership — on what's the best way to use this capability."
...

tnt22

https://spaceflightnow.com/2020/01/18/spacex-will-trigger-an-intentional-rocket-failure-to-prove-crew-capsules-safety/
ЦитироватьSpaceX will trigger an intentional rocket failure to prove crew capsule's safety
January 18, 2020 | Stephen Clark


Illustration of the SpaceX Crew Dragon and Falcon 9 rocket during the company's uncrewed In-Flight Abort Test for NASA's Commercial Crew Program. This demonstration test of Crew Dragon's launch escape capabilities is designed to provide valuable data toward NASA certifying SpaceX's crew transportation system for carrying astronauts to and from the International Space Station.
...
A NASA official said Friday that SpaceX's next Crew Dragon spacecraft could be ready to launch astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken to the space station as soon as early March. But that schedule hinges on a good outcome to Sunday's abort test, the results of two more parachute drop tests, NASA data reviews and final assembly and processing milestones for the Crew Dragon spacecraft itself.

triage

Просто про службу спасения
Цитироватьtnt22 написал:
 https://spaceflightnow.com/2020/01/16/spacex-abort-test-serves-as-practice-run-for-astronauts-rescue-teams/
 
ЦитироватьSpaceX abort test serves as practice run for astronauts, rescue teams  
   January 16, 2020  |  Stephen Clark  
...
Personnel with the Air Force's Detachment 3, part of the 45th Space Wing at Patrick Air Force Base, will work with SpaceX's recovery team downrange in the Atlantic Ocean to observe the Crew Dragon's splashdown. The military rescue team, working in coordination with SpaceX recovery vessels, will practice their approach to the spacecraft in the ocean, rehearsing a real-life astronaut rescue operation.

SpaceX teams will eventually pull the capsule from the sea and return it to port for inspections.
...
The Detachment 3 teams from Patrick Air Force Base include an HC-130 transport and refueling plane, and two HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopters with search and rescue teams on-board, according to NASA officials.

The military pararescue specialists will parachute from the aircraft into the Atlantic with inflatable boats.

SpaceX and Boeing, NASA's other commercial crew contractor, are responsible for recovering their spacecraft after a normal landing. The Crew Dragon splashes down at sea, with a primary zone in the Atlantic Ocean east of Florida and a backup zone in the Gulf of Mexico, and Boeng's Starliner capsule returns to a touchdown on land at one of several possible sites in the Western United States.

But like SpaceX's vehicle, the Boeing Starliner is designed for a water landing in case of a launch abort.

"We requested from (the military), if something goes awry, such as a pad abort or an ascent abort — which is what we're talking about with this In-Flight Abort Test — then they typically would go out and deploy their teams and provide for rescuing the crew, picking them up," said Ted Mosteller, NASA's commercial crew launch and landing lead, in an interview with CBS News.

"SpaceX, they're really specifically for the nominal landing site and nominal landing in most cases," he told CBS News. "And then the DoD, specifically Detachment Three down at Patrick, coordinates with the Air Force the assets that we use for rescue."

For a crewed mission, the search and rescue team at Patrick Air Force Base will have primary responsibility for retrieving the astronauts from the Crew Dragon spacecraft after a pad abort or launch emergency in the first few minutes of the flight, a scenario that would lead to a splashdown within about a 230-mile (370-kilometer) radius from Cape Canaveral.

Launch trajectories toward the space station head to the northeast from the Kennedy Space Center, following a path roughly parallel to the U.S. East Coast. NASA required SpaceX and Boeing, which launches its Starliner capsule on United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rockets, to design their crew capsules to avoid splashing down in the middle of the North Atlantic Ocean in the event of an in-flight abort late in the ascent sequence.

If required, thrusters on the Crew Dragon or Starliner spacecraft would fire after an abort to ensure the capsule lands within about 300 miles of eastern Canada or Ireland, NASA officials told CBS News.

"Once you detach from a failing rocket, you will either have enough propellant to slow down and land before you get there, or to boost you to the other side of that zone," said Steve Payne, NASA's launch integration manager for the commercial crew program.
....
NASA and contractor teams will also assess sea states in the Atlantic Ocean before giving final approval for a crew launch.

On future commercial crew flights with astronauts on-board, a C-17 cargo plane from Charleston Air Force Base in South Carolina will be on standby to respond for a sea rescue farther away from the launch site in Florida. A C-17 aircraft with a similar search and rescue team would deploy from Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii, for an emergency landing in the Pacific Ocean or neighboring seas.

During a crew launch, the rescue teams at Patrick Air Force Base could be airborne in 10 or 15 minutes, Mosteller told CBS News, and will aim to retrieve the astronauts and transport them to a local hospital within six hours. The C-17s are on a one-hour alert from the time of a SpaceX or Boeing crew launch until docking with the space station, with a goal of getting to the astronauts within 24 hours after an emergency landing anywhere in the world.

Mosteller told CBS News that the SpaceX and Boeing crew capsules both carry radio beacons to help the military search and rescue team locate the spacecraft. The Crew Dragon and Starliner both have flashing lights, and crews will carry handheld radios and personal locator beacons to communicate with search and rescue teams if the astronauts have to leave the spacecraft after splashdown.

The SpaceX and Boeing crew capsules both have a raft on-board, plus a survival kit with medications, food and fresh water, signaling mirrors, blankets and other equipment, Mosteller told CBS News.

Military rescue teams are also equipped with a larger life raft that can accommodate the search and rescue forces, along with the astronaut crews, and carries provisions for up to three days.
....

tnt22

Цитировать Stephen Clark‏ @StephenClark1 7 мин. назад

Crew Dragon astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken just spoke with reporters at KSC. Hurley says he will be vehicle commander for the Demo-2 mission, Behnken is vehicle pilot. Planning an automated docking on Demo-2 mission, but will do some manual flying on approach to ISS.

tnt22

Цитировать NASA Commercial Crew‏ @Commercial_Crew 50 мин.  назад

Hear from NASA astronauts @AstroBehnken and @Astro_Doug on how they feel after @SpaceX's In-Flight Abort Test

They'll be the first to fly on the second #CrewDragon mission to the @Space_Station!

https://video.twimg.com/ext_tw_video/1218969722420629504/pu/vid/1280x720/MnuXZFdSiSH8DSf2.mp4 (0:36)

tnt22

https://spaceflightnow.com/2020/01/19/spacex-aces-final-major-test-before-first-crew-mission/
ЦитироватьSpaceX aces final major test before first crew mission
January 19, 2020 | Stephen Clark


SpaceX's Falcon 9 booster disintegrated in a fireball — as expected — a few seconds after the Crew Dragon capsule fired away fr om the top of the rocket in an in-flight escape demonstration Sunday. Credit: Spaceflight Now

SpaceX performed a dramatic high-altitude test flight Sunday of the company's Crew Dragon capsule over Florida's Space Coast, testing the human-rated ship's ability to escape a rocket failure and save its crew before two NASA astronauts strap in for a flight to the International Space Station as soon as this spring.

The unusual test flight included an intentional failure of the Crew Dragon's Falcon 9 rocket about a minute-and-a-half after liftoff fr om the Kennedy Space Center. The rocket disintegrated in a fireball high over the Atlantic Ocean as the crew capsule sped away fr om the top of the launcher with a powerful boost from eight SuperDraco engines.

The SuperDraco engines — mounted around the circumference of the gumdrop-shaped crew capsule — fired around eight seconds to carry the spaceship a safe distance from the Falcon 9 rocket after the booster's first stage engines shut down, a standard part of the launch escape sequence.

The Crew Dragon arced on a ballistic trajectory to a top speed of about Mach 2.2 and a peak altitude of about 131,000 feet, according to Elon Musk, SpaceX's founder and chief executive. The capsule then deployed four main parachutes for a splashdown in the Atlantic Ocean roughly 20 miles (32 kilometers) east of the Kennedy Space Center.

"I'm super fired up," Musk said. "This is great ... We're looking forward to the next step."

NASA has signed agreements with SpaceX valued at more than $3.1 billion since 2011 to fund the design, development, construction and testing of the Crew Dragon spacecraft.

The next major step for the Crew Dragon program is the capsule's first trip to space with astronauts. The Crew Dragon's in-flight abort test Sunday was the last major flight demonstration of a full-scale Crew Dragon spacecraft before its first launch with humans on-board.

Veteran NASA shuttle fliers Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken are training for the mission — designated Demo-2 — to fly the Crew Dragon to the International Space Station.

Musk said after Sunday's in-flight abort test that the Demo-2 mission would likely launch in the second quarter of this year — between the beginning of April and the end of June — although rocket and spacecraft hardware for the Demo-2 flight could be in place at the Kennedy Space Center by the end of February or early March.

"The hardware necessary for first crewed launch, we believe, will be ready by the end of February," Musk said. "However, there's still a lot of work once the hardware is ready to cross-check everything, triple-check, quadruple-check, go over everything again so that every stone has been turned over three or four times.

"And there is also the schedule for getting to (the) space station because space station has a lot of things going to it, so what's the right timing for this?" Musk said. "The sort of collective wisdom at this point is we're highly confident the hardware will be ready in Quarter 1, most likely the end of February, but no later than March, and that it and it would appear probable that the first crew launch would occur in the 2nd Quarter."


SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk speaks with reporters Jan. 19, 2020, at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Credit: Stephen Clark / Spaceflight Now

In the meantime, SpaceX will collect all the data from the Crew Dragon abort test and analyze the results for any potential problem areas. NASA is also reviewing numerous Crew Dragon data packages provided by SpaceX before agreeing to fly Hurley and Behnken on SpaceX's next crew capsule launch.

SpaceX plans at least two more atmospheric drop tests of the Crew Dragon parachute system to gain more confidence in the capsule's decelerators, which have been a problem area on the project after chute failures on a cargo-carrying Dragon spacecraft and in Crew Dragon testing.

Engineers found that NASA was using wrong assumptions in models that predict how much force parachutes experience on spacecraft returning to Earth. Data from testing showed the parachute risers, or suspension lines, encountered more significant loads than expected, raising concerns about chutes across the agency's human spaceflight programs, including on the Starliner commercial crew capsule being developed by Boeing.

SpaceX and NASA agreed to switch to a new generation of Crew Dragon parachutes dubbed the Mark 3, and testing of the new Mark 3 chutes — made by a company named Airborne Systems — has proceeded without failure since late last year.

Sunday's in-flight abort test provided the parachute engineers with another successful test of the Mark 3 chutes, adding additional confidence about the system's reliability.

NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine called Sunday's abort test "another amazing milestone" in the agency's nearly decade-long effort to resume crew launches to the space station from U.S. soil.

"Make no mistake, there's a lot left to do," Bridenstine said. "We have a number of parachute tests upcoming, and of course, we're going to get a lot of data from this particular test. So we're not quite there yet, but by all accounts, this was a very successful test."

After a one-day delay due to rough seas in the splashdown zone — and a two-and-a-half-hour hold Sunday to wait for improved winds — the Crew Dragon spacecraft lifted off on top of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket at 10:30 a.m. EST (1530 GMT) Sunday from pad 39A at Kennedy, the same launch pad once used by NASA's Saturn 5 moon rockets and space shuttles.

The 215-foot-tall (65-meter) rocket flew off the launch pad powered by nine kerosene-fueled Merlin 1D engines and pitched on an easterly trajectory from the Florida spaceport.


The Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon spacecraft lifted off from pad 39A at the Kennedy Space Center at 10:30 a.m. EST (1530 GMT) Sunday. Credit: Stephen Clark / Spaceflight Now

The Falcon 9 surpassed the speed of sound in less than a minute, and the Crew Dragon's pre-programmed escape sequence initiated around 84 seconds after liftoff, when the rocket was at an altitude of roughly 62,000 feet (19 kilometers).

The abort was triggered soon after the point in the launch sequence wh ere the booster and capsule experience the most extreme aerodynamic pressures.

While the nine Merlin engines on the Falcon 9 rocket cut off in response to the escape command, nearly 130,000 pounds of thrust from the SuperDraco engines pushed the Crew Dragon rapidly away from the top of the launcher.

SpaceX said the capsule, and two mannequins seated inside, accelerated at about 3.5Gs during the abort, a relatively gentle ride for astronauts in good physical condition.

The Crew Dragon can initiate an abort and free itself of a failing launch vehicle in just 700 milliseconds, according to Musk.

"It's way more than a human could do," he said. "It's occurring in a fraction of a second. There's a command for the engines to shut down, and then the abort system then presses up very rapidly, the SuperDracoss are ignited to initiate separation from the upper stage. All of this is occurring in literally a split second, and it's really quite remarkable how quickly those engines reach full thrust."

The SuperDracos keep the Crew Dragon pointed in the right direction using differential thrust, Musk said.

"So it's making those thrust adjustments at the almost millisecond level," he said. "It's very, very fast."


Illustration of the SpaceX Crew Dragon and Falcon 9 rocket during the company's uncrewed In-Flight Abort Test for NASA's Commercial Crew Program. This demonstration test of Crew Dragon's launch escape capabilities is designed to provide valuable data toward NASA certifying SpaceX's crew transportation system for carrying astronauts to and from the International Space Station.

Sunday's in-flight abort test builds on a Crew Dragon demonstration in 2015 that proved the craft's SuperDraco engines could safely boost itself away from the top of a rocket on the launch pad in the event of a preflight emergency.

The Crew Dragon successfully flew to the International Space Station in March 2019 on its first unpiloted space mission, named Demo-1. The round-trip six-day mission included a launch on a Falcon 9 rocket from Kennedy, an automated docking with the orbiting research laboratory, and a splashdown in the Atlantic Ocean.

But SpaceX suffered a setback the next month when the same Crew Dragon spacecraft was destroyed during an attempted test-firing of its SuperDraco engines on a test stand at Cape Canaveral.

Investigators determined the Crew Dragon explosion on the ground last April was caused by a leaky valve that allowed nitrogen tetroxide — the oxidizer that feeds the SuperDraco engines — into the abort propulsion system's high-pressure helium lines. When the system pressurized before ignition, the nitrogen tetroxide was driven back against the valve, leading to an ignition event that destroyed the vehicle.

SpaceX replaced the faulty valve with a "burst disk" to block the pathway and prevent similar leaks. The disk designed for rupture when the abort system pressurizes.

Musk said the Crew Dragon's abort system, which is integrated on the crew module itself instead of using a top-mounted launch abort tower like the Apollo spacecraft or Russia's Soyuz capsule, comes with the benefit of enabling an abort maneuver from before the time of liftoff all the way through the Falcon 9's ascent to orbit.

"The fact that the launch abort system is integrated with the spacecraft, with the SuperDraco thrusters in the sidewall, means that you have launch abort capability all the way to orbit, whereas previously with launch escape tower — because that's top heavy — that is discarded 20 or 30 percent of the time into flight."

SpaceX designed the SuperDracos with another purpose in mind.

The company originally intended to use the high-power engines to slow the Crew Dragon for propulsive vertical landings on solid ground, aiming to achieve a helicopter-like precision similar to the braking burns and landings performed by SpaceX's Falcon rocket boosters.


SuperDraco thrusters on a ground test article of SpaceX's Crew Dragon spacecraft fire during a hover test in 2015, when SpaceX intended to use the thrusters for landings. Credit: SpaceX

SpaceX gave up on that goal after determining it would be too difficult to certify the propulsive landings for crew missions, company officials said.

The SuperDracos proved to be a difficult part of the Crew Dragon's development, Bridenstine said.

The escape engines appeared to perform well Sunday, along with other Crew Dragon systems, according to Musk.

While wreckage from the Falcon 9 booster fell to Earth at high speed, the Crew Dragon's parachutes slowed the capsule for an ocean landing. Winds in the splashdown area were near the lim it for a Crew Dragon return.

The winds at the splashdown zone were around 18 mph, or 16 knots, providing data on the performance of the parachutes under more stressing conditions than they might see on a typical return, Musk said.

U.S. military search and rescue teams deployed in the Atlantic Ocean practiced procedures to approach the capsule after splashdown. The teams from Patrick Air Force Base just south of Cape Canaveral would rescue astronauts from the spacecraft after a launch abort.

SpaceX's "Go Searcher" recovery ship hoisted the capsule from the sea and returned the Crew Dragon to Port Canaveral, wh ere teams will offload the ship to begin inspections and analysis.

The schedule for the Demo-2 launch with Hurley and Behnken will partly be determined by a NASA decision in the coming weeks on whether to extend the length of their mission at the space station from a short-duration stay of about a week to an expedition that might last as long as several months.

Bridenstine said the Demo-2 crew will have to undergo additional training to perform duties on the space station if NASA extends Hurley and Behnken's mission.

Kathy Lueders, NASA's commercial crew program manager, suggested Friday that the Demo-2 mission might be ready for launch as soon as the first half of March.

But it's more likely to happen in April — at the soonest — when the space station's crew is downsized to three people through October, assuming no U.S. crew launches in that period.

"We might look at making that first crew be a long-duration crew for the purpose of getting the max amount of capability out of the International Space Station," Bridenstine said. "Bascially we'll be able to maintain a larger presence of astronauts on the space station for a longer period of time.

"I'm not saying this is the direction we're going to go," he added. "We just haven't decided, yet and we're working through it ... Given what looks like to be a very successful test (Sunday), we now have options, so that's a positive thing."

Boeing, NASA's other commercial crew partner, is readying its Starliner crew capsule for its first space mission with people later this year. The first Starliner unpiloted orbital test flight in December failed to reach the space station due to a software timing error that caused the ship to burn too much fuel just after an otherwise-successful deployment in space from a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket.

NASA is reviewing the results of the Starliner test flight to determine if the next Boeing crew capsule launch can carry astronauts, as officials originally intended. Boeing astronaut Chris Ferguson and NASA astronauts Mike Fincke and Nicole Mann are assigned to the first Starliner crew flight.

When Boeing's first piloted Starliner mission might fit on the space station's schedule of visiting vehicles remains uncertain. NASA has already approved an extended-duration Starliner test flight that could allow Ferguson, Fincke and Mann to remain on the space station up to six months.

Chris Cassidy is set to launch to the station in April on a Russian Soyuz spacecraft with two Russian crewmates. Cassidy will fly on the last Soyuz seat under NASA control before the commercial crew vehicles begin flying regular crew rotation missions, a milestone to come after the initial test flights with astronauts.

Cassidy is scheduled to return to Earth in October, at which point the space station will not have a U.S. crew member unless NASA buys more Soyuz seats from Russia or a commercial crew vehicle successfully docks at the orbiting outpost.

While it looks increasingly likely at least one of NASA's commercial crew transportation providers will launch astronauts to the space station before October, Bridenstine said Sunday the agency will proceed with plans to procure at least one more Soyuz seat from Roscosmos, the Russian space agency.

"As much confidence as we have in the team, I think it's probably not prudent to go in that direction," he said. "I think it's important that we have options ... and make sure that the International Space Station has continuous American presence, so we're not ready to make any adjustments on that front. We're going to buy another Soyuz seat."

NASA has paid the Russian government some $3.9 billion since the space shuttle's retirement in 2011 for seats on Soyuz crew ferry vehicles flying to and from the space station.

Once the Boeing and SpaceX crew capsules are declared operational, the U.S. capsules will begin flying Russian cosmonauts. NASA astronauts will continue launching and landing on Soyuz spaceships through an "in-kind" arrangement involving no exchange of funds.

The arrangement ensures at least one Russian cosmonaut and one U.S. astronaut are always on the space station, even if the Soyuz, Crew Dragon or Starliner is grounded by a technical concern.

With a U.S. crew vehicle on the cusp of launching astronauts into orbit for the first time since 2011, Musk said the space industry is at a "profound" moment.

"I think the United States is very much a nation of explorers," he said. "Anyone who has an adventurous bone in their body is going to be very excited about this, and I think it will help reinvigorate interest in space."

"I think it's something that matters to all Americans and to people worldwide."

Paleopulo

Пишут, что Douglas Hurley будет командиром корабля, а Robert Behnken - пилотом.

azvoz

#3009
на 2 квартал уже планируют?
Видимо хотят запуск 12 апреля.
..полетит леди Гага.

Димитър

Ходят слухи, что НАСА потребовала ещё испитаний парашутов... 

Алексей

В воскресенье посетил Johnson Space Center - очень удивился, что нету макета Дракона, который вроде как привозили год назад. Спросил у гида, он сказал что макет в новой конфигурации приедет в феврале. Так что со сроком полета я бы не был очень оптимистичен.
PS Старлайнер и Орион на месте.

Paleopulo

ЦитироватьДимитър написал:
Ходят слухи, что НАСА потребовала ещё испитаний парашутов...  
На пресс-конференции вроде говорили про 2 испытания парашютов Марк3.

tnt22

ЦитироватьNASA Commercial Crew: Returning Human Spaceflight to America

NASA's Kennedy Space Center

27 янв. 2020 г.

NASA and Commercial Crew Program partners Boeing and SpaceX are preparing to launch astronauts from Florida's Space Coast.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WrX0287xk10https://www.youtube.com/embed/WrX0287xk10 (1:23)

Димитър

Маск сказал: первый пиллотируемый полет "через несколько недель" - во втором квартале года 

Небось на 12 апреля хочет выпендриться...
КАКТОТАК
----------------------------
Моделью ракеты можно достичь модели Марса

Max Andriyahov

ЦитироватьАлександр Шлядинский написал:
Небось на 12 апреля хочет выпендриться...
Как Колумбия STS-1))

azvoz

ЦитироватьАлександр Шлядинский написал:
Небось на 12 апреля хочет выпендриться...
И полетит леди Гага.

metelica

ЦитироватьMax Andriyahov написал:
 
ЦитироватьАлександр Шлядинский написал:
Небось на 12 апреля хочет выпендриться...
Как Колумбия STS-1))
Тогда надо в 2021 году лететь. Упс...

tnt22

Цитировать Michael Sheetz✔@thesheetztweetz 10:58 PM - Feb 3, 2020

NASA officials say SpaceX will complete construction of the Crew Dragon capsule for its first operational mission "3 months earlier than originally planned," according to the GAO, citing manufacturing efficiencies and SpaceX modifying facilities and bringing in more resources.