Vector Wolverine от Vector Space

Автор Salo, 08.08.2016 22:52:42

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tnt22

ЦитироватьAlba Orbital PocketQube Satellite Launch Cluster Service

Alba Orbital

Опубликовано: 4 апр. 2018 г.

Alba Orbital are selling PocketQube launches via their AlbaPod PocketQube deployer. These start at 25k euro on a flight proven launch vehicle. For more information please visit www.albaorbital.com
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tnt22

ЦитироватьJim Cantrell‏ @jamesncantrell 16 ч. назад

More progress as our @vectorspacesys second stage of the Vector-R launch vehicle comes together. Wiring and components being installed on interstage structures. The Vector-R traces heritage & design back to the Garvey Nanosat Launch Vehicle (NLV) which Vector acquired in 2016

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tnt22

ЦитироватьVECTOR‏ @vectorspacesys 4 ч. назад

Successful week in Kodiak, Alaska. Excited to report we completed RF integration w/ ground comms systems & s-band transmitters, successful LOX/propylene fueling ops & work with partner @AlbaOrbital.
Thanks @kdmgabe @kodiakmirror for spending time w/ us. One step closer to orbit!

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tnt22

ЦитироватьJim Cantrell‏ @jamesncantrell 9 ч. назад

Images from @vectorspacesys pathfinder operations this week on Kodiak Island preparing for our October launch there. Objectives of operation included: Demonstrating vehicle transfer and launch preparations, fueling operations, payload operations & telemetry compatibility testing

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triage

Старенькое на сайте оператора космодрома на Аляске, первая фраза это не Вектор
Цитировать https://akaerospace.com/news/vector-runs-rocket-tests-kodiak

Friday, July 13, 2018 - 10:15



GABE STUTMAN gabe@kodiakdailymirror.com
Friday, July 13, 2018 - 10:15

GABE STUTMAN gabe@kodiakdailymirror.com

KODIAK — A spaceflight startup rehearsed its launch procedures this week at the Kodiak spaceport.

Arizona-based Vector Launch, Inc. conducted a telemetry test on Tuesday, to check communications between the rocket and the spaceport command center. On Wednesday, it performed a fueling test.

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During both, employees raised a 43-foot replica of the "Vector-R" rocket to a vertical position on launch pad C, where the company hopes to launch later this year.

The actual Vector-R rocket – to be used for transporting small satellites into orbit, quickly – is currently being built at the company's manufacturing center in Tucson, Ariz.

The model, called a Manufacturing Engineering Unit or an MEU –  stood-in as employees practiced loading a simulation payload, moving the vehicle fr om its processing facility to the launch pad, standing it up using a mechanical arm called a "strongback," and fueling procedures.

"We're doing this now to mitigate risk," said John Garvey, an executive and one of the company's co-founders.

The MEU looked identical to the Vector-R on the outside, but on the inside it lacked an engine, fuel tanks, and some electronic equipment.

Garvey said one of the purposes of the test is to acquaint Alaska Aerospace Corporation employees with Vector's launch procedures.

"We are 'socializing' the rocket, so when we move to the next phase, they'll be comfortable with our operations," he said.

On Wednesday afternoon, a team of 10 Vector employees – executives, engineers and operations staff – prepped the model for its second test in two days.

Garvey stressed that to be competitive, his company will need to prove that its rockets can launch more efficiently – and more quickly – than the competition. The "R" in Vector-R stands for "rapid."

"We're focusing on how we can shorten the trip," he said, as workers hitched the vehicle to a truck.

Vector is one of a number of startups in the spaceflight industry looking to capitalize on the booming small satellite market. Customers including the U.S. military, which is looking to implement a more nimble satellite network, and private companies engaged in mapping, imaging and communications services, are looking for ways to get their technology into orbit as efficiently as possible. And to do it repeatedly.

Garvey counted the minutes as they passed. He checked the time as the gate of the Payload Processing Facility opened. The PPF is a cavernous room meant for preparing the rocket's cargo.

On the short drive down to the launch pad, Garvey, who wore circular 1960s-style sunglasses and a brown bomber jacket with "Vector" on the lapel, and Shaun Coleman, the company's first investor and public relations director, trailed closely behind in an SUV.

Garvey expressed lofty visions for his company. He said in the future, Vector hopes to launch multiple rockets per day.

For now, however, the company is still prepping for its first orbital launch, which it hopes will be later this year in Kodiak.

After about five minutes, the model arrived at the launch pad – a gravel patch about the size of a tennis court, at the edge of Narrow Cape, overlooking the Pacific ocean. It was slowly lifted into a standing position via a hydraulic ram.

A handful of Vector employees worked around the vehicle, while an Alaska Aerospace safety officer looked on.

While vertical, employees hooked liquid oxygen tanks to the MEU, and burned off propylene, to simulate fueling.

Workers wore welding masks, bibs and thick gloves for protection fr om the liquid oxygen, whose freezing temperature can burn skin.

Since the model did not contain fuel tanks, the oxygen dissipated in the air, creating a mist.

During a real launch, fueling would take by far the longest of any of the pre-launch procedures – about 2-3 hours. And much more fuel would be needed, roughly 3,000 gallons worth. For the test, the amount burned was about the size of a propane tank in a small gas grill.

Garvey said he was pleased with the result.

"It was 25-minutes from when we rolled out of the building to going vertical," he said.

Certain needs were identified. For one, the launch pad will need to be modified. Concrete will have to be poured over the part of the asphalt that the rocket launches over, to prevent flying debris. And a gate will need to be built on the pad's rear fence to allow for the blast to exit without doing damage.

The company is also looking to get a better network connection to the pad to enable live streaming in high-definition.

Vector hopes to test using the actual Vector-R later this year, and launch at some point after that. Though it's executed multiple tests since forming in 2016, including a suborbital launch from Camden, Ga. in 2017, the company is still anticipating its first orbital launch.

Vector secured approximately $22 million in venture capital funding since launching two years ago. It also inked a deal worth up to $60 million with York Space Systems, a Colorado-based spacecraft company, and received $4.3 million from DARPA, a military agency.

Coleman said the company is currently in the process of closing out another round of funding.

The Vector-R will carry two satellites – "PocketQube" nanosatellites manufactured by Glasgow, Scotland-based Alba Orbital – into polar orbit.

Garvey said Kodiak was chosen for a number of reasons, including its relative lack of vehicle traffic and its location over the Pacific ocean, which provides opportunity to launch in an azimuth, or flight path, far from population centers.

Dry runs, dress rehearsals and on-site tests are meant to work out the kinks. For example, wh ere to get supplies in Kodiak in a pinch. During a test on Tuesday, the crew realized the proper fuel line adapter was not delivered. So it went to Island Hydraulics, in Kodiak, wh ere it found the needed piece.

Engineers are also getting used to the climate in Alaska, noticing that hydraulic fuel, for example, behaves differently in 40-degree temperatures than it does in the Arizona desert.

"We've worked in temperature extremes in the heat – we have not worked in temperature extremes in the cold," Coleman said. "One of the things that we are going to do is as the temperature changes, we're going to perform some of the operations again, to get acclimated to the colder environment."

Garvey said that while he wants to move quickly, the company has chosen to take a relatively measured approach relative to other spaceflight startups. They've invested heavily in what's called CONOPS, or concept of operations, to model systems before they are implemented. They have commissioned drawings that some might consider unnecessary.

"A lot of people do not invest as much in CONOPS, and they get bit," Coleman said.

"It's painful because you want to run faster," Garvey said. "But we're investing in the future."
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tnt22

ЦитироватьJim Cantrell‏ @jamesncantrell 30 июл.

Probably the last time that a @vectorspacesys Block 1 vehicle (orbital/carbon fiber) shares an assembly line with an original Block 0 vehicle (Suborbital/Alum). Together here is the last Block 0.003 to fly in a month (without skins) & first Block 1 1001 vehicle for Oct launch.



tnt22

ЦитироватьJim Cantrell‏ @jamesncantrell 8 авг.

Some have asked why I didn't attend @SmallSat this week. Simple. We are both damned busy and damned serious about our first block 1 launch this October. Also last of Block 0 vehicles being readied for flight in next few weeks. #nosparetime

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tnt22

ЦитироватьJim Cantrell‏ @jamesncantrell 22 авг.

Just another Monday in the rocket business @vectorspacesys . Meetings, hardware, meetings. Stay tuned as a lot of important milestones unfold between now and the end of the year. In foreground our last Block 0 vehicle being used to test the mobile launch pad (TEL).

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tnt22

ЦитироватьJim Cantrell‏ @jamesncantrell 31 авг.

Mission Control up and running @vectorspacesys this afternoon getting ready for upcoming launches. Our launch vehicles will take off from places like Alaska and our mission engineers will remain in Huntington Beach. Part of how we launch by the 100's


tnt22

ЦитироватьJim Cantrell‏ @jamesncantrell 6 сент.

Our mobile launch pad @vectorspacesys (also known as TEL) being readied for a September Block 0 test launch and then shipment to Alaska for our Block 1 launch in October. Stay tuned




7 сент.

Our next @vectorspacesys Block 0 Vector-R undergoing testing on the mobile launch platform. Getting real ! The next gen Block 1 orbital vehicle will launch from this same platform in Alaska later this year


tnt22

ЦитироватьJim Cantrell‏ @jamesncantrell 13 сент.

First stage carbon fiber flight tanks start arriving at our @vectorspacesys Tucson facility getting ready for 2019 production ramp up while our test vehicles are being integrated in our Huntington Beach facility


tnt22

ЦитироватьJim Cantrell‏ @jamesncantrell 14 сент.

Things are getting real when you're ordering fuel in these quantities @vectorspacesys


tnt22

ЦитироватьJim Cantrell‏ @jamesncantrell 14 сент.

Chad Anderson of @SpaceAngels proudly raising his first Vector-R rocket as he leads an expedition of investors to @vectorspacesys


tnt22

ЦитироватьHEIGHT=48]https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/1008233173761720321/-HlFwCkR_bigger.jpg[/IMG];Jim Cantrell‏ @jamesncantrell[/url] 14 сент.

The @SpaceAngels get a tour of the high bay where the first @vectorspacesys Vector-R Block 1 being assembled as they watch


tnt22

ЦитироватьSpace Angels‏ @SpaceAngels 15 сент.

A huge thank you to @jamesncantrell, John Garvey and the @vectorspacesys team for a truly spectacular morning and for putting @spacecapital to work #Expedition18

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VECTOR‏ @vectorspacesys 15 сент.

Thank you @SpaceAngels for coming by to check out our Huntington Beach office. We loved sharing our progress & seeing how many SpaceAngels we can fit in our new mobile LCC!


tnt22

ЦитироватьJeff Foust‏ @jeff_foust 19 мин. назад

Greg Orndorff, Vector: planning a suborbital test flight of our Block 0 test vehicle this Friday in Mojave. Then start orbital launches from Kodiak, Alaska; awaiting FAA license.
#AIAASpace

tnt22

ЦитироватьVECTOR‏ @vectorspacesys 17 сент.

First, 1st stage engine test at our new engine test facility in Arizona.

Video (0:16)

tnt22

ЦитироватьJim Cantrell‏ @jamesncantrell 2 мин. назад

Second orbital vehicle B1002 coming together @vectorspacesys Tucson facility for launch early 2019


tnt22

ЦитироватьJim Cantrell‏ @jamesncantrell 25 сент.

Propylene is a chemical cousin of Propane and @vectorspacesys uses it as a rocket fuel eliminating turbo pumps & regenerative cooling used on other small rockets like #RocketLab & #SpaceX. We also received a patent on the LP1 Vector engine this month.
https://t.co/aAIaV5mYUs

Pirat5

ЦитироватьGreg Orndorff, Vector: planning a suborbital test flight of our Block 0 test vehicle this Friday in Mojave .
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