LupusDei
curious alien
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2017
- Posts
- 4,283
Problem is, they have very limited space at their Texas pad and the ground isn't even ten meters over the water table. So, even though the rocket dug quite a trench spontaneously, it's not quite what they really can do there. (While it's technically possible to build into the groundwater, that has own can of worms.)I’ve seen The Incredibles so even I know big rockets need diversion trenches. It’s a major plot point.
At their new Florida pad they are installing a water deluge system (that spray massive amounts of water unto/into the exhaust, making it easier to manage), but in Texas they neither have readily freshwater source (we talk millions of gallons; saltwater is nasty and would leave dozens of tons of salt behind upon evaporation) nor obvious options of drainage that wouldn't threaten federally protected wildlands.
They might get away with just actively cooled armoured diveverter(s) and that's what they're likely intend to build there. Rumour is, they had already designed the thing and even had some parts on site... just decided to not wait for it and see how it goes without any mitigation.
A rocket motor with thousands of tons of thrust is just a nuke detonating in slow motion.
Yup, the rocket was lifting out of an active volcano of own making. Folks going over the replays allegedly have spot a chunk of something (likely concrete) five meters across briefly hovering hundred meters in the air alongside the rocket. Fun is, it's not one big engine either, but an array of engines in several concentric layers. In between those there's practically guaranteed to be upward suction zones. That thing was shot rocks and dust at, at energies equal to tank guns, and it still somehow flew for over four minutes, albeit leaking oxygen and hydraulic liquid...