Recommended Posts

Yep. We don't know the weight comparison relative to a metal-fabricated one, but it's a sure bet that it'll be on the order of 1/5 ~ 1/8th as heavy. Especially since SpaceX doesn't use baffles, helping the weight even more. These tanks will be the most advanced ever built. Hell, this whole Spacecraft will be the most advanced thing to ever fly -- Air or Space. And we thought Dragon 2 was some slick #### ... wait till ITS has a Demo Flight. We'll think we've gone to Nerd Heaven. :yes: 

To top it all, that compressed carbon fibre, when applied to aeroframes, might well make Musks dream of an electric jetliner possible thanks to the much lower thrust to weight ratio...

  • Like 2
1 hour ago, FloatingFatMan said:

Use it for vehicle frames too, which will reduce the weight of Musk's Tesla's even more...

 

1 hour ago, DocM said:

Too rigid. Vehicles need the materials ton progressively crush like metals for crash protection. Aerospace grade aluminum is just fine.

That's what my brother and I were discussing. They're great for Aerospace use (Aircraft, Spacecraft, etc) after everyone does recalculations and "learns how to fly again", but not so good for Cars. We need those superstructures to give, for safety reasons, in impacts. Those forces have to be absorbed and dissipated in and at the materials rather than our bodies. Better that a frame absorb it and then snap in half than a human spine. :yes:

 

There's still a use for metals, don't get me wrong. LOTS of uses. Just we'll use a lot less of them, and the weight & fuels savings will be a boon to all sectors of Environmental Concerns, Commerce and Industry. And the Jobs -- and the Education, Industry Infrastructure and Ecosystems needed to support all of that -- will be big business ten years from now.

 

Oh, and now with the advent of ISRU Technologies, especially the new discovery of that "Easy Ethanol from CO2" process (with a 60% efficiency yield!) ... keep TWO Ethanol (CH3+CH3) from this process (store it, break it down, or convert as below; whatever), use the "extra" stuff you're getting from it and you've got H2O plus Nitrogen now. You're now removing all of this CO2 from Earth's Environment that everyone is crying about -- Planet saved and we've now got fuel. Apply some "easy chemistry" and turn that Ethanol into Methanol (CH3-OH).

 

As a sidenote -- Methanol should probably be converted into Methane (CH4) if we wanna store it for later .. way safer. Another discussion for another thread, VAST number of uses here too. :yes:

 

They're just getting started with the Composites Industry. :D Gonna be huge. HUUUUUUGE. Can't wait.

That would be OK if the carbon members can take high single point side loads of an accident without shattering. I've been in a racer with steel roll cage and it worked great in a 140 mph oopsie, but there was a helluva dent in each of the tubes at their IP's. Carbon? Show me.

8 hours ago, DocM said:

That would be OK if the carbon members can take high single point side loads of an accident without shattering. I've been in a racer with steel roll cage and it worked great in a 140 mph oopsie, but there was a helluva dent in each of the tubes at their IP's. Carbon? Show me.

I can't, but perhaps the guys making this stuff can...

Motor Sports Assn. standard is a steel roll cage.  Last I checked FIA was similar, with a slight difference wrt the additives. Both require the main tubes to be one piece, including the bends, which makes fabbing carbon on a mandrel an issue.

 

MSA,

 

Material Specifications


1.4.1. Specifications of the tubes used:


Minimum Material


Cold Drawn Seamless Unalloyed Carbon Steel, containing a maximum of 0.3% of carbon. Note: For an unalloyed carbon steel the maximum content of additives is 1.7% for manganese and 0.6% for other elements.

Edited by DocM
  • 2 weeks later...

Their timeline shows very soon, with spaceship "Grasshopper" tests around Q3 of 2018 and orbital tests in 2020.  They're cryo testing the full scale LOX tank and firing the Raptor engine now, and items which can't be discussed.

 

They're also negotiating a deal for ~$2.5-3 billion worth of top-end aerospace composites, and there's a deal for advanced radiation tolerant semiconductor wafers.

 

Thiis train has left the station.

 

Timeline

ITS-Timeline-1280.jpg

  • Like 1

Not sure why they call it the interplanetary transport. I guess technically if it goes to Mars it could be called that. Our tech is pretty prohibitive for the years' journeys to the other planets.

Just now, patseguin said:

Not sure why they call it the interplanetary transport. I guess technically if it goes to Mars it could be called that. Our tech is pretty prohibitive for the years' journeys to the other planets.

Because it can pretty much go anywhere up to and including Saturnian Space. That is the limits of the technology, currently. Saturn. :yes: Whether Humans can deal with the journey? That remains to be seen. I'd say yes, but it'd be difficult.

46 minutes ago, patseguin said:

Not sure why they call it the interplanetary transport. I guess technically if it goes to Mars it could be called that. Our tech is pretty prohibitive for the years' journeys to the other planets.

It's designed primarily to carry up to 100 people and up to 450 tonnes of cargo to Mars and return. Use fewer crew, less cargo and preposition propellant depots (or propellant "factories" using indigenous resources) and it could go about anywhere in the solar system. It's also going to be FAST - this spaceship will have a max thrust of over 5 million pound-force, 21+ meganewtons, in a vacuum. Musk has also discussed adding plasma engines down the road.

 

There have also been major recent advances in life support systems, water processing etc.

 

Yeah, interplanetary. As in the Moon, Mars & it's moons, Ceres, the outer Jovian moons, Saturn's moon Titan etc.

Edited by DocM
  • Like 1
30 minutes ago, DocM said:

It's designed primarily to carry up to 100 people and up to 450 tonnes of cargo to Mars and return. Use fewer crew, less cargo and preposition propellant depots (or propellant "factories" using indigenous resources) and it could go about anywhere in the solar system. It's also going to be FAST - this spaceship will have a max thrust of over 5 million pound-force, 21+ meganewtons, in a vacuum. Musk has also discussed adding plasma engines down the road.

 

There have also been major recent advances in life support systems, water processing etc.

 

Yeah, interplanetary. As in the Moon, Mars & it's moons, Ceres, the outer Jovian moons, Saturn's moon Titan etc.

So, the max thrust won't be as much as the Saturn V of the old Apollo program? (7.5 million pounds of thrust)

20 minutes ago, robertwnielsen said:

So, the max thrust won't be as much as the Saturn V of the old Apollo program? (7.5 million pounds of thrust)

The thrust quoted is the upper stage -- the business end. Lower stage is gonna be upwards of 13~18 million, or more depending on payload and destination requirements.

2 minutes ago, Unobscured Vision said:

The thrust quoted is the upper stage -- the business end. Lower stage is gonna be upwards of 13~18 million, or more depending on payload and destination requirements.

Ah. I wonder how much G-force that kind of thrust will generate?

8 minutes ago, robertwnielsen said:

Ah. I wonder how much G-force that kind of thrust will generate?

They'd control the thrust to limit it to 3g at launch, maximum. That's for Crew Safety. For Cargo Missions, likely 4g's.

1 minute ago, Unobscured Vision said:

They'd control the thrust to limit it to 3g at launch, maximum. That's for Crew Safety. For Cargo Missions, likely 4g's.

IIRC, the shuttle generated about 3g at maximum, so that would make sense. Although, 4g wouldn't be terrible, for humans. A little uncomfortable, I would imagine, but easily survivable.

  • Like 2
1 hour ago, patseguin said:

 

 

33 minutes ago, Unobscured Vision said:

The thrust quoted is the upper stage -- the business end. Lower stage is gonna be upwards of 13~18 million, or more depending on payload and destination requirements.

No. The ITS Booster has 42 Raptor engines, for a liftoff thrust of about 29 million pound-force (128 meganewtons) of sea level thrust. Saturn V was 7.891 million pound-force (35.1 meganewtons)

 

The ITS Booster is a beast.

  • Like 2
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I have been using Firefox for years.
    • I'd trust open source stuff on github more then closed source binaries from Microsoft.
    • OpenAI is now rolling out Lockdown Mode to more ChatGPT users by Pradeep Viswanathan Back in February, OpenAI first announced Lockdown Mode for users who want the most comprehensive protection from potential attacks. At the time of the announcement, the company mentioned that this feature was available to a small set of highly security-conscious users, including executives or security teams at leading organizations. Today, OpenAI announced that Lockdown Mode is now rolling out to all personal ChatGPT accounts, including Free, Go, Plus, and Pro, and also self-serve ChatGPT Business accounts. Users can enable the feature from ChatGPT Settings > Security when it is available for their account. When Lockdown Mode is enabled, ChatGPT limits or disables several features that connect to the web or external services. These include live web browsing, Deep Research, Agent Mode, and more. Here is the complete list of services that will be disabled in Lockdown Mode: Live web browsing: Web browsing is limited to accessing only cached content. Search results may be limited, unavailable, or stale. Image support: ChatGPT may not display images in regular responses or retrieve images from the web. Users can still upload image files, and image generation remains available where it is otherwise available. Deep research: Deep research is disabled. Agent mode: Agent mode is disabled. Canvas networking: Users cannot approve Canvas-generated code to access the network. File downloads: ChatGPT cannot download files for data analysis. ChatGPT can still operate on your manually uploaded files. It is important to note that Lockdown Mode does not completely block prompt injections from appearing in content that ChatGPT processes. For example, a malicious instruction could still be present in an uploaded file or cached web content. However, the mode is designed to reduce the ways such an attack could send sensitive information outside the conversation. Along with Lockdown Mode, OpenAI today also announced that the Active sessions feature is now available across ChatGPT accounts and workspace types. This feature allows users to review where their account is signed in across devices and end sessions if required. A session will have the following information displayed: Device or browser information. First-party app context, such as ChatGPT, Codex, or API Platform. Approximate location. Sign-in date and time. Whether the device is a trusted device. Whether it is your current session. OpenAI highlighted that the Active sessions feature will not be available for accounts linked to an organization’s single sign-on setup, including SAML or OIDC.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Rookie
      moog19 went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Mentor
      grik went up a rank
      Mentor
    • Dedicated
      JKR earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • One Year In
      CHUNWEI earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Conversation Starter
      FBSPL earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      487
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      270
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      75
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      68
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      63
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!