SpaceX submits Starship mishap report to the FAA

Aug 17, 2023
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I’m curious about what they said about the FTS (Flight Termination System) failures. To my knowledge, the U.S. has never had a Flight Termination System failure of this magnitude before. The self destruct command was sent, and the system only partially activated, and it didn’t work correctly. I have not seen a lot of press coverage of the FTS failures, but I imagine that this is being examined by the FAA in great detail.
 
Aug 5, 2020
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I’m curious about what they said about the FTS (Flight Termination System) failures. To my knowledge, the U.S. has never had a Flight Termination System failure of this magnitude before. The self destruct command was sent, and the system only partially activated, and it didn’t work correctly. I have not seen a lot of press coverage of the FTS failures, but I imagine that this is being examined by the FAA in great detail.
The flight termination system worked, it just worked far too slowly. No question at all about that, nor does this require a major engineering fix.
It did not "partially activate" it fully activated it can clearly be seen in the video activating on both tanks fine. It just took the seemingly over built rocket far too long to blow up thereafter. A very easy fix ,I would have thought, blowing more holes in tanks is not complicated.
The recent static fire seems to have validated the deluge system, though we have yet to see a full power test with all the engines running. I suspect it will hold up to all intents and purposes and it seems to have cleared up the major debris problems as well.
Far more important is why Starship has yet to have x 33 engines running simultaneously on the booster.
The lost development and particularly testing time on the booster, thanks to FAA delays, may well have hampered the project quite badly. Elon's fault for tweaking their tail by launching without a FAA Inspector on site.
The FAA will delay and delay yet again, because they really are not fit for purpose when it comes to this type of hardware rich development program.
Those are the real problems, not the FTS which is an easy fix.
 
Question: Why was an FAA inspector not on-site at the launch? It is not as if the launch was any sort of a surprise. Did the FAA simply not provide an inspector at the proper time and then expect the whole world to wait for them to get around to it?
 
Aug 22, 2023
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I’m curious about what they said about the FTS (Flight Termination System) failures. To my knowledge, the U.S. has never had a Flight Termination System failure of this magnitude before. The self destruct command was sent, and the system only partially activated, and it didn’t work correctly. I have not seen a lot of press coverage of the FTS failures, but I imagine that this is being examined by the FAA in great detail.
There was/has not been a lot of coverage of the FTS failure, the environmental lawsuit (which obviously has merit based on the results of the first launch), or SpaceX's failure to obtain a required permit "...to dump a vast amount of industrial wastewater into sensitive wetlands on a national wildlife refuge..." (San Antonia News-Express, 8/16/2023) prior to the recent static hot fire test. There is not a lot of negative press coverage about SpaceX. Perhaps that is due to a combination of Musk's billions and NASA's successful manned lunar landing per schedule based on their complete reliance of the Starship. The FAA proved unreliable with the Boeing 737 MAX disaster which resulted in the death of 346 people. Perhaps that, plus the results of the first Starship launch, will cause the FAA to be more critical in approving a second launch, and perhaps their fellow government agency, NASA, will allow the FAA to do it's job. The EPA should have been involved in the original approval, but it's easier to obtain forgiveness than permission.
 
The environmental aspect of what SpaceX is doing can never be zero negative effect on anything anywhere. It is an industrial activity. It has annoyed me many times to see "environmentalists" arguing that someplace is important to some species and thus should be off limits to anything (except their personal intrusions to recreate in the area), while, at the same time, cities are putting in new roads, shopping centers, housing developments that actually affect very similar ecosystems to a much greater negative extent.

The real issue is whether allowing SpaceX to use this area is worth the degradation levels that will need to occur. Considering how few areas are available for launching something like Super Heavy over water instead of land, it seems to me that all we can really call for is that SpaceX makes reasonable efforts to limit ecological effects. But, a lot of the "environmentalist" resistance is mainly a reflection of "not in my backyard", and so no level of effect is OK. This is especially true for the Native American claim of "sacred lands", too.

So, the courts are going to have to decide if they want to become a never ending impediment to SpaceX rocket development or make a prompt and decisive decision that the benefits to society outweigh the disbenefits to society.
 
Jun 25, 2023
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Mike excellent article. To me the FTS works, or it doesn't work; I would think a delay in seconds could cause more damage it the rockets deviates over land or the sensitive wetlands. But I do understand ability to fix, but broke is broke. Looking at the large 300 BBL white tanks six pack tanks that are very near the pad. Do these tanks store the deluge water or do they contain something else. The bullet tanks that are near also must contain the methane or the LOX they are still close. Does the launch site have correct separation between fuel storage and the launch site if there is a failure on the pad resulting in an explosion? The FAA is the lead agency on launch authorization, but I doubt they have biologist on their staff that can access the impacts of the site 's toxic runoff into the wetlands, or damage that was caused to the wetlands from the April launch attempt. They FAA probably would not know a Kemp Ridley from an explosive squib, both have hard shells. The petroleum industry would call the first launch attempt a NEAR MISS, and many lessons to be learned. Elon has got to get it right next trip.
 

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