It seems to be news, so most of you probably heard that there was an explosion on the pad at LC-40 this morning, leading up to a static test fire for the upcoming launch of the AMOS satellite.
What we know so far: No one was injured, but the bird (a $200M payload) was lost. It’s a setback for Spacecom, which was about to be purchased by China pending a successful deployment. It happened prior to ignition, and SpaceX is calling it a “pad anomaly,” so it doesn’t seem to have anything to do with the rocket itself. But it will be a setback in SpaceX’s aggressive fall schedule until they determine the cause and how to prevent it in the future, and repair the pad.
It’s worth noting that they won’t be launching crew from that pad, but from 39B. But Phil McAlister and Kathy Lueders will want to know if the abort system would have saved crew had they been on top of the rocket. The immediate interesting question to me is whether or not they had any warning. The rocket itself has failure onset detection systems to trigger an abort, but it’s unclear if the pad itself does, and how much warning they would have had to pull the D-ring on the Dracos. Phil and Kathy had also better brace for a very stupid Congressional hearing, and we can all expect to hear a lot of illogical nonsense about how SpaceX should forget about Mars, and how this proves that reusable rockets don’t work.
[Update a couple minutes later]
One point as follow up to that last graf: SpaceX had been requesting to fuel with crew aboard, and NASA had been considering it. That’s probably out the window now.
[Update a couple more minutes later]
There were nine more flights scheduled this year. That was always unlikely, but it’s certainly not going to happen now.
[Update a few minutes later]
Well, this is timely. The OIG has released a status report on commercial crew certification.
[Update a couple minutes later]
How this will affect Spacecom. Shares are down with the news. I’d call it a buying opportunity.
[Update a couple more minutes later]
Also worth noting that it’s been a bad couple days for launch. Long March had a failure yesterday, and the Chinese have been mum about it (as usual).
[Update a few minutes later]
Jeff Foust already has a story about the potential ripple effects for SpaceX, SES, and the rest of the affected industry.
[Update a few minutes later]
And here‘s Loren Grush’s story.
[Update a couple minutes later]
And from Miri Kramer.
[Update a while later]
The only good news to come out of this. https://t.co/mpnoJwuBZm
— Apostle To Morons (@Rand_Simberg) September 1, 2016
[Update a few minutes later]
Joe Pappalardo probably has the best take at this point.
[Update a while later]
Well, this is bad news.
Loss of Falcon vehicle today during propellant fill operation. Originated around upper stage oxygen tank. Cause still unknown. More soon.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) September 1, 2016
[Update a while later]
Aaaaaand here’s the video. I’ve heard that people felt it in Orlando. It may have been the largest explosion at the Cape in history.
[Update a few minutes later]
This is great news, if true.
It sounds like that there was
But I’m surprised they fuel the payload on the pad. I thought that storables were filled during integration.
[Update a couple minutes later]
OK, not such good news. Jon Goff reminded me that they use hydrazine for ACS in the upper stage. Though I’d still think they’d fuel that during horizontal integration, not on the pad.
[Late-morning update]
Here’s the full OIG report on Commercial Crew that just happened to come out today. I’ll probably do a separate blog post on it. I would note that the primary reason that it continues to slip, and that NASA has no apparently problem taking six months to do a two-week review, is that space, and American access to it, isn’t important.
[Update at noon]
[Late-afternoon update]
@jsmuir_ @SafeNotAnOption @PaulDalyROI @spacecom @stevenyoungsfn @wingod pic.twitter.com/TLDHgQN9Ge
— Astro Mouse (@AstroMiceRule) September 1, 2016
You make a good point Rand, but I’m equally critical of those rushing to Space X’s defense before the facts are known. The politics swing both ways.
Social media would be pretty useless if people weren’t allowed to rush to judgment before the facts were known.
This seriously sucks. I heard something of a hydrazine explosion, so that sounds as if it may have been the payload, not the Falcon that initiated the event. That doesn’t discount that some sort of systemic fault allowed the event to occur, and that would need to be addressed. But it would be nice to know that the SpaceX hardware is not the faulty link in the chain of events.
I doubt it’s the payload. You can see the fairing falling to the ground a few seconds after the explosion, and it looks in one piece. And the explosion appears to originate from the second stage’s fueling hookup. Guess we’ll know more in a few days.
Agreed. After seeing the footage, it does appear to be in the SpaceX upper stage, even right at the filling location it seems to me.
Rand> SpaceX is calling it a “pad anomaly,”
Not quite. They said that “there was an anomaly on the pad” which some people (including Eric Berger) thought excluded the rocket itself, but the consensus is that this is a misinterpretation and at this point SpaceX’s statement does not exclude a fault with the rocket itself while “on the pad”.
SpaceX’s statement in full:
SpaceX can confirm that in preparation for today’s static fire, there was an anomaly on the pad resulting in the loss of the vehicle and its payload. Per standard procedure, the pad was clear and there were no injuries.
They’re just saying what they know. My point is that until they know the cause, we can suspect the rocket, but we shouldn’t assume it.
Agreed. Unfortunately many people are interpreting “anomaly on the pad” as “anomaly with the pad” and excluding the rocket, based solely on SpaceX’s initial statement.
I thought static tests happened without the payload? Oh well.
It’s going to delay a couple of launches.
I think Falcon 9 Heavy is supposed to launch from a different pad (LC-39A) also in the Cape?
At least it didn’t happen with IDA-2 launch. I could care less about Facebook’s satellite…
They can still do launches from Vandenberg and LC-39A. So maybe those launches will get pushed up sooner assuming the problem isn’t in the rocket.
What it is going to do is push insurance rates for Falcon 9 launches up though. That’s good news for the launchers with more reliability (e.g. Atlas V, Ariane 5).
Why would it? It wasn’t a launch failure.
Doesn’t matter. The satellite blew up while it was in SpaceX’s possession. I hope they find out the causes and fix them but in the long run this accident won’t impact SpaceX much at all.
The satellite company is another matter though. They should have insurance on the satellite but they still won’t be able to operate the service on time.
But like I said, the owner is Facebook. So screw them.
Facebook isn’t the owner, just one of the transponder lessees.
Speaking as a lawyer and not an enthusiast, the video of the F9 going up on the pad is enough of an impetus for insurance carrier to jack up the rates. If it turns out this happened because of Space X pad practices even more so, and if it was do to super-chill O2, that could add to the tab and even make some customers insist they not use the practice for their satellites, which means Space X would have to expend more cores. Speculation at this point, but a plausible scenario.
The chances of it having anything to do with superchilled LOX are vanishingly small. That’s only in the first stage, I think. I think it’s more likely a hydrazine problem in the upper stage. It should be an impetus for SpaceX to get away from hypergolics.
SpaceX can’t get away from hypergolics easily. They use them to start the first stage (Green Dragon), and in the Dracos and SuperDracos (hydrazine).
Vandenberg can’t support the inclinations for most of their customers.
LC-39A is in the Cape. SES-10 was supposed to launch there in a Falcon 9.
No, but the manifest shows a lot of upcoming flights out of Vandenberg.
http://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=40231.0
That NSF tracked list was optimistic on dates even prior to this incident, but it showed three LC4E launches through the end of this year and eight more penciled in for 2017.
There are, but you can’t use Vandenberg for a launch originally scheduled for the Cape.
Sure but they have two launch sites in the Cape.
Godzilla’s point (can I not reply to comments once they are nested too deep?) is that SpaceX might be able to get LC39A going before repairing LC40. They were planning the inaugural launch of the Falcon Heavy there late this year, so the pad preparations must be close. I don’t now what other issues might affect the use of LC39A for commercial F9 launches.
I suspect their schedule had assumed the use of both pads. This will certainly cause delays.
When talking about ‘fueling and crew’ I was wondering – the erectors I’ve seen don’t really seem to have any way for crew to get -up- there. Do we have a basic idea of how they plan to load?
Is there some ‘improved’ erector, somewhere? How much does an erector cost, and where is the replacement for -that- coming from. (Because this one is toast.) They aren’t ‘Shuttle transporter expensive’ are they?
Crew will fly out of 39B, the Saturn/Shuttle pad, not 40.
Are you sure about it being the biggest bang in the Cape’s history? I thought the Atlas-Centaur fall back on March 2, 1965 was the biggest.
https://youtu.be/YViFMC-ejKQ
No, I’m not sure.
I’m pretty sure this is the biggest on the pad. The second biggest rocket after Saturn V was the Saturn IB, which weighed almost exactly the same as Falcon 9. It never failed.
The Titan IV A20 was much larger, but blew up almost a minute into flight.
Oh, and the Falcon 9 is about the size of the Saturn IB.
A couple seconds after the initial explosion something that looks like the payload fairing can be seen hitting the ground. Which suggests that a capsule on the stack might survive a similar explosion. Of course the top priority is figuring what went BOOM in the first place and making sure it doesn’t happen again.
Here is a video splicing this vehicle loss with the Dragon V2 abort test.
https://twitter.com/StateMachines/status/771535425328459780
The propellant tanks at the launch site seem fine. Considering how SpaceX’s launch sites are I think repairing it would take a couple of months at most.
Didn’t they have an issue with some valves on the second stage a couple of flights back? This is supposedly a different issue but once again its second stage issues.
Re: launch site repairs… take a couple of months at most.
Let’s hope so!
I wonder if the cameras (if any) that show the other side would be helpful, if there was a spark or leak or something.
I’ve watched the video several times, at all speeds, and in single frame. I could almost swear that the origin of the initial “event” is between the vehicle and the tower…almost. Given the oxygen venting around the fairing boattail, it is not far-fetched to think that something as simple as a static discharge could have ignited oxygen-saturated wire insulation. Once initiated, it would spread rapidly to anything flammable – as Apollo 1 should remind us all.
Well, if it had been only the Israeli AMOS that was lost, that would be too bad. But they also lost a microsat, the African National Deforestation Environmental Explorer.
The loss of AMOS and ANDEE together is just too much for this infantile space launch industry, so it’s time to shut it down.
Any type of reasonably humorous response to this would get me banned on every public forum everywhere simultaneously.
So let me say the payload of record for this rocket and the one of notoriety was the Israeli satellite, that went down in flames. Or in other words: Flamous AMOS.
Paul D. ball is in your court….
What did that rocket know about Hillary Clinton’s e-mails?
Good on ya, David. Even I didn’t have the nerve to make that joke.
State Department on Monday: “We found another hard drive that contained some of Hillary’s emails but unfortunately it was repurposed for a microsat that was on that Falcon 9 that blew up.”
Rand,
Responding to yours of 10:19 AM yesterday, why would they have been fueling the upper stage for a static test that (obviously) only involved the first stage engines?
The static fire isn’t only to check the booster’s engines, but also to check out the ground support equipment (GSE) and countdown procedures. The static fire is run as much as possible like an actual countdown. It can’t test the upper stage engine, of course, but it does test the fittings and valves associated with tanking and detanking LOX and PR-1 for both stages.