It is a frustrating day, but in truth, the chance of a brand new rocket launching from a brand new launch pad on its first try was exciting, but unlikely.
Here's the summary of the cause of the abort from Elon:
"What happened was that an auxiliary liquid oxygen (LOX) fill tank had a manual vent valve incorrectly set to vent. The time it took to correct the problem resulted in significant LOX boil off and loss of helium, and it was the latter that caused the launch abort. LOX is used to chill the helium bottles, so we lose helium if there is no LOX to cool the bottles.
Although we were eventually able to refill the vehicle LOX tanks, the rate at which we could add helium was slower than the rate at which LOX was boiling away. There was no way to close the gap, so the launch had to be called off. In addition, we experienced an anomaly with the main engine computer that requires further investigation and was arguably reason in and of itself to postpone launch.
The next launch attempt is expected to occur in approximately mid-December, depending on the time required to resupply LOX and helium."
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In the end, what I saw was a team of very smart and experienced people, making each decision after careful consideration. No one wanted to abort, but in this business, you always do the right thing.
Saturday, November 26, 2005
Post-Launch Summary
Expected Launch Date
Based on the ensuing discussion after the abort, the team expects to get new LOX and helium delivered in time to allow for a launch in mid-December.
Digg It!LOX tanks are full
We are on hold at T-minus 10 minutes to refill Helium tanks and other procedures.
Digg It!The Money Shot
We're T-minus 25 minutes. There is no turning back now.
They are refueling both the LOX and the RP1.
During the operation, they unloaded about 15% of the RP1 from the rocket tanks. The reason they did this was because the LOX tanks and the RP1 tanks are adjacent to each other. If the RP1 tank is full, the fuels effect each other's temp. With a temperature differential between the LOX and RP1 of about 400F, that causes the LOX to boil-off much faster.
Since the race was to finish the operation before all the LOX boiled off, this move bought them some time. The LOX burn-off went from 8 gallons per minute to 4 gallons per minute. The delay took three hours in all. That's 750 gallons saved.
I told you they were smart.
T-minus 20 minutes.
T-Minus 45 Minutes to Launch!
Launch time is now 12:50pm Kwaj time, 4:50pm CA time.
Man. Tense doesn't even come close to describing it. Digg It!
Procedure in process - Team is still on the island
The problem has been fixed and team has started the operation to refill the LOX into the high-pressure tanks. The back-up LOX is stored in low-pressure tanks, so it needs to be pressurized.
Once it is in the pressurized tanks, they can then start refueling the rocket. Even though the rocket was full at countdown, refueling is necessary because of boil-off.
No status yet on timing.
Every minute counts as they race to stay within the launch window.
The Team is on the Island
As a result of the LOX burn-off during this process, we are now in do-or-die mode. If we do not get this procedure done before the launch window closes, the launch is off until a new shipment of LOX can be brought in.
The team here are some of the best in the industry. If it can be done, it will be done. Digg It!
Waiting for the crew
The camera is now trained on the dock where the crew will arrive. They should get there any minute.
Digg It!Status 11am
The team has been approved to land on the island. They are on their way.
The operation is expected to take 2 hours.
Once the operation is complete, they will be able to reassess whether the launch can occur today.
Status 10:51am
The team is waiting to be allowed back on the island. The manual adjustment required can only be done by hand and the LOX is burning off at 500 gallons per hour.
Unfortunately, we have to write up a procedure in order for the military to let us back on the island.
We are waiting painfully while the team writes up a procedure and waits for approval.
Launch will not happen for several hours. The danger of no launch today will be if we run out of LOX before we can fix the valve problem.
Very, very tense.
Valve not closing
We are now on indefinite hold.
A valve is not closing on one of the external LOX storage tanks.
They are waiting on a safety approval to send the SpaceX team back to the island to close off the valve manually.
The concern here is that if the procedure takes too long, LOX will boil off to a point where they will need more LOX. That's not good.
T-Minus 10 Minutes and on hold
The count is being held very briefly at T-Minus 10 minutes to ensure that all procedures have been properly finished.
Very tense and excited atmosphere.
All external variables are within acceptable ranges (weather).
Countdown on Hold
Due to the supply pump for Helium being slower than expected, the launch countdown has been put on hold.
The destination tank for the Helium is at 4900 PSI and the source is at 1400PSI. As a result, you need a very strong pump to keep pushing the helium into the rocket tanks. The pump is slower than expected but it is working.
Current expected launch time: 10am Kwaj time, 2pm CA time.
Quick rocket fuel primer for dummies:
LOX, liquid oxygen is stored in the tanks with Rocket Propellant 1 (RP1). In Stage 1 (the big bottom section of the rocket), the ratio is 2.2:1, LOX:RP1. In the 2nd stage, the upper section of the rocket, the ratio is 2.35:1. The LOX and RP1 are combined at the base of the rocket and accelerated by the turbo pump. That makes the rocket go.
The Helium is used to ensure a constant pressure in the fuel tanks, and is used to activate the valves in the rocket. In the 2nd stage, there is no turbo pump and the helium is essential to pressurizing the fuel tanks.
The steam you see being released from the rocket is the boil-off from the LOX.
By the way, the rocket goes very fast. The 1st stage accelerates the rocket to 6,850 miles per hour. That is very fast. It gets to this speed in 160 seconds.
But truthfully, if you know rockets, that is not really that fast. So after it jettisons the first stage, it accelerates to 17,000 miles per hour. Now that... is very fast.
Countdown has restarted. T-minus 40 minutes and counting.
Kimbal Digg It!
MISSION DAY!
T-minus 1 hour and 35 minutes to launch window.
Up at 3 am, the SpaceX crew have been filling the rocket with LOX (liquid oxygen). The Pad-Crew leave the island just before the LOX gets filled and retreat to an island three miles away. The Control Room is 26 miles from Omelek, the Rocket Island.
That's where I am. I feel like that Farside Cartoon where the dork leopard goes up to the other leopards as they stalk a deer. The dork leopard goes up to them and says: "What's up guys?"
A thank you to Gary Larson for teaching me when to keep my mouth shut.
The way that a launch day works is that SpaceX is given a window by the military of 6 hours in which to launch. In our case, we've been given 9am to 3pm Kwaj time (1pm to 7pm CA time).
If everything is a go at 9am, then we launch at 9am. Right now the only thing that might hold us up is winds. They are varying from 14-25 knots this morning. We would prefer to launch in lower winds.
Digg It!
Friday, November 25, 2005
What do Ronald Reagan and Mark Hamill have in common?
Both are bad actors and played a leading role in Star Wars.
To give you an idea of how big this structure is, imagine a football stadium. It's huge. It's probably 20 stories high. And it's scary looking.
So I asked a few folks around what the hell this thing once did. There answer (I'm not kidding here): it was used as a target for laser beams from space. It had Giant Frickin' Laazzzzeeerrrr beams shooting at it from satellites in space. Dr. Evil, are you listening?
These laser beams would be powerful enough to take out an ICBM heading towards the mainland. The idea, I guess, was to test the accuracy and power of these lasers.
Turns out, that was harder than it sounded. And more expensive. And harder. Did I say harder? In the end it was determined that in order to get the level of power you would need to make such a laser, you would have harness the energy from an atomic bomb each time you shot one laser.
Really, really hard.
The Star Wars laser system was even harder.
Turns out, even if we did figure it out, we would need an enormous number of these things to counter a major offensive. We could ask nicely for the enemy to send one missile at a time, but it's unlikely they would accommodate us.
So in the end, they stopped the program and focused on good old-fashioned missiles. Also really hard to make work, but not as hard, and missiles are cooler. And you get to see them up close and go "oooohhh..."
The launch is now less than 24 hours away. All final preparations are in place and pre-launch activity is done.
Now I'm going scuba diving.
Later,
Kimbal Digg It!
Thursday, November 24, 2005
Day 3: Life as a Target
After being in Kwaj for three days now, I started to wonder what all these posters were around town. They were quite stunning and other-worldly. My first assumption was that it was some unique anomoly of light caused by our unique location. Turns out I was wrong.
Kwaj is not only a launch site for missiles, it is also a giant target for testing missiles launched from the continental US. Those images are the re-entry trails of the ICBM's launched from California. I found this out on a bike ride around the island. There is a beautiful view on the north side of the island looking into the center of the atoll.
So I thought I'd look around some more and see what life is like on this mini-island.
First of all, there is a downtown.
It has a Macy's. Not a real Macy's, but they call it Macy's. You can get most things at Kwaj's Macy's as you can get in New York's Macy's, it just much, much smaller. And you can't be picky.
For example, they only sold women's sunglasses. If you're a man and you want sunglasses, then stop being picky and wear one of those nice, shapely sunglasses they're selling.
Truthfully, life is pretty good out here for the folks that choose Kwaj. Almost everyone on the island is non-military. I was told that less than 50 people worked for the army. Everyone else is part of contractor companies supporting the military operations in Kwaj.
Schools are apparently so good here that over 90% of students move on to college. The motivation might also be partly "get me off this tiny island" as much as good schooling, but you can't beat those odds.
On the ride around the island we saw people scuba diving, swimming and lazing on the beach; basically doing what you would imagine people would do on a beach resort. Except they live here and seem pretty darn happy. Everyone seems to be smiling.
It's hot, but it's not that hot. It's humid, but it's not... actually, it's damn humid. Still, I hear you get used to it after a while.
All round, not a bad place to live.
On the rocket front, the launch has been pushed a day due to a "request" from the army. The details are so infuriating but suffice it to say, we're pissed. Elon received a call at 4am in the morning saying that they need to move Spacex's long planned launch time because they need to "work" that day near the Spacex island.
So now the launch is Sunday our time, Saturday Mainland time.
'til next time.
Kimbal
Digg It!
Wednesday, November 23, 2005
Day 2: On Dr. Evil's Island
We spent the day today on the island where the rocket will launch from. It's several miles from Kwaj by boat. The island was once used as a launch pad during the cold war but since had been overtaken by brush and trees.
If you've seen Austin Powers, then you know what I mean by Dr. Evil. Truthfully, Austin Powers was a spoof of so many of the same movie: megalomaniac wants to take over the world. The first step of course being finding a remote island and building one of the various "world conquering" rockets.
When Spacex leased the island, the first thing they did was cut it down some of the brush to open land. Then they poured concrete down, and presto: instant launch pad. Sounds easy, except that almost every piece of equipment needs to be brought in over 5,000 miles by boat. You look at a truck a little differently when you know it's the only truck. As in, it's the only truck.
Did I mention we're in the middle of nowhere:
The team spent today attaching the final piece of the rocket: the chamber. that's the cone-like thing that goes on the bottom of the rocket. It looks kind of like a big bullhorn.
It's been a cool day. Rockets and islands. Hard to beat it.
Happy Thanksgiving and see you tomorrow.
Kimbal Digg It!
Kwajalein and Rockets
Hi Everyone,
I am officially in the middle of nowhere, writing a blog from Kwajalein Atholl, where Spacex, my brother's company, is launching their first rocket in a few days.
First of all, if you think you've been to a place that is fairly remote, then you should consider comparing it to Kwaj. For most of you, the best way to summarize it is that neither Fedex nor UPS deliver here. Now that's crazy.
Some Kwaj facts:
Guam is closest at 1,400 miles away, Hawaii is 2,100 miles away
It's the largest Atholl in the world
Population 2,500
It has a runway and a small military base.
Not much else to say actually. But it's perfect for launching rockets!
On the way in, we did a fly-by of the island where the rocket will launch from. It's about five miles from Kwajalein.
All rocket management happens in this Control Room. No one is allowed within three miles of the rocket when it launches. There are no windows in this room. It's freaky.


I don't know what the HUUUUGGGE structure is above the Spacex Control Room, but it's scary looking. You don't get a warm and fuzzy feeling when you walk outside. I feel like they should be handing out lead underwear.
That's it for today. I'm excited about trying the local restaurant. It's actually the military cafeteria, but people here like to call it the local restaurant. That should make for an interesting blog tomorrow.
Have a good one.
Kimbal Digg It!