Virgin Galactic Test Flights To Restart This Year 20
astroengine writes: Test flights of Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo are on schedule to begin again this year – this time with its own pilots, the chief executive of Richard Branson's space startup said Friday. The first in a series of planned passenger spaceships was destroyed on Oct. 31, 2014, during a fatal test flight being conducted by manufacturer Scaled Composites. The National Transportation Safety Board, which is investigating the accident, determined that co-pilot Michael Alsbury, who died in the crash, released the ship's moveable tail section early. The vehicle was not traveling fast enough for aerodynamic forces to keep the so-called "feather" pinned in place, as designs called for. As a result, the ship was torn apart, jettisoning pilot Pete Siebold in the process, who managed to parachute to safety.
So don't throw away your tickets yet (Score:2)
They might still get tourists into space before the end of the century
...c'mon lemme see you shake your tail feather... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:...c'mon lemme see you shake your tail feather. (Score:4, Insightful)
Try dropping the landing gear in a commercial jet at mach 0.8.
Re: (Score:2)
Thats the point. You would have wheels, maybe no gear bay doors, but the wheels will be just fine.
Re: Pretty bad design (Score:1)
Interlock fails closed, everyone dies. This is the type of system where simpler is better and procedural controls are best.
Re: (Score:2)
Ahead of NTSB (Score:3)
Ok, here are claims made without a final conclusion by NTSB anywhere in sight. How the heck can they assume that NTSB does not come out and burn their entire design to ground ? How do they even assume NTSB investigation will conclude before end of the year ?
What a hubris.
Your design grandfather Rutan retired years ago, your chief designer left the company .. and you are still making these grandiose claims ?
Re: (Score:1)
Well, if they sit on their dicks and do nothing, then they will be two years behind. However, if they plan and the schedule slips, that's okay. Give you a hint, we plan to fly every day, and if an incident causes that to change,well, that's tolerable, but we keep being able to fly every day.