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bewaretheirs | 1 year ago

First attempt to catch the booster back at the launch site.

The "mechazilla" launch tower has two "chopstick" arms which are used to pick up and stack both stages and which are intended to be able to catch the returning booster and maybe also the returning Starship upper stage.

discuss

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1659447091|1 year ago

> has two "chopstick" arms ... which are intended to be able to catch the returning booster

Do you mean this literally? As in something like Mr. Miyagi catching a fly with chopsticks in the orig Karate Kid?

nycdotnet|1 year ago

Yes. The booster has two pins that stick out at the top that are designed to hold the weight of the entire booster when empty. The plan is for the booster to return to the launch tower, position itself between the arms which will close on it and then the pins will “land” on the arms, completing the catch.

bewaretheirs|1 year ago

Main difference (besides scale) is that the booster is cooperating with the chopsticks, navigating to hover at a point between the arms.

mlindner|1 year ago

Yes, literally, but the arms are massive and not directly controlled by humans.

dotnet00|1 year ago

It should be better described as having the booster land on the arms. The arms will probably be able to adjust a little to assist in alignment, but the booster is doing most of the work to be 'caught'.

lucianbr|1 year ago

How could it possibly be meant literally? Do you consider it possible for a rocket to be caught by a literal person with literal wooden sticks?

I guess I don't really understand what you are asking. There's a tower with some huge metal arms that is meant to catch the rocket. They call them chopsticks in a joking manner. Obviously, I would have thought.

bloopernova|1 year ago

What benefit does catching the booster provide? (Or, what's a good written guide to that system?)

thrance|1 year ago

It allows removing the landing gears on the booster, which saves wheight, which saves fuel, which increases efficiency and reduces costs. It also avoid having to fetch the booster from wherever it would have landed.

exitb|1 year ago

What others said is true, but I think the endgame is also to literally land on the launchpad, allowing for a quick turnaround.

admax88qqq|1 year ago

Don’t need landing legs/gear on the ship. Saves weight

tgsovlerkhgsel|1 year ago

Given that a lot of the landing failures we've seen started with a near perfect landing followed by the rocket tipping over, I suspect one benefit is that the contact point is now above the center of gravity and thus it can't really tip over.

Of course, it can't tip over unless something fails or the rocket ends up in the wrong spot (and fails to get caught) and the previous tip-overs also had to involve failures (of the landing strut, in the latest loss) or landing in some way that isn't perfectly aligned.