Friday, May 27, 2016

SpaceX Falcon 9 - THAICOM 8

  SpaceX Falcon 9 Full Thrust - THAICOM 8 - Launching May 27, 2016

Screenshot from SpaceX Webcast of the launch of THAICOM 8

Mission Rundown: SpaceX Falcon 9 FT - Thaicom 8

Written: January 31, 2021

Lift Off Time

May 27, 2016 - 09:39 UTC - 05:39 EDT

Mission Name

THAICOM 8

Launch Provider

SpaceX

Customer

THAICOM Public Limited Company

Rocket

Falcon 9 Full Thrust serial number B1023-1

Launch Location

Space Launch Complex 40 - SLC-40

Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida

Payload

GEOStar-2.3 Communication Satellite - serial no. 36

Payload mass

3 200 kg ~ 6 800 pounds

Where did the satellite go?

Geostationary Supersynchronous Transfer Orbit

349 km x 91 392 km x 21.21° - Target 78,5° East

Will they be attempting to recover the first stage?

Yes - A drone ship has been towed downrange

Where will the first stage land?

OCISLY is waiting about 680 km downrange

Will they be attempting to recover the fairings?

No - Engineers are looking for ways to do this

Are these fairings new?

Yes - Two Type 1 boat hull sized fairings - 34 x 17 feet with 10 evenly spaced ventilation ports in a circle

This will be the:

– 25th flight of all Falcon 9 rockets

– 5th flight of Falcon 9 Full Trust “V1.2” booster 

– 23rd SpaceX launch from SLC-40

– 4th booster landing overall

– 5th mission for SpaceX in 2016

Where to watch

Where to read more

SpaceX link

Want to know or learn more link visit Tim Dodd


Launch debriefing

(This is what happend)

T-00:20:57

Hosts:

-

T-00:00:02

T 00:00:00

T+00:01:22

T+00:02:39

-

T+00:02:47

T+00:03:41

T+00:06:34

T+00:08:21

T+00:08:56

T+00:25:47

T+00:27:07

-

T+00:32:00

-

SpaceX live feed at 00:31

Brian Mahlstedt, Tom Praderio, Lauren Lyons and John Federspiel

TEA-TEB Ignition - Full Thrust check

Liftoff at 21:30

MaxQ at 22:52

MECO at 24:09, stage separation at 24:14

Velocity 8 343 km/h - Altitude 65,6 km

SES-1 at 24:17 - Velocity 8 227 km/h - 74,7 km

Faring separation at 25:10

Entry burn 28:03 by 3 Merlin 1D+ for 18 seconds

Landing burn 29:50 by 1 Merlin 1D+ for 20 seconds

SECO at 30:26 - 26 930 km/h - 164 km

SpaceX resumes live feed at 47:17 - Audio

SES-2 - SECO-2 in 74 seconds gave a velocity boost from 26 448 km/h to 36 440 km/h at 48:37

SpaceX doesn’t show deployment at 53:29 - Cheers

Rap up from SpaceX at 54:10



An der schönen blauen Donau

SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket will deliver THAICOM 8, a commercial communications satellite for Thaicom, to a supersynchronous transfer orbit. Thaicom is one of Asia’s leading Asian satellite operators, influencing and innovating communications on a global scale. Other news sources.

SpaceX is targeting the launch of THAICOM 8 from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida on May 27. The approximately two-hour launch window opens on May 27 at 05:40 EDT, 09:40 UTC. The satellite will be deployed about 32 minutes after liftoff.

The Payload

THAICOM 8 (Thai: ไทยคม 8) is a Thai satellite of the THAICOM series, operated by Thaicom Public Limited Company, a subsidiary of INTOUCH, and is considered to be the 8th THAICOM satellite headquartered in Bangkok, Thailand.

Manufactured by Orbital ATK, the 3,100-kilogram (6,800 lb) THAICOM 8 communications satellite will serve Thailand, India, and Africa from the 78.5° East geostationary location. It is equipped with 24 active Ku-band transponders for sending high-definition television signals through the satellite to residential dwellings.

Designed for fifteen years of service, the spacecraft is powered by twin four-panel solar arrays consisting of ultra-triple-junction cells. Propulsion is provided by a BT-4 engine constructed by Japan’s IHI Corporation, with smaller monopropellant thrusters for maneuvering and – alongside reaction wheels – for attitude control.

In addition to Thaicom 5 and 6, Thaicom 8 joins a fleet that includes the eleven-year-old Thaicom 4 satellite at 119.5 degrees East and Thaicom 7 – That has leased transponders aboard the AsiaSat-6 satellite at 120 degrees East.

The satellite will be stationed at a longitude of 76.5 degrees East, alongside Thaicom 5 – which has been in orbit since its launch on an Ariane 5 in May 2006 – and Thaicom 6. Thaicom 5 has four years remaining of its fourteen-year design life, while Thaicom 6 is expected to remain in service until 2029.

What a spoiler is this

At T-09:41 or 11:48 in the SpaceX video there is a short clip of a fairing tumbling down after fairing separation, which means their engineers are studying the ballistic properties of the fairing's return profile falling back through the atmosphere.

Screenshot of tumbling fairing from a previous launch. 2nd stage just by the fairing edge i a haze

A technical camera was found on a piece of fairing debris on the beach. It recorded the fall of the fairing through the reentry plasma burns and the hard ocean impact. It didn’t sink but floated around until it washed ashore on a Bahama beach. It would be interesting to know which flight this footage was from, and how many cameras were launched until this one was found relatively intact on the beach.

The fairing is made of a honey coned aluminium layer sandwiched between two carbon fiber shells - an inner and an outer layer creating a solid fairing half about two inches thick by the looks of it. The interstage tube section are constructed in a similar way. The found debris piece is from a “male” fairing half which the pusher rod on the edge indicates.

There are also barnacles growing on the camera housing which tells me that it must have floated around for at least a year before being found. So for how long and from which previous mission did this fairing and other fairings have cameras installed.

The next step for SpaceX rocket engineers is gaining control over fairing flight position, aerodynamic balancing to prevent stalling, angle of flight profile and lastly landings wet or hopefully dry in the ocean with parachutes and giant nets.

Author William Graham link

link

Coauthor/Text Retriever Johnny Nielsen

link to launch list



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