Brian Doherty | March 21, 2007
Yesterday's test launch of private rocket Falcon 1 fails to complete full orbit because of a "roll-control anomaly" during the second-stage burn; SpaceX founder Elon Musk explains what went wrong, and is unbowed.
Katherine Mangu-Ward explored the current state of private space flight efforts in our January issue.
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Interesting. Had this same problem happened with a NASA rocket, Reason would be all over it as yet another example of how the government cannot do anything right.
Apparently Dan does not remember the 60's when NASA had many
launch failures including fatalities.
In this case, a private enterprise managee to hit 186 miles of
altitude. The rocket did not achieve its intended target, but this
was hardly an abject failure.
Interesting. Had this same problem happened with a NASA
rocket, Reason would be all over it as yet another example of how
the government cannot do anything right.
The difference is, the government charges me half my income in
order to waste my money on faulty rockets... where the private
industry can do it at no cost to me, and for a fraction of the cost
of NASA stupidity.
The government is also a monopoly - so if NASA fails, the U.S.
space program fails... Where if a private space company fails,
there will be multiple competitors that will survive.
"The rocket business is definitely not a low-stress
business, that's for sure."
He's probably glad it's not booming.
[walks in, dressed as knight. bonks Highnumber over the head with a rubber chicken. walks out]
Yesterday's test launch of private rocket Falcon 1 fails to
complete full orbit because of a "roll-control anomaly" during the
second-stage burn
Geez. It's not like this stuff is rocket science.
Oh wait...
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