Bimfred

joined 2 years ago
[–] Bimfred@kbin.social 1 points 2 years ago (2 children)

And how well do 3dsMax and Solidworks work? Cause Blender was the first modeling program I ever tried and couldn't stand the UI, so that's straight up not an option after 20 years of experience.

[–] Bimfred@kbin.social 1 points 2 years ago

Aren't the batteries and electric motors driving the grid fins at the top of the booster? That and the entire interstage are gonna get blasted with the thrust plume of three Raptors. Reinforcing them enough that it doesn't affect planned reusability targets could take a bigger bite out of the payload than they get from hot staging.

That said, assuming the booster doesn't get royally annihilated immediately, they'll surely do a thorough analysis on just how much damage the booster takes. Might be that hot staging doesn't work out for regular use, but they'll keep it on hand for launches that need every last bit of delta-V.

I think Soyuz boosters currently do hot staging, the interstage is open IIRC.

You are correct. I believe most Russian rockets have used hot staging. It may be destructive, but it works.

[–] Bimfred@kbin.social 3 points 2 years ago (2 children)

The technological developments that built modern civilization have always come with tradeoffs at the expense of nature. This is simply the next step on that path. It's unfortunate that it's necessary, but commendable that they're making efforts to minimize the impact as much as possible.

[–] Bimfred@kbin.social 5 points 2 years ago

Entirely reasonable. With the graphical fidelity gamers expect these days, and how much everyone hates long load times, HDDs simply do not cut it any more. The number and filesizes of all the art assets that need to be loaded is too great.

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