Feb 04, 2015 · The second autonomous boat, which is under construction, will be called "Of Course I Still Love You," Musk added. ... The rocket stage succeeded in hitting the drone ship, ...
West Coast Move. SpaceX repositioned Of Course I Still Love You from Port Canaveral, Florida, to the Port of Long Beach, California in June 2021. Just Read the Instructions droneship was previously based in California until mid-2019 but was repositioned to Florida as launched out of Vandenberg slowed down. This meant that SpaceX no longer had a dronship to support Pacific …
Apr 30, 2019 · “Of Course I Still Love You” and “Just Read the Instructions” If these colorful names have you scratching your head, you’re not alone. SpaceX’s fleet of drone ships are named to honor ...
Apr 14, 2015 · Of Course I Still Love You, Falcon: New SpaceX Ship Ready to Catch Rockets. SpaceX is gearing up for its seventh paid cargo run to the International Space Station, and the third attempt to catch the spent first stage of a Falcon 9 rocket on a drone ship in the Atlantic Ocean. The company is scheduled to launch a Dragon spacecraft from Cape Canaveral this …
The trend started six years ago when Musk announced via Twitter that he had named the company's first spaceport drone ship "Just Read the Instructions." Soon enough, he clarified the meaning behind the name, revealing that he did so in honour of Iain M Banks.May 5, 2021
Of Course I Still Love You carries the first first stage that successfully landed on a drone ship (Falcon 9 Full Thrust, SpaceX CRS-8, 8 April 2016)....Autonomous spaceport drone ship.Of Course I Still Love You landing historyAssociated rocketsFalcon 9 Full Thrust Falcon 9 Block 5 Falcon Heavy4 more rows
SpaceX's CEO, Elon Musk, named the spacecraft after the 1963 song "Puff, the Magic Dragon" by Peter, Paul and Mary, reportedly as a response to critics who considered his spaceflight projects impossible.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The most prolific SpaceX drone ship has arrived on the West Coast. The floating Falcon 9 rocket landing pad "Of Course I Still Love You" (or OCISLY for short) departed Port Canaveral on June 10, to change coasts in support of SpaceX's increasing launch operations.Jul 7, 2021
SpaceX's new droneship, A Shortfall of Gravitas, means the company can power even more ambitious goals. Mike Brown. 9.13.2021 9:37 AM. SpaceX's new drone ship is taking to the sea in style.Sep 13, 2021
221.1 billion USD (2022)Elon Musk / Net worth
SpaceX's toilet is working fine, thanks for asking. When the capsule returned from its three-day jaunt in orbit, engineers found urine throughout an internal section beneath Crew Dragon's interior floor. The source: a broken tube from the capsule's toilet that funnels waste into an internal tank.Nov 10, 2021
Recommendation. Currently the most commonly used format would appear to be name only. The most common format that would be possible to uniformly implement appeaes to be (rocket). Therefore, the recommended naming convention would be to use the name, followed by the term rocket in parentheses.
Issues with the toilet on board SpaceX's Crew Dragon capsule will leave a group of four astronauts without a bathroom option during their hours-long trip back home from the International Space Station aboard the four-metre-wide capsule this month.Nov 1, 2021
A Shortfall of GravitasA new SpaceX drone ship named “A Shortfall of Gravitas” was towed into Port Canaveral Thursday, completing a shuffling of SpaceX's rocket landing platforms to support upcoming launches from Florida and California.Jul 15, 2021
Return to launch site landing requires more fuel so it isn't always feasible, especially if the Falcon 9 is carrying a massive payload. So typically the company relies on its drone ships to do most of the work. The ships are mobile and require less fuel reserves on the rocket.Sep 2, 2021
CAPE CANAVERAL — SpaceX successfully returned its Dragon spacecraft to flight Friday and landed the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket almost on target on a barge about 200 miles offshore.
Of Course I Still Love You was built as a refit of the barge Marmac 304 for landings in the Atlantic Ocean. Its homeport was Port Canaveral, Florida from December 2015 to June 2021, after being ported for a year at the Port of Jacksonville during most of 2015. In June 2021, OCISLY began heading towards the Port of Los Angeles to begin supporting launches on the west coast. Of Course I Still Love You worked successfully as a landing platform after the Falcon 9 rocket brought astronauts to space on the crewed mission Launch America on 30 May 2020.
The first flight test was 10 January 2015 when SpaceX conducted a controlled-descent flight test to land the first-stage of Falcon 9 Flight 14 on a solid surface after it was used to loft a contracted payload toward Earth orbit. SpaceX projected prior to the first landing attempt that the likelihood of successfully landing on the platform would be 50% or less. The landings went from being landing tests towards being routine parts of missions.
The landing platform of the upper deck of the first barge named Just Read the Instructions was 170 ft × 300 ft (52 m × 91 m) while the span of the Falcon 9 v1.1 landing legs was 60 ft (18 m).
The second ASDS barge, Of Course I Still Love You ( OCISLY ), had been under construction in a Louisiana shipyard since early 2015 using a different hull — Marmac 304 — in order to service launches on the East Coast of the United States. It was built as a replacement for the first Just Read the Instructions and entered operational service for Falcon 9 Flight 19 in late June 2015. As of June 2015, its home port was Port of Jacksonville, Florida, but after December 2015, it was transferred 260 km (160 mi) further south, at Port Canaveral .
In 2009, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk articulated ambitions for "creating a paradigm shift in the traditional approach for reusing rocket hardware". In October 2014, SpaceX publicly announced that they had contracted with a Louisiana shipyard to build a floating landing platform for reusable orbital launch vehicles. Early information indicated that the ...
SpaceX first launch vehicle landing barge ( Marmac 300 ), and also its third ( Marmac 303 ), were both named Just Read the Instructions ( JRTI ). In fact, some of the parts from the original hull/barge were used to build the Marmac 303 ASDS. The original, Marmac 300, was scrapped after the SpaceX CRS-6 landing failure on 14 April 2015.
A fourth ASDS, A Shortfall of Gravitas ( ASOG ), was announced in February 2018 and was originally planned to enter service in mid-2019. In October 2020, Elon Musk re-affirmed plans to build a ship of this name. In January 2021, Marmac 302 was spotted at Bollinger Fourchon site.
A merlin is a variety of medium-sized falcon. Since the Merlin engine is currently used to power Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy, that fits nicely. SpaceX’s other rocket engines have equally avian monikers: Kestrel and Raptor.
If these colorful names have you scratching your head, you’re not alone. SpaceX’s fleet of drone ships are named to honor the science fiction author Ian M. Banks. Specifically, his novel The Player of Games, in which OCISLY and JRtI are sentient spaceships.
Space exploration is serious business. Missions cost tens of millions of dollars and frequently put human lives on the line. That’s probably why rockets and spacecraft tend to have serious-sounding names.
Just before the spacecraft separated from the third stage of its Soyuz carrier rocket, the rocket’s oxidizer and propellant tanks depressurized, with apparently catastrophic results. The spacecraft was left tumbling out of control, rotating at 90 degrees per second.
SpaceX continues to double down on their efforts to build a reusable rocket system. It’s all part of the company's increasingly large footprint on the Florida coast , where a former Atlas rocket launch site is being converted to a rocket stage landing complex. (Future Falcon landings may skip the barge altogether.)
The company is scheduled to launch a Dragon spacecraft from Cape Canaveral this Sunday, June 28 at 10 :21 a.m. EDT (14:21 UTC).
Falcon 9 first stage approached the drone ship “Just Read the Instructions” in the Atlantic Ocean after successfully launching the Dragon spacecraft during the CRS-6 mission to the International Space Station on April 14. Video: SpaceX.
Meanwhile, over at Launch Complex 39A, the space shuttle's old pad, construction continues on a Falcon Heavy launch site. SpaceX hangar at pad 39A SpaceX's rocket assembly building is located just down the hill from pad 39A. The facilities will be used for the Falcon Heavy. Image: Jason Davis / The Planetary Society.
Dragon is carrying about 1.8 metric tons of cargo and supplies. After the Falcon first stage gives the launch vehicle its initial boost toward orbit, it will separate, perform a boostback burn and come in for an upright landing on a thruster-powered landing platform.
S paceX is a spaceflight company focused on building big-ass rockets capable of taking people to Mars, but it’s also a strangely famous purveyor of so-called “drone ships,” autonomous platforms floating in the ocean. By now, the world has seen the company manage to vertically land several rockets on one its two ocean drone ships.
See, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk is a pretty big fan of science fiction. One need look no further than his adoration for The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy for proof. He literally named his company’s future Mars-bound spacecraft Heart of Gold for this reason.
There have been a few misses in the subsequent years as SpaceX worked to perfect its recovery methods. A third ship, which Elon has been promising for years, is nearly complete and will be following in OCISLY's footsteps in Florida.
In the coming years, SpaceX has plans to ramp up its West Coast launch operations as the company works to fill out its Starlink satellite megaconstellation. The broadband satellites are part of the company's effort to blanket the globe with internet coverage.
While he’s working on getting humans into space, SpaceX CEO/CTO Elon Musk hasn’t forgotten the greats who propelled us out of the stratosphere through fiction long before him. Today, Musk tweeted that he’s named two of his spaceport drone ships in the most fitting way: after ships from science fiction writer Iain M. Banks’ Culture novels.
Anderson of course returned to Rustum with his “New America” stories that first appeared in Roger Elwood’s Continuum anthologies. (Perhaps Elwood’s most interesting project — four volumes each featuring one installment of a connected series — though in the end not really that successful.)
A Falcon 9 SpaceX rocket on a resupply mission to the International Space Station lifts off from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Cape Canaveral, Fla., Thursday, Dec. 5, 2019.
Falcon 9 was named for the Millennium Falcon seen in the films, while the number 9 refers to the amount of Merlin engines that power the rocket.