New highlights video:
As noted, we already know the cause. One of the legs failed to lock.Landing a Rocket on a barge is really difficult to do.I was hoping it would stay upright. The weight of the Rocket and a lot of elements could've caused it to tip over.
I was wondering, would the ocean landing help here? On the completely horizontal landing pad it may have stayed upright even with the leg not locked, or am I being naïve again? They should have still noticed it, since these things should have multiple sensors, but there's nothing like an explosion to spot there's an issue. That explosion costed dozens of million dollars, because they could already start reusing those rockets – first gets tested & sent to a museum, obviously, but the second can fly again.Better to have that failure early on..I see a minor tweak of that locking mechanism in the near future.
I've understood that they've already fixed the legs on the new version which landed succesfully on the land. And that this January 17 launch was the last launch of the old version in any case.Better to have that failure early on..I see a minor tweak of that locking mechanism in the near future.
Falcon 9 v1.1 made its final flight on 17 January 2016.
Falcon 9 v1.1 Full Thrust completed its maiden flight on 21 December 2015, carrying an Orbcomm 11-satellite payload to orbit and landing the rocket's first stage intact at SpaceX's Landing Zone 1 at Cape Canaveral
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Design improvements announced later in the year included a larger and stronger interstage with revised stage-separation mechanism; revised grid fin design; and upgraded structures for the landing legs and first stage.
As has been noted, it would take a 23 degree lean before the falcon 9 first stage would be in danger of tipping on it's legs. No need for Rube Goldberg devices, they just need to fix that locking mechanism on the leg.
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