Jul 26 2018

Ascension Mk1 Flight 2 Analysis

After failing to achieve orbit on our first flight of the Ascension Mk1 lifter, changes were made so that the second flight covered here in this analysis would have a better chance at becoming the first spacecraft to circle the planet. As with the first mission, the goal was to place the craft in a decaying orbit so it would eventually return to Kerbin without us having to also install any cold gas thrusters or make the engine able to re-ignite and add further complexity. The mission also used a brand-new K2-X engine and a more aggressive ascent profile.

The Flight

Before the rocket even left the ground, once it was vertical and hooked up on the launch pad a 30-second hold-down firing was conducted. This allowed us to ensure the newly-built K2-X was functioning as intended and also enabled the launch team to set much better constraints for engine chamber pressures during ignition and run-up to launch thrust. This was a cause for abort during the first launch attempt when the constraints were set to expected values based on data from testing the engine, which changed enough over multiple tests to become invalid.

The following day brought mostly cloudy skies to the area and caused the weather team to put the countdown on hold at L-15 minutes until skies began to clear from the southwest. Besides the slight weather delay, which lasted about 48 minutes, no issues came up during pre-launch operations. Some minor troubles with the engine system and communications the previous day were resolved during the hold-down test and did not resurface.

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Jul 25 2018

Progeny Mk6 Block I Flight 6 Analysis

Another flight was put together to further explore the properties of the hazardous radiation region found above our planet. All previous launches had occurred sometime during the daylight hours while this flight was scheduled to occur during the middle of the night. Scientists had several theories regarding why the radiation data from this sub-orbital trajectory would be different, but we will address them in a later report once they have finished working through the new data as well as the old. Here we will focus solely on the performance of the rocket during the mission.

The Flight

No delays led up to an on time launch last Friday at precisely 16:51:00.04 local time when the lower 0.625m solid fuel booster lit off to push the rocket off the launch base. Ascent through to booster engine cutoff for the third stage liquid fuel engine was nominal compared to past launches, showing no significant deviation from event times or in the rocket’s angle of attack while spinning to stay stabilized. The rocket entered space 1m28s after launch, just 10ms after BECO. It maintained proper orientation throughout the 9 minute climb to 522.368km apokee and all the way back down to atmospheric interface at L+19m56s.

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Jul 20 2018

Operations Summary – Week of 7/16/18

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Jul 20 2018

Progeny Mk6 Block I Flight 6 (Radiation Field Study 7)

In order to possibly help lend credence to various theories on the hazardous radiation region above Kerbin, this rocket is sent up in the middle of the night cycle as opposed to our usual daytime launches

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Jul 18 2018

KerBalloon Badlands Science Survey #1

Both high and low altitude balloons are dispatched to the Badlands under Sector X1-37A to collect various science readings for Flooyd Dynamics Research Lab

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Jul 17 2018

Ascension Mk1 Flight 2 (Orbit Attempt 2)

After failing to reach orbit on our first attempt, adjustments have been made to the ascent profile to get the rocket horizontal sooner and hopefully push our periapsis out from under the ground on this second attempt

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Jul 13 2018

Operations Summary – Week of 7/9/18

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Jul 12 2018

Progeny Mk1-B Captive Carry & Release Test 2

Flight Officers Tedman and Aldeny perform another carry and release flight to see how the rocket reacts to being deployed far from level flight and closer to its initial ascent angle

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Jul 10 2018

Progeny Mk1-B Captive Carry & Release Test 1

Flight Officers Aldeny and Tedman begin to test the feasibility of launching a rocket from the top of a Deuce while in flight, starting with the smallest of the Progeny rockets

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Jul 07 2018

Low-Altitude Science Survey 35

Crews take a 2,000km+ journey to gather meteorological data over Zone 6-7DD, an area of open water not yet researched by balloon flight and the furthest yet from KSC

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