The Anonymous Widower

SaxaVord ‘A Real Spaceport Now’ After First Rocket Explosion

The title of this post, is the same as that of the title of this article on The Times.

This is the sub-heading.

Despite the disappointment of last Monday’s fire engineers remain confident that the Unst site is ready for launch

These are the first two paragraphs.

Nothing could look more ominous for the European space industry than the tower of flame lighting up the skies over Shetland’s SaxaVord spaceport when a prototype engine suddenly and spectacularly caught fire on the launchpad last week.

The blaze was certainly “a nightmare” for the engineers of Rocket Factory Augsburg (RFA), the German company that hoped to conduct its first vertical rocket launch this year.

These are my thoughts and some from the article.

  • I can remember a headline of Ike’s Phutnik, in a tabloid, when the United States tried to launch their first satellite.
  • The safety systems seem to have worked well and no-one was hurt.
  • The Chief Operating Officer of Rocket Factory Augsburg, still seems to have the ambition to make the project succeed.
  • The operators are confident that SaxaVord will be ready for the next trials, whenever they are required.
  • There is interest from Malaysia, to launch earth observation satellites.
  • Scotland also offers other opportunities to southeast Asian tech businesses, as there are no launch sites in the region.

But most importantly, SaxaVord is generating interest from a wide range of users, as this paragraph indicates.

Others have already decided. SaxaVord has struck launch agreements with Lockheed Martin, the US aerospace giant and the German company HyImpulse as well as the UK’s Skyrora. Another four deals with international satellite companies are said to be in the offing.

If an established company were to launch a successful satellite, it could make all the difference to SaxaVord.

Conclusion

These are the last two paragraphs of the article.

Interest on this global scale enables the Scottish space pioneers to shrug off Monday’s blaze and the bad publicity it entailed. For anyone thinking the fire was bad news, emails from colleagues in the US told an altogether different story.

“You’re a real spaceport now,” read one message to a Shetland engineer. “You can’t call yourself a spaceport until you’ve had a rocket blow up!”

I have been to a party at NASA in Houston and they wouldn’t have been as successful, as they have, if they gave up on a failure. They try, try and try again.

 

 

August 25, 2024 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Spotlight On The IVECO E-WAY H2: Less Weight, 15% More Passenger Capacity

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on Sustainable Bus.

This is the sub-heading.

Up to seven time less batteries than a BEV bus (one module instead of 7), with 15% more passengers. These are the specifications mostly stressed by IVECO BUS when outlining the features of IVECO BUS E-WAY H2, presented at Busworld 2023 in Brussels. The bus model derives directly from the E-WAY BEV bus model

Note.

  1. The hydrogen fuel cell technology is from Hyundai.
  2. The bus is designed to be lighter in weight, which increases passenger capacity from 93 to 111 and gives an enhanced range.
  3. The driveline is from Accelera by Cummins, with a Siemens electric motor.
  4. IVECO provide the front axle and ZF the rear.
  5. Surprisingly, the bus is assembled from stainless steel panels, onto a steel floor.

It strikes me, that if the late great Colin Chapman had designed a bus, it would follow some of IVECO’s design.

Conclusion

This bus could set the standard for hydrogen-powered buses.

I particularly liked the saving in lithium compared to an electric bus.

August 25, 2024 Posted by | Design, Hydrogen, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment