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The Chinese Tianlong-3 Rocket Accidentally Launched During A Engine Test

Spyxos

Member


Chinese commercial company Space Pioneer announced on Sunday that no casualties were reported after a test of the first stage engines of the Tianlong-3 rocket failed in Henan province.

Tianlong-3, a two-stage kerosene-liquid oxygen rocket comparable to SpaceX's Falcon 9, experienced the failure during a test of its nine engines intended to power the first stage. The engines, which are planned to be reusable in the future, were tested in Gongyi city, according to Beijing Tianbing Technology Co, also known as Space Pioneer.

At 3:43 pm, the engines were fired according to plan, and the engine thrust reached 820 tons. However, a structural failure caused the rocket to detach from its launch pad and blast off. It subsequently landed in a mountainous area about 1.5 kilometers away and broke apart.

Space Pioneer described the test as the most challenging on the propulsion system during the development of China's current carrier rockets, with the engine thrust doubling that of previous aerospace tests. The company added that it will investigate the causes of the failure.

 
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nush

Member
Right… so they had it fully fuelled up for a “Test”?

Don’t believe press statements from China.
 

BlackTron

Member
Right… so they had it fully fuelled up for a “Test”?

Don’t believe press statements from China.

I mean, if they were doing the test they say they were. Not saying the release is accurate, but having enough fuel to blast off and crash in the hills is probably consistent with a test to see how much thrust it can generate.
 

RaptorGTA

Member
Right… so they had it fully fuelled up for a “Test”?

Don’t believe press statements from China.
It's be best to be fully loaded to add weight to the rocket. SpaceX does this when they static fire Super Heavy Booster.

Another key item was the rocket didn't have a nose cone. Had it not suffered engine failure, the air draw to the front of the rocket would have cause it's to disintegrate.
 

SJRB

Gold Member
The intern who pressed the wrong button:


monkey-looking-away-meme-template-j506g.jpg
 

Lord Panda

The Sea is Always Right
You got to love it when 'static' tests suddenly become 'dynamic-WTF-did-we-just-nuke-a-fucking-mountain' tests.

Also, some of the comments from are gold:



"When you copy your friend's homework - but don't understand the answers..."
 
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TheInfamousKira

Reseterror Resettler


Chinese commercial company Space Pioneer announced on Sunday that no casualties were reported after a test of the first stage engines of the Tianlong-3 rocket failed in Henan province.

Tianlong-3, a two-stage kerosene-liquid oxygen rocket comparable to SpaceX's Falcon 9, experienced the failure during a test of its nine engines intended to power the first stage. The engines, which are planned to be reusable in the future, were tested in Gongyi city, according to Beijing Tianbing Technology Co, also known as Space Pioneer.

At 3:43 pm, the engines were fired according to plan, and the engine thrust reached 820 tons. However, a structural failure caused the rocket to detach from its launch pad and blast off. It subsequently landed in a mountainous area about 1.5 kilometers away and broke apart.

Space Pioneer described the test as the most challenging on the propulsion system during the development of China's current carrier rockets, with the engine thrust doubling that of previous aerospace tests. The company added that it will investigate the causes of the failure.



Come on, China. It's not rocket science.
 

StreetsofBeige

Gold Member
Maybe it's cheaper to clear cut fields this way. The explosion cleared a couple hectares in a few seconds.
 
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