Was pretty cool. I love seeing innovative approaches to get common people (with lots of money ? $250k per ride - I'll spend mine here on earth) to the start of space. Was odd to hear that the spaceship is manually controlled in 2021; that it's analog. There's a decent short read here: How Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo Passenger Space Plane Works (Infographic)
I'll say that depends, I'd hate to have the pilot sneeze while feathering. I suppose that's why they have two pilots (carbon based failsafe).LOL, Analog done right beats 1's N 0's
Excerpt from: VSS Enterprise crash - WikipediaThe VSS Enterprise crash occurred on October 31, 2014, when the VSS Enterprise, a SpaceShipTwo experimental spaceflight test vehicle operated by Virgin Galactic, suffered a catastrophic in-flight breakup during a test flight and crashed in the Mojave Desert near Cantil, California.[1][2] Co-pilot Michael Alsbury was killed and pilot Peter Siebold was seriously injured.
The National Transportation Safety Board later concluded that the breakup was caused by Alsbury's premature unlocking of the air brake device used for atmospheric re-entry. The NTSB said other important factors in the accident were inadequate design safeguards, poor pilot training and lack of rigorous oversight by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).[3]
Excerpt from: Mars Climate Orbiter - WikipediaThe Mars Climate Orbiter (formerly the Mars Surveyor '98 Orbiter) was a 638-kilogram (1,407 lb)[1] robotic space probe launched by NASA on December 11, 1998 to study the Martian climate, Martian atmosphere, and surface changes and to act as the communications relay in the Mars Surveyor '98 program for Mars Polar Lander. However, on September 23, 1999, communication with the spacecraft was permanently lost as it went into orbital insertion. The spacecraft encountered Mars on a trajectory that brought it too close to the planet, and it was either destroyed in the atmosphere or escaped the planet's vicinity and entered an orbit around the Sun.[2] An investigation attributed the failure to a measurement mismatch between two software systems: metric units by NASA and non-metric (imperial or "English") units by spacecraft builder Lockheed Martin.[3]
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