← Back to context Comment by mulmen 3 months ago Stage 1 is remotely operated? I find that surprising. 4 comments mulmen Reply nirav72 3 months ago I’m not knowledgeable in the deep technical details of rocketry. But curious - how else would the first stage be operated? Should it be autonomous? 0xffff2 3 months ago Yes. The timings involved would make it impractical to land a rocket reliably via human teleoperation even with zero latency. mulmen 3 months ago I’m not a rocket scientist but my assumption is that it would be internally guided and only take external inputs in the form of GPS and “land on the ship” or “don’t land on the ship”. Saturn V was manned and had a an internal guidance computer. bpodgursky 3 months ago No, but they want to be able to remotely abort.
nirav72 3 months ago I’m not knowledgeable in the deep technical details of rocketry. But curious - how else would the first stage be operated? Should it be autonomous? 0xffff2 3 months ago Yes. The timings involved would make it impractical to land a rocket reliably via human teleoperation even with zero latency. mulmen 3 months ago I’m not a rocket scientist but my assumption is that it would be internally guided and only take external inputs in the form of GPS and “land on the ship” or “don’t land on the ship”. Saturn V was manned and had a an internal guidance computer.
0xffff2 3 months ago Yes. The timings involved would make it impractical to land a rocket reliably via human teleoperation even with zero latency.
mulmen 3 months ago I’m not a rocket scientist but my assumption is that it would be internally guided and only take external inputs in the form of GPS and “land on the ship” or “don’t land on the ship”. Saturn V was manned and had a an internal guidance computer.
I’m not knowledgeable in the deep technical details of rocketry. But curious - how else would the first stage be operated? Should it be autonomous?
Yes. The timings involved would make it impractical to land a rocket reliably via human teleoperation even with zero latency.
I’m not a rocket scientist but my assumption is that it would be internally guided and only take external inputs in the form of GPS and “land on the ship” or “don’t land on the ship”. Saturn V was manned and had a an internal guidance computer.
No, but they want to be able to remotely abort.