That's a pain, because SRBs are big and heavy and I'd like to use the SRB to get up there where I need to test it. Even the contracts that say that you have to "activate from staging" will generally still have a "Run Test" button that also works, instead of staging.įor example, I've often got contracts that want me to test an SRB, supposedly by staging it, in orbit (or flying in the upper atmosphere, or wherever- the point being, not on the ground). This even works on SRBs and decouplers that can't actually do anything when staged a 2nd time.Īctually, in my experience I don't even have to do that much. Then stage again (sometimes you have to hit spacebar twice). Just, when you're in the correct position (be it splashed down, orbiting at the correct altitude, or even flying Xm/s at Y,000 meters off the ground in atmosphere) you can drag the part out of the "staged" bucket at the bottom of the list on the left, up to the "next stage," creating a new stage with that already used part in it. I feel we must not get overconfident.One quick trick to note: If a thing requires staging, you can still use that thing in normal flight by staging it. While we are rightly proud of our success, getting spacecraft into sustained orbits is going to require more complicated-and volatile-rockets. This was due to Bill not risking much in the way of lateral movement. It was not very far from the Space Center, relatively speaking. ![]() This marks the final landing spot of Skybreaker-1. We had sent a Kerbal to space and brought him back again. The chute opened as planned, although the descent involved subjecting Bill to an uncomfortably large quantity of G-Force.įinally, twelve minutes and forty-four seconds later, Bill splashed down safely. The capsule detached from the rocket as planned. Throughout the short duration of the flight, we were very nervous. Bill was even ordered to cut the engine before fuel ran out for fear that the spacecraft would go too far and get stranded.įrom the small window of the capsule, Bill Kerman saw Kerbin in all of its majesty, taking this photograph himself. The Skybreaker had only enough fuel for a short suborbital flight. The Skybreaker's atmosphere sensor moved down until, finally, we had made it into outer space. The Skybreaker ascended upwards-began to lose control as the previous rockets had-and then Bill engaged the RCS and deftly kept it on its arc. ![]() Bill did not seem worried by Jebediah's death and looked forward to the experience. The pilot was Bill Kerman, another top of the academy class. The RCS was what saved our space program. Then there was the Reaction Control System, which could steer the spacecraft by firing gases out of the nozzles. First, there was a decoupler that would, once it came time to land, break the capsule away from the rocket. The Skybreaker was significantly greater in length to the Ascender, with more fuel, but its real advance lay in the other systems. With the Skybreaker rocket, we were trying to do a lot very fast. The demise of the pilot took away from the fact that even if he had lived, all he would have done was flop into the water. ![]() After the death of Jebediah Kerman, we settled in for making the improvements that would enable us to do something more with our space program.
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