Friday, March 29, 2013

Oh yeah, I'm supposed to be having fun.

Let me catch up on the last few days.

Well, given the large amount of orbital debris floating in space in low orbit (90km-110km) I was having trouble targeting my station. So I made a couple attempts to deorbit the debris. Here are a couple pictures of the attempts:






The idea was to use the lander legs to brace against the debris (the orange tank) and try and deorbit it. It ended up doing some good (the orbit dropped to 80km90km) but it began tumbling so bad there was no hope of doing it again. I gave up and deorbited the deorbiter.





Frustrated I opted to work on the station. I had enough fuel to try to move it in to a Mun orbit, so I thought what the hell?

Minor glitch, I didn't have the station balanced, and it went all Gumbi on me. I then made a control mistake, and well.... you can see for yourself...





Dammit! This screenshot is only a partial story, a lot of those debris are multiple pieces.

Screw it, I'll just launch a new station...


... or not. I was working quickly, I was tired, I was frustrated. At this point I only had only working craft (the probe on Minmus) and a sky full of debris. 

RELOAD! (F9)

Hey, the station is still there in this one, but now the probe isn't. Fine. I deorbit the station and enjoy the light show, then I am off to start a new save game.


 








Well, that was cool looking!

Next time up, anew save game and the work on a real heavy lift rocket...

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

To the moon Alice!

Ok, not the Mun, but instead Minmus. Why? Because Mr. Wizard just did and it seemed like a good idea.

So, first we build a probe, stick it on top of a ridiculously overpowered rocket (this is the same one I use to launch space station parts) and point it to space.








Now I plot and burn a couple times to aim at the green rocket we call Minmus, which is a bit of a challenge since it is both elliptical and not on Kerbin's equatorial plane.




Once in orbit I plot a nice large flat area to land on...


Now for few pretty pictures while I descend...




Since I brought a ridiculous amount of fuel with I still had the interstage with me to descend to the surface. I cut it loose at about 600m above the surface and battled with the throttle on the way down (the gravity is almost non-existent here)






I failed to fit the legs right so I am teetering on the engine nozzle. Eh, details.

Now to pull off the probe using the RCS unit on top. 



Then I just disconnect the RS unit and drive out from under it (which was a bit stressful as I almost dumped the rover over doing it because it was caught in the decoupler ring)


A quick drive around, then I park to recharge until I go for a drive during a later session. The gravity makes this a very dangerous to drive here. Even deploying the solar panels almost flipped the rover over. 




Ta Da!

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Station rearranging...

... is not a very exciting blog entry, sorry.

So here is the deal. Both solar arrays are effectively backwards (I want to reduce the polar moment...  basically I want as much of the mass in the center of the craft and not at the ends). To do this I need to flip the array towers around, but they both have their booster motors. Since I am going to dump them, I opt to dump the booster on the original habitation module as well.

So, here we go...


These are the three boosters that I had to cut free. Unfortunately I realize now that I was so busy trying to time the de-orbit/re-orbit that I forgot to take screenshots. (grumble).

So I use that big motor from the orange tank to deorbit the entire station from its 110kmx110km orbit and then I cut free all three of the circled boosters (I did pull in the solar panels for this 'just in case') I then had to re-orbit the ship in to a final orbit (which is more like 109.km x 111km right now, but the thing is so wobbly I don't think I'll do this kind of thing again.)

Pro-tip: When your station is wobbling like mad, don't count on the RCS or ASUS to dampen out the oscillations  just turn them both off and let it settle.

Anyhow, I began putting the station back in to orbit:


Using a mayflower engine for orbital adjustments is like pulling a tooth with a locomotive.


Anyhow, we are back in orbit, so now I need to flip the two solar beams around:



Now the other side:




Ta Da! It is all flipped around. 


Friday, March 22, 2013

Ok, fuel pod one is up...

... This is the first of (hopefully) several large orange fuel tanks to get in to orbit for the purpose of making this a fuel station. Launch (hitting V to can the camera to 'orbital' can make some cool shots)





So I built this ship with plenty of RCS and a a plan to nudge it all in to orbit with the orange tank. 


Again, some tweaking to get in to position.



But I got docked up with a nice wobbly orange tank to store fuel in. 



I think tomorrow I am going to deorbit some junk and unneeded parts. The screenshots will be lower quality while I switch to a laptop for the weekend.