The Falcon 9 Heavy
The Heavy Lift "Hemi" of Aerospace
SpaceX successfully launched the world's most powerful rocket April 11th 2019,
and retrieved all 3 First Stages . . First Time Ever.
Falcon 9 Heavy
27 Merlin Engines
Power Equal to 18 Boeing 747s at Full Throttle
Fuel: Liquid Oxygen and RP1 Kerosene
Little Rocket, Big Flame
The Falcon 9 Heavy Rocket is 230 feet tall, and the Flame is over 1,000 feet long.
The rocket just passed through the heavy stress area of the Sound Barrier where they throttle it back to keep it from breaking apart. Now safely on the other side of the sound barrier they are powering it up to Full Throttle to make the most of the booster rockets before they drop off and return back to earth for a flawless landing.
This photo was taken at a distance of 45 miles away from the launch site in Palm Bay Florida with a Cannon T3i camera with a telephoto lens, then expanded up on the computer to bring you this real image.
Booster Rockets dropping off the main Falcon 9, turning around and heading back to Kennedy Space Center for their landings.
Once again same distance and same camera, only this time the rocket and boosters are so high they are outside of our atmosphere and need to go through Re-Entry of the atmosphere to get back to earth. You will be able to see the White Charred Paint on the rocket tubes that discolored from the heat of re-entry.
Boosters landing back at Kennedy Space Center
Main Falcon 9 Heavy Center Core landing back on the Drone Ship Barge 500 miles off the East Coast of Florida in the Atlantic Ocean, will be towed back to Cape Canaveral to get ready to be used again. Only 10 minutes 22 seconds for the round trip.
This center section main core really shows the heat effects of re-entry as it went much higher and came in much faster than the 2 booster rockets.
They save millions of dollars being able to recycle these 2 boosters and the main center core.
Hope you enjoy the heavy lift "Hemi" of aerospace.
The Heavy Lift "Hemi" of Aerospace
SpaceX successfully launched the world's most powerful rocket April 11th 2019,
and retrieved all 3 First Stages . . First Time Ever.
Falcon 9 Heavy
27 Merlin Engines
Power Equal to 18 Boeing 747s at Full Throttle
Fuel: Liquid Oxygen and RP1 Kerosene
Little Rocket, Big Flame
The Falcon 9 Heavy Rocket is 230 feet tall, and the Flame is over 1,000 feet long.
The rocket just passed through the heavy stress area of the Sound Barrier where they throttle it back to keep it from breaking apart. Now safely on the other side of the sound barrier they are powering it up to Full Throttle to make the most of the booster rockets before they drop off and return back to earth for a flawless landing.
This photo was taken at a distance of 45 miles away from the launch site in Palm Bay Florida with a Cannon T3i camera with a telephoto lens, then expanded up on the computer to bring you this real image.
Booster Rockets dropping off the main Falcon 9, turning around and heading back to Kennedy Space Center for their landings.
Once again same distance and same camera, only this time the rocket and boosters are so high they are outside of our atmosphere and need to go through Re-Entry of the atmosphere to get back to earth. You will be able to see the White Charred Paint on the rocket tubes that discolored from the heat of re-entry.
Boosters landing back at Kennedy Space Center
Main Falcon 9 Heavy Center Core landing back on the Drone Ship Barge 500 miles off the East Coast of Florida in the Atlantic Ocean, will be towed back to Cape Canaveral to get ready to be used again. Only 10 minutes 22 seconds for the round trip.
This center section main core really shows the heat effects of re-entry as it went much higher and came in much faster than the 2 booster rockets.
They save millions of dollars being able to recycle these 2 boosters and the main center core.
Hope you enjoy the heavy lift "Hemi" of aerospace.
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I should have kept a personal log
. I saw one of the Falcon launches last fall, first 1 I've seen that actually made a sonic boom. The landing of the booster was a real treat 














