destinos
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- Jul 30, 2009
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Hey all,
I was making a routine climb into orbit last night to try and tackle the Earth to Mars tutorial in Go Play In Space.
I was climbing along a heading of about 42 degrees. For most of the flight my pitch was higher than the recommended 30 degrees, at some point in the climb my VV started falling, dipped below the horizon, and i found myself somehow being pulled back to earth even though my nose was up and main thrusters were as maxed as they have ever been.
Does anyone understand the mechanic that would have caused this?
My guess is that in the winged craft, I failed to generate enough ground speed before leaving the part of the atmosphere that generates altitude-sustaining lift. So it's possible to have too steep an ascent in such a craft.
If this is right reasoning, does anyone know whereabouts the atmosphere thins to a point where lift becomes negligibly weak?
I was making a routine climb into orbit last night to try and tackle the Earth to Mars tutorial in Go Play In Space.
I was climbing along a heading of about 42 degrees. For most of the flight my pitch was higher than the recommended 30 degrees, at some point in the climb my VV started falling, dipped below the horizon, and i found myself somehow being pulled back to earth even though my nose was up and main thrusters were as maxed as they have ever been.
Does anyone understand the mechanic that would have caused this?
My guess is that in the winged craft, I failed to generate enough ground speed before leaving the part of the atmosphere that generates altitude-sustaining lift. So it's possible to have too steep an ascent in such a craft.
If this is right reasoning, does anyone know whereabouts the atmosphere thins to a point where lift becomes negligibly weak?