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3 mar 2023 · Kevin teaches new players how to orbit, land on, and return from the Mun in Kerbal Space Program 2.JOIN OUR LOCALS COMMUNITY: https://spacexcentric.locals.co...
To answer your question, the transfer stage has 2124 delta-V and the lander has 2955 delta-V. The lander is very squat and about as hard to tip over as a pancake. The whole thing including transfer stage is 17.34 tons.
The Mun is a large moon orbiting Kerbin, and the inner moon of Kerbin. It is the larger sibling of Kerbin's other moon, Minmus. The Mun does not have an atmosphere, and has one-sixth the surface gravity of Kerbin. The surface is gray and barren, saturated in craters of various sizes.
Best way is to first get a nice circular Kerbin orbit, let's say at 100km. Then hit m so you are in solar system view and zoom out so you can see the mun and rotate the camera so that the mun is at about 2oclock relative to Kerbin. Then you burn prograde at 6ocklock for about 800dv.
Idk it’s possible. I got back to kerbin from orbit around the mun with only like 330 m/s delta V. I escaped munar orbit and went into a higher orbit around Kerbin. Once I reached apoapsis I did a retrograde burn and went on a highly elliptical orbit that intersected Kerbin’s atmosphere.
4 lip 2024 · The Mun, is a large satellite orbiting Kerbin. It is mostly gray in appearance, with craters of various sizes dotting its otherwise smooth surface. The Mun’s discovery is widely regarded as one of the more important breakthroughs of Kerbal evolution.
Mun, also known as the Mün, is a large moon orbiting Kerbin. It can be thought of as an analogue to our own Moon. It is gray in appearance with craters of various sizes and mountains exceeding 3400 m in height. The gravitational pull the surface is 1.63 m/s², 8.18 m/s² less than that of Kerbin...