Laika's mission, of course, is to take off, orbit the planet and do spy stuff, and come back in over KSP.

Launch! Sadly, this image was a failed attempt. If you take the launch vehicle off SAS and attempt a gravity turn too early, it starts wildly spinning around in the direction of pitch. While you can recover from this, it's still not a good thing to happen, so I just redid the launch.

Alas, I was too busy flying in the launch to get a pic of the separation of the stages. But I have tested them, and they both land softly. Anyways, you can start turning in the neighborhood of 15,000 meters up and/or slightly before the liquid booster runs out of fuel.

Getting an orbit takes a while. The LV-909 is quite efficient and more than sufficient for surface-level flight, but it's pretty weak by rocket standards. On the plus side, the Laika is not particularly heavy, since it doesn't have to carry that much fuel.

There we go!

Laika deploys its antennae and starts listening in for secret transmissions and the like.

After it's mission is done, Jeb fires the engines to put Laika on a return trajectory.

In the upper atmosphere, I turn the craft perpendicular to the surface, a technique that seems to increase drag, which makes sense. When we're coming in like this, it's more ballistic than aeronautical, so the angle is perfectly safe. Of course, we can't pull shenanigans like this in the lower atmosphere.

Laika more or less glides in, using a small amount of power from time to time to keep airspeed up.

At this point, I come to the conclusion that I have significantly undershot KSC. I might have been able to fix that by burning back upwards, but I didn't really feel like changing the landing formula that's worked twice for me before. And besides, I was rather wary of running out of fuel, even if I might have been able to survive that as well. In retrospect, I probably wouldn't have run out, anyways. Alas.

Landing chutes open up! Not only do these slow me down from screaming reentry to gentle glide, they'll also help me land. If I didn't have these pre-deployed, I could have probably gotten some serious distance, but ah, well. There are a lot of things that I could have done, but skipped for the sake of brevity. That smile on Jeb's face is about how he's going to murder mission control for this, by the way.

Several maneuvers are performed to speed up descent slightly, because I'm impatient.

This shot just LOOKS cool.

A shot taken just before full deployment.


Parachutes deployed!

Laika splashes down almost vertically. The engine firing is mostly a safety measure.


[
Successful landing is successful. Not quite where I wanted it, but still. This makes 3 out of 3 landings without a single bit broken. Laika is
awesome.