Was Starship’s Stage Zero a Bad Pad?

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  • Опубликовано: 19 июн 2023
  • Launchpads are incredible feats of engineering. Let's cover some of the basics!
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Комментарии • 2,4 тыс.

  • @timeimp
    @timeimp 11 месяцев назад +3631

    Can we expect a "I built a small-scale Starship in my garage" clip? 😂

    • @andreabuzzolan9807
      @andreabuzzolan9807 11 месяцев назад +30

      There's a guy that has made a solid rocket that self lend

    • @charleschristner7123
      @charleschristner7123 11 месяцев назад +17

      As long as you don't tell the wifey 😮

    • @bc-guy852
      @bc-guy852 11 месяцев назад +8

      Epic comment!

    • @MikeHarris1984
      @MikeHarris1984 11 месяцев назад +2

      Lol

    • @willimnot
      @willimnot 11 месяцев назад +5

      Nasaspaceflight did this with a pressure washer

  • @UrFavSoundTech
    @UrFavSoundTech 11 месяцев назад +346

    Another big reason why 39 was so monstrous was that NASA was tired of building custom pads for each rocket. KSC is littered with single use pads.

    • @MrGlobalSuccess
      @MrGlobalSuccess 11 месяцев назад +155

      Kerbal Space Center is littered with a whole lot more than just single use pads

    • @thithi8793
      @thithi8793 11 месяцев назад +3

      ok

    • @vejet
      @vejet 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@MrGlobalSuccess Like what?

    • @Eureka092
      @Eureka092 11 месяцев назад +88

      @@vejet dead kerbals

    • @mirst5069
      @mirst5069 11 месяцев назад +1

      Cant they take apart the old pads and build for new pad

  • @HammerOn-bu7gx
    @HammerOn-bu7gx 11 месяцев назад +1230

    Just a point of clarification: The flame deflectors of launch pad 39A and 39B, during the Saturn and Shuttle eras, were steel frames covered in concrete. At least during a Saturn launch, approximately one foot of the concrete was ablated off of it. Also, the one shown in your graphic at about the 6:18 point is for the Ariane pad in French Guiana. It is a one sided deflector. The Saturn deflector split the exhaust to two sides.
    Also, the flame trenches were initially lined with ceramic fire bricks to protect the underlying concrete. I don't know if that has been replaced by refractory concrete or some combination.

    • @JoshyCC
      @JoshyCC 11 месяцев назад +39

      "spit into two sides" I'm thinking that looked like an inverted aerospike?

    • @andarkelorin8797
      @andarkelorin8797 11 месяцев назад +44

      ​@@JoshyCC Effectively, yes. A linear AeroSpike anyway.

    • @blindsniper35
      @blindsniper35 11 месяцев назад +22

      Thank you for the extra information on the flame deflector designs.

    • @TheBleggh
      @TheBleggh 11 месяцев назад +65

      Actually, to correct your correction: The graphic at 6:18 is indeed LC-39B, and not the Ariane V pad. One of the SLS mods was to make the flame deflector one-sided.

    • @TheDemocrab
      @TheDemocrab 11 месяцев назад +90

      @repentandbelieveinJesusChrist9 I'll continue seeking retribution for all of the children victimised by the church before anything else kthx.

  • @voicetest6019
    @voicetest6019 11 месяцев назад +424

    This brings me back to a retort of the "Mechanical Engineers build weapons, Civil Engineers build targets" joke from my uni physics days:
    Civil Engineers build cities, Mechanical Engineers build headaches for Civil Engineers.

    • @jameswilson5165
      @jameswilson5165 11 месяцев назад +26

      And politicians bedevil them both.

    • @zagreus5773
      @zagreus5773 11 месяцев назад +25

      @@jameswilson5165 *architects

    • @Greatdome99
      @Greatdome99 11 месяцев назад +49

      Mechanical engineers make things that move; Civil engineers make things that shouldn't move.

    • @RC-fp1tl
      @RC-fp1tl 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@zagreus5773 both politicians and architects

    • @Shadowmanchronicles
      @Shadowmanchronicles 11 месяцев назад +9

      And us electrical engineer does lines of coke!

  • @ArrakisMusicOfficial
    @ArrakisMusicOfficial 11 месяцев назад +930

    I would love to see a garage model of a flame diverter with a deluge system, I know you can do it Grady!

    • @yan3073
      @yan3073 11 месяцев назад +26

      And also a rocket engine for realistic simulation!

    • @gus473
      @gus473 11 месяцев назад +10

      😂 Go for it, Grady! 🤣✌️😎

    • @esarlls3
      @esarlls3 11 месяцев назад +21

      Collaboration with Dustin @SmarterEveryDay ?

    • @carazy123_
      @carazy123_ 11 месяцев назад +12

      @@esarlls3*Destin but that would be a sick collab

    • @dancingdog2790
      @dancingdog2790 11 месяцев назад +8

      NSF has an hour-long video that features a concrete test slab being attacked with a power washer; hilarity ensues.

  • @bubbax1115
    @bubbax1115 11 месяцев назад +380

    My favorite comment: "The launchpad left starbase faster than the rocket did."

  • @petem6503
    @petem6503 11 месяцев назад +288

    I was part of the team that re-furbed the test stand at Edwards after Challenger failed. The mechanical systems to provide the water for cooling are impressive. The diverter there was hollow, with tens of thousands of holes in the "hot side" to shield the diverter surface from the flame with a "fog" discharge of water through the surface. The criteria was 5 million gallons of water, delivered in something like 3~5 minutes. The pump houses (there were two) had about 20,000 HP of pumps. The water into the diverter was carried in two 48" pipes. One of our guys took videos of the "dry run" (no flame) test of the water system. The audio can be heard "shut it down, shut it down!!!" once someone realized that without the flame, the water flew downhill into the sloped desert...right toward the tiny berg of Boron, CA. The "fishtail" bottom end of the diverter caused the water to jump right over the drainage canal that was supposed to carry off excess water. It was a fun project. Almost forgot to mention: we didn't determine the criteria for water flow, etc., but we were instructed that no material available (late 80's) could withstand the rocket blast, so the water protected the gantry, diverter, etc. When I saw the damage to the impact area of the flame, I wondered if the real problem was a mechanical one: not enough water? Pump fail?

    • @sanjaymishra7892
      @sanjaymishra7892 11 месяцев назад +4

      Great

    • @sharedknowledge6640
      @sharedknowledge6640 10 месяцев назад

      This is Elon Musk where all that matters is what he THINKS will happen but he’s wrong wrong way more than he’s right. From the Cybertruck’s unbreakable windows to the 2+ year delay from his promised delivery date. He just sells fake snake oil over and over again and his slobbering fan boys are dumb enough to blindly drink up his often fake hyperloop and similar nonsense.

    • @PhysicsGamer
      @PhysicsGamer 10 месяцев назад +24

      For perspective, that gives a flow rate of around 8,000-30000 gallons per second over that time period. At the low end, if it were a river it would be around the 32nd most powerful river on the entire planet. At the high end, it would be the _eighth!_

    • @petem6503
      @petem6503 10 месяцев назад +10

      @@PhysicsGamer The 5 mil gal criteria included a big safety factor, and as I recall the motor sections (Saturn V?) came in 3 minute and 5 minute versions (?), so the amount of water varied with the test.

    • @PhysicsGamer
      @PhysicsGamer 10 месяцев назад +7

      @@petem6503 Makes sense. Still an enormous amount of water - more than enough to carry a house away under the right circumstances!

  • @saltyroe3179
    @saltyroe3179 11 месяцев назад +67

    My dad worked on the designs of the launch pads and launchers for the Atlas missile. The issue of making reusable launch pads led to concrete turn buckets with refractor brick lining. Water flooding was developed latter by NASA at Cape Canaveral. The cost of a fleet of Atlas missiles pads that would be used once against the USSR led to the coffin launcher. This launcher had the missile horizontal until fueled, then erected to vertical for launch. The launcher was surrounded by a wall mostly to keep things out while waiting for years for a launch order that never came. If launched, the Atlas would destroy the launcher and surrounding wall. When the US went to silos for ICBMs there were extensive systems to direct the blast out the bottom of the silo and to vents outside the silo tube. This was intended to prevent the missile from destroying itself before leaving the silo. Over at the Soviet Cosmodrome the solution was brutally simple: dig a deep hole in the ground, canterleaver a platform over the hole, put rocket on platform. When the rocket took off the blast went into the hole and the effect on dirt in the bottom wasn't an issue.
    Of course you cannot (as you pointed) out, economicly dig a giant hole at Cape Canaveral (Kennedy) or Boca Chica.
    I cannot imagine that SpaceX didn't know that they had built an expendable launch pad. The question is do they want to pay for a reusable pad? It might be cheaper to build an expendable pad for each launch, just like the Atlas coffin launcher.

    • @sysbofh
      @sysbofh 11 месяцев назад +8

      They did know. This version (the concrete one) was to be substituted by a new one. The hardware was already there, but they thought it would withstand one launching. And so, decided to go ahead to save time (as it would take about 2 months to install everything).
      They were wrong. But this was the idea: do one launch with the old pad, change it to the new deluge system, launch the second rocket.

    • @randomperson1731
      @randomperson1731 11 месяцев назад +10

      While it could be cheaper, they wouldn't want to use an expendable pad anyway because they need to launch within a couple of days at most for in-orbit refilling. These repairs are taking far too long for that to be feasible.

    • @eustatic3832
      @eustatic3832 10 месяцев назад +4

      They know that they would likely cause the extinction of the piping plover at boca chica

    • @dancingdog2790
      @dancingdog2790 10 месяцев назад

      @@eustatic3832 🤣

  • @eliljeho
    @eliljeho 11 месяцев назад +499

    I know it's new, but it would be interesting to hear your perspective on the I95 collapse and repair before the final report is finalized, and apparently repaired. Maybe a topic for a short?

    • @personzorz
      @personzorz 11 месяцев назад +56

      I mean it's probably hard to have an overpass not collapsed with a tanker burns under it

    • @jimbarino2
      @jimbarino2 11 месяцев назад +37

      I am more interested in the plan to rebuild it. I saw that they are using lightweight fill and I was like, "Hey, I know about that!"

    • @Noneofyourbusiness2000
      @Noneofyourbusiness2000 11 месяцев назад +16

      Is it really that interesting? Tanker catches on fire under an overpass. Overpass predictably collapses. They're going to use gravel to build up next to the overpass and pave a temporary road as they fix the overpass. The finished overpass takes five years to construct as it's PennDOT.

    • @nicholashartzler2205
      @nicholashartzler2205 11 месяцев назад +8

      ​@@personzorz but jet fuel can't melt steel beams

    • @RedsPC
      @RedsPC 11 месяцев назад +18

      Road Guy Rob just released a video explaining how they plan to fix the video, if you wanna watch it. Basically they are building sort of a thin bridge in the middle for people to continue using the i95 and they will build half a bridge beside it, then switch to those being used and build the middle

  • @counterfit5
    @counterfit5 11 месяцев назад +184

    The water deluge system was as much, if not more, for protection the pad from the incredible sound pressure rather than thermal protection. Saturn V nearly maxed out the possible sound pressure possible in 1atm of air

    • @Amradar123
      @Amradar123 11 месяцев назад +25

      It also was to protect the lower stage against sound waves from hitting it

    • @BenState
      @BenState 11 месяцев назад +10

      @@Amradar123 thats what he said.

    • @Sappo7
      @Sappo7 11 месяцев назад +25

      Given that there's a lot of suspicion that all those motor failures during the starship test launch were directly caused by that sonic damage, the new plate probably won't fix the problem either. They need a deluge or other acoustic solution just to keep acoustic effects from rattling the engines apart again.

    • @807800
      @807800 11 месяцев назад +25

      @@Sappo7 That's just suspicion from internet commentators.
      There's a NASA doc [Acoustic loads generated by the propulsion system - NASA SP-8072] that stated in order to have an effective deluge to minimize the acoustic load from a big rocket, you would need to launch it on a large lake.

    • @Hybridog
      @Hybridog 11 месяцев назад +15

      One of the major components of Saturn V sound generation was infrasound. That is, sound below 20Hz that cannot be heard by human ears. The rocket produced a lot of super powerful infrasound that created enormous stress on the rocket stages above. It had to be accounted for in the design and they worked on ways or reducing it via pad/deluge design and some tweaking to the engines. Powerful infrasound can cause internal hemorrhaging in humans and shake buildings apart.

  • @Darisiabgal7573
    @Darisiabgal7573 11 месяцев назад +47

    The problem with boca chica site is its built on the rio grande flood plain. The sand is essentially delivered down the rio grande during historic floods that occurred before the two upsteam dams were built, falcon lake and lake amistad.
    Within the sand laid down since the last ice age when sea levels were lower is a spongey like material with organic material and bacteria trapped in an anoxic environment. While the surface may look firm, putting pressure on the surface can cause the sand to become more maleable.
    Now imagine, you have a set of rocket engines with their thrust vector pointing down at a sheet like structure laying over something that is hard agregate on top and spongey below.
    The ISP of the engine is in the 350 range which we multiply a 9.8 m/s for and exhaust velocity of Mach10.
    This does not reach the launch pad, but the rocket engines resonate and their wave functions create pulse waves that travel at hypersonic speed to the sheet of concrete. This is much like a sonicator used to clean off surface debris but a million times more powerful.
    The sheet itself begins to vibrate and the substrate below begins to undergo liquifaction. The pad is now free to vibrate, and because concrete is fairly weak under stretching it just breaks up. Because of the nature of the sand below this causes the substrate to give and the action of the Ve on the concrete itself scours it away.
    I am been to boca chica, i had the fortunate exoerience of sinking a car in that sand, Its not like other soils with tightening layers as you go down, its just goopy sand, often pitch black layers of bacteria laden sand. When they chose the site I pondered how they were going to stabilize the soil, just to build the equipment. They had problems with the soil in the begining because it was so wet and soft. They demonstrate some magical technique they use to dry things out. But look at boca chica, on any given day it looks dry and sand, until you get below the surface. The region has suffered from storm after storm, flood after flood. After hurricane allen, the main road up S. padre island was chopped into a dozen pieces, 8x8x8 blocks of granite were torn out nowhere to be found. There were tropical fish from the offshore island living in the large ponds that Allen created were the road used to be.
    This is the nature of boca chica, its not stable, over thousands of years it gets torn up and completely rebuilt, what looks like dry land today is just an illusion.

    • @WhatIsThisVid
      @WhatIsThisVid 10 месяцев назад +2

      They brought in loads of dirt and let it sit for years which stabilized the soil, then they took some of it away and built Starbase on top of it.

    • @Darisiabgal7573
      @Darisiabgal7573 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@WhatIsThisVid They tried to draw the water out by mixing drying agents, but its still in the flood plain of the riogrande and you can only get so much compaction of that type of substrate.

  • @StephenGillie
    @StephenGillie 11 месяцев назад +7

    "Exciting to watch" reminds of cars which are "exciting to drive" in that you don't know if you'll arrive at your destination.

  • @TheVonMatrices
    @TheVonMatrices 11 месяцев назад +212

    It's worth pointing out that one of the speculated reasons that there were so many engine failures that ultimately doomed the launch was because of debris from the launchpad striking the engines. So even without considering government regulations or neighbors, there is a strong reason for the company to build a more durable launchpad to protect the rocket itself.

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 11 месяцев назад +18

      I watch Scott Manley, and from him I have learned things like RUD (Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly) and "Engine-Rich Exhaust".

    • @steveaustin2686
      @steveaustin2686 11 месяцев назад +24

      Per Musk, the first three engines to fail before liftoff, were not from debris strikes.

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 11 месяцев назад +67

      @@steveaustin2686 And he always tells the truth! Such a free-speech absolutist!

    • @steveaustin2686
      @steveaustin2686 11 месяцев назад +17

      @@MonkeyJedi99 If he is telling the truth, then the Raptor 2 engines need further development. Which matches what SpaceX has said that the Raptor 2 engines will be replaced by Raptor 3 engines.

    • @paulmoir4452
      @paulmoir4452 11 месяцев назад +5

      If you think about it, the mass and flow coming from the base of the rocket, which is what destroyed the pad, should also have kept the pad from flowing back up towards the rocket. 1.8e6N * 33 engine / 9m rocket_base_area = something like 145 PSI force from 21 tonnes per second. Are you really throwing chunks of concrete against that successfully? I know there are nuances but you have to overcome the big picture which says, at least to me, "firmly no".

  • @Zanthum
    @Zanthum 11 месяцев назад +56

    NASA also used asbestos in the flame trench at 39a, I believe in the joints between the concrete slabs. I remember mesothelioma lawsuit ads talking about the flame trench specifically as a potential source of exposure.

    • @Robert-cu9bm
      @Robert-cu9bm 11 месяцев назад

      Asbestos is a very good material, it does things no other can do.
      Shame it gives cancer.

    • @scythelord
      @scythelord 11 месяцев назад +9

      Meh. Asbestos is still used in applications where it is necessary.

    • @Zanthum
      @Zanthum 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@scythelord yes. I thought it would be an interesting inclusion to the engineering discussion, though I suppose it fits better in a materials or mechanical engineering discussion rather than a civil engineering discussion but the video was already starting to straddle that boundary.

  • @tlskillman
    @tlskillman 11 месяцев назад +101

    Thanks for the historical perspective. Seems like NASA was all over the launch pad issue from the start. I wish you had said more about the SpaceX water deluge plan. I couldn't tell how you felt about the odds of success.

    • @snuffeldjuret
      @snuffeldjuret 11 месяцев назад +11

      he didn't say a single word about the ability to do the same thing in boca. They could not.

    • @fakename287
      @fakename287 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@snuffeldjuret why not?

    • @snuffeldjuret
      @snuffeldjuret 11 месяцев назад +24

      @@fakename287 they are not allowed to flood the area with that amount of water, due to environmental reasons.

    • @JRBendixen
      @JRBendixen 11 месяцев назад +18

      Crazy Elon idea. May work in theory and surely fail in practise.
      Why on earth would anyone rely on pumps for this.

    • @SpaceAdvocate
      @SpaceAdvocate 11 месяцев назад +11

      @@snuffeldjuretThey are allowed to release an undefined amount of fresh water. Though it can't be contaminated.
      They wouldn't be releasing amounts anywhere near what a single cloud can do.

  • @mudrunner1
    @mudrunner1 11 месяцев назад +11

    You didn't cover the reasons SpaceX didn't build a flame diverter.

  • @heaslyben
    @heaslyben 11 месяцев назад +422

    Calling a rocket launch "thunderous" may be an understatement, but it is definitely a thunderstatement!

    • @aldenconsolver3428
      @aldenconsolver3428 11 месяцев назад +6

      that hurts LOL

    • @nvelsen1975
      @nvelsen1975 11 месяцев назад +10

      Here's your coat, door's over there.

    • @Boodlemania
      @Boodlemania 11 месяцев назад +6

      I see what you did there.

    • @cy-one
      @cy-one 11 месяцев назад +4

      So how're the kids?

    • @Niskirin
      @Niskirin 11 месяцев назад +6

      Out. Now.

  • @trooper5157
    @trooper5157 11 месяцев назад +50

    Great to see content related to space travel and rocketry. So much of the channel (we've followed since the early days) relates to civil engineering for municipalities - its good to see some other areas of interest, like this, covered. Keep it up!

  • @stargazer7644
    @stargazer7644 10 месяцев назад +2

    I usually find in video ads to be obnoxious and they get skipped immediately. But I found your Nebula ad well done and worth watching.

  • @notabene9630
    @notabene9630 11 месяцев назад +2

    love your videos and thank you for mixing the music in this one !

  • @hofii2
    @hofii2 11 месяцев назад +7

    In rocketry what happened is what is called "pad rich exhaust".

  • @CSIStarbase
    @CSIStarbase 11 месяцев назад +162

    HI Grady! I've been waiting for this video to come out for a while now. I knew there was no way you weren't going to cover this lol.
    This was a fantastic review, although I was a bit surprised you didn't go deeper into the actual failure mechanics
    I considered reaching out to you as I was working on my deep dive investigation to see if you may want to partner on this topic, but I figured you may be a bit too busy.

    • @gadgetmerc
      @gadgetmerc 11 месяцев назад +40

      Agreed. Mostly about how things are normally done. Very light on any details about stage 0. I was excited and expecting to hear him talk about the 5 seconds of pain that the pad took and his explanation on what would have happened under the pad. Even a practical example of what all of that pressure would do.

    • @AhmedHassan-yc5fb
      @AhmedHassan-yc5fb 11 месяцев назад +14

      I have seen a video from NSF or you recently (can't remember which one). They talked about the old pad construction. They deduced that the pad failed/cracked at unsupported points. This let the gased flow under the pad and lift the concrete everywhere. It is likely that Grady does not follow the community as close as we do and so does not have much awareness of the data collected by the various enthusiasts like RGV. I would also like to hear speculation/analysis about the usefulness/longivity of the new pad construction. Love your videos. Would be very cool if you collaborated.

    • @CSIStarbase
      @CSIStarbase 11 месяцев назад +30

      @@gadgetmerc I was hoping he would maybe have watched my episode about this and found some holes in my logic or things that I didn’t consider. Not trying to self promote, but that was genuinely something I considered as I was investigating this topic.
      “I have to be extremely thorough with this or Grady will completely shred my explanation lol”
      I’m a bit sad that he didn’t

    • @CSIStarbase
      @CSIStarbase 11 месяцев назад +31

      The biggest issue here was the failure of the pile cap, not the Fondag layer on top. It didn’t vaporize, but instead the sand underneath the pile cap was compressed and caused it to bend and eventually snap.
      Loads were not properly transferred to the CFA piles, and instead the pile cap was transferring loads into the subsoil layer which has close to zero bearing capacity under liquefaction conditions.

    • @AhmedHassan-yc5fb
      @AhmedHassan-yc5fb 11 месяцев назад +10

      @@CSIStarbase yup, that's the video that I meant. Great video btw. A shame Grady did not delve that deep into the analysis.

  • @pavlovic317
    @pavlovic317 10 месяцев назад +1

    I have watched many videos about this launch yet I still learned several things from your video that no one else mentioned. Thank you for providing well researched content

  • @Crazymadanapalle
    @Crazymadanapalle 10 месяцев назад +1

    was waiting for your video on this from just moments after I watched the launch! I'd love more videos covering things like this, related to Space!

  • @brooksbryant2478
    @brooksbryant2478 11 месяцев назад +5

    I’ve been hoping you would make this video since we first saw the aftermath of the launch!

  • @mikeg0802
    @mikeg0802 11 месяцев назад +5

    Thank you Grady for another awesome video!

  • @mattmatt516
    @mattmatt516 11 месяцев назад

    I was waiting for your video on this from just moments after I watched the launch! I'd love more videos covering things like this, related to Space!

  • @bryandensley6220
    @bryandensley6220 10 месяцев назад

    Love this, would love to see more space related engineering videos from you

  • @Archangelm127
    @Archangelm127 11 месяцев назад +8

    *SO* many Kerbal Space Program flashbacks...

  • @The_dislike_guy
    @The_dislike_guy 11 месяцев назад +150

    The technical term for this kind of engineering is “f*ck around and find out” or FAFO for short.

    • @davidwebb4904
      @davidwebb4904 11 месяцев назад +18

      Expensive way to learn a very obvious lesson.

    • @TheHiznor
      @TheHiznor 11 месяцев назад +18

      @@davidwebb4904 ULA was charging the US Government around 500 million a launch. With space X now in the mix, the price has dropped to about 100 million a launch. Rapid prototyping certainly has its risks, but if you "do it like you always have" you are way less likely to have evolutional breakthroughs.

    • @mattb9343
      @mattb9343 11 месяцев назад +20

      When your boss is too dumb to take launch pad building tips from people who've already built powerful rockets this is what happens. Hell even the Russians use a dry reinforced flame divert for their pads.

    • @TheEDFLegacy
      @TheEDFLegacy 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@TheHiznor Absolutely! The old method of design is incredibly slow, and is still prone to major accidents because some things you won't learn without actual testing.

    • @Yutani_Crayven
      @Yutani_Crayven 11 месяцев назад +5

      It's "move fast and break things"

  • @Grichecth
    @Grichecth 4 месяца назад +2

    Would love a follow up to this now that the water cooled plate has performed excellent during the latest launch.

  • @lasinthas4152
    @lasinthas4152 10 месяцев назад

    And this is the first I’m learning of the water deluge system. I love this channel!!!

  • @crowlsyong
    @crowlsyong 11 месяцев назад +7

    5:41 I feel like a good little engineer- that was the first thing I wondered when you mentioned they used the dredged material as fill.

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin 11 месяцев назад

      I was wondering how much soil overburden they used to help the settlement, which they later remove for the final construction. I bet it was 10-20ft of additional soil above what they needed, just to load the soil for the construction weight.

  • @Verrisin
    @Verrisin 11 месяцев назад +47

    You have not mentioned the most interesting part.
    - They said the problem is because the *soil* below the concrete slab compressed, and thus the concrete _snapped_ and flames got through it. It would have been much less violent, if the concrete ablated as it was supposed to.
    - I was hoping for analysis of that.

    • @Verrisin
      @Verrisin 11 месяцев назад +27

      Many of your videos are highly technical and informative, yet this felt like _no more_ than what any media outlet reported on.

  • @nathansteadman2588
    @nathansteadman2588 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you for making this video. I love space content, and your applicable perspective gave the whole picture.

  • @matthewfranklin8427
    @matthewfranklin8427 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you. I was hoping you would cover this topic.

  • @jimbobur
    @jimbobur 11 месяцев назад +315

    From an engineering standpoint I don't think flame diverters or a water deluge systems are really necessary for SpaceX. They can just submerge the launchpad in the ocean's-worth of copium in the comments section.

    • @papermario3982
      @papermario3982 11 месяцев назад +10

      Snrk

    • @LeCharles07
      @LeCharles07 11 месяцев назад +5

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @chadleach6009
      @chadleach6009 11 месяцев назад +5

      Someone's coping with Musk for sure 😅

    • @Old_Ladies
      @Old_Ladies 11 месяцев назад +32

      It is always frustrating reading the comments on Elon's videos. So much copium for every failure and how Elon is a genius...

    • @SeanCMonahan
      @SeanCMonahan 11 месяцев назад +9

      NGL, you had me in the first half 😂

  • @scratchbuiltdozer
    @scratchbuiltdozer 11 месяцев назад +5

    I went down to the launch pad a month ago and gathered up a bunch of concrete chunks from the launch. Super cool stuff and place to visit.

  • @DavidHRyall
    @DavidHRyall 11 месяцев назад +17

    Good summary, but would have been worth mentioning that the engines blasted the pad longer than expected due to engine outage. And also the sand underneath collapsed under the pressure impact, causing the concrete to fracture
    Would have also been worth discussing their solutions for reinforcing the substructure (not just the installation of the water deluge) so that the concrete can't fracture under pressure again

  • @YourArmsGone
    @YourArmsGone 11 месяцев назад +55

    One of my biggest concerns with the Starship pad is how close the fuel farm is. We saw several tanks damaged by the last launch which could easily have resulted in an explosion and even more damage. So far I haven't see SpaceX address this issue.

    • @snuffeldjuret
      @snuffeldjuret 11 месяцев назад +14

      there is not much fuel left in them when it is all in the rocket.

    • @robijenik9872
      @robijenik9872 11 месяцев назад +34

      So wise! That’s why we should accept that fuel tanks getting sprayed with concrete chunks is an acceptable downside :)

    • @snuffeldjuret
      @snuffeldjuret 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@robijenik9872 it is not a planned feature

    • @nightonfir3
      @nightonfir3 11 месяцев назад +5

      The tanks are mostly empty after launch and the fuel is methane which is not particularly explosive.

    • @xovvo3950
      @xovvo3950 11 месяцев назад +14

      And they won't, until that design loses them money (like in a launch-site disaster).

  • @billykuan
    @billykuan 11 месяцев назад +39

    There is an old NASA documentary that is all about the development of the eventual Saturn 5 launch pad. I watched it about 5 years ago, there was good information on flame diverting and water suppression systems and the mistakes along the way. I am surprised SpaceX didn't come close to following the lessons learned.

    • @boblordylordyhowie
      @boblordylordyhowie 10 месяцев назад +12

      Probably because they think they are smarter than NASA engineers. How many times have you heard kids tell us we wouldn't understand, they forget, we wrote the book.

    • @stickiedmin6508
      @stickiedmin6508 10 месяцев назад

      @@boblordylordyhowie
      Absolutely. Thinking about the insane amounts of money they must have burned through, relearning lessons, duplicating mistakes and rediscovering problems that NASA and/or Roscosmos figured out *_decades ago_* is chilling. Too arrogant to acknowledge what came before, or to build on top of someone else's foundations, and trying to reinvent the wheel.

    • @jackboot3946
      @jackboot3946 10 месяцев назад +14

      I suspect there are some design engineers at SpaceX who are smugly saying "Told ya so".

    • @TheDrunkenMug
      @TheDrunkenMug 10 месяцев назад +7

      It is quite frankly not surprising *- at all*

    • @bensemusx
      @bensemusx 10 месяцев назад +4

      SpaceX’s pad was capable of withstanding the Saturn V. They did a 50% thrust test and the pad withstood it. 50% thrust of the SuperHeavy booster is equal to the full thrust of the Saturn V. Based on the damage done they believed the pad could handle one launch of the rocket. They ended up being wrong but it doesn’t matter as they had updates for the pad ready to go.

  • @baystated
    @baystated 11 месяцев назад +6

    Every time Grady said "launchpad", my brain finished with "McQuack".

  • @brussels13207
    @brussels13207 11 месяцев назад +1

    Love these videos, regardless of subject. Please keep them coming, and I hope you earn good money for doing them.

  • @seeriktus
    @seeriktus 11 месяцев назад

    Thankyou for covering this!

  • @jwstocker1979
    @jwstocker1979 11 месяцев назад +17

    Fondag is a really interesting product. My family owns a ready mix concrete company that services an aluminum smelting plant. Every so often the floors in the furnaces are replaced and they will use Bulk Fondag for the concrete. The laborers and finishers that are working it will sometimes have to vibrate around their feet when they want to move to a new work position.

  • @thejll
    @thejll 11 месяцев назад +3

    Digging in the sand near sea-side was an evocative image!

  • @emrehaymana8306
    @emrehaymana8306 10 месяцев назад +1

    that shot of cape canevaral at 4:24 looks so nice! the sky, the rainbow and the giant rocket! absolute perfect :D

  • @johncampbell7433
    @johncampbell7433 10 месяцев назад

    thank you for doing this topic!

  • @roberthaston459
    @roberthaston459 11 месяцев назад +38

    As it was explained to me on a tour (I also flew over the pads often). The flame trench originally didn't have a water deluge and it shot fire brick far away.
    In May 2008 (STS 124) 3,500 19 pound fire bricks from the wall were shot out at up to 680 mph, 1,800 feet away.

  • @scottbrower9052
    @scottbrower9052 11 месяцев назад +5

    What did they think was gonna happen?

    • @zyeborm
      @zyeborm 11 месяцев назад +3

      Ablation and spalling like had happened in their sub scale testing. I think they may well have gotten away with it had all the engines lit. The takeoff was much much slower without the 3 that failed at the moment of ignition. The other two that failed a bit later made it worse. But if they had them all out would have well cleared the tower by the time the debris started flying out in the attempt they had.

  • @ITSupport-fj6pf
    @ITSupport-fj6pf 6 месяцев назад +2

    Now after 2nd launch, without this damage, i really wish a follow-up video explaining how the stage 0 is intact with newly designed water system

    • @weekiely1233
      @weekiely1233 5 месяцев назад

      Granted that plate was already going to be used for flight 2. It wasn’t an afterthought

  • @johann-space
    @johann-space 11 месяцев назад

    Yes! Been waiting for this video!! So interesting.

  • @shanebusch8102
    @shanebusch8102 11 месяцев назад +23

    Grady I know you won’t say it but I will. You are just as good if not even better than those old discovery and science channel shows and you’re definitely a billion times better than the shows they air now.

    • @JoeOvercoat
      @JoeOvercoat 11 месяцев назад

      His voice is even better!

  • @dichebach
    @dichebach 11 месяцев назад +5

    The wildlife around Boca Chica are not quite so chipper I think.

    • @planetsec9
      @planetsec9 11 месяцев назад +2

      I think the hurricane that hit 2 days later was a bigger deal for them

    • @dsdsspp7130
      @dsdsspp7130 11 месяцев назад

      @@planetsec9 not really, the chemical damage caused by toxic concrete dust is a bigger deal, not just for the wild life, but also for the people in the area.
      your organs and other animals' organs have evolved to deal with sand, not concrete.

    • @filip9564
      @filip9564 11 месяцев назад +1

      Who cares? Like really who even cares? Its a small part of some very common animals and plants, it dosent matter if it gets destroyes.

  • @ianjanusz4109
    @ianjanusz4109 10 месяцев назад

    Omg this is amazing. Please more space content!!!

  • @eirikmellesdal
    @eirikmellesdal 11 месяцев назад

    I like thiese videos. Very neat how your dissasemble intimidaing/mundane things to the basics. very neat

  • @markrichardson2508
    @markrichardson2508 11 месяцев назад +17

    Dam I thought you might’ve talked more about the science behind how it was probably the foundation that really failed and that the concrete they used probably would have survived a lot better if the slab didn’t crack.

  • @BrandonBigB956
    @BrandonBigB956 10 месяцев назад +4

    I wonder how many of those engines that failed to ignite or failed early did so due to damage done to them by the launch pad blowing apart.

  • @zam6877
    @zam6877 11 месяцев назад

    I am grateful for your more sober approach
    Rockets and space exploration in general can stir up a lot of emotions

  • @Lemonickous
    @Lemonickous 11 месяцев назад +2

    Awesome video man

  • @captiannemo1587
    @captiannemo1587 11 месяцев назад +120

    Another thing to consider is the Pad39 diverter was designed with bigger rockets in mind…

    • @rh906
      @rh906 11 месяцев назад +133

      Almost like people figured this problem already and someone was just cheap...

    • @crackedemerald4930
      @crackedemerald4930 11 месяцев назад +6

      Bigger than starship? Isn't it like the biggest rocket?

    • @jamesm6830
      @jamesm6830 11 месяцев назад +65

      @@crackedemerald4930 Pad 39 was designed for the Saturn 5 rocket in the 1960s - not Starship. OP was probably saying how this was a solved problem 60 years ago.

    • @christianweagle6253
      @christianweagle6253 11 месяцев назад +60

      NASA had plans for a follow-on rocket even bigger than the Saturn V.

    • @steveaustin2686
      @steveaustin2686 11 месяцев назад +62

      @@jamesm6830 Reportedly the LC-39 pads were designed for rockets roughly twice the size of the Saturn-V. So for a rocket roughly the size of Starship.

  • @kirkpuppy
    @kirkpuppy 11 месяцев назад +6

    At 8:45 "I think that the results came as a surprise to no one..." Elon stated that they did not expect the pad to be destroyed and would not have launched if they did. Showing NASA built flame trenches, implying that this is a solved problem is misleading. The flame trench at 39a frequently needed repairs and was reconfigured many times. Spacex static fired Starship at about the same thrust of a Saturn 5 and the pad only had minor damage. As far as this not being mentioned in the environmental PEA, that's not surprising since it wasn't anticipated.
    At 10:54 "..not to mention the public safety aspects of the showering debris." The debris particles that fell on Port Isabel have been tested at UCF. They found that it did not contain elements of the concrete and Fondag, just sand.
    At 11:-00 "The FAA has effectively grounded Starship..." The FAA has not grounded Starship. The launch license was for one launch. The mishap investigation is standard procedure.
    I was expecting so kind of analysis of how the pad failed.

    • @steveaustin2686
      @steveaustin2686 11 месяцев назад +2

      The OLM is pretty far from the ground, so is effectively a 360 degree flame trench. What SpaceX did was launch before installing the water deluge as parts of it were already being delivered to the site, before the 'orbital' test launch. And that Musk wants to avoid a diverter if at all possible.
      The Starship FAA license is for 5 years (until Apr 2028) and not for one launch. What the FAA did was ground the spacecraft until the investigation into the mishap is complete, which is what the FAA always does for mishaps.

    • @kirkpuppy
      @kirkpuppy 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@steveaustin2686 No it was just for the first flight.
      www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_offices/ast/licenses_permits/media/VOL_23-129_SpaceX_Starship-Super_Heavy_License_and_Orders_2023-04-14.pdf
      Under item "4. Authorization:" it states "For the first flight only, unless this license is modified to remove this term."

  • @timothydonlan9112
    @timothydonlan9112 11 месяцев назад +2

    Why does the whole SpaceX thing make me think of Salvage 1? Anyway, thank you Grady! Your channel is one of my favorite. You keep me hopeful there are more good engineers.

  • @c4feg4r44
    @c4feg4r44 10 месяцев назад +2

    are you planning to take a look at the ocean gate titan sinking once more information comes out?

  • @pz7510
    @pz7510 11 месяцев назад +31

    thanks for this, I thought the design of the pad and all the collateral damage caused by the debris being scattered was the more interesting part of the event

  • @Mr2winners
    @Mr2winners 11 месяцев назад +11

    Water logged concrete + lot of heat is 💥 of concrete, only the top layer as i understand is the special concrete the lower layers is normal concrete mixuee

  • @jimmlynden2261
    @jimmlynden2261 10 месяцев назад

    Keep up the great work, Grady.

  • @LT1SWAPCOM
    @LT1SWAPCOM 11 месяцев назад +1

    I've been waiting for this from you...

  • @UncleKennysPlace
    @UncleKennysPlace 11 месяцев назад +40

    Certainly some info on the mode of failure would be nice.

    • @Sonny_McMacsson
      @Sonny_McMacsson 11 месяцев назад +9

      Disintegration caused by high winds.

    • @timwildauer5063
      @timwildauer5063 11 месяцев назад +20

      @@Sonny_McMacsson Disintegration was expected, but that didn’t eat through many feet of concrete and rebar. The concrete actually snapped in half under the load, and that allowed the “high winds” to eat through the soft sand underneath. Disintegration would have been acceptable, and even expected, but snapping in half was unexpected and thus not included in the assessment.

    • @moonasha
      @moonasha 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@timwildauer5063 that sounds about right. I seriously doubt spaceX would have gone ahead with the launch if they expected a catastrophic failure like this. Whatever they were expecting, it was probably much more tame

    • @ericlotze7724
      @ericlotze7724 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@timwildauer5063 doesn’t concrete have an expected maximum load…

    • @noconsent
      @noconsent 11 месяцев назад +6

      So many engines failed it did not have the delta to make it to space nor orbit. They lost control of the biggest rocket ever launched, and it was trying to point back to earth. Thankfully it is just a giant metal tube with no real structural support, so even after the flight termination system failed, the rocket as able to fall apart in the air, instead of turning into a missile headed for Mexico/Texas.
      Or do you mean the mode of failure for the launch pad? That was caused by pointing rocket engines at concrete and just assuming nothing will go wrong. Like all companies that employ "move fast, break things, go bankrupt" culture.

  • @MWPdx
    @MWPdx 11 месяцев назад +13

    SpaceX: psh, yeah we knew that would happen.
    EPA: Did you?
    SpaceX: Um....

  • @morganjohansen5097
    @morganjohansen5097 11 месяцев назад

    I’m so happy to see this on my feed!

  • @MD.ImNoScientician
    @MD.ImNoScientician 10 месяцев назад

    Great Reporting once again Grady 👍

  • @daveyoder9231
    @daveyoder9231 11 месяцев назад +153

    I've always loved NASA, maybe because it always felt like they tried so hard to do the best they could. I would expand their budget by an order of magnitude. More exploration, less exploitation.

    • @TanksInSpace_
      @TanksInSpace_ 11 месяцев назад

      Sure, SpaceX rockets are just updates/copies of NASA Technologies but still ... I can't wait till SpaceX put the first people on the moon in 2033

    • @dx-ek4vr
      @dx-ek4vr 11 месяцев назад +16

      I am in favor of stuff like Asteroid mining, though. Much rather mine those than have to destroy some sensitive habitat here on Earth for stuff like Rare-Earths

    • @papermario3982
      @papermario3982 11 месяцев назад +8

      Stan NASA! We need to keep working on getting off this planet before it dies or we all nuke each other lmao

    • @j3i2i2yl7
      @j3i2i2yl7 11 месяцев назад +8

      I agree that NASAs unmanned programs have been awesome. Their manned programs since Apollo, the Space Shuttle in particular, have been less impressive. In the 70s NASA claimed they were creating affordable access to space, but they lost their way until Obama open contracts to private companies. Now the Artemis program is looking like it is following the Space Shuttle path, with NASA going to their legacy contractors and micromanaging them.

    • @agbmoe
      @agbmoe 11 месяцев назад +29

      I used to share your opinion, but the NASA we grew up with is not the NASA of today. If you need proof, look at the SLS vs Starship. SLS is now almost a decade late and billions of dollars over budget. Hell the RS-25 engines alone are going to cost $146 million PER ENGINE and there are 4 of them. A fully expendable falcon heavy launch costs $150 million and both carry a 26 ton payload to lunar transfer orbit. Granted falcon heavy isn't crew rated, but even if we double the cost of a falcon heavy launch that alone will cover the cost of JUST the engines of SLS.
      I'm not saying we should scrap NASA... Far from it. I love NASA. Our tax dollars have been wasted on outdated technology for decades though. NASA shouldn't be designing spaceships anymore. They should focus on missions and research. The private sector has proven that they can design faster, better, and cheaper than NASA can.

  • @AnvilDragon
    @AnvilDragon 11 месяцев назад +16

    Concrete can handle pressure, special concretes handle high thermal loads, but concrete is a poor choice against sound energy. Reflecting world record sound energy back at your rocket with a flat plate should have "ACME" printed on it somewhere. The rocket plume helps and both the water mass and steam will help more, but it seems foolish to not deflect a large portion of that energy away from the rocket. It would seem unlikely that they will launch without damaging engines and equipment until they do.
    As noted even with the SLS launch system, flat surfaces reflect sound and that reflected sound will destroy things it is focused on. This system too has some work required to prevent sound damage.

    • @braddie77
      @braddie77 11 месяцев назад

      Steam = Cushion of air buffer?

    • @AnvilDragon
      @AnvilDragon 11 месяцев назад

      @@braddie77 not the best wording but both the liquid and gas water mass. Think of it as making the local air harder to shake.

    • @braddie77
      @braddie77 11 месяцев назад

      @@AnvilDragon i'd had a few beers when I asked, so my vocabulary was limited, but wanted to ask if there would be a reduction in sound pressure due to the intense heat forcing the surrounding air, heat and sound toward cooler air when water is converted to steam?

    • @AnvilDragon
      @AnvilDragon 11 месяцев назад

      @@braddie77 Not quite, but changes in density and viscosity tend to act a bit like layers with a portion of the sound reflecting and interfearing with the main pressure waves. Density and viscosity does vary with air temperature but adding steam, water droplets, and streams of water are much larger changes. Once bouncing off that steel plate the sound will have to reflect back through the exhaust to the rocket. If they record the combustion pressure near the injectors though a decent spectrum they could filter out and "hear" the flat surface. They could play back both the change in pitch and decay of that reflected sound as it lifts (Just not the sound levels).

  • @JM-yh4yf
    @JM-yh4yf 11 месяцев назад +1

    I love that Grady is doing a space video ❤

  • @folk.
    @folk. 10 месяцев назад

    been waiting for this one

  • @bc-guy852
    @bc-guy852 11 месяцев назад +5

    Grady you've got an amazing channel - congratulations. You're one of the few creators who has NOT put your hard-earned RUclips plaques for subscriber achievement in the background of your video. Why? I think you SHOULD brag about your achievements - we all love you - and that bookshelf is just ASKING for some company! Put up your plaques Grady!

  • @TwitchyMofo
    @TwitchyMofo 11 месяцев назад +16

    Was hoping for a deeper dive on the failure mode. SpaceX thinks the sand compressed and cracked the concrete. Do you agree with that? Is there a potential way to do this without water? Just seems there's a lot more to be said on this topic.

    • @beamed5382
      @beamed5382 11 месяцев назад +7

      The current steel plate will use water. And yeah, this video was just absolutely useless.

    • @SuperCuriousFox
      @SuperCuriousFox 11 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@beamed5382 Well, perhaps it's useful to people who have never heard about launchpad construction. I don't really get the timing of releasing this video now though. It would have made more sense to do so like a month ago, or wait longer until there is actual info from the FAA about environmental impacts.

    • @Czeckie
      @Czeckie 11 месяцев назад +10

      this video is uncharacteristically shallow for this channel

    • @filip9564
      @filip9564 11 месяцев назад +1

      This video seemed extreamly rushed. He just jumped on the "elon bad" train and put together a half assed video and hoped most people would agree because elon is unpopular

  • @marksadler4457
    @marksadler4457 11 месяцев назад +1

    Another excellent video - thanks, neighbor.

  • @Articulate99
    @Articulate99 11 месяцев назад

    Always interesting, thanks.

  • @BradleyG01
    @BradleyG01 11 месяцев назад +9

    one small correction, when Elon said it went about as expected, he meant the rocket launch itself, not the launch pad. He stated on twitter that they did not anticipate the severity of the destruction of the launch pad.

  • @screetchycello
    @screetchycello 11 месяцев назад +7

    If you've never been to a rocket launch, you totally should. You can literally feel the sound / pressure wave from launch from several miles away. It's amazing.

    • @stepheneyles2198
      @stepheneyles2198 11 месяцев назад +1

      Nice suggestion, but probably not a practical option for (maybe) 95% of the world's population!

    • @jaelwyn
      @jaelwyn 11 месяцев назад +1

      I got to attend the launch of STS-134 (a bucket list item for me since I was a kid), and it truly gives one perspective on the literal meaning of "awesome", as in "awe-inspiring". Or to steal some lines from Rush's 'Countdown": "A thunderous roar shakes the air, like the whole world exploding […] It tears away with a mighty roar, the air is shaft by that awesome sound."

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@stepheneyles2198 Vacations are not an option for 95% of the worlds population? I think that might be a bit of an exaggeration.

  • @ivovanroij
    @ivovanroij 11 месяцев назад

    Interesting video, thanks for going at it!

  • @wpherigo1
    @wpherigo1 11 месяцев назад

    Excellent, as always.

  • @pierredelecto7069
    @pierredelecto7069 11 месяцев назад +16

    Will be neat to see how the next pad works out. Fun watching rocket launches!

    • @Old_Ladies
      @Old_Ladies 11 месяцев назад +13

      I am betting that it will fail as well.

    • @designtechdk
      @designtechdk 11 месяцев назад +7

      Fun watching Elon Musk destroying nature.

    • @Naturallystated
      @Naturallystated 11 месяцев назад +7

      Instead of dented towers, expect them to be shredded this time!

    • @dualtronix4438
      @dualtronix4438 11 месяцев назад +9

      @@Old_Ladies I'm betting on supersonic metal shrapnel flying everywhere

    • @lordhoden
      @lordhoden 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@designtechdk it is

  • @veramae4098
    @veramae4098 11 месяцев назад +12

    I've been a sci fi fan for as long as I can remember, and I'm 70. None of those early writers gave any thought to the launch pads. Oh, E.E. Smith wrote about the spherical ships being so heavy they'd sink 1/3 deep into the ground, and the land was scorched. That was about it.
    Over the years I've been sort of compiling a list of what sci fi missed. Completely missed computers until they were already being developed, for example. None wrote about problems adjusting to zero gravity or reduced gravity, again, until that was already discovered.
    On the other hand, it's interesting to see what they "forecast", metaphorically. Heinlein's been pretty much on track in his "future history". We haven't settled other planets or discovered a faster than light ship, but we've sent robots almost everywhere and the JWSpaceTelescope is showing us the universe. (He wrote almost all his stories with the same background.) It's been compiled -- and guess what? Near the end there's a pandemic, and then: the first human civilization. Gives me hope.

    • @kenbrown2808
      @kenbrown2808 11 месяцев назад +1

      interesting thing to study. it would be interesting to see a full overview. (not being 70, I have a few obligations that keep me from doing such a thing myself, right now. and if the past is any indication I won't when I'm over 70, as well.)

    • @KnugLidi
      @KnugLidi 11 месяцев назад +1

      Heinlein had Point to Point suborbital flights, space elevators, faster than light travel, and had dozens of off-world colonies in 'Friday'. Not to mention super human geneticaly engineered people. He was a sci-fi writer after all. His 'Future history' collection of loosely interconnected short stories was one way forward. Given current progress here in the early 21st century, I don't have a doubt that we will have one or more permanent settlements on Mars by the end of the 21st, let alone by the 23rd (the end of the 'future history' timeline) but I am quite certain that humanity will never leave this solar system. Our genetic material may leave and maybe we'll create some kind of generational ship with frozen embryos, but that would be far after the 23rd century. 30,000 years just to clear the Oort cloud at the speed of Voyager 1 ? I can't even imagine the amount of energy needed to accelerate a several thousand ton ship to those speeds.

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 11 месяцев назад +1

      One thing scifi missed is the internet and how we use it.

    • @theendisoverdue
      @theendisoverdue 11 месяцев назад

      You sound awful to talk to about sci-fi

    • @zyeborm
      @zyeborm 11 месяцев назад +3

      There's still essentially zero research that has been done on long term partial gravity. One Japanese study that last time I looked hasn't had the results published. All these plans for Mars colonies and we have not even got a mouse model for gestation.

  • @koszuta
    @koszuta 11 месяцев назад

    Wow this was the crossover I needed 😁

  • @daddysnip6397
    @daddysnip6397 6 месяцев назад

    Great video! Thanks a lot.

  • @zoltankurti
    @zoltankurti 10 месяцев назад +4

    Actually the damage to the pad was surprising. The half thrust static fire left next to no damage on the concrete. The static fire earlier that did damage the concrete was even less powerful than half thrust, but it was done before the FONDAG concrete was used. The last static fire of the booster mentioned in the video used the upgraded concrete and caused minimal damage.

  • @dsdy1205
    @dsdy1205 11 месяцев назад +19

    10:13 It is worth mentioning that the assessment DOES include the case of the entire rocket detonating on the pad, which is going to be significantly more severe in terms of debris and blast damage, and for which the exclusion ranges, etc are already budgeted accordingly. It may be the case that both or either parties felt this was sufficiently broad to cover for lower energy events, which this event undoubtedly was.

    • @MurderWho
      @MurderWho 11 месяцев назад +3

      On the other hand, entire detonation should be very rare, at least something they want to avoid for their own concerns. But the demolition of the launchpad will happen on every rocket launch of this scale, even fully successful ones.

    • @dsdy1205
      @dsdy1205 11 месяцев назад +3

      @chickiew3039 not really an issue, since this launch license was for one test. Undoubtedly futther licensing will probably require they don't shower Boca Chica with sand every launch

    • @anthonypelchat
      @anthonypelchat 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@MurderWho The demolition of the launchpad was not planned nor was it expected to happen. It was planned to be heavily damaged, but not demolished like it was. And they have already moved past that with greater reinforcement, steel plates, and a better water deluge system. So the pad demolition should be extremely rare as well. Hopefully it won't ever happen again.

  • @laserfloyd
    @laserfloyd 10 месяцев назад +2

    I hadn't been following Starship much the past few months due to work and life and such. When I watched the launch my first thought was "Uh, where's the flame diverter? Water deluge??" Yeah, no one is surprised that happened. I am still skeptical about a large steel plate firing water directly up at the bottom of the 33 Raptor engines. It should be exciting to watch either way but I'm not sold on it working. ;)

  • @wiz3kid
    @wiz3kid 11 месяцев назад

    Wow you have chosen an amazing topic to talk about 😀

  • @Real28
    @Real28 11 месяцев назад +88

    The fact that Starship cartwheeled in the atmosphere, still under power, multiple times without breaking apart is as insane ad what it did to Stage 0.

    • @vylbird8014
      @vylbird8014 11 месяцев назад +50

      Except that should have triggered the flight termination system. It failed at failing.

    • @redditreviews9698
      @redditreviews9698 11 месяцев назад +14

      @@vylbird8014 it did trigger it just failed. You can see it in the live stream

    • @vylbird8014
      @vylbird8014 11 месяцев назад +35

      @@redditreviews9698 That isn't any better.

    • @redditreviews9698
      @redditreviews9698 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@vylbird8014 no not really but it did trigger.

    • @boldCactuslad
      @boldCactuslad 11 месяцев назад +18

      Isn't the popular contention that the flight termination system failed entirely and the later detonation was purely coincidental?

  • @GeofreySanders
    @GeofreySanders 11 месяцев назад +4

    "Rapid development cycles" means "don't ask for permission".

    • @jaelwyn
      @jaelwyn 11 месяцев назад +1

      And if you want to succeed at having _more_ rapid development cycles, you need to slow down enough that "having to ask for forgiveness" isn't a problem. Because you aren't going to get it.

    • @jdotoz
      @jdotoz 11 месяцев назад +1

      Which is all well and good until you come to a place where you really ought to have asked permission.

    • @filip9564
      @filip9564 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@jdotozthey asked permission...

    • @jdotoz
      @jdotoz 11 месяцев назад

      @@filip9564 Great. The point stands.

  • @user-ki3tx4wf8h
    @user-ki3tx4wf8h 9 месяцев назад +1

    My favorite comment: "The launchpad left starbase faster than the rocket did.". My favorite comment: "The launchpad left starbase faster than the rocket did.".

  • @worskaas
    @worskaas 11 месяцев назад

    I was waiting for this video

  • @dsdsspp7130
    @dsdsspp7130 11 месяцев назад +16

    there is an important mistake at 0:50
    the flight termination system was triggered but didn't succeed in terminating the flight.
    you can see clearly from the footage, the explosion started from the engines which means it wasn't caused by the FTS. you can also see in the footage that before the main explosion the FTS was triggered and caused a small explosion but didn't succeed in causing the whole rocket to explode.

    • @randomperson1731
      @randomperson1731 11 месяцев назад +3

      I think the leading theory is that the FTS depressurized the vehicle to the point that it structurally failed, leading to it exploding.

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin 11 месяцев назад

      @@randomperson1731 Also once it started getting into the very thin, but more than a vacuum, atmosphere.

  • @TrystyKat
    @TrystyKat 11 месяцев назад +131

    Move fast and break things is fine when there are no externalities, but when you're launching rockets on this scale, there are a _lot_ of externalities

    • @JasonOvalles
      @JasonOvalles 11 месяцев назад +58

      Yeah, Grady says "we get to follow along" but it feels more like "we have to live with the consequences of their mistakes."

    • @Exarian
      @Exarian 11 месяцев назад +26

      "move fast and break things" "yeah for instance, my fist is about to move fast and break your face if you set my back yard on fire again."

    • @jackieknits61
      @jackieknits61 11 месяцев назад

      The externalities were not well addressed by NASA, and they actually gave it a moments thought. SpaceX only thought about externalities as something to make sure it won't slow them down or cost SpaceX. Not a good business model. Billionaires get all the glory and profits, taxpayers pay the bill. Its not that interesting.

    • @thursdaythought7201
      @thursdaythought7201 11 месяцев назад +5

      "move fast and break things" isn't meant to be taken literally haha

    • @andrewahern3730
      @andrewahern3730 11 месяцев назад +49

      @@thursdaythought7201it absolutely is. It’s jackasses applying software development logic to everything

  • @meinkamph5327
    @meinkamph5327 11 месяцев назад

    On the money ! ! !
    Awesome video

  • @doobiedoo5450
    @doobiedoo5450 5 дней назад

    Thanks for the video. Really like most of the content. The music at the end might be enough to make me avoid it because of the music. I like to watch these types of videos when im falling asleep and the music might wake me up.