McDonnell Douglas X-33 SSTO Reusable Launch Vehicle

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
  • Single-Stage-To-Orbit (SSTO) Reusable Launch Vehicle (RLV). McDonnell Douglas submitted a vertical landing configuration design which used liquid oxygen/hydrogen engines. NASA considered design submissions from Rockwell, Lockheed Martin, and McDonnell Douglas. NASA selected Lockheed Martin’s X-33 design on 2 July 1996. The RLV technology program was a cooperative agreement between NASA and industry. The goal of the RLV technology program was to produce significant reductions in the cost of access to space, and to promote the creation and delivery of new space services and other activities that would have improve U.S. economic competitiveness.
    #ssto #nasa #spacex

Комментарии • 175

  • @jmsnead
    @jmsnead 9 месяцев назад +274

    Having worked on the DC-X project from the DOD side of the project, it is nice to see this very good visualization. However, as I recall the design, there are several elements presented incorrectly. During the reentry, the vehicle was primarily in a nose-down position to minimize aft body heating and maximize cross-range maneuverability to bleed off energy and reach the landing site from a range of orbital positions. As the vehicle approached the ground unpowered over the landing site, it would rotate into a nose-high attitude even as it continued to lose altitude. Very close to the ground, the landing engines would start and run just for a minimum number of seconds to touch down. The video shows the vehicle falling like a "leaf" and starting the engines quite early. The propellant mass for this to happen would be prohibitive and likely make SSTO not possible to achieve. A general operational safety issue with this approach is how to assure that the landing engines will, with very high confidence, start in those last few seconds. Any failure, even for a couple of seconds, to start will result in a crash. This is a key operational safety issue that any such vehicle needs to resolve to become "truly" operational.

    • @jmsnead
      @jmsnead 9 месяцев назад +33

      @concreteproof SSTO designs-remembering that none have yet been built-typically had payload fractions of 1-2 percent of the TOGW. "Design closure"-referring to when the detailed design ready for fabrication is, with reasonable weight and propellant margins, able complete the design missions-has been very difficult to achieve in actual practice. None have done this as of yet, to my knowledge. This is why a two-stage, fully-reusable system, developed in accordance with standard airworthiness-like safety requirements, will likely be the first true commercial passenger spaceflight system built.

    • @adinb6876
      @adinb6876 9 месяцев назад +3

      Thank you for your insight & first hand experience!

    • @niraj_dave
      @niraj_dave 9 месяцев назад +2

      would you say that starship comes very close to what you mention the process is here. believe starship bit more leverage comparatively since it's a TSTO instead of SSTO.

    • @Chris.Davies
      @Chris.Davies 9 месяцев назад +1

      Hover-slam only for SSTOs. And hence, impossible to man-rate.

    • @AnthonyDDean
      @AnthonyDDean 9 месяцев назад +5

      Lockheed X-33 (the winner) was in fact mostly built when it was cancelled. The launch area was fully built. The comment regarding fully reusable TSTO - Boeing’s TAV was exactly that, and everything was off the shelf. Best ideas are cancelled and the dumbest ideas (anything from the Bono camp) are forced into working order. It’s just what humans do - normalization. Get a gigantic group of people working on something and it has to turn into the biggest dumbest thing because scramjets are “impossible” unless they’re on a weapon somehow. The findings of John Becker and Paul Czysz will remain ignored because rockets are to space as clubs are to cavemen.

  • @gregoryfaith4303
    @gregoryfaith4303 9 месяцев назад +32

    I worked on the telemetry/radar tracking portion of the project at NASA Dryden from the beginning to the end of the project. X-33 was never flown. It was fun.

  • @clevergirl4457
    @clevergirl4457 9 месяцев назад +50

    That flip and landing animation was 👌

  • @mattybirchall
    @mattybirchall 9 месяцев назад +54

    As opposed to the Lockheed Martin skunkworks X33 which was a lifting body? Wow this rocket concept had a lot of Starship in it (more like the original Interplanetary Transport Ship though), must be where SpaceX got the idea from! Great stuff, keep them coming!

    • @bryanillenberg
      @bryanillenberg 9 месяцев назад +10

      While there are similarities to Starship, that's mostly because it's the ideal design for a reusable upper stage.

    • @therathalosabusnardo923
      @therathalosabusnardo923 9 месяцев назад +3

      It’s also quite different from starship, beside the different propellant and materials, that X-33 would have been much more of a hypersonic lifting body than starship, which has a very ballistic reentry and is optimised for it.
      Honestly plug nozzle, active cooled, capsule like reusable upper stages like what stokes is building or the historical ROMBUS are quite likely to be competitive with more starship-like reusable S2 design.
      I also wouldn’t dismiss the use of inflatable hypersonic decelerators for upper stage recovery.

    • @bryanillenberg
      @bryanillenberg 9 месяцев назад

      @@therathalosabusnardo923 "Honestly plug nozzle, active cooled, capsule like reusable upper stages like what stokes is building or the historical ROMBUS are quite likely to be competitive with more starship-like reusable S2 design."
      Active cooling is heavy. More mass means less payload. Less payload means more $/kg.
      Starship is (close to) the ideal design for a reusable upper stage.

    • @AnthonyDDean
      @AnthonyDDean 9 месяцев назад +3

      “It has Starship in it”. So cute and innocent.

    • @therathalosabusnardo923
      @therathalosabusnardo923 9 месяцев назад

      Mass that is compensated by the lack of tiles and aerodynamic control surfaces
      Matter of fact, as long as starship has flaps and tiles, it’ll never be ideal

  • @jameswilson5165
    @jameswilson5165 9 месяцев назад +5

    These just keep getting better and better.

  • @patpat9803
    @patpat9803 9 месяцев назад +2

    Damn, I leave this channel a little while ago, incredible animations, I come back now, it somehow got even better ! Incredible work man !

  • @thadollagenerale
    @thadollagenerale 9 месяцев назад +22

    These animations are the absolute best. Thanks dude.

  • @lautaromontenegro7362
    @lautaromontenegro7362 9 месяцев назад +2

    these animations keep getting better and better

  • @Keavon
    @Keavon 9 месяцев назад +1

    This is by far your highest-quality animation and editing. Keep making the quality at this video's standards!

  • @randycampbell6307
    @randycampbell6307 9 месяцев назад +22

    Great visuals as usual. It's kind of a misnomer though as the "X-33" was to be a test article only capable of suborbital flight, the 'actual' SSTO was to be the DC-Y. Oddly after the full "X-33" program was canceled Northrup-Grumman who was to partner with McDonnel Douglas on their version of the X-33 and responsible for the cryogenic composite propellant tanks delivered a "full size" (aka X-33) set of tanks to NASA for destructive testing. Not only were the tanks easier to make due to not having the complicated geometry of the actual X-33 tanks but they were much more robust than the actual tanks. The NASA testing program went fine as far as I ever heard.
    As jmsnead pointed out the reentry would have been in a nose-down-and-forward position to retain enough hypersonic lift (the reason the "windward" side is flat like the Shuttle) to meet DoD/DARPA requirements. (The nose would have been of refractory materials backed up by an active "transpiration" cooling system IIRC) Landing would have been more like the "hover-slam" of the Falcon 9 due to the limited amount of propellant left in the tanks at that point. (Sharp eyed viewers will note the windward side "flares' out from the cylinder section to keep the majority of heating off the leeward side of the vehicle. It also has a "body flap" like the Shuttle for better maneuverability and to protect the engines from heating. Because an "engine bay" ala-Starship is a very, very bad idea for a cryogenic rocket) People should also note the two (2) sets of engines with the outer 4 being high thrust engines with limited throttability and the inner ones being deep throttling for landing.(IIRC for the DC-Y the outer engines were to be variants of the SSME's and the inner ones some type of RL10)

    • @LDTV22OfficialChannel
      @LDTV22OfficialChannel 8 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you for the facts.

    • @Errudit_s
      @Errudit_s 4 месяца назад

      Awesome, out of curiosity why is a engine bay a bad idea?

    • @randycampbell6307
      @randycampbell6307 4 месяца назад

      @@Errudit_s Note that just about every time either Starship fly they end up having a fire? Engine bay may "protect" the engines but that doesn't mean much when it traps fuel vapors and they ignite and burn up your engines anyway.

    • @Errudit_s
      @Errudit_s 4 месяца назад +1

      @@randycampbell6307 fair, thx for the reply!

    • @topsecret1837
      @topsecret1837 3 месяца назад

      @@randycampbell6307
      The booster didn’t have an engine bay yet had a fire on IFT-5 because of other reasons.

  • @Nalrats
    @Nalrats 9 месяцев назад +1

    your ability to integrate these vehicles into real footage is very impressive.

  • @billwatkins276
    @billwatkins276 9 месяцев назад +8

    The MDC DC-X was originally proposed in response to a DoD Strategic Defense Initiative Office RFP (circa 1990). MDC and Scaled Composites built a 1/3 scale 40 foot high concept demonstrator (in 21 months for only $60 million) and had started incremental test flights when SDI was cancelled. The prototype flight test program was then shifted to NASA and DARPA to continue testing, but the upgraded prototype was seriously damaged in a landing accident caused by a pre-flight maintenance error and NASA declined to continue the program. Refer to Wikipedia article "McDonnell Douglas DC-X" for the history of the program. (Former astronaut Pete Conrad was working for McDonnell Douglas at the time and provided ground-based remote control for some of the flights.)

  • @joansparky4439
    @joansparky4439 9 месяцев назад +2

    slick. thx for animating it so nicely

  • @dkadayinthailand3082
    @dkadayinthailand3082 9 месяцев назад +2

    The animation, especially where it's flying off with the camera movement looks very realistic.

  • @shilparadhakrishna7475
    @shilparadhakrishna7475 9 месяцев назад +3

    This whole video was... chef's kiss...

  • @vaughnpatania506
    @vaughnpatania506 9 месяцев назад +4

    my heart aches at the unrealized futures we might have had...

  • @AndrewDasilvaPLT
    @AndrewDasilvaPLT 9 месяцев назад +5

    Thank you for your work.

  • @octopusmagnificens
    @octopusmagnificens 9 месяцев назад +4

    The graphics keep improving.

  • @charlesblithfield6182
    @charlesblithfield6182 9 месяцев назад +3

    Focus adjustments, lens flares and more show the attention to detail in these fantastic creations.

  • @robmelis7537
    @robmelis7537 9 месяцев назад +2

    Very nicely done. More please!

  • @JAD-Sl0p
    @JAD-Sl0p 9 месяцев назад +4

    Nice. This and the Superheavy booster to send it off through the solar system. Looks better than Starship.

  • @garymccammon6696
    @garymccammon6696 7 месяцев назад +2

    Why are SSTO designs always so neat looking?

  • @piplupsingularity
    @piplupsingularity 9 месяцев назад +13

    If they made this a two-stage design, we could've had Starship a few decades early

  • @turbodunce2938
    @turbodunce2938 9 месяцев назад +6

    Are you going to do Rockwell's proposal next? Please do!

  • @commonsenseskeptic
    @commonsenseskeptic 9 месяцев назад

    Nicely done.

  • @APLKitkit
    @APLKitkit 7 месяцев назад

    wow first time to see you made a launch at vandenberg. Where Delta IV regularly launched. nice.

  • @elmobrandao9849
    @elmobrandao9849 9 месяцев назад +1

    I can barely wait for Rockwell's X-33 video (the last remaining)

  • @robertfousch2703
    @robertfousch2703 9 месяцев назад

    would love to see you do a launch of Skylab where it shows the micrometeor shield being torn off at about 1 min in, the failure of the aft skirt being jettisoned after S-II ignition, and the ripping of the solar panel after S-II and the lab separation, followed by the launch of Skylab II and its fly around to survey the damage. So many things went wrong and yet we still fixed the lab and has 3 successful missions.

  • @ajds
    @ajds 9 месяцев назад

    This was real. You can't tell me it wasn't. Bravo!

  • @Gerhard_Schroeder
    @Gerhard_Schroeder 9 месяцев назад

    Again - Great video!

  • @h.plovecraftn-4307
    @h.plovecraftn-4307 9 месяцев назад +2

    Just like a starship on the SpaceX

  • @davidroberts5602
    @davidroberts5602 8 месяцев назад

    Hi that was awesome David I’d like 👍 to see those little bots in the next one David 🚀❤️🇬🇧👌👍

  • @pontuswendt2486
    @pontuswendt2486 9 месяцев назад +1

    AMAZINGNES!!! This is always so coool!!!

  • @timwilliams9100
    @timwilliams9100 9 месяцев назад +2

    Would love to see something like this incorporating the Regenerative cooled heat shield of STOKE. Would be cool if you could have the central engine be a jet engine using Liquid air
    simply by scooping up air for first two minutes of Flight and last minute of landing by integrating it with the Cooling heat shield

  • @longtsun8286
    @longtsun8286 9 месяцев назад

    Impressive work.

  • @jul__p6393
    @jul__p6393 9 месяцев назад

    The sound 🤩

  • @janosnemate5795
    @janosnemate5795 9 месяцев назад

    /néri/köszönöm űrutazás magyarulnak, sajnálom fűnyírás &egyéb kerti munkák,puszi házi munka ezerrel puszi!!!❤❤❤❤🌹💋🌹🌹🌺🌺🌷🌷🌷🌺💝💝🌾😘

  • @Michael-v3h1u
    @Michael-v3h1u 2 месяца назад

    I'm not sure if half of the people that view this short get it that this is all computer generated.... kinda like watching a high tech cartoon lol! Still they're usually very high quality and therefore highly entertaining!! Props!!!

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman 9 месяцев назад

    Great video...👍

  • @bohicajohnson7203
    @bohicajohnson7203 9 месяцев назад +1

    That is amazing, the dreams of a possible future.

    • @Ithirahad
      @Ithirahad 9 месяцев назад

      A possible past. This X-33 design was rejected in favor of a different bidder, and then the whole program, like pretty much every innovative launch vehicle program in NASA, was cancelled by Congress refusing to pay for its continuation decades ago. Now the only NASA-led launch vehicle program is... well... the Artemis SLS, and we all know how that one goes.

  • @trstquint7114
    @trstquint7114 9 месяцев назад +1

    nice animation...

  • @martinmaxian8880
    @martinmaxian8880 9 месяцев назад

    Zaujímavé.

  • @terencewong-lane4309
    @terencewong-lane4309 9 месяцев назад +2

    *Spectacular*

  • @atptourfan
    @atptourfan 9 месяцев назад

    So awesome!

  • @freedom4651
    @freedom4651 9 месяцев назад

    Do you think Haz needs to recreate their old videos with this quality?

  • @PiDsPagePrototypes
    @PiDsPagePrototypes 9 месяцев назад +2

    Have you thought about doing a Rylothian GunStar ?

  • @badrinair
    @badrinair 9 месяцев назад

    Awesome 👍🏾

  • @valmine7507
    @valmine7507 9 месяцев назад +3

    nice

  • @IanValentine147
    @IanValentine147 9 месяцев назад

    Amazing

  • @-K-Depbluhole
    @-K-Depbluhole 9 месяцев назад +2

    Nice

  • @christiantroy3034
    @christiantroy3034 9 месяцев назад

    When I was younger I read a book called Cloud Dog, can you make a cloud look like a dog and have the craft fly by it?

  • @vinniepeterss
    @vinniepeterss 5 месяцев назад

    nice one!

  • @alexaxel2953
    @alexaxel2953 9 месяцев назад

    Wow, few years ago this chanal got maximum 77 000 subscriber and now 700K +

  • @centaur1a
    @centaur1a 9 месяцев назад

    You should try those “What if” type animation. I was thinking of if “ space shuttle (or something similar) was ready to release a rocket pack to push Skylab into a higher orbit. Plus what would the extended parts look like had NASA had the budget to do so.

  • @voraz.
    @voraz. 9 месяцев назад +1

    -everyone: talking about how good and realistic this animation is
    -the smoke at the start of the video: 💀

  • @smde1
    @smde1 8 месяцев назад

    Oh what are the possible military applications?

  • @Delta-V-Heavy
    @Delta-V-Heavy 9 месяцев назад

    Ooh, that’s SLC-6, right?

  • @ArjunaKunti
    @ArjunaKunti 9 месяцев назад +4

    Why didn't they planned foldable wings which can expand during reentry so they could land with a much smaller g-force glider?

    • @HALLish-jl5mo
      @HALLish-jl5mo 9 месяцев назад +5

      Folding wings are an engineering and maintenance nightmare on a vehicle that does mach 2.5 and you want them on a vehicle that does mach 25?

    • @dr4d1s
      @dr4d1s 9 месяцев назад +1

      While the idea is good, the hardware needed to do that would be prohibitively heavy and would have had to hold up to extreme pressures and velocities - thus making them even heavier for safety margins and reducing your mass fraction even more; the bane of the SSTO.
      As a side note, you can see this happen in aircraft design in the mid 70s to early 80s. There is a reason why new variable swept wings weren't really made after that time period. There was a video released a week or so ago about the topic. Unfortunately I can't remember the channel off the top of my head. You should be able to find it pretty easily if you are interested.

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@dr4d1s: I don't remember the channel either, but I do remember the thumbnail: an F-14, mid-flight, seen from above, with one wing retracted and the other extended. An unfortunately common occurrence while landing F-14s.

    • @Ithirahad
      @Ithirahad 9 месяцев назад +1

      Mass and complexity. Mostly mass.

    • @dr4d1s
      @dr4d1s 9 месяцев назад

      @@absalomdraconis yep that is the one. It was a really interesting and informative video as I had always wondered why they never did more designs like the F-14. 10-12 year old me didn't know crap about engineering but they looked awesome and kicked butt in Top Gun! Lol

  • @simongeard4824
    @simongeard4824 9 месяцев назад

    At about half the vehicle's total volume, the tanks seem very small for an SSTO - especially a hydrolox one, and even more so for one that also has to reserve enough fuel for a very slow hovering landing (not a suicide burn like Falcon).

  • @WolfeSaber
    @WolfeSaber 9 месяцев назад

    Next generation of SpaceX rockets

  • @rogercooley6
    @rogercooley6 8 месяцев назад

    I worked on the DCX prototype.
    1/3 scale. It flew and landed vertically long before SpaceX. Until it was destroyed when one of the 4 landing gear failed to deploy. Bummer.

  • @Arcadelt12
    @Arcadelt12 9 месяцев назад

    this is awesome, but I think the engine plume is underexpanded too far into the launch flight regime. You probably should not be seeing shock diamonds at a minute into the launch

  • @DJ-bh1ju
    @DJ-bh1ju 9 месяцев назад +2

    Carrying enough fuel to get itself all the way to orbit from a standing start.... That's the biggest problem right now.... Hope I live long enough to see that solved.

    • @hwytravler1962
      @hwytravler1962 9 месяцев назад +1

      The warp drive is still in the works

    • @bryanillenberg
      @bryanillenberg 9 месяцев назад

      @@hwytravler1962 That won't help for reaching orbit.

    • @cockpeatdarkhole6909
      @cockpeatdarkhole6909 9 месяцев назад

      See the chinese Rocket (for Building the Space Station tiangong) - from Earth to Space with a big fat Booster, then uncontrolled fly in the Orbit... 😆

    • @DJ-bh1ju
      @DJ-bh1ju 9 месяцев назад

      @@hwytravler1962 Indeed. The theories are being actively worked on in small labs around the world... Someone, not likely named Zephram Cochrane, will make a breakthrough some year.

  • @garylester3976
    @garylester3976 9 месяцев назад

    Very nice video, but a crude ship design, but does use Beck's traffic cone statement to at least be self sufficient and not need silly gigantic towers like Starship.
    I could suggest a design that instead of the flat bottom heat shield, had shallow V hull bottom chines for passive stability. Also would be better to have wider hulls, and inline the engines. more of a Manta effect for longer glide ratio re entry. front end could be surf board like, and give a Frisbee like glide ratio. With a rounded top and flatter bottom lifting shape.
    Also wing effect needs to be high shouldered, and wing shape creating a air glide box, using about 30° angles at the shoulders, and then wings 15° or less rise from center, and then again 30° down at the tip.
    We need to get away from pointy capsule shapes and into more mature and elegant designs. I guess to defense contractors, everything is an artillery round?

  • @strufian
    @strufian 9 месяцев назад

    Красивая компьютерная графика. X -33 компании Макдональд-Дуглас никогда не был создан (обошлось красивой картинкой). А их предыдущий проект - Дельта Клипер был крайне неудачным. 1997 году компания Макдональд-Дуглас была поглащена Боингом и перестала существовать. Увы.

  • @afroztayyab7222
    @afroztayyab7222 9 месяцев назад +1

    🎉❤😊MASHALLAH I ♥ like ♥

  • @silverfox8615
    @silverfox8615 9 месяцев назад +1

    Wasn't it supposed to splash down on pools at the Cape?

  • @hallahgray3190
    @hallahgray3190 9 месяцев назад

    If only they had built it we could have been further, along the line as a spacefaring nation.

  • @mpetersen6
    @mpetersen6 7 месяцев назад

    I always thought the Douglas proposal made the most sense. Enough mature technology as to allow focus on the main effort. An SSTO does make sense if it designed around one specific purpose. It least in my opinion. And that is delivery of crew or passengers to an orbital destination. That destination could be a research facility, a manufacturing facility, a vehicle assembly facility or an interplanetary or lunar bound vessel that was either assembled in orbit or launched on a lower cost non man rated Big Dumb Booster.
    Also instead of vertical landing l think l would have gone for a runway.
    In terms of quick turnaround for a workable SSTO l don't see anything less than two weeks given todays technology. Besides most of the vehicle cost is in development. Build a fleet of 10 instead of two or three.

  • @rjung_ch
    @rjung_ch 9 месяцев назад +2

    Well, I hope this vehicles is not as badly built as the previous ones from Boeing, else they won't even get to fly.
    Your animations are so real, thanks! 👍💪✌

  • @stanleydomalewski8497
    @stanleydomalewski8497 9 месяцев назад

    Interesting

  • @ClausB252
    @ClausB252 8 месяцев назад

    Great CGI! Shame to see it diminished by mimicking the reality of focus failures, poor tracking, shaking, lens flare, etc.

  • @michaelhband
    @michaelhband 9 месяцев назад +1

    👍👍👍❤❤❤🚀🚀🚀

  • @Organic_Corn_Farmer
    @Organic_Corn_Farmer 9 месяцев назад

    Does anyone think the Lockheed Martin X33 version went black after the program was cancelled? The fuel tanks were a lame excuse to cancel.

  • @LordDustinDeWynd
    @LordDustinDeWynd 9 месяцев назад +1

    Bummer it hasn't flown yet!

    • @sfsastro8697
      @sfsastro8697 9 месяцев назад

      It was cancelled in the 90s

  • @michaelshortland8863
    @michaelshortland8863 9 месяцев назад

    There is a good novel about this vehicle called "Lash-Up" by Larry Bond, if anybody is interested.

  • @DanielGomez-gw4kt
    @DanielGomez-gw4kt 9 месяцев назад +4

    Hazegrayart when you post in the next video, can you do the Rockwell design of the X-33 as well ?
    Make sure that you have the Rockwell X-33 to blast off like a rocket from a LaunchPad first, make sure that it's launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base like from this video. I would also like to see it make a space dock to the International Space Station, and at the end of the video make sure it lands at the Kennedy Space center.
    And actually I kind of change the idea for the beginning of the next video, have the Rockwell X-33 to blast off from Edwards Air Force. The reason why for that, it's because that I've been thinking and dreaming that someday if space vehicles can be launched from Edwards Air Force Base someday.
    So I would like to see a CGI animated video of the Rockwell X-33 to be launched from Edwards Air Force, so it could kind of demonstrate and simulate that hopefully NASA, SpaceX, blue origin and maybe Sierra space can launch space vehicles someday at Edwards Air Force base.
    So make sure that you have the next CGI animated video to demonstrate, simulate and test the idea. With the Rockwell X-33👍😉

  • @MCMXLVI
    @MCMXLVI 8 месяцев назад

    What I find weird is that Douglas Aircraft is owned by Boeing?

  • @mediagroup7497
    @mediagroup7497 9 месяцев назад +2

    Топливо не хватает для выхода на орбиту. Нужен дополнительный бак как на шатле а так графика реалистичная

    • @strufian
      @strufian 9 месяцев назад

      Это всё проекты 30-ти летней давности. О них забыть пора...

  • @avinashkamble318
    @avinashkamble318 9 месяцев назад

    👍👍👍

  • @CromemcoZ2
    @CromemcoZ2 9 месяцев назад

    How does a chemical-fueled rocket get to orbit with such small fuel tanks? From the position of the docking port, it looks like no more than 50% fuel.

  • @C_A_T_56
    @C_A_T_56 9 месяцев назад +2

    Ето бомба просто круто

  • @RXTRUX1
    @RXTRUX1 8 месяцев назад

    Boeing killed it.

  • @marshallrauch817
    @marshallrauch817 9 месяцев назад +2

    Nowhere near the fuel capacity required. Always the problem with SSTO, and even starship has it!

    • @codeforce5556
      @codeforce5556 9 месяцев назад

      Detonation engine, would work

  • @menguardingtheirownwallets6791
    @menguardingtheirownwallets6791 9 месяцев назад

    Sorry, but it does not have enough fuel to make it to orbit, not in that configuration. The vehicle would need to be a lot larger and use a much more efficient aerospike engine it if were to get into orbit using just a single stage.

  • @allanchurm
    @allanchurm 9 месяцев назад

    at least it lands on legs ..that catch arm idea from spacex hopes that all the engines fire ok..( no landing legs on the booster or starship.) .micky mouse outfit.

  • @irinabrezeanu343
    @irinabrezeanu343 9 месяцев назад

    Waw😮❤🎉

  • @trs4u
    @trs4u 9 месяцев назад

    Without a suicide burn, it looks fake - like a New Shepard landing.

  • @Eshanas
    @Eshanas 9 месяцев назад +1

    If only….

  • @quantumac
    @quantumac 9 месяцев назад

    As impressive as this design and animation are, I keep wondering if there is a better way. *IF* there is any truth at all to the idea that _some_ UAP might be visiting NHI, their understanding of physics and modes of transportation appear to be far more scalable than ours, from the very small to the very large. It's an unknown, but perhaps it's something worth investigating outside of deep black projects.

  • @jonasgabrielsilva2996
    @jonasgabrielsilva2996 4 дня назад

    X-33❎
    SN-33✅

  • @2150dalek
    @2150dalek 9 месяцев назад

    Bizarre design, half rocket, half lifting body. The Fins and wings are cool near the engines. But I suppose the space shuttle also had a fin under it's engine. I would like to see an animation of the once NASA proposed helicopter blade landing of capsules instead of parachutes.

  • @jimmysjamin1
    @jimmysjamin1 Месяц назад

    This is B.S. It reminds me of a TOHO production Man from space 😂

  • @davidbowerman6433
    @davidbowerman6433 9 месяцев назад

    Everyone seems confused by the fact this is NOT the X-33.... This is the Delta X. Made by Lockhead. The X-33 was a SSTO Space PLANE. And landed as such. Still, great graphics. And as noted by @jmsnead not quite how it operated. It makes Falcon slam-burn look tame in comparison! Literally SECONDS before impact

  • @rodriihebervzqz107
    @rodriihebervzqz107 6 дней назад

    Starship salió del grupo....

  • @abelincoln.2064
    @abelincoln.2064 8 месяцев назад

    C'mon man. The SSTO was never possible due to the propellant requirements.
    MD should figured out it needed an reusable Booster .. with a vertial take off & land ... to X-33 to an altitude with negligible air resistance and a velocity where the it can comfortably get to orbital velocity with its tanks, with enough fuel to get to the ISS ... and ... land on Earth. But MD with guidance from NASA ... stupidly focused on SSTO .... instead of Two Stages to orbit .. reusable Launch system.

  • @eiskaffe0
    @eiskaffe0 9 месяцев назад +2

    Looks like a Kindergartener's drawing of a rocket💀

  • @illuminatedtiger
    @illuminatedtiger 9 месяцев назад +1

    Radial landing legs - what a concept! Someone should go back to 2017 and tell Elon.

  • @fredcomstock1100
    @fredcomstock1100 9 месяцев назад +4

    SSTO has been proven that it will not work. You cannot change the laws of physics. Too much propellant is needed therefore too much weight and therefore more propellant. The only way to get SSTO is an engine that exceeds the laws of physics. Getting to 100Km is not enough to achieve orbit, you must also achieve 27,000 Km/hr velocity to stay up (orbit). I will stay tuned for the attempts, but I highly doubt SSTO will ever be achieved.

    • @cockpeatdarkhole6909
      @cockpeatdarkhole6909 9 месяцев назад

      Nope. Not, when you have Nuklear- thermic Engines or Fusion- drive (Not today, but in 20....50 Years?) 😉

  • @vicabramov8983
    @vicabramov8983 9 месяцев назад

    i guess it never was really built