SpaceX Starship launches, explodes midair minutes following liftoff.

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  • Опубликовано: 27 дек 2024

Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @MattyArC204
    @MattyArC204 Год назад +1928

    Man those are some expensive ass fireworks

    • @jordanplays-transitandgame1690
      @jordanplays-transitandgame1690 Год назад +52

      ​@@TheBitterSarcasmOfMs.Anthropy it's a private company... NASA is what your referring too

    • @Status-6
      @Status-6 Год назад +8

      @@TheBitterSarcasmOfMs.Anthropy not true

    • @whippinsaw
      @whippinsaw Год назад +26

      ​@@jordanplays-transitandgame1690they are subsidied heavily from taxes

    • @lawncarelegends6745
      @lawncarelegends6745 Год назад

      ​@@jordanplays-transitandgame1690 NASA funded SpaceX when it was about to die. Basically the father of SpaceX, all the tech will be NASA techniques before long

    • @rogerab1792
      @rogerab1792 Год назад +4

      Still worth it

  • @davidkeeton6716
    @davidkeeton6716 Год назад +492

    They called it a rapid unscheduled disassembly. That's a keeper.

    • @Sloppy_Sloppy
      @Sloppy_Sloppy Год назад +8

      Damm I love spaceX

    • @skunkjobb
      @skunkjobb Год назад +10

      That's an old saying in the rocket industry, used since at least the 60s.

    • @jjfreeman18
      @jjfreeman18 10 месяцев назад +3

      Well it detected a leak a self destructed to avoid large fragments being left behind

    • @jjfreeman18
      @jjfreeman18 10 месяцев назад +1

      And*

    • @boryang3372
      @boryang3372 9 месяцев назад

      space x will not succeed without the help of engines from russia... congratulations to biden who upset elon musk 🤣🤣🤣

  • @captainmichael787
    @captainmichael787 Год назад +1611

    They weren’t expecting it to make it past the launch arms that’s why they are excited even though it blew up

    • @shannonwurts1814
      @shannonwurts1814 Год назад +88

      I was so confused by the applause now I know.
      Thank you Captain

    • @asleepawake3645
      @asleepawake3645 Год назад +42

      PR and "positivity" to gaslight the competition 😂😂😂

    • @asleepawake3645
      @asleepawake3645 Год назад +20

      Really? I thought everyone wanted separation and landing as the goal. It's just PR. Although, this is definitely the most abticipated launch since they built the Boca Chica site.

    • @yidfn8215
      @yidfn8215 Год назад +2

      Oh ok

    • @thomasharris9059
      @thomasharris9059 Год назад +51

      @@asleepawake3645 Of course that’s the goal, it certainly wasn’t the expectation.

  • @331SVTCobra
    @331SVTCobra 4 месяца назад +55

    Starship 3's reentry was the most dramatic space footage EVER.

  • @brianvalenti1207
    @brianvalenti1207 Год назад +846

    I hope they got the extended warranty.

    • @akelly2k5
      @akelly2k5 Год назад +14

      Btw, we've been trying to contact you...

    • @Galm1Cipher0
      @Galm1Cipher0 Год назад +7

      About your car’s extended warranty

    • @CALLS2
      @CALLS2 Год назад +7

      How about your brain extended warranty overdue since u were born

    • @jafetmorales9941
      @jafetmorales9941 Год назад +2

      You are the warranty's guarantee, you just don't know it yet brother

    • @notarmchairhistorian7779
      @notarmchairhistorian7779 Год назад +1

      They have rockets lined up. Dont worry,

  • @ajcook7777
    @ajcook7777 Год назад +330

    They knew this was going to happen,
    "Anything after clearing the tower was icing on the cake"
    "We promised an exciting end to the starship inaugural..."
    They knew this was going to happen

    • @drhaydenwho4877
      @drhaydenwho4877 Год назад +4

      so?

    • @bendobbing7015
      @bendobbing7015 Год назад +55

      ​@@drhaydenwho4877 There's a lot of people writing it off as a failure just because it blew up. This is an integral part of rocket development and given the fact Starship is far more powerful than any rocket in history by a long way, this was extremely successful.

    • @drhaydenwho4877
      @drhaydenwho4877 Год назад +4

      @@bendobbing7015 that’s what i was arguing???

    • @MrDibara
      @MrDibara Год назад +5

      Hmm, still wish it lasted a little bit longer. 😕
      Oh well, so long as the other Starships learn and fly for longer...

    • @badtrekee4348
      @badtrekee4348 Год назад +8

      @@bendobbing7015 they blew it up after stage 2 wouldnt separate. it got past max Q a bonus

  • @stephenchapman4440
    @stephenchapman4440 Год назад +127

    It didnt blow up. They used the flight termination system after the starship failed to separate from the super heavy booster.

    • @GetDeported420
      @GetDeported420 Год назад +4

      The FTS on starship is a bomb. By using it, the rocket blew up.

    • @stephenchapman4440
      @stephenchapman4440 Год назад

      No. By saying it exploded you are implying that that it was uncontrolled. Fuzzy reporting for clicks. It is wrong and telling/ promoting half the story is tantamount to propaganda. The FTS was used when the rocket became uncontrolled to ensure it destroyed over water.

    • @joemamaenjoyer5262
      @joemamaenjoyer5262 Год назад +12

      By blowing it up...

    • @WWG1WGA136
      @WWG1WGA136 Год назад +2

      🤔 there is another video, and there was separation.

    • @Mottbox
      @Mottbox 9 месяцев назад +5

      and what happened when they executed that command? It blew up. So I ask you, do you still think it didn't blow up when they blew it up?

  • @jackmanning6160
    @jackmanning6160 8 месяцев назад +20

    This was our first launch. Many saw it as a fail as we saw it as a success. Wait til you see what we have in store for the rest of 2024 - 25… you’ll be mind blown. Stay tuned

  • @susanwahl6322
    @susanwahl6322 Год назад +639

    I loved how everyone clapped even though the thing blew up.

    • @Dremag_Gaming
      @Dremag_Gaming Год назад +96

      Yep. It's because it was far from the launch pad and cpuld be used again. They explain it more in the main video.

    • @jameswilliams9655
      @jameswilliams9655 Год назад +77

      They blew it up. It was a test flight.

    • @ramtron1775
      @ramtron1775 Год назад +79

      "Anything after clearing the tower was icing on the cake"

    • @asleepawake3645
      @asleepawake3645 Год назад +3

      I really don't, it's not funny. The spin abd failure to separate were failures to troubleshoot. That said, the launch of this heavy lifter is most anticipated. I was waiting for it since last year.

    • @freeffree4133
      @freeffree4133 Год назад +4

      Crazy right? 😂

  • @331SVTCobra
    @331SVTCobra 4 месяца назад +8

    Starship 3's reentry video was the most awesome space footage EVER.

  • @anthonypettit3713
    @anthonypettit3713 Год назад +18

    That went bad as fast as my first marriage and just a bit more costly

  • @MadSceintist
    @MadSceintist Год назад +49

    Still outstanding that it stayed completely intact during the entire process and all those flips. And the proper sequence of rapid disassembly was phenomenal

    • @jackprier7727
      @jackprier7727 Год назад +3

      Yet it did not remain "completely intact" and was clearly bent a lot and shedding parts as other shot-by shot videos show-

    • @mtsoccerman
      @mtsoccerman 2 месяца назад

      What’s the story behind it? Why launch something that is expected to fail?

    • @MadSceintist
      @MadSceintist 2 месяца назад

      @@mtsoccerman data. Knowledge. Experience doesn't come from guessing

  • @davidperry4013
    @davidperry4013 Год назад +73

    This is called a rapid unscheduled disassembly.

    • @troyallen8223
      @troyallen8223 Год назад +2

      Not hilarious... but accurate

    • @jackfullerton5762
      @jackfullerton5762 Год назад +2

      Isn't that special.

    • @coolcat6303
      @coolcat6303 Год назад +9

      And when I crash my car it’s called a “rapid unscheduled stop with structure modification”.

    • @mlee40738
      @mlee40738 Год назад +2

      😂

    • @GetDeported420
      @GetDeported420 Год назад +3

      Flight Termination System

  • @JRoss911
    @JRoss911 Год назад +119

    This is the same energy most of us have attending weddings..............knowing that it's still going to blow up in the end

  • @edljnehan2811
    @edljnehan2811 Год назад +15

    Looks like it's a long way to Mars

    • @Youngbl33zy
      @Youngbl33zy 2 месяца назад +1

      How to you feel about seeing it caught out of mid air just last weekend? Still feel the same?

    • @edljnehan2811
      @edljnehan2811 2 месяца назад

      @@Youngbl33zy what?? Hahaha

    • @TommyLeite-k7n
      @TommyLeite-k7n Месяц назад

      Womp womp wrong.

    • @ebonaparte3853
      @ebonaparte3853 23 дня назад

      @@edljnehan2811They caught it out of mid-air. Did you see?

    • @edljnehan2811
      @edljnehan2811 23 дня назад

      @@ebonaparte3853 I didn't

  • @trevorphillips1835
    @trevorphillips1835 Год назад +69

    Extremely impressive! This is how you collect data and a great launch for a prototype!

    • @DalaluddeenHalala
      @DalaluddeenHalala Год назад +7

      When Starship explodes it becomes a Prototype 😎

    • @lachyt5247
      @lachyt5247 Год назад +8

      @@DalaluddeenHalala It was always a prototype, they literally have 3 more built which all have modifications. This rocket was obsolete before it launched, it is the definition of a prototype.

    • @DalaluddeenHalala
      @DalaluddeenHalala Год назад +4

      @@lachyt5247 Yes I know.

    • @Lucas51192
      @Lucas51192 2 месяца назад

      👏👏👏

  • @thecrazycelt5143
    @thecrazycelt5143 Год назад +42

    This was a huge success!

    • @JoseCruz-rj9cp
      @JoseCruz-rj9cp Год назад +2

      Whaaat?!...

    • @sunnysideupshortz
      @sunnysideupshortz Год назад +3

      Um buddy im sorry to say.......

    • @andpeggy7960
      @andpeggy7960 Год назад +4

      Why it is a success is because the crew did not even expect it to get off the pad so that's why it's a success.

    • @tylerdurden4006
      @tylerdurden4006 Год назад +2

      Success is landing on the south pole of the moon on your first try like India did. 😂

    • @kevinrice957
      @kevinrice957 Год назад +4

      Success list: 1. All engines stayed lit. 2. Booster survived until after stage separation. 3. HOT STAGING, never tried before (both top/bot lit at same time), 4. starship (top) almost made near-orbit (24k vs. 27k kph). 5. Launch tower unharmed. 6. showed need for heat shield tiles better. 7. showed need for better hot-staging timing and thrust levels, RUD caused by sloshing in fuel tank and ingestion of air into engines (boom). SUCCESS. Next rocket is 4 weeks from launch, sitting in assembly building next door.

  • @UKxNZ
    @UKxNZ Год назад +67

    they're cheering because they're trying to break the firmament

  • @Steve254-
    @Steve254- 9 месяцев назад +189

    This rocket wasn’t a failure at all. It’s the most advanced rocket by far to ever be developed and this the very first test of the fully integrated rocket. It’s a prototype rocket… the largest by far to ever fly. The future of space flight. Show some respect for the people doing something that no one else could do.

    • @Gigi1111Layna
      @Gigi1111Layna 8 месяцев назад +7

      It's all a learning experience ✨️

    • @SteveSteeleSoundSymphony
      @SteveSteeleSoundSymphony 7 месяцев назад +14

      It’s literally barely more advanced than the Soviet N-1 Moon rocket. Oxidizer, fuel, common bulkhead, 30+ closed cycle engines on stage one, etc. Superheavy is overly complicated, just like the N1. The Artemus program doesn’t even call for the amount of thrust that the superheavy puts out. These are the kinds complexities that lead to mistakes, explosions and deaths that kill programs. Hopefully they’ll actually get that beast to orbit, and hopefully they’ll be able to refuel it 16-20 times, but I don’t think it will happen anytime soon. Meanwhile, China will start colonizing the Moon sometime this decade. Elon and company better not screw this up.

    • @benaminconeglon5525
      @benaminconeglon5525 7 месяцев назад +10

      @@SteveSteeleSoundSymphonythe goal isn’t to colonise the moon it’s make an outpost, that’s the ultimate goal of artemis. But i agree with your points too. This changing the definition of failure is getting absurd. The rocket did cartwheels and blew up and that’s a success?! Just spacex fanbois

    • @THEiBPhantom
      @THEiBPhantom 6 месяцев назад +11

      @@SteveSteeleSoundSymphony Except Starship is has only two stages whereas N1 had 5. N1 used LOX/RP1(Kerosene), where Starship uses LOX/Methane. The first stage of Starship produces 74,400 kN of force whereas N1 produced 45,400 kN. Also... Starship is made to be reused. I wouldn't say "barely more advanced". Starship is the undoubted leader as far as rockets so far in our existence.

    • @bobfranke2347
      @bobfranke2347 6 месяцев назад +5

      I dunno, I prefer real success myself....

  • @Bastetcharm
    @Bastetcharm 2 месяца назад +1

    I'm so proud of the team the excitement in their voices is priceless

    • @Bastetcharm
      @Bastetcharm 2 месяца назад

      I love you

    • @Bastetcharm
      @Bastetcharm 2 месяца назад

      Elon im scitsophrenia and I have a huge crush on you. I wish you only the best. It's nice for me to imagine I'm part of your missions. And that we chat telepathically. Elon I don't want to ombaress you but on my fb 4 years ago I could of loved you so hard. I wish you all the best in the future. You have am amazing personalities and a wicked sence of humoir

    • @Bastetcharm
      @Bastetcharm 2 месяца назад

      If love could meen it all. In debut of all the rock stars. I feel I was caught in .... peace on earth is my biggest wish no more war.

  • @Dixy3
    @Dixy3 Год назад +14

    Although this rocket blew up, SpaceX will count this first part of the launch successful. Each stage is counted as a separate part of the mission. It is the same for launching satellites. It was a great launch, and although the first stage never separated, the rocket flew true and balanced with a new type of second stage on top of the rocket. It's really sad that it didn't separate and the second stage didn't ignite. Fingers crossed the next launch is successful, and SpaceX succeed in another first rocketry mission.

  • @paulbabinchak6897
    @paulbabinchak6897 2 месяца назад +1

    What I notice the most is how neat and streamlined lined he has gotten the jet stream to be. MASA LAUNCHES WAS LIKE A HUGE FIR BALL UNDER THE SHIP. HIS ISMLIKE A TORCH FLAME NEAT AND TIGHT. I ASSUME THAT PROVIDES MORE POWERFUL LIFT. AMAZING ALL AROUND.

  • @mydream-xh3dj
    @mydream-xh3dj Год назад +9

    Now we can expect a tweet about Doge in order to recover from this loss😂

  • @ved_ituas
    @ved_ituas 2 месяца назад +1

    Videos like this make me so proud in humanity, after this costly and discouraging failed attempt. They havent given up, they believe that they can do it.

  • @YTjndallas
    @YTjndallas Год назад +19

    I remember when The Challenger blew up in 1986. The memory makes me cry to this day.

    • @swmplvr
      @swmplvr Год назад +3

      lol ok NPC.. it's 2023... who actually believes in the Challenger story any more??

    • @watamatafoyu
      @watamatafoyu Год назад +10

      ​@@swmplvrWTF 😆 I saw it happen. Do you live under a rock?

    • @swmplvr
      @swmplvr Год назад +2

      @@watamatafoyu lol YOU saw the Challenger explode on TV? What is your point??

    • @Kipplz
      @Kipplz Год назад +3

      ​@@swmplvr cringe

    • @swmplvr
      @swmplvr Год назад +2

      @@Kipplz the cringe is in NASA lies.

  • @smoothblacksilkassassin6481
    @smoothblacksilkassassin6481 6 месяцев назад +1

    Was that in padre?

  • @kallelaakso130
    @kallelaakso130 5 месяцев назад +21

    People and even ABC doesn’t seem to know what a TEST FLIGHT is 🤯 blows my mind

    • @TheLifeOfKane
      @TheLifeOfKane 3 месяца назад

      I mean... It says it IN the video
      There very little dialogue, and it's half about being a preplanned explosion

    • @great5grace
      @great5grace 3 месяца назад +1

      That’s bcos ABC (US) and not the Australian ones are anti Elon Mask, Anti Republicans, and anti Trump.

  • @climber950
    @climber950 Год назад +12

    BS clickbait title. It self destructed. These people HATE Elon so much they’ll just say anything they possibly can to make him look bad. This launch was a great success.

    • @markw5509
      @markw5509 2 месяца назад

      To be fair, Elon sucks as a person. It’s the SpaceX team that makes this happen.

    • @stigbengtsson7026
      @stigbengtsson7026 2 месяца назад

      @@climber950 you are 100%
      Right, and Elon is great man

    • @shannonnakashima7714
      @shannonnakashima7714 2 месяца назад

      @@stigbengtsson7026was

    • @climber950
      @climber950 Месяц назад

      @@markw5509what have you done for humanity? He’s worked hard finding ways to make green energy. He’s worked hard to ensure minerals used in vehicles are mined ethically. He has brought internet to so many around the world for free during times of need. He seeks ways to improve the human race. He probably did more for humanity in one day than most people will do in their lifetime.

  • @Dukinut
    @Dukinut Год назад +40

    ''The world most expensive firework''

    • @snowball5166
      @snowball5166 Год назад +1

      You are a roblox player!? I am too

    • @boryang3372
      @boryang3372 9 месяцев назад

      space x will not succeed without the help of engines from russia... congratulations to biden who upset elon musk 🤣🤣🤣

    • @Dukinut
      @Dukinut 9 месяцев назад

      @@snowball5166 yes

    • @Dukinut
      @Dukinut 9 месяцев назад

      @@boryang3372 what is bro yapping about

  • @Acokeek
    @Acokeek Год назад +51

    THE Mothership knew that it was coming way ahead of time and was ready for it.

  • @ComDenox
    @ComDenox Год назад +111

    Great job cutting the whole part where it fails

  • @shawnlawrence973
    @shawnlawrence973 Год назад +1

    where is the footage of the upper black portion

    • @ArttuT9
      @ArttuT9 Год назад

      It kinda blew up as you can see.

  • @mrw5131
    @mrw5131 Год назад +16

    New Yorks Fireworks budget for 2024 New year's = 270M
    Elon Musk = *hold my beer*

  • @phaxiong104
    @phaxiong104 4 месяца назад +2

    Soooo that was intended?

  • @ServiceProcess
    @ServiceProcess 8 месяцев назад +4

    it's nice to see that the spacex staff are louder than the rocket.

  • @StrongSpirit
    @StrongSpirit 9 месяцев назад +2

    I wish they reword the title, the booster explodes midair minutes following but Starship its self was in Earth's very low orbit (not really) for 40+ minutes before going offline.

    • @Via_SCV-42
      @Via_SCV-42 9 месяцев назад +1

      This is IFT-1

  • @missstormchaser1
    @missstormchaser1 Год назад +12

    To those asking about the claps when the boosters exploded, it wasn't meant to make it that far up it was always designed to launch then come straight back down landing in the ocean. The explosion has provided them with valuable data they weren't even planning for but will make a difference in future development 😊😊

    • @keck4022
      @keck4022 Год назад +5

      What? I thought it was supposed to be the first orbital flight of the starship?!?
      That just sounds like they try to cope

    • @bobbyk5752
      @bobbyk5752 Год назад +2

      I'm glad they have Microsoft standards. If it boots up, it's a product.

    • @anonymousapocalypse247
      @anonymousapocalypse247 Год назад

      😆😄😭

    • @Fold-103
      @Fold-103 Год назад

      It’s not even a cope because it was expected of a 50/50 chance of not even working properly

    • @badtrekee4348
      @badtrekee4348 Год назад

      they blew it up it didnt explode

  • @timwakeling2579
    @timwakeling2579 3 месяца назад +1

    Rapid "scheduled" disassembly is the correct assessment.

  • @ThisIsCheez
    @ThisIsCheez Год назад +26

    What's more impressive than the launch is when it was flipping and didn't explode until they did a manual explosion. Most rockets would have failed under that amount of stress, but this son of a bitch kept flipping and flipping and kept going. This is one hell of a rocket.

    • @VideoDotGoogleDotCom
      @VideoDotGoogleDotCom Год назад

      Yeah, seems like a robust thing for sure.

    • @johntheux9238
      @johntheux9238 Год назад

      The bigger you get the less wind is an issue. And they were already 40 km above sea level.

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Год назад +1

      @@johntheux9238No. Because it’s so big it creates a lost of drag cus of surface area. Since the booster is almost empty the ratio of wheigt to drag would be other than the ship. Then cus of this it could have bent in the middle … but it didnt

    • @johntheux9238
      @johntheux9238 Год назад

      @@Wurtoz9643 If it's twice as big it has 4 times as much drag, but it's also 8 times heavier.
      Everything is relative.

  • @MarionMccrory
    @MarionMccrory 10 дней назад

    They didn't think it would go that far. Congratulations once again. It still is a success Space cowboy❤❤❤🎉

  • @Yellow_300
    @Yellow_300 Год назад +4

    The people's screams are way Louder than the rocket itself

  • @farmerjohn2262
    @farmerjohn2262 2 дня назад

    I consider myself a time traveler. I was born back in 1958. I've lived in the past, and now I'm living in the mind-blowing future. But I didn't jump into a time machine to get here. I took the long way around. 😊

  • @otiebrown9999
    @otiebrown9999 Год назад +4

    To build BRAND NEW, has risks.
    MUSK said it exactly that way.
    I admire his courage.

    • @abc456f
      @abc456f 3 месяца назад

      Courage? All he does is put up the money.

  • @akaredcrossbow
    @akaredcrossbow 8 месяцев назад

    So did they self destruct it?
    Or did it blow up unexpectedly?

  • @danieltraconis1476
    @danieltraconis1476 Год назад +37

    Call China to send a balloon 🎈

    • @gomerzpyle6805
      @gomerzpyle6805 Год назад +1

      We should let it drift to Panama where their troops are and say what's the big deal?

  • @ritchieowens3255
    @ritchieowens3255 Год назад +2

    They had no problem with doing this in 1969 I don’t understand why they’re having problems now I think they’re going backwards they’ve already gone to space this way they should be moving forward with something different try a new design

  • @brianmosupasenoamadi6843
    @brianmosupasenoamadi6843 Год назад +15

    The amount of information they learn from the test flight is invaluable.

    • @CSAdityaHoon
      @CSAdityaHoon Год назад

      Will see it in next launch

    • @stevenlonien7857
      @stevenlonien7857 Год назад +2

      How much global heating millions of gallons of fuel plus energy to make structures.wasting resources for EINSTEIN'S relativity of wind tides energy's😊 conversions to eliminate oil nuclear as unnessery

    • @thefreese1
      @thefreese1 4 месяца назад

      Some people will never understand.... They think all the falcon tests were failures...
      They got more data from this flight than they did off the Falcons at this stage...

    • @war_fish
      @war_fish 2 месяца назад

      ​@@stevenlonien7857 not a lot.
      As Starship uses Methane and Oxygen. Leaving little to none carbon emissions.

    • @JJ-of7ms
      @JJ-of7ms 2 месяца назад

      ​@@war_fishMethane ... contains carbon. 🤯
      "Methane (CH4) is a powerful greenhouse gas, and is the second-largest contributor to climate warming after carbon dioxide (CO2)." -NASA

  • @raguilard
    @raguilard Год назад +1

    Nice Fireworks 🎉 Are they going to clean up all the debris

  • @johnnysays9629
    @johnnysays9629 Год назад +4

    So a really expensive bottle rocket?

  • @that_woody_tradish
    @that_woody_tradish 8 месяцев назад +1

    although it didn’t fully work, it was a success, and a start to something even better

  • @steveriley8537
    @steveriley8537 Год назад +11

    it was meant to explode.

  • @hairyhaggler
    @hairyhaggler 9 месяцев назад

    What is giving us the images as it launched. It's looking from up so high?

    • @war_fish
      @war_fish 2 месяца назад +1

      I believe you are referring the views as it was getting off the pad?
      There are cameras both on the launch tower and on the ship itself.
      Also a lot of other cameras on the ground tracking it

  • @poloska9471
    @poloska9471 Год назад +3

    Great first test flight 👌 the next one will go a lot better if not perfectly

  • @pizzainc.1465
    @pizzainc.1465 10 месяцев назад +1

    I’m pretty sure that was intentional, it was supposed to separate but it didn’t, so they blew it up to avoid worse damage had it fallen to the ground.

  • @Frenchylikeshikes
    @Frenchylikeshikes Год назад +4

    This "icing on the cake" comment will stay in History.

  • @ME-ef4xs
    @ME-ef4xs Месяц назад +1

    Go Gwynne Shotwell and SpaceX Engineers. Go
    NASA.!!!
    You rock. Mars here we come.

  • @coolaf186
    @coolaf186 Год назад +4

    As hard as it is for most people to grasp, this launch was an absolute success! So many firsts were achieved - the only way this would have been a failure is if it exploded on the pad.

    • @joemamaenjoyer5262
      @joemamaenjoyer5262 Год назад +1

      It very clearly failed, people saying this was technically a success are huffing ungodly amounts of copium

    • @ThuTran-ox8nk
      @ThuTran-ox8nk Год назад

      @@joemamaenjoyer5262 they put a bomb it in so that they could explode it early, they didn’t want it to explode when it was higher so that it could kill a bunch of people doofus

  • @thelatiosmaster
    @thelatiosmaster 3 месяца назад +1

    I love how Elon had decided to play KSP irl and he is actualy dragging the whole space industry now

  • @ServoDestroyer
    @ServoDestroyer Год назад +13

    Good show. Reminds me of the challenger explosion when I was a kid, except nobody died.

    • @dmdufrene
      @dmdufrene Год назад

      That last bit was what made it fun.

    • @swmplvr
      @swmplvr Год назад

      Don't believe everything you hear and see on TV! Nobody died in the Challenger either ..research it..

    • @davidharrison7014
      @davidharrison7014 Год назад

      In the case of the Challenger, NASA should've let the boosters to continue flying; it wasn't like they were heading back towards land.
      And, by inspecting the SRB's after parachuting into the water, it would've taken just 2-3 days at the most before they discovered the EXACT cause of the accident.

    • @swmplvr
      @swmplvr Год назад +1

      @@davidharrison7014 it was NOT an accident that the Challenger blew up. Clearly.

    • @davidharrison7014
      @davidharrison7014 Год назад

      @@swmplvr How was it NOT an accident???

  • @superbub1
    @superbub1 5 месяцев назад +2

    As I always tell engineering students, you get more useful data when things go wrong.

  • @martingrant1960
    @martingrant1960 Год назад +4

    NO PROBLEM,BRO,JUST ANOTHER RED ENGINE LIGHT GLITCH.🌻🤷‍♀️🦅😉👍🐧👍

  • @ronaldkirklandsr2488
    @ronaldkirklandsr2488 19 дней назад +1

    I'm glad i missed that ride.

  • @robgor482
    @robgor482 Год назад +12

    Amazing! Well done SpaceX!

    • @alexander.almlov
      @alexander.almlov Год назад +1

      Do it better yourself then!

    • @eruston
      @eruston Год назад

      ??????

    • @robgor482
      @robgor482 Год назад +3

      You think their just going to build the biggest space ship ever launched and it’s just going to work flawlessly. They learned a lot with this launch.

  • @bradrankin844
    @bradrankin844 Год назад +1

    Why did they want to blow it up???? Can anyone tell me please!?

    • @MCPro24
      @MCPro24 Год назад +1

      The mission was a test launch. They never wanted it to blow up. It’s just cool.

    • @bradrankin844
      @bradrankin844 Год назад

      @@MCPro24 oh ok!? Seems like a huge waste of $$$$ though!?

    • @raptorwhite6468
      @raptorwhite6468 Год назад

      They didn't want it to, but they were sure it will

    • @ThuTran-ox8nk
      @ThuTran-ox8nk Год назад

      @@bradrankin844 this was actually a huge success, they originally didn’t even know if it would get off the ground but they got a lot of helpful info from this, they purposely blew it up because they didn’t want it to get higher in the atmosphere and explode later because that could’ve killed a lot of people

  • @dlwa256
    @dlwa256 Год назад +13

    I’m so very glad it was unmanned.

    • @dlwa256
      @dlwa256 Год назад

      @@Jackmama007 screw you!

    • @dlwa256
      @dlwa256 Год назад +1

      @@Jackmama007 put your big boy boxers on and deal with it.

    • @Jackmama007
      @Jackmama007 Год назад

      @@dlwa256 NO! I will put on my big PERSON boxers and deal with it.

    • @mral4381
      @mral4381 Год назад +1

      There was a monkey named Charley 😮

    • @dlwa256
      @dlwa256 Год назад +2

      @@SirDinzhi I guess when you have money to burn…

  • @Mannicx
    @Mannicx Год назад +2

    To me the sound is like the new years countdown celebration for fireworks… but then you wake up and reality hits you, it’s a new year… it was only fireworks 😂

  • @normabracey6794
    @normabracey6794 Год назад +6

    That's just sad when people applaud because millions of dollars blew up, in the air at that, when there are thousands of homeless people in this country. Make it make sense.

    • @Sean-nj3hx
      @Sean-nj3hx 4 месяца назад

      They’re clapping because it was a successful test launch, rocket companies are not responsible for spending their money they make from building rockets on solving the worlds problems ( which btw is not a money problem )

    • @octavioholguin5454
      @octavioholguin5454 3 месяца назад +2

      Homeless it's a homeless because they don't want to work, they only needed the stupid drugs and not responsibility at all!?

    • @bjulianok5k
      @bjulianok5k 3 месяца назад

      по етои логике ми должни постаяно жит вкамином веке ни класт денги внауку а заниматся блоготворительнастю

    • @war_fish
      @war_fish 2 месяца назад

      Governments responsibility. SpaceX is not the government.

  • @duchessstudioband7896
    @duchessstudioband7896 Год назад

    Was it supposed to blow up? Just asking. I guess they didnt have high expectations

  • @jasonfreeland
    @jasonfreeland Год назад +5

    Rapid unscheduled disassembly

    • @Backswell
      @Backswell Год назад

      "We. Fucked. It. "

    • @coolcat6303
      @coolcat6303 Год назад +1

      And when I crash my car it’s a “rapid unscheduled stop with structure modification”.

    • @electronicguy420
      @electronicguy420 Год назад

      ​@@coolcat6303 *with insurance

  • @Arkin647
    @Arkin647 Месяц назад +1

    Imagine if this happened on New Year

  • @mitchevans4597
    @mitchevans4597 11 месяцев назад +3

    I know the astronauts feel comfortable knowing there are going to Mars on an explosive spaceship.

    • @NASADarth
      @NASADarth 11 месяцев назад +3

      Then you make it better??? Falcon 9 hasn’t had a failure in like 6 years. That doesn’t mean that every single starship will explode.

    • @war_fish
      @war_fish 2 месяца назад

      Literally every rocket is an explosive.

  • @experimentmagnet
    @experimentmagnet 2 месяца назад +1

    This is really relatively very old. Shame on the click bate without a date stated. This initially looked current even though it was an early planned SUCCESSFUL test... WTH!

    • @chronovore7234
      @chronovore7234 2 месяца назад

      This short was uploaded a year ago, it’s not click bait if RUclips decides to push your old shorts.

  • @hevifran
    @hevifran Год назад +3

    Meanwhile people went to the moon in 1969 😅

    • @CertifiedBlackScreen
      @CertifiedBlackScreen Год назад +2

      Mars is like 10× farther than the moon ate you alien or something who is laughing on failures of humanity

    • @Blaadd64
      @Blaadd64 10 месяцев назад +1

      Spacex has the safest rocket ever made that can go to space and back easily. This is a prototype of another rocket

  • @glendaharris4776
    @glendaharris4776 Год назад +1

    That's a billion dollars we'll never get back😂😂😂😂

  • @WIRE_MESH.POLICE
    @WIRE_MESH.POLICE Год назад +6

    Took awhile to leave the pad! Thought it was gonna blow there

    • @H0ldUp
      @H0ldUp Год назад +4

      They started off the engines in increments of power, so it won't have the thrust the lift super fast in the beginning

    • @RW-zh7kl
      @RW-zh7kl Год назад +4

      It is the tallest, heaviest, and most powerful rocket ever launched by anyone, it's crazy to think Elon Musk will surpass the whole American government space program

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Год назад +2

      @@RW-zh7klthey ARE kind of the american space program because of the Artemis lander thing.

  • @marksteinhauser3779
    @marksteinhauser3779 Год назад +1

    May not be early adaptor for this one 🤯

  • @Tmhen
    @Tmhen Год назад +7

    Clapping for it to explode midair???? People are nuts

    • @Octuly
      @Octuly Год назад +5

      Because this prototype wasn't expected to launch that high. They barely expected it to get past the launch tower because of how old this prototype was

    • @shebibscreations8544
      @shebibscreations8544 4 месяца назад

      When you expect absolute failure but you get some success it definitely feels like a victory. That thing went so high before it became the world’s most expensive fireworks show.

  • @alexandernikolaus3451
    @alexandernikolaus3451 9 месяцев назад

    This is SLS 1 the third was today and has a lot better results. Name anyone who got their first launch of a mostly complete system right?

  • @ronaldsmith1282
    @ronaldsmith1282 Год назад +5

    Thank God nobody was on board😳🙄🙄🫣🙄🙄🇺🇸

  • @kennethwilson8633
    @kennethwilson8633 Год назад +2

    I guess it’s still hard if it’s rocket science.

  • @W1dow2
    @W1dow2 Год назад +4

    I live an hour away from there and saw the live

    • @themetalhead1463
      @themetalhead1463 Год назад

      I live 21 hires away and saw it live

    • @war_fish
      @war_fish 2 месяца назад

      I live on the other side of the world and saw it live

  • @godferbidd6262
    @godferbidd6262 Год назад +2

    So... Who wants to go to Mars in one one of these beauties?!

  • @infinilife6239
    @infinilife6239 Год назад +3

    And We made the sky a sheltered ceiling, and they turn away from its signs (32)

    • @ReddFoxx1562
      @ReddFoxx1562 Год назад

      "What do you mean we, white man?"

    • @Ddeelee-gt4uv
      @Ddeelee-gt4uv Год назад

      ​​@@ReddFoxx1562gods

    • @ReddFoxx1562
      @ReddFoxx1562 Год назад

      @@Ddeelee-gt4uv what gods?

    • @war_fish
      @war_fish 2 месяца назад

      Flight 2
      Flight 3
      Flight 4
      Soon Flight 5.
      Along with the 360+ Falcon9 flights.

  • @SteveV2023
    @SteveV2023 Год назад +1

    When was this???

  • @Oskky91
    @Oskky91 Год назад +10

    I would like to know why the starship took too long to clear the tower, that delay definitely created a crater under the OLM, also I would like to know why it did not separate and was spinning too much

    • @DarrienCrowelf
      @DarrienCrowelf Год назад +1

      Hy that’s wat I was looking at

    • @bendobbing7015
      @bendobbing7015 Год назад +5

      Because they need to make sure all engines are full throttle before the release, making sure they have enough thrust to lift the ship. If they retracted the clamps with too little thrust they'd effectively drop the entire ship through the OLM and the destruction would be far worse.

  • @stevenmoore1923
    @stevenmoore1923 8 месяцев назад

    Very cool. Congratulations on all your progress.

  • @vorsgxxul1762
    @vorsgxxul1762 Год назад +3

    just look at the price of gas in texas...

  • @richardbesse7148
    @richardbesse7148 Год назад +1

    It was sad to see the rapid uncheduled dissassembly.
    I was hoping it could land.

  • @pjplaysgamez8520
    @pjplaysgamez8520 Год назад +5

    People don't realize the amount of power it takes to lift 5000 tons off the ground

    • @7150285
      @7150285 Год назад

      100 tons*

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Год назад +1

      @@7150285no it is about 5000 tons if include all of the fuel… which you have to do.

    • @mattchilcott1989
      @mattchilcott1989 Год назад

      It's not any where near the weight we're told it's an inflatable , true story

  • @wfoote73501
    @wfoote73501 Год назад +4

    They intentionally destroyed it

    • @coolcat6303
      @coolcat6303 Год назад

      Nah, it blew up all on it’s own.

    • @jorganzola1
      @jorganzola1 Год назад +1

      ​​@@coolcat6303
      Confirmed by FAA: Starship's automated flight termination system terminated the rocket.

  • @hallga2
    @hallga2 Год назад +2

    It didn't explode, it was an unscheduled disassembly!

  • @ianrose56
    @ianrose56 Месяц назад +1

    Fts #1 ... Yes, it was more powerful than they thought. Rud employed to self-destruction..
    Fts 5 complete success, and ship and booster did their thing.
    In fact, booster caught by chopsticks at the launch tower, and starship made a soft presion landing in the middle of the Indian ocean .!!!
    Fts 6 November 18th, be there and witness history in the making.!!!

  • @Vincent.M.Chern1905
    @Vincent.M.Chern1905 Год назад +3

    It is a test flight. Exciting ending is no bad.

  • @aaronwangler1463
    @aaronwangler1463 10 месяцев назад +2

    Good thing there is a ban on gas lawn mowers and weed eaters. Wouldn't want to waste any gas.

  • @TimJSwan
    @TimJSwan 11 месяцев назад +3

    Comments: “Man, those are some expensive fireworks.”
    Me: “100 million dollar prototype of a reusable rocket, saving a few trillion in manufacturing costs in the coming years.”

  • @hollywood6526
    @hollywood6526 8 месяцев назад

    I live on the Space Coast of Florida, and there is rockets that go up sometimes three times a day. It's definitely something to see in your bucket list.

  • @ImmortalGods
    @ImmortalGods Год назад +4

    This is what happens when you fire everybody at spacex except two people.

  • @mustafakangal1178
    @mustafakangal1178 7 месяцев назад +2

    This rocket wasn’t a failure at all.

  • @davidpetersen1
    @davidpetersen1 Год назад +3

    Awesome effort!!!! What an insanely complicated affair. They will have the second ready to go in weeks.

  • @jameskurk5668
    @jameskurk5668 Год назад +1

    Just to blow it up? Wtf?
    And what was it that flew up and severely damaged the rocket. Just as it came off the ground.