Somewhat similar thing happened to a Pegasus rocket some years back. The launch was scrubbed at T-30 seconds, but due to a miscommunication it ended up launching anyway. Aside from the lack of permission to launch, it reached orbit uneventfully
Well, the report said that it crashed 1.5 km from the test site, yet also said "near the city of Gongyi". So it was probably further away from the city itself than the 1.5 km, yet dangerously close i.m.h.o. if they call it "near". But the Chinese have been used to fireworks for over a thousand years, so...
Space X has much more launches than entire China has, and when they crash lately, it is only when expected during flight testing - not when they are parking in a garage like China crashed now, lol.
@@loadingnewads It's actually in the Description of this video. The Tianlong-3 rocket, developed by private Chinese business Space Pioneer that is hoping to challenge Elon Musk’s SpaceX, lifted off unexpectedly during what was intended to be a ground test of its booster.
@@NooborianWhen? The US has lost a lot more than 10 astronauts in total throughout its space program, but the last one was in 2003. The US and Soviet Union both also wrote the book on space travel for the first 50 years or so, in many ways it's a miracle more accidents didn't happen. It's important to clarify this is a private company and SpaceX and Boeing among other private American space faring companies have also had issues. With that said, this one seems very major, about as major as the issues SpaceX was having. It may be zero fatalities today, but it could very well be many the next time. As China mans more launches over time, we may very well see accidents spring up.
@@no-barknoonan1335 " but the last one was in 2003" - that's because since then the US sent their people to space and back down almost exclusively on foreign rockets, in like 90% of cases from Russia.
@@Nooborian Is this the year of the "paper" tiger? China reminds me of that Cher song from the 1970's: Chinese tramps and thieves: "Thieves thieves tramps and thieves we here it from the people in world around us thieves thieves tramps and thieves but every night when the sun goes down, we steal everything not nailed down" 😁😃🤣🙂
That's a different animal. China will advance in space but may trail Japan and India. It's going to be International up there, might as well get use to it.
@@David-gh6vpSoviets looked mighty too. Now read about documents on how hollow it was. Everything was done to show off. People were Expendables. Bad things were hidden
unexpected launch is a bit hard to believe, but no casualties is believable. They kinda have to build the testing sites in places without humans living nearby, it's standard.
@@Oligodendrocyte139 it crashed 1.5 km from the test site, thats 0.93 miles, when SpaceX does a static fire of Starship on the OLM the road block is 1.6 miles from the vehicle.
The "unexpected launch" wasn't someone push the launch button by accident. Instead, this was meant to be a ground engine test, but they underestimated the power of the rocket engine, and the mechanism holding the rocket in place failed. A failure that could've been avoided, but not that ridiculous.
@@megafilmlover and here we have the CCP shill ... happens all the time whole buildings collapse because they are Tofu dregs ... and miraculously no deaths say the CCP media. its like russian media if either said it was sunny out id take my umbrella
Best demonstrated in airshows. It's what separates the pro photographers from the amateurs with the enormous zoom lens they've just added to their collection.
Уменьшай, уменьшай, уменьшай, еще, еще... вот, нужный фокус: сигарета "Falcon 9" сдуло боковым ветром с карниза "балкон 9" и - падение на землю. 1. Все свое ношу с собой. 2. Следи за своими вещами. 3. Следи за собой, будь осторожен.
They definitely achieved the desired success in "What could go wrong" tests. Others should thanks them for their sacrifices that helped the others to achieve success. 😂
On January 28, 1986, the Space Shuttle Challenger broke apart 73 seconds into its flight, killing all seven crew members aboard. The spacecraft disintegrated 46,000 feet (14 km) above the Atlantic Ocean, off the coast of Cape Canaveral, Florida, at 11:39 a.m. EST (16:39 UTC).
This is just a private enterprise rocket, not a national level rocket... 😜 Every province in China has private enterprises that independently develop rockets. ~ ~ 😎😎
they fired toward the mountians..in the states when we launch from cape Canaveral, we launch toward the ocean , but otherwise the surrounding area is highly populated.
The experiment was designed to test rocket engines on the ground. However due to wrong calculations and construction , the platform failed to contain the rocket. That’s the reason it been called “unexpected launch “
@@Supraboyes China wishes it could have something even remotely as advanced as Starship, lmao. West Taiwan can't even match the outstanding capabilities of the Falcon Boosters. Stay mad.
This is just a private enterprise rocket, not a national level rocket...😜 Every province in China has private enterprises that independently develop rockets. ~ ~ 😎😎 So your mockery seems to be wrong on the basis.
They claimed the flight control shut off the engine, which was not going to change anything… Back to the comment, The rocket booster was filled with fuel and it could potentially fly for a minute before running out of fuel, which means to send a big chunk of metal into the sky
Mission Specialist Bang Ding Ow assured everyone that the launch went as planned. Along with pilot Wi Tu Lo, they expressed their excitement in anticipation of the manned mission taking place next week.
@@Alex-gt5ho Yes, but they also do not try to scrub the internet from any evidence of their failures nowadays (like china is currently trying on their side of the great firewall). And they never dropped their spend booster rockets over villages or put their Launch/test sites right next to cities.
The same people who scream "dont trust china" will whip out the chinese census data to prove that its in a demographic "collapse" funny how that works😊
they had to change the design to accommodate for the poor construction material and craftsmanship. No joke, an elevator construction company my friend worked for used to use metal brackets made in Europe, it's basically just a flat piece of stainless steel shaped into a corner to hold screws in place. The company switched to Chinese made part, it was so flimsy it came with cross-section braces to give it rigidity (which diverts from the original specification) and the screws tore the material apart when they tried to tighten it as it. They switched back.
@penitent2401 hot damn, I do not doubt that. From everything I've seen of their materials in construction I'm surprised any of their buildings are even standing.
@u2beuser714 the problem with China is they use very cheap materials and cut too many corners. China is better at copying software than they are at engineering.
Compared to the United States China's private space program(s) are still fairly young, so it totally understandable that accident might occur. I am glad that hear that nobody was hurt in the incident.
It doesn’t matter what country, I know it used to be a “race” but I feel a human bond in our efforts towards reaching the stars so any failure is shared and my heart is with those who spent so much effort on the project to have it go off unplanned like that. Sad to see
@@hunnyjar8937 Same way that they put too much fuel for a static fire test. Probably enough fuel to reach the orbit. And enough fuel to level a village based on that explosion.
@user-qr2yi9wo8m I'm just glad Harbor Freight exist. Their saw saw blades are pretty cheap & they get the job done, for $1 a blade. Tho, they're only good for one project at best.
No different than Boeing. Yes the rocket got the capsule to ISS. However how they going to come back in a leaky capsule ? 🤔 " Boeing Starliner capsule docks with space station despite helium leaks "
@@cosmoray9750 Chinese rocket: Blatantly breaks free of it's restraints while oriented in a vertical direction (Note the US tests engines horizontally towards mountains) US Spaceship: Successfully achieves rocket based launch and arrives at it's destination, but has a minor problem that only the U.S. is willing to delay activities for return for (Russia would have sent them down regardless). Yes, your comparison is totally legitimate and doesn't detract *at all* from the reality of both situations. Well done (NOT!)
100% agree with that. I go out of my way to avoid buying anything made in China. I’m sick of seeing “Made in China” All US companies should leave China, those that don’t, should be incentivized to leave. To hell with China and their constant thievery, lies, deception, aggression and malicious behavior.
Cameraman so nearly was perfect until the crash
Yeah wtf is he doing
Seems to be a trend. Shake the camera or aim it at your feet right at the crucial moment. Is filming that hard? I don't get it.
Its a phenomenon with all phone camera videos. Held perfectly until the critical moment, then they move the camera and miss the money shot.
It honestly pissed me off😂
I mean really
The fact that they launch rockets SO CLOSE to residential areas is a cause of concern.
Not for the Chinese Communist management. They don't give two hoots about their people.
They don't care
They do not care, they have over a billion people!
it was a photocopy error😂😂😂
They lock thousands in lifetime slave labour for being the wrong type of Chinese
"unexpected launch" is a hell of a phrase lol
Somewhat similar thing happened to a Pegasus rocket some years back. The launch was scrubbed at T-30 seconds, but due to a miscommunication it ended up launching anyway.
Aside from the lack of permission to launch, it reached orbit uneventfully
@@mistertagnan I swear baby, this never happened to me before...
It was supposed to be a test. The structure holding the rocket failed.
Premature projectile dysfunction
😮😮😮
"no casualties"
50 deers, 1000 Squirrels and 2,5 million ants: 💀
Billions of ants
😭
@@HN-yq1rb 在他眼里,估计中国伤害一只蚂蚁都比其他人杀害一个平民的罪更重。
@@HN-yq1rbWhataboutism.
@@红伞刀 中国烧烤摊斗殴女子受伤:“国际重大新闻,舆论毁天灭地”
美国大街枪击十几人死亡:“美国内日常新闻,舆论风平浪静”
结论:全世界就数中国人的命最值钱!
The camera man had one job!
Exactly what I was thinking
Cool guy Dont look at Explosion
not a camera man. just a home video. normal guy who's not used to explosions.
woman..
His job is probably store owner or office worker or delivery driver. He just happened to be holding a phone to look at the engine test.
“No casualties were reported. We made sure of it.”
Reported being the key word
😂 lmfao
评论区很多傻子,这只是一个静态测试罢了,火箭在测试台上没有固定好,导致了意外飞出去,就这么简单,很多人真的被洗脑成傻子了,各种阴谋论。
😂😂
50 cents hold it.
I gotta admire how dedicated the camera man is to filming this during an earthquake.
nowatderesfunny ahuncarewhoyare !!
Hahahah
Top kek
he was zooming from far away of course it's going to shake
@@johnsonfromml8662 unfortunately the earthquake happened to hit at the exact moment the cigarrete rocket plunged into the mountain!
China: nobody is dead
Everyone else: ya a few people died
*WUHAN, CHINA:* _we didn't make COVID_
*EVERYONE:* _its called Wuhan Flu_
China: Our Soldiers didn't die in fight with India!
News agencies: So yeah, 35-40 Chinese soldiers died in the clash.
The CCP reported that this and all future failed launches results in no casualties.
Nah, CCP told the people the launch was successful.
BBC: CCP is stealing our market
Heroes of space development
Well u ameridogs had lots of inicidents to
中国共产党不在乎居民的感受阿,独裁者的天堂😂
Last time I checked 1.5 kilometers was close enough to be considered "in the neighbourhood"
Theres at least 3 mcdonalds within a mile of my house. Yeah im american
1.5 km from the test site, not the residential area. Read again.
*In chinese LIE distances, that is "FAR"*
@orionmedivh5859 Clearly they're filming from a house mate. No one said anything about cities.
Well, the report said that it crashed 1.5 km from the test site, yet also said "near the city of Gongyi". So it was probably further away from the city itself than the 1.5 km, yet dangerously close i.m.h.o. if they call it "near". But the Chinese have been used to fireworks for over a thousand years, so...
Successful rocket launchs: 2. 4k views.
Rocket crushes: 240k views. 😂😂😂😂😂
When haters finally find the vent🤣🤣
No it’s almost always the case with good news against bad news. Allll the time… especially after the Cold War and the optimistic days.
@@reviver2012 Naah. Just some Michael Bay fanboy on sightseeing.
Haters be hatin. When their countries couldn't hope to match in 50 years the progress China made in 5.
Same with NASCAR, people are there to watch the crashes
Space X rocket crash: 4k views
China rocket crash: 400k views
The password of the traffic
What a load of BS. Space X crashes get hundreds of thousands if not millions of views on dozens of different YT channels.
西方媒体里了中国就没饭吃了哈哈哈
China crash tests rockets 🚀 near houses and schools, space x stress tests rockets safety
Space X has much more launches than entire China has, and when they crash lately, it is only when expected during flight testing - not when they are parking in a garage like China crashed now, lol.
@@jasonlee148 因为 这是西方人的流量密码
The black box recorded the last message from launch station. The control technician is recorded saying "What does this button do?".
🤣
😂😅
saying crash of Space X
😂😂😂
@@Yae-Miko216wumao stfu your opinions are of no value just like your currency. Stupid communist dreamers 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
State media also reported that there was no incident at all.
A very successful engine test that went above and beyond infact!
Planned???
Can I have a look at the source, it’s absurd
Chinese govt is answerable to no one, they do as they please
hahahahahaha Good one Larry
@@loadingnewads It's actually in the Description of this video.
The Tianlong-3 rocket, developed by private Chinese business Space Pioneer that is hoping to challenge Elon Musk’s SpaceX, lifted off unexpectedly during what was intended to be a ground test of its booster.
The country that invented fireworks is living up to its reputation 😂
Zero human casualties, while the USA...lost more than 10
@@NooborianWhen? The US has lost a lot more than 10 astronauts in total throughout its space program, but the last one was in 2003. The US and Soviet Union both also wrote the book on space travel for the first 50 years or so, in many ways it's a miracle more accidents didn't happen. It's important to clarify this is a private company and SpaceX and Boeing among other private American space faring companies have also had issues. With that said, this one seems very major, about as major as the issues SpaceX was having. It may be zero fatalities today, but it could very well be many the next time. As China mans more launches over time, we may very well see accidents spring up.
@@Nooborian ......what?
@@no-barknoonan1335 " but the last one was in 2003" - that's because since then the US sent their people to space and back down almost exclusively on foreign rockets, in like 90% of cases from Russia.
@@Nooborian Is this the year of the "paper" tiger? China reminds me of that Cher song from the 1970's: Chinese tramps and thieves: "Thieves thieves tramps and thieves we here it from the people in world around us thieves thieves tramps and thieves but every night when the sun goes down, we steal everything not nailed down" 😁😃🤣🙂
imagine them sending out nukes and falling to their own land several meters away from launch silos
Imagine them sending a rover on the dark side of the Moon, operating it several hours, collecting samples, then recovering it back to Earth...
@@mariusmioc3045They only care about pursuit to space instead of their own people...
That's a different animal. China will advance in space but may trail Japan and India. It's going to be International up there, might as well get use to it.
@@David-gh6vpi highly doubt it
@@David-gh6vpSoviets looked mighty too. Now read about documents on how hollow it was. Everything was done to show off. People were Expendables. Bad things were hidden
Unexpected launch and no casualties? Doubt that reporting.
What? But the state-run media said so!
If it was an engine test like they say then no-one is going to be close to it, just like a real launch.
State run Media 😅
unexpected launch is a bit hard to believe, but no casualties is believable. They kinda have to build the testing sites in places without humans living nearby, it's standard.
@@Oligodendrocyte139 it crashed 1.5 km from the test site, thats 0.93 miles, when SpaceX does a static fire of Starship on the OLM the road block is 1.6 miles from the vehicle.
"Why do we need to spend so much on covers for the launch buttons?"
😳😬😖
Space force 😂😅😂😅😂😅😂😅😂
Probably closer to the truth than we know. Coffee spilled on the launch button and short circuited
""Xui, hurry there's cake in the break room"
"coming! lemme just set my coffee down.."
The "unexpected launch" wasn't someone push the launch button by accident. Instead, this was meant to be a ground engine test, but they underestimated the power of the rocket engine, and the mechanism holding the rocket in place failed. A failure that could've been avoided, but not that ridiculous.
😮😮😮😮😮
It could have dropped in middle of Shangai during rush hours ... and still China state media would say no casualties
A Thought 💭 to my self ... Like yeah no damn casualties due to being damn Vaporized 😮. Craziness. I wonder what SOP went wrong 🤣🤣. Ñooooooo.
Not true.
@@megafilmlover and here we have the CCP shill ... happens all the time whole buildings collapse because they are Tofu dregs ... and miraculously no deaths say the CCP media. its like russian media if either said it was sunny out id take my umbrella
its been happening. people have died from debris from the rockets & the Chinese government washes it hands cleans & moves on.
@@megafilmlover Is the CCP still denying the Tiananmen Square massacre?
"State media reported there were no injuries."
That means it must have fell onto a small village, wiping it out.
打開衛星地圖都能看到墜毀地點 沒有任何村莊,為什麼要張嘴就來呢?
unexpected launch? sounds like a problem i’ve had before
💀💀💀
wtf
😂😂😂
mmhmm 😅😅
😂😂😂😂
Hey, I know he took the responsibility of manning the camera, but I don't blame him for looking away and watching it live 😂
People still think zooming in is the best option. Zoom out to get the whole scene.
Best demonstrated in airshows. It's what separates the pro photographers from the amateurs with the enormous zoom lens they've just added to their collection.
Уменьшай, уменьшай, уменьшай, еще, еще... вот, нужный фокус: сигарета "Falcon 9" сдуло боковым ветром с карниза "балкон 9" и - падение на землю. 1. Все свое ношу с собой. 2. Следи за своими вещами. 3. Следи за собой, будь осторожен.
I wouldn’t even trust a chair that’s made in china let alone a damn rocket
Lmao! Truer words were never spoken.
Xenophobic,
@@jucilene7562 what's this have to do with the movie Aliens??
@@The_Bad_Guy.ignorant.
@@rebel1766 not really. Dude made a very valid point.
When your rocket comes from Temu!
😂
Facts!
Shien.
Best post award 😂
Is Temu the new Wish?
America:Space X
China : Space OOPS
or
boeing
boing boing oops
How many rockets did spacex destroy?
@@bardsamok9221 at least not near a village or due an unexpectet start
@@MrBugfunk well it was not near any village but visible enough from one... just like space x
@@frombrum boeing buys low quality and fake titanium from china.
Stealing intellectual property still requires some intellect on your part.
🤣🤣🤣
😂😂
Should have taken spaceX stuff instead of F35
The USA block China cooperating with NASA, how does China steal your selfish technology?
What did they steal? Were the first rockets literally invented in China ?
Whoever was filming in portrait should be given a free ride on the next launch.
Portrait is perfect for vertical action.
Filming in portrait was fine.
Editing that into a horizontal video to add their text was telegraphs fault.
😂
State media also reported that the cameraman had since has a terrible accident involving a gun being fired at the back of his head.
lol that's American tradition.
accidentally* fired of course
3 shots*
@@afx2024not really, though.
Send your source please.
Hard to believe nobody lives in the area of the crash, at least there’s nobody living now.
Something definitely died from that.
All that money, simply just to put Chinese lives in danger, instead of making a better life for the Chinese people, the CCP buys exploding toys.
Probably a pig or a hog, or a Chinese chicken 😂 @@elusivelectron
I understood a different context with that last sentence on your comment in a dark way 💀
It looks like it was in the hills so unless someone was hiking or something seems like it was an unoccupied region.
They definitely achieved the desired success in "What could go wrong" tests. Others should thanks them for their sacrifices that helped the others to achieve success. 😂
Worst camera man in the history of camera men.
Probably the same guy that designed the rocket test.
Looks is so real cause it is. Cmon.
When the male operates the camera himself during "unexpected launch".
He was actually aiming perfectly, but his phone was made in China.
@@Commzor"made in China" is of good quality these days, so your joke is outdated, where is the phone made better than in China?
Made in China
Starship did not crash once i believe
And Japan rocket didn't crash I believe.
They came back from the far side of the moon and these people can't wait to make fun of a private space company.
Soy Westerner can't pretend being human for 1 second billionth edition
On January 28, 1986, the Space Shuttle Challenger broke apart 73 seconds into its flight, killing all seven crew members aboard. The spacecraft disintegrated 46,000 feet (14 km) above the Atlantic Ocean, off the coast of Cape Canaveral, Florida, at 11:39 a.m. EST (16:39 UTC).
Don't believe in anything until it is officially denied.
The Ministry of Truth approves this message!
This is not an official rocket issued by China. There are more than a dozen media outlets in China Folk Rocket Company misleading others.
It's true they were taken over by the lizard people back in Oct 2022
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣👍👍👍👍👍👍
"No" "casualties"...
As a chinese person this is so embarassing 😢😢
视频传的真快
This is just a private enterprise rocket, not a national level rocket... 😜 Every province in China has private enterprises that independently develop rockets. ~ ~ 😎😎
?为什么尴尬,火箭试车失误是什么无法接受的事实吗?😅😅况且试车标准本来周围就不会有人,自然不会有伤亡,它唯一的问题只是离市区太近,但那是另外一回事了。
@@彭家升-r3v 这个本来就是民企自研的火箭,这就让它们集体高潮了。。。~
That could have been a lot worse looking at how close the residential area is.
they fired toward the mountians..in the states when we launch from cape Canaveral, we launch toward the ocean , but otherwise the surrounding area is highly populated.
@@davediamond9436There's a reason why we didn't built a space port in Alabama
it was...but Casualty means harm to politburo member in chinese - the rest don't count
Casulties is just a number for them. ccp dont give a damn
Yup couldve been worse
"It lifted off unexpectedly during what was intended to be a ground test of its booster".
Well, the booster passed its ground test.
It definitely produces enough thrust 😅
Cameraman took video from the beginning mean it was not an unintended launch. They lying to cover up the failure.
"no casualties" said the reliably transparent Chinese government with a reputation for caring about its own citizens
in unrelated news, 10,000 people died when they all spontaneously combusted due to old age
Looking like a lit cigarette falling in the sky
The experiment was designed to test rocket engines on the ground. However due to wrong calculations and construction , the platform failed to contain the rocket. That’s the reason it been called “unexpected launch “
They use the same quality control for their nukes.
made in China probably
@@projectirelia1581 your hate is showing
@@projectirelia1581yea i agree 100% that rockrt is made in china
Just another tofu dreg construction, cheaping out on everything at the cost of resources and human lifes
700 million cctvs and this camera man missed the landing 😂
Such a moron comment.
He knew what would happen to him if he caught the impact on film
SpaceX can rest easily. The Chinese competition have some kinks to work out.
erm so does space x with that joke star ship
@@Supraboyes dumbass troll xD
@@Supraboyes China wishes it could have something even remotely as advanced as Starship, lmao. West Taiwan can't even match the outstanding capabilities of the Falcon Boosters. Stay mad.
@@marinecorpsman5 falcon is fine because it's something space X was testing before a idiot came in and decided to make a silly toy for himself
@@Supraboyes
But what has Britain got? Nothing! 🤣
Chinese management team: Sir, We accidentally lunch products that are supposed to sell another country
This is just a private enterprise rocket, not a national level rocket...😜 Every province in China has private enterprises that independently develop rockets. ~ ~ 😎😎 So your mockery seems to be wrong on the basis.
Chinese Rocket: "Your a Bluetooth devise is ready to pear!" 😂
ngl, for years I thought it was saying "your blue hued wife is really super"
Says angloidal dummy who is uneducated as well
😂😂😂😂😂
Teh fone ringin
"Your bluetooth device is really cheap here."
The engineers shut off the engines so we can fall back to earth with a large amount of fuel and cause a big explosion.
If it had been designed properly, it would have taken a second or two to shut it down, not 20-30 as the video would seem to indicate.
@@MyFiddlePlayer Better to have the rocket fly out of control with full engines over populated area.
what I did see was a conventional 4ton TNT warhead
It was out of control. There's other video angels on the crash and it landed right next to a village.
They claimed the flight control shut off the engine, which was not going to change anything…
Back to the comment,
The rocket booster was filled with fuel and it could potentially fly for a minute before running out of fuel, which means to send a big chunk of metal into the sky
The chief engineer, a Mr Sum Ting Wong, said it's all good, we meant to do that.
His assistant, Ho Lee Fook also confirmed that was the case.
The chief administrators Ho Lee Fuk and Wi tuu Lo also said everything went to plan. Nothing to worry about I guess.
Static fire test. Psyche!
Made ya look!
Hoo flung dung on the team?
Mission Specialist Bang Ding Ow assured everyone that the launch went as planned. Along with pilot Wi Tu Lo, they expressed their excitement in anticipation of the manned mission taking place next week.
The entire facility is probably Temu or AliExpress built
They should really stick to fire crackers
And lanterns
@@andrewbielecki6154but not the solar ones, they only last a few months. (Which is still longer than this rocket lasted.)
As if nasa didn't have lots of fails too cmon
@@Alex-gt5ho Yes, but they also do not try to scrub the internet from any evidence of their failures nowadays (like china is currently trying on their side of the great firewall). And they never dropped their spend booster rockets over villages or put their Launch/test sites right next to cities.
@@MrRisenKill the news is all over Chinese internet, smarty
The largest Chinese Fire Drill in all history just occurred.
🤣
😂
😂
Actually it’s from a commercial team, not the national team.
If China said the sky is blue, i'd still go outside and check
I mean, the last time I was in Hong Kong, the smog was so bad that the sky was yellow
CHINA IS LIKE A FART AFTER TACO TUESDAY, NEVER TRUST IT
@@mechadoggy Your social credit score is now negative 1 billion, report to the salt mines comrade.
The same people who scream "dont trust china" will whip out the chinese census data to prove that its in a demographic "collapse" funny how that works😊
And it still is blue . Bet u are stupid
The MADE IN CHINA stigma will never go
They forgot to copy the exact blueprints they stole.
too late for operation paperclip
they had to change the design to accommodate for the poor construction material and craftsmanship.
No joke, an elevator construction company my friend worked for used to use metal brackets made in Europe, it's basically just a flat piece of stainless steel shaped into a corner to hold screws in place. The company switched to Chinese made part, it was so flimsy it came with cross-section braces to give it rigidity (which diverts from the original specification) and the screws tore the material apart when they tried to tighten it as it. They switched back.
If copying was that easy why not every country does it? Why india cant do a fraction of the lainches china does? They cant copy?
@penitent2401 hot damn, I do not doubt that. From everything I've seen of their materials in construction I'm surprised any of their buildings are even standing.
@u2beuser714 the problem with China is they use very cheap materials and cut too many corners. China is better at copying software than they are at engineering.
Engine test was successful I guess?
820 tons of thrust... blew the test site up
Exceeded the sites’ limit.
lol, such a stupid mistake
@@EthanX1ao Better to have more thrust than less. Ex: Vanguard 1
Yes the engine test was successful but the ground mounts didn't tether it, it had too much power
China never cease to provide us their entertainment.
but not ast entertaining as america's presidential debate
傻逼
never heard someone saying " oh i expected this crash, what a suprise"
They sounded like they were having fun. “Yeee!”
确实哈😂
hahahahahaa like the rabbits from wallace and gromit
A monument to chinese technology
This is a private space company launch test
Ahhh yes, rocket technology by Temu
😂😂😂
Underrated comment 😂😂😂
Camera guy had one job to do.....
It was a regular person and not a professional
@@shac9131 So he had more than one job then?
@@shac9131 Prove it
@MerchantIvoryfilms I read the news and led us to video's here
@@shac9131 prove it
Premature release. Rocket was so enthusiastic, like a teenage boy.
Space Pioneer says the test exceeded expectations, bigly.
Yea, SpaceX uses that excuse alot for their explosions too
@@ev17dannot an excuse
its to collect data
@@ev17danSpaceX is at least objectively a successful company lmao.
@@jsw2894 yea 4 falcon super heavy launches and 4 total losses
@@parislikesliners not for long
Compared to the United States China's private space program(s) are still fairly young, so it totally understandable that accident might occur. I am glad that hear that nobody was hurt in the incident.
Knowing how to hold a rocket in place in 1960s technology.
@@megafilmlover shitguo 🇨🇳 bots are angry
Finally I see a normal person
美国人失败了大喊成功,中国失败了就是年轻
It doesn’t matter what country, I know it used to be a “race” but I feel a human bond in our efforts towards reaching the stars so any failure is shared and my heart is with those who spent so much effort on the project to have it go off unplanned like that. Sad to see
At some point the rocket resembles a cigarette dropped by someone
Snoop Dogs blunt craft returning to earth
It was supposed to be a STATIC FIRE TEST but the rocket lifted off instead 😂😂😂
Yeah, massive "oops" there! lol
It was actually a FOREST FIRE TEST and it was a complete success, the Chinese state media reports!
Nobody told the guy who was in charge of bolting it down obviously. 😊
If they're gonna be sloppy with the anchorage system then just have the booster on it's side or upside down ffs
@@hunnyjar8937 Same way that they put too much fuel for a static fire test. Probably enough fuel to reach the orbit. And enough fuel to level a village based on that explosion.
Waiting for Elon Musk's reaction... 😂😂😂
Yeah so many people hang onto every single word snake oil salesman Musk says.
Yeah just like how he laughed at BYD who's overtaken Tesla in both sales numbers and EV technologies.
@@jasonlee148 But Tesla has surpassed BYD in recalls.😉
@@jasonlee148byd has no full self driving
@@Kalpanax-sh4tf just like they couldn't make long lasting batteries 5 years ago. Let's see about full self driving in another 5 years shall we?
Elon be like, ur welcome
They must’ve bought it from Harbor freight
Made in China. :-O
or Boeing.
hey mom I bought it from walmart!
@user-qr2yi9wo8m
I'm just glad Harbor Freight exist. Their saw saw blades are pretty cheap & they get the job done, for $1 a blade. Tho, they're only good for one project at best.
Jesus! That was crazy they would test in such a place surrounded by mountains and people living so close!
1.5 km is like 2 secs of rocket travel time!
Well it's simple, China doesn't give a fug about their citizens.
It's barely even a 20-minute walk!
1.5 km = 1 mile
It was not supposed to fly. It is a ground test facility, not a launch pad. But the rocket had its own plans :)
I pity the poor guy who had to load that thing with 41,834,995 little AG13 batteries. He'll have to start over.
🤣
Mofos launch pad was 5km within residential areas hahaha! So fckin geniuses! 😂
It's not a launch pad, it's an engine test pad.
@@krashd LOL! God damn Einstein! So, its a test pad, not a launch pad where they fckin launch a rocket? Hahaha!
Chinese official to engineers: "There was a perfectly good village nearby, why drop the rocket back on this expensive launch site?"
No different than Boeing.
Yes the rocket got the capsule to ISS.
However how they going to come back in a leaky capsule ? 🤔
" Boeing Starliner capsule docks with space station despite helium leaks "
@@cosmoray9750 Easy, disconnect the leaking capsule and send another one up. It's pretty routine.
When did this happen
@@cosmoray9750 Chinese rocket: Blatantly breaks free of it's restraints while oriented in a vertical direction (Note the US tests engines horizontally towards mountains)
US Spaceship: Successfully achieves rocket based launch and arrives at it's destination, but has a minor problem that only the U.S. is willing to delay activities for return for (Russia would have sent them down regardless).
Yes, your comparison is totally legitimate and doesn't detract *at all* from the reality of both situations. Well done (NOT!)
😮😮😮
Somewhere nearby is the Chinese equivalent of Homer Simpson: "I wonder what this button does..."
Amazing how it seems to fall in slow motion. Shows how quick it's going up to when it isn't.
It also shows how huge that rocket stage must have been. Big things always look slower than they really are
Rockets can reach super sonic in seconds. Gravity is no match.
Good use of camera 👍🏻 10/10
The state media was correct when they said "nobody living there now".
Love your retort!
Most comments are oblivious to that fact that this was the Tianlong-3 rocket, developed by private Chinese business Space Pioneer.
those haters will make up all kinds of stories to mock China. Fact is never something they care
Pc of junk
elon musk Said can't copy rocket from Elon musk
When copying something, its important to make sure it actually works first.
They were.
This was a test, to see if it works... it didn't.
Reminds me of the time China stole blueprints from Russia of an experimental jet and then crashed it into a mountain their first time flying it
Yeah must've stole the schematics from Boeing.
These people sound like aliens "eeeeeeeee".
I'm pretty certain that there is many chinese swear words in that video
“ Made in China “
Notably, this WASN’T SUPPOSED TO TAKE OFF. They just forgot to bolt it down tight enough.
In rocket parlance, it was Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly caused by a Rapid Unscheduled Launch.
Dont think they would be able to find any "casualties.
This mirrors my experience with most Chinese products,,,,,,,
😂
100% agree with that. I go out of my way to avoid buying anything made in China. I’m sick of seeing “Made in China”
All US companies should leave China, those that don’t, should be incentivized to leave.
To hell with China and their constant thievery, lies, deception, aggression and malicious behavior.
Many people thought it was the Chinese space agency, but they didn't realize it was just a private company testing the rocket. 🚀 !😂
They don't want to know and face they reality. Because it hurts their fragile hearts😊
Unscheduled rapid disassembly
Chinese invented a flying cigarette😂
Exploding vape pen rocket
whenever I ask my mom to record something
Hey let's go to Mars😅
Rocket looks like a large factory smoke stack that was suddenly launched by a mysterious, unxpected explosion.
Scientists: Okay begin Engine test
Engine: LOOK HOW POWERFUL I AMM!!
Scientists: NYUUUUUUUUUU!
It's an "ex" rocket, as opposed to a Space X rocket.
'Nah its not, it fine, it just moved!'
Great camera work 👍👍
The people living there had no idea there was a rocket base. Imagine that
Bad day to take a hike
This is not an official Chinese project, but an accident occurred during a rocket engine test run by a Chinese private rocket company.
Certainly NOT because it failed.
@@valtyger Has your country successfully launched a rocket recently? The fox said the grapes were sour.
LOL there are no "Private": companies in the CCP. They are ALL controlled, in part, by the Chinese Communist Party... Read a book.
A Chinese company on mainland China certainly isn't private.
It became a private company at the moment of impact.
Dude legit had THE opportunity, but forgot how to use his hands.
I love how people react exactly the same way in any language
No comments?
Looking like a lit cigarette in mid air.
because we believe what "state media" says?