I'm an astrophotographer and I am utterly humbled by the tracking ability of your guys. Extreme focal lengths, tack-sharp focus on a cloudy day with the vehicle often filling the field of view... chef's kiss Someone was definitely paying attention in geometry class.
[4K Slow-Mo] Starship Flight 3 Supercut w/ Incredible Audio 0509am 19.3.24 considering the tech they're hinting at - we're so primitive in this.... Andiamo!!!! i wonder which alleged mad men are being silenced and pilloried due to far more innovative and cost effective ways of space travel being available.....????
The quality of the photography is astounding. I find it incredible the lengths people go to to achieve this footage. Great work everyone who participated.
The shots starting at 19:00 are the most exceptionally clear of all, and while it was a very clean vehicle relative to the previous two flights, there are still several tiles visible falling off the TPS. More than a couple of them hit the aft fins, exploding into a fine, bright white silica dust as they likely destroy the tiles on the fin in the process. This is highly reminiscent of the STS-107 foam strike incident that sealed the fate of Columbia and its crew on reentry in 2003. I would guess the leading edge of the aft fins is eventually going to have to be strengthened with reinforced carbon-carbon, just like the shuttle was - hopefully with thicker material this time.
Seeing the multiple and repeated Sonic booms from the thrust during initial liftoff and takeoff demonstrates the insane power this rocket possesses. I think, when compared in relation to our previous exposure to launches and spacecraft flight travel photography/cinematography. If you told me just 10 years ago, I would be seeing this, I don't know if I would truly believe you then. This is some of the coolest demonstrations of photography/cinematography outside of Starship, starting re-entry and the visualization of the plasma starting to form and the plasma trail from a different perspective before it finally was unable to relay pictures anymore. I think that it's the General Public not only having access but providing the rest of us with access to these images. Not just NASA or some private company contracted to take the images. I also understand that it was a cold war, and it was allegedly necessary, but I'm glad that as times have changed, so has this policy.
Incredible work by everyone who made these videos. SpaceX is taking humanity into an amazing near future (5 to 10 years?) where it will be possible to lift thousands to tons into LEO, the moon and eventually mars every year.
I can't wait for them to reach the moon. Imagine the amount of crazy content we'll get. As the moon becomes more and more populated it'll be like an entirely new country was created. New lives, businesses, economies etc will suddenly appear in a very short amount of time. It's going to be fascinating
Yes it is and not to take anything away from this experience but for those of us "of a certain age" we remember how long the flame was coming off the bottom of the Saturn 5! Now THAT was just as memorable!! And, how slow that the Saturn 5 was to rise off the pad just like Starship. Large vehicle launches are always stunning!!
It is not Exhaust Flame, in astronautics Rocket Engine terminology, it is *Exhaust Plume* and it is one of visual factor (length-shape and color) about Engine Thrust Vector power coefficiency, Color: gives clue on combustion design (full or open cycle) and combustion productivity from thrustchamber&throat till nozzle skirts...Exhaust plume also gives data on how many engines the stage approximately consisted of and/or the level of combustion chamber pressure and/or the level/power of probable specific implus...exhaust plume color distribution from around nozzle skirts till end of plume indicates the specific implus level together with the type of FUEL! for NTO and UMDH the color is characteristic: Orange... *In short we say for any space launch vehicle in total, if the exhaust plume length at least at sea level equivalent to the overall height of lauch vehicle (rocket) it is an avarage rocket in reaching LEO and higher but it is least the limit a vehicle needs in winning gravity. *EXHAUST PLUME CO-FACTOR MUST BE AT LEAST 1.2 TIMES OF ROCKET OVERALL LENGTH* *WHEN A ROCKET HAS AT LEAST 1.2 TIMES ITS LENGHT AT EXHAUST PLUME AT SEA LEVEL THEN WE SAY THIS SPACE LAUNCH VEHICLE HAS ENOUGH POWER TO MAKE ORBITAL INJECTION!*
I'm watching from Kenya, my bucket list includes watching such a Launch in person. The audio quality in this compilation, the various angles and closeups are just incredible. Wow... Thanks for the experience.
It's worth the trip, though don't expect the visual to compare to all of these clips. The audio is the big difference, these clips sound great but nothing compared to being there in person, you FEEL the launch and so does everything around you. It's like you're in the middle of a minor earthquake.
Man, is there even a better sight than seeing not even a single of those 33 raptors going blind - all lit like eyes, roaring towards heaven. The overall tracking and the quality made me feel guilty for watching it for free - especially those hot staging shots. Incredible, to say the least. Thank you Tim, CP (Ryan and Marie Liz, esp.) and everyone involved in this.
Physically seeing the shockwaves propagate out is one of the coolest things I've ever seen. This is one of the best videos I've seen of a launch. Then you add the spacex on board footage, especially the starship re-entry footage. This makes me happy to be alive during this time and excited for the future.
Shock fronts seem to spawn mainly off of the fluffy tail-end of the plume, and not so much higher up along the sides. Interesting. I suppose one should be expecting that, since the exhaust gases are so tightly focused in one single direction for the most part... Still interesting, though! :)
Amazing shots at 1:45-2:45. When it's lifting off the shockwaves are reflecting off of the ground and going upward, but after the rocket gets some altitude the shockwaves are going outward, and you can clearly see that they are originating from the end of the exhaust trail, not the engines themselves. That's the crackle, supersonic eddy currents. Awesome! I thought it was a shame that it was so foggy for the launch, but it actually was great for visually demonstrating the crackle and where it comes from!
HOLY MOLY! The East Remote view (2:43) is hands down THE most Apollo-looking Starship footage so far. I am 100% sure that shot will go in documentaries!
It's definitely a beautiful shot. I think one of the reasons it's reminiscent of Apollo is because it's in slow motion. The Saturn V took forever to clear the launch tower, but Starship in real time footage really leaps off the pad. The thrust to weight ratio on that thing is insane compared to the Saturn V
@@ClearAleraIt's interesting to me really that how fast starship accelerates definitely belies its size somewhat in comparison to the stately pace of the Saturn V. It makes it easy to forget just how gargantuan a vehicle it is.
That's exactly the thought that went through my head. It felt like watching Apollo 11 launch footage while simultaneously being aware that this happened last week, not 55 years ago. Amazing.
When the focus hits and you get to see all the engines individually glowing... WOW!! Tons of amazing footage. Thanks to everyone involved in provides such great views.
I love the south spotter (Ryan) footage, where the last few moments are accompanied by the spund pf waves and seabirds. A beautiful contrast to all the fury of a few moments before.
That will never get old…. Tim….I can’t imagine how it must feel to know that one day you will be sat atop that amazing piece of engineering. And massive props to all the great peeps who contributed to the footage. One day soon I will get to witness a launch in person
Andrew Keating smashed the audio once again, pretty good visuals too lol. Thanks Tim for bringing this special collection of people together to capture this event once again. You're getting better and better every time.
The ability to see the shockwaves at the pad and in flight is amazing. Its flickering effects on the deluge steam cloud is also just incredible. I think the fact that it was hazy/foggy helped show these effects.
You guys are getting a massive leap forward in quality with each launch... The sonic waves , all the crackles and earth shattering bass and watching those kids holding their ears from all those miles away really helps to give sheer power of this monstrous craft. Bravo to the dedication of the EA team
OMG! The audio and visuals are both breath taking! It's amazing what humans can do from ground zero to this masterpiece in 22 years and thanks to Tim and his team, we can get these views from all around the world! Thanks @EverydayAstronaut !
If you showed me the shot at 7:20 2 years ago, I would have immediately dismissed it as CGI. The shaky video and the not-so-subtle zoom in and all engines being perfectly in focus would have been obvious CGI "touch ups". Thank you Tim and the gang for capturing these amazing shots for us and the future.
I was a little worried about the fog, but I think it was just the right amount because we could still see Starship while also seeing those awesome shockwaves
@@Ban00 Shockwaves that repeat at a semi-stable frequency are literally just really powerful sound. Sound is literally just a very weak repeating shockwave. So yes, you can see sound. There is a demo in many high school science classes where sound is "displayed" on a line of burners. This is literally the same thing but with a volume high enough to forcibly condense atmospheric water vapor at the high pressure (**EDIT - I mean LOW PRESSURE**) phases of the sound wave
Technically what's been produced here is next generation and I loved it! I knew you guys would do insane stuff and so inspired. I will increase my Patrion as everybody viewing this film will be blown away.
Incredible work, Tim! Your footage is nothing short of exceptional. It's almost like we had front row seats to the action. A huge thanks for making it possible.
We need the audio that smarter every day, showed once on one of his videos. It was a 3d something. Anyway, this was awesome filmed, tracked and recorded!!! Thanks Tim and Team !!!
It's impossible to truly appreciate the raw power of 16 million pounds of thrust. A fully loaded 747 is a bit under 1 million pounds, this is 16 of them taking off going straight up at once.
@@supraa66 The 747's engines aren't anywhere near that powerful, the Raptor engine can produce 540,000 lb of thrust at sea level versus 66,000 lb for a 747 engine. Airplanes have a thrust to weight ratio of less than 1 whereas rockets need the thrust to weight ratio to be more than 1 to go anywhere. All 4 engines on a 747 combined are half the thrust of a single Raptor engine and there are 33 of them so it's really more like 66 747s taking off at once in terms of thrust.
Absolutely stunning! Well done to the entire crew on capturing such fantastic footage! Everyday Astronaut & Cosmic Perspective knocked it out of the park again!!
Tim, you and your crew did such an amazing job recording Flight 3!! Just amazing footage. I can't wait for the next flight, and hopefully a clear day to see even more amazing video. Thanks to you and the entire team for an astounding effort!!
These videos have to be so valuable for the SpaceX team working on Starship. Absolutely incredible footage! Seeing the heatshield tiles falling off in the last slow-mo is insane! Amazing work to everybody involved! Absolutely stunning footage & audio!
@@ferythThis. The sheer sound pressure inside that "dome" is so violent it would probably liquify a human. The energy involved in this launch is ridiculus.
Working in a remote location, we had a devastating earthquake and aftershocks in the past few months. I could not watch this in one go with the headphones, the audio is so clean it's scary.
So many thanks!! Awesome footage from all of you!! I bet many of the SpaceX team are more than thankful that you guys put so much effort into it! I am for sure!!
The absolute barrage of shockwaves radiating out when they light the thing is insane. I am surprised anything can hold itself together in that environment.
I was not expecting my footage to be usable at all 😂 Great view through the clouds
It was great!
fr it's at NASA level of good
You were great at tracking! :D
Great to see you behind the scenes of this kind sir
We were not expecting raptor engines to be usable at all
Now here they are putting hundreds of tons into orbit
@@sulljoh1 who's "we"?
I'm an astrophotographer and I am utterly humbled by the tracking ability of your guys.
Extreme focal lengths, tack-sharp focus on a cloudy day with the vehicle often filling the field of view... chef's kiss
Someone was definitely paying attention in geometry class.
Elon Musk is not good for wide field astrophotography, trust me😂
@@slooob23 b..b..but my 14mm, 1.2 what to do know? please send help 🥹
@@RandomTheories what you should do is send that lens to me, I'll figure it out😉
[4K Slow-Mo] Starship Flight 3 Supercut w/ Incredible Audio 0509am 19.3.24 considering the tech they're hinting at - we're so primitive in this.... Andiamo!!!! i wonder which alleged mad men are being silenced and pilloried due to far more innovative and cost effective ways of space travel being available.....????
The quality of the photography is astounding. I find it incredible the lengths people go to to achieve this footage. Great work everyone who participated.
Flat earthers will refuse to watch it and say its CGI
Not as the quality of the vehicle itself.
The shots starting at 19:00 are the most exceptionally clear of all, and while it was a very clean vehicle relative to the previous two flights, there are still several tiles visible falling off the TPS. More than a couple of them hit the aft fins, exploding into a fine, bright white silica dust as they likely destroy the tiles on the fin in the process. This is highly reminiscent of the STS-107 foam strike incident that sealed the fate of Columbia and its crew on reentry in 2003. I would guess the leading edge of the aft fins is eventually going to have to be strengthened with reinforced carbon-carbon, just like the shuttle was - hopefully with thicker material this time.
Seeing the multiple and repeated Sonic booms from the thrust during initial liftoff and takeoff demonstrates the insane power this rocket possesses. I think, when compared in relation to our previous exposure to launches and spacecraft flight travel photography/cinematography. If you told me just 10 years ago, I would be seeing this, I don't know if I would truly believe you then. This is some of the coolest demonstrations of photography/cinematography outside of Starship, starting re-entry and the visualization of the plasma starting to form and the plasma trail from a different perspective before it finally was unable to relay pictures anymore. I think that it's the General Public not only having access but providing the rest of us with access to these images. Not just NASA or some private company contracted to take the images. I also understand that it was a cold war, and it was allegedly necessary, but I'm glad that as times have changed, so has this policy.
Incredible work by everyone who made these videos. SpaceX is taking humanity into an amazing near future (5 to 10 years?) where it will be possible to lift thousands to tons into LEO, the moon and eventually mars every year.
That beginning shot could be straight out of Terminator. That palm tree was really feeling the shock wave.
1 launch a week in the future, i'm sure it regets sprouting in that spot. ;)
You could even see the past launches on it's trunk 😂 (notice the irregular girth of its trunk)
Shh … FAA are listening. They could delay the next license ..! 🤭
That last super close up was unbelievable!!! Can't wait for IFT-4 and beyond!!!
It's really awesome 🔥
The orange flame just above the engines was interesting in that shot. It didn't look like it was supposed to be there.
I can't wait for them to reach the moon. Imagine the amount of crazy content we'll get. As the moon becomes more and more populated it'll be like an entirely new country was created. New lives, businesses, economies etc will suddenly appear in a very short amount of time. It's going to be fascinating
@@slooob23 are you talking about at 18:42? because that is just a reflection off a triangular face of the booster
Again i see the heat-tiles falling off.
Cant they use some kind of coating instead of single tiles ?
The exhaust flame being almost twice the size off starship is mind boggling
I was thinking the same. That's a long tail right there.😊
Yes it is and not to take anything away from this experience but for those of us "of a certain age" we remember how long the flame was coming off the bottom of the Saturn 5! Now THAT was just as memorable!! And, how slow that the Saturn 5 was to rise off the pad just like Starship. Large vehicle launches are always stunning!!
rocket+plume is like 400 meters. its crazy
Not just Starship, twice as long as the whole stack!
It is not Exhaust Flame, in astronautics Rocket Engine terminology, it is *Exhaust Plume* and it is one of visual factor (length-shape and color) about Engine Thrust Vector power coefficiency, Color: gives clue on combustion design (full or open cycle) and combustion productivity from thrustchamber&throat till nozzle skirts...Exhaust plume also gives data on how many engines the stage approximately consisted of and/or the level of combustion chamber pressure and/or the level/power of probable specific implus...exhaust plume color distribution from around nozzle skirts till end of plume indicates the specific implus level together with the type of FUEL! for NTO and UMDH the color is characteristic: Orange... *In short we say for any space launch vehicle in total, if the exhaust plume length at least at sea level equivalent to the overall height of lauch vehicle (rocket) it is an avarage rocket in reaching LEO and higher but it is least the limit a vehicle needs in winning gravity. *EXHAUST PLUME CO-FACTOR MUST BE AT LEAST 1.2 TIMES OF ROCKET OVERALL LENGTH*
*WHEN A ROCKET HAS AT LEAST 1.2 TIMES ITS LENGHT AT EXHAUST PLUME AT SEA LEVEL THEN WE SAY THIS SPACE LAUNCH VEHICLE HAS ENOUGH POWER TO MAKE ORBITAL INJECTION!*
I'm watching from Kenya, my bucket list includes watching such a Launch in person. The audio quality in this compilation, the various angles and closeups are just incredible. Wow... Thanks for the experience.
It's worth the trip, though don't expect the visual to compare to all of these clips. The audio is the big difference, these clips sound great but nothing compared to being there in person, you FEEL the launch and so does everything around you. It's like you're in the middle of a minor earthquake.
Man, is there even a better sight than seeing not even a single of those 33 raptors going blind - all lit like eyes, roaring towards heaven. The overall tracking and the quality made me feel guilty for watching it for free - especially those hot staging shots. Incredible, to say the least. Thank you Tim, CP (Ryan and Marie Liz, esp.) and everyone involved in this.
Don't feel guilty, you're watching it here on youtube, they get paid for this!
Those visuals of the shockwaves bouncing off the ground are amazing!!!!
Physically seeing the shockwaves propagate out is one of the coolest things I've ever seen. This is one of the best videos I've seen of a launch. Then you add the spacex on board footage, especially the starship re-entry footage. This makes me happy to be alive during this time and excited for the future.
This has to be one of the most incredible, if not the most incredible things I have seen in my whole life!!! Can't wait for what's more to come
Saw it live and was so thrilled, Elon is going to get us to Mars!
I'm with you
@@jooei2810 Musk the 1st Emperor of Mars?
@@PanzerBuyer He'll never fly on any of his rockets.
@@PanzerBuyer Absolutely!
The audio is stunning and you can clearly see the in incredible forces that come to play in the first two clips
Absolutely incredible that you can see the shockwaves after it has already left the pad and up into the air!
They are so mindblowing! What a power show!!!
Starship is really HUGE so yeaahhh it's really awesome 🔥🔥🔥
Shock fronts seem to spawn mainly off of the fluffy tail-end of the plume, and not so much higher up along the sides. Interesting. I suppose one should be expecting that, since the exhaust gases are so tightly focused in one single direction for the most part... Still interesting, though! :)
Yes!! we rarely see footage of them after liftoff
Amazing shots at 1:45-2:45. When it's lifting off the shockwaves are reflecting off of the ground and going upward, but after the rocket gets some altitude the shockwaves are going outward, and you can clearly see that they are originating from the end of the exhaust trail, not the engines themselves. That's the crackle, supersonic eddy currents. Awesome!
I thought it was a shame that it was so foggy for the launch, but it actually was great for visually demonstrating the crackle and where it comes from!
HOLY MOLY! The East Remote view (2:43) is hands down THE most Apollo-looking Starship footage so far. I am 100% sure that shot will go in documentaries!
Hell, it even tells you just how big that rocket is. You can actually see the shockwave traveling up it´s body and shaking ice loose. It´s insane.
It's definitely a beautiful shot. I think one of the reasons it's reminiscent of Apollo is because it's in slow motion. The Saturn V took forever to clear the launch tower, but Starship in real time footage really leaps off the pad. The thrust to weight ratio on that thing is insane compared to the Saturn V
YES. That shot just screamed Saturn V launch footage to me when I saw it. Very fitting really in a lot of ways
@@ClearAleraIt's interesting to me really that how fast starship accelerates definitely belies its size somewhat in comparison to the stately pace of the Saturn V. It makes it easy to forget just how gargantuan a vehicle it is.
That's exactly the thought that went through my head. It felt like watching Apollo 11 launch footage while simultaneously being aware that this happened last week, not 55 years ago. Amazing.
When the focus hits and you get to see all the engines individually glowing... WOW!! Tons of amazing footage. Thanks to everyone involved in provides such great views.
That’s wild !
Audio is the real masterstroke . Nobody catches it so crisp . Not an easy task .
I love the south spotter (Ryan) footage, where the last few moments are accompanied by the spund pf waves and seabirds. A beautiful contrast to all the fury of a few moments before.
@@alexwebster7065 He did such an amazing job we should buy him a chair.
Andrew is a master chef
I love, love LOVE the pad footage. The cameras getting blown over, then still seeing the rocket flying away through a break in the cloud. Pure cinema.
❤
Every tripod close to the pad should have a sandbag hanging below it to hold it down. Easily fixed for future launches.
I would like to take a pause from this beautiful footage to once again remind you that this was actually real
Not as impressive as the orbiter going up. That thing was insane
Its incredible this is all real. Paint me impressed.
I'd like to take the time to remind you that we've been trying to reach you about your cars extended warranty.....
@@dougellis4092 Its all fun and games until you realize im take the bus cuz im broke
@ 2:00 The best footage of a orbital launch I have ever seen.
Props to Tim and his team.
holy guacamole the audio is insane
You mean like guacamole made by a priest or what?
I know
Why guacamole
@@ZeroAsteroidMexican border
I love guacamole
Tim, you and your team are beyond dedicated and absolutely awesome..!!! Thank you for bringing Space down to earth for everyday people
Tim needs a couple of tickets. Good luck. You totally earned it.
As an audiophile at first I was like “yeah that audio isn’t going to be that amazing, something that loud is extremely hard to get right…” JAW DROPPED
Andrew captured in 4channel ambisonic for Apple Vision Pro and Quest as well 🫣
Can you imagine the Deals? "That is Their Audio; This, is Our Audio..."
That will never get old….
Tim….I can’t imagine how it must feel to know that one day you will be sat atop that amazing piece of engineering.
And massive props to all the great peeps who contributed to the footage.
One day soon I will get to witness a launch in person
10:00 South Tracker Ryan ! Epic footage, Epic audio recording. 10/10
Andrew Keating smashed the audio once again, pretty good visuals too lol. Thanks Tim for bringing this special collection of people together to capture this event once again. You're getting better and better every time.
The ability to see the shockwaves at the pad and in flight is amazing. Its flickering effects on the deluge steam cloud is also just incredible. I think the fact that it was hazy/foggy helped show these effects.
the sheer power of that booster is spectacular. Thank you for posting this.
The very best coverage of all things spacex. Well done team!
Ryans Lift-Off Shot is Beautiful! You can see right into the launch mount. WOW.
It looks like he was tracking the booster at separation, I would love to see the booster returning to Earth at supersonic speed from that perspective!
Thanks!!
You guys are getting a massive leap forward in quality with each launch... The sonic waves , all the crackles and earth shattering bass and watching those kids holding their ears from all those miles away really helps to give sheer power of this monstrous craft. Bravo to the dedication of the EA team
OMG! The audio and visuals are both breath taking! It's amazing what humans can do from ground zero to this masterpiece in 22 years and thanks to Tim and his team, we can get these views from all around the world! Thanks @EverydayAstronaut !
If you showed me the shot at 7:20 2 years ago, I would have immediately dismissed it as CGI. The shaky video and the not-so-subtle zoom in and all engines being perfectly in focus would have been obvious CGI "touch ups". Thank you Tim and the gang for capturing these amazing shots for us and the future.
Everyday Astronaut team, thank you so much for this historic and beautiful video compilation. Best I have ever seen.
I m so looking forward for the VR version. So many thanks to Cosmic Perspective for that!
The shockwaves looked cool on both previous IFTs, but on this one theyre on another level
yeah dude i mean i thought it was some sort of lighting side effect until i realised that no its was shock waves
That's why it sounds (and feels) so powerful.
Dude the mechanics of the starship, the huge shockwaves, the humongous mach cones, are things to write quite some scientific papers on!!!!
@@egooidios5061 cool
I was a little worried about the fog, but I think it was just the right amount because we could still see Starship while also seeing those awesome shockwaves
Fantastic footage! Thank you to all those involved. The sound is incredible as is seeing the pressure waves in the 'North Remote [Slow Mo]' footage.
Came for the views, blown away by the sound. The view of Tim so far away, yet the pressure/sound was still so visceral.
A couple of cameras were blown away by the sound too...
7:35 I love how the cloud filters such that you can see EVERY INDIVIDUAL ENGINE. Beautiful work guys!
Love the sound of it taking off
I love how you can both hear and see that sound
@@df1ned you see shock waves. you can't see sound lol
@@Ban00 Shockwaves that repeat at a semi-stable frequency are literally just really powerful sound. Sound is literally just a very weak repeating shockwave. So yes, you can see sound. There is a demo in many high school science classes where sound is "displayed" on a line of burners. This is literally the same thing but with a volume high enough to forcibly condense atmospheric water vapor at the high pressure (**EDIT - I mean LOW PRESSURE**) phases of the sound wave
@@df1nedShouldn't it be the low pressure phases, or the troughs in the waveforms that causes water vapour to condense? My bad if I'm mistaken
Same
THANK YOU!
I LISTENED AT FULL VOLUME ON SURROUND SOUND SETUP
*WOW*
That first shot looked absolutely tornadic! (Minus the rocks)
Technically what's been produced here is next generation and I loved it! I knew you guys would do insane stuff and so inspired.
I will increase my Patrion as everybody viewing this film will be blown away.
Bro the visible sound waves through the smoke... amazing
And how you can see in the east remote the first shock of the ignition traveling up the rocket shaking ice loose. This launch was jawdropping.
Incredible footage and commentary as always. These launches are incredibly special and there is no better place to watch them on screen. Thankyou
Incredible work, Tim! Your footage is nothing short of exceptional. It's almost like we had front row seats to the action. A huge thanks for making it possible.
We need the audio that smarter every day, showed once on one of his videos. It was a 3d something.
Anyway, this was awesome filmed, tracked and recorded!!! Thanks Tim and Team !!!
0:47 Stereoscopic VR experience
Yes! Finally! The perception of the size of objects is way better in VR than in 2D.
The snap, crackles, and pops are something else.
It's impossible to truly appreciate the raw power of 16 million pounds of thrust. A fully loaded 747 is a bit under 1 million pounds, this is 16 of them taking off going straight up at once.
Appreciate you sharing the 747 context.🚀
So basically one reactor from the 747 = 50% of the power of one rocket engine, goes to show how powerfull those 747 engines really are
@@supraa66 The 747's engines aren't anywhere near that powerful, the Raptor engine can produce 540,000 lb of thrust at sea level versus 66,000 lb for a 747 engine. Airplanes have a thrust to weight ratio of less than 1 whereas rockets need the thrust to weight ratio to be more than 1 to go anywhere. All 4 engines on a 747 combined are half the thrust of a single Raptor engine and there are 33 of them so it's really more like 66 747s taking off at once in terms of thrust.
@@drabberfrog my bad I read the 747 had 1 million pounds of thrust but you were talking about the weight of the plane.
Absolutely stunning! Well done to the entire crew on capturing such fantastic footage! Everyday Astronaut & Cosmic Perspective knocked it out of the park again!!
Shock waves are spectacular to see.
And the stupidity of the photographer leaving equipment that become flying projectiles and hit some people couple of mile down range....
@@rgloria40Did you watch the video? The tripods merely tipped over.
@@pepsico815 And the point is taken....that sometime out of view flew....I hope you are lucky; no lawsuits are filed in the following months....
Tim, you and your crew did such an amazing job recording Flight 3!! Just amazing footage. I can't wait for the next flight, and hopefully a clear day to see even more amazing video. Thanks to you and the entire team for an astounding effort!!
Magnificent! And the music at the end when we see the separation is *chef's kiss*!
Listening to this with good headphones is top notch. It really helps me feel like I'm there.
This is where the fun begins!
OMG, best video capture, audio capture, and crowd reaction capture… really does justice to IFT3
These videos have to be so valuable for the SpaceX team working on Starship. Absolutely incredible footage! Seeing the heatshield tiles falling off in the last slow-mo is insane!
Amazing work to everybody involved! Absolutely stunning footage & audio!
What amazing videography! And also, the sound is absolutely outsanding. Thank you all.
Cosmic perspective team and Tim. Thank you all so much for your work. This is amazing.
By far the best audio & video i have seen. Really great!
2:12 I have to confess the audio exceeds the visuals. This is just insane, poetry to my ears
Poetry to see the failure.
Thank you to everyone who filmed here, this is amazing.
I love the wave/ripple dome shaped things when it takes off in the videos, no clue what they are but they're super cool.
I think it's the shockwaves of the exhaust pushing the moisture in and out of the air into condensation
@@feryth that makes sense
@@ferythThis. The sheer sound pressure inside that "dome" is so violent it would probably liquify a human. The energy involved in this launch is ridiculus.
Shock waves.
Working in a remote location, we had a devastating earthquake and aftershocks in the past few months. I could not watch this in one go with the headphones, the audio is so clean it's scary.
Absolutely bonkers, mind-blowing footage. Incredible work
Wow. Just incredible. Especially the first 2. Listen with headphones and volume up if you can...👍🏼. Great job
Ryan always kills it. Everybody did fantastic! So awesome
So many thanks!! Awesome footage from all of you!! I bet many of the SpaceX team are more than thankful that you guys put so much effort into it! I am for sure!!
I'm sure too!❤🧡💛
The shockwaves at launch are insane 🤯
I will be watching this again and again. Thank you.
19:32 - some tiles coming off the top right flap, lovely footage!! :)
I was one street behind you on W Oyster! People can't fathom how loud this is!!
I literally shook my house.
South tracker Ryan slo mo! Holy cow! Good work team!
Thanks!
The East Remote Slow-Mo is just incredible!!!
watching the shots of cameras getting knocked over shows the power, and getting people's reactions while watching is great
Some of these literally look like renders, still having to pinch myself that this is real. What a time to be alive.
I don't think it's real
@@johnrhodes3350 bro, just go to Texas and see it irl lol
16:00 Gotta love the natural exposure compensation occasionally revealing more detail from the raptors. 👍🏼
Seeing the cavitation waves is insane!
No doubt launches like these will inspire young people to pursue careers in aerospace industries.
What a privilege to be witnessing this.
Another win for Starship!
Another loss for the commenters chatting shite on starship!
@@jackhebdon8360 Why? It disintegrated.
Another win? I'm confused, so far complete failure 😂 elon is a con man🤡
@@zagreus5773 r/whoosh
@@zagreus5773 these people are so deluded LOL proof in front of your face it was a success.
Thanks
the shock diamonds each the size of a small house are absolutely insane among other things
ITF3 had the best launch coverage I ever seen. Thanks to SpaceX and every single space enthusiast!
Awesome !
Insanely high quality. Thank you for your enthusiasm and skills involved in making these videos. Amazing launch. Definitely in my bucket list.
the launch is like a nuke going off and sounds like a mountain tearing in half
1:15 I did not expect the shockwaves to be that powerful! Straight up knocked over all the cameras
It was already quite windy but the shock waves made a clean sweep.
It was very kind of SpaceX to tilt all of your cameras up for you after Starship had gone up out of shot.
Nice
You and your team rocks!!!! Thanks for letting us come along for the ride.
Holy crap, you guys have done it again!!! Absolutely awesome work! Thank you, thankyou!!!!
The absolute barrage of shockwaves radiating out when they light the thing is insane. I am surprised anything can hold itself together in that environment.
Great view through the clouds! This has to be one of the most incredible. Thanks you and congratulations!!!!
un-freaken-real. awesome tracking n sound!!
Oh great you've blown my speakers - but it was so worth it
These are the first ground shots of stage sep that I've seen from IFT3, beautiful coverage, awesome job folks
This was nuts. Thanks a ton. You guys keep that show running and we keep watching. 🙏
Thank you Tim & team for all that you do. You are, quite simply, amazing.