Astronauts Escape Failing Rocket - Soyuz Did Not Go To Space Today

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  • Опубликовано: 2 июн 2024
  • Soyuz MS-10 was supposed to carry a pair of crew to the International space station, but there was an issue shortly after staging which forced the crew to abort.
    This video is already a little out of date:
    Timeline on NASA site is incorrect, Launch Escape Tower does indeed jettison near to staging time, shroud jettisons 40 seconds later. The capsule was pulled from the rocket using the shroud motors.
    This is the first time in hundreds of space flights that a crew had to use an in flight abort system.
    At this time Soyuz is the only rocket able to send astronauts to the space station and the current crew will have to return home in 2 months. If the situation isn't resolved there's a chance the ISS will be left empty for a while.
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Комментарии • 2,8 тыс.

  • @ale131296
    @ale131296 5 лет назад +1771

    Scott, the tower was indeed jettisoned, what pulled the crew out to safety was the shroud, it has thrusters and can do it and it has being reported by NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei that that's what exactly has happened. The tower is jettisoned BEFORE booster sep, so by the time of the failiure the tower was already out and indeed there is other footage that shows the tower releasing from the rocket as expected and then a few seconds later the failiure happens at booster sep.

    • @scottmanley
      @scottmanley  5 лет назад +321

      Thanks, info has been fluid and I’m glad we got confirmation of this. The timeline on NASA's page put the tower & shroud Jettison as 42 seconds after staging, but clearly the tower was supposed to be gone 10 seconds after staging. The shroud has rockets which can be used for separation and those were used in this case.
      www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/structure/elements/soyuz/timeline_ascent.html

    • @ale131296
      @ale131296 5 лет назад +115

      @@scottmanley BTW, I've seen pictures coming from Alexander Gerst (ISS Commander) of the launch seen from there and I think he actually captured the moment in which the LES kicks in and puts the capsule away from the rocket.

    • @scottmanley
      @scottmanley  5 лет назад +105

      Yep, I was sharing these on twitter but forgot to include them in the video.

    • @donjones4719
      @donjones4719 5 лет назад +16

      Can you please tell us what the shroud is, as opposed to the LES tower? Also, what G-force results from use of the shroud? I know the main LES has wicked G-forces, have seen 17g given. Apparently much less with the shroud, but - how much?

    • @stevenhorne5089
      @stevenhorne5089 5 лет назад +28

      Alejandro Alcantarilla You, my friend, are the man of the day with the answers. Thank you very much.

  • @spider0804
    @spider0804 5 лет назад +179

    The fact they bailed and survived just fine shows the several decades long proven record of the system.

    • @dirkbester9050
      @dirkbester9050 12 часов назад

      Nothing is proven if you suddenly start building failing rockets and rockets with holes in them. Or if the previous corrupt and delusional head of roscosmos gets replaced in 2020 by someone whose qualification is "Putler likes me".

  • @VulpeculaJoy
    @VulpeculaJoy 5 лет назад +2383

    Why didn't they revert to launch tho?

    • @unidentifiedphysican7333
      @unidentifiedphysican7333 5 лет назад +438

      You know those Russians, its all about that hardcore playthrough

    • @RustedCroaker
      @RustedCroaker 5 лет назад +68

      They do! They didn't forget to bind the Backspace(Abort) key. Those pesky Russki knew the thing or two about how to into space.

    • @spacenoodles5570
      @spacenoodles5570 5 лет назад +35

      @@RustedCroaker except when they launched a rocket from the wrong SPACE CENTER!

    • @adamp.3739
      @adamp.3739 5 лет назад +7

      I see what you did there!

    • @wbstaple8387
      @wbstaple8387 5 лет назад +48

      Russians always have the difficulty set to Hard - no revert to launch or quicksave. They really should load MechJeb though.

  • @IanRM
    @IanRM 5 лет назад +814

    I speak Russian and was watching the incident live. As the fault happened, there was only one communication from the Space Crew, saying ДЕРЬМО. Roughly translated " SSHHHHIIIIITTTTTTTTTT"

    • @femboichik
      @femboichik 5 лет назад +23

      Сука блять, Серега, падаем!

    • @ShroomKeppie
      @ShroomKeppie 4 года назад +91

      @Rhys Wong I know this from watching Russian dashcam videos. It's probably the most-spoken word you'll hear.

    • @anthonyc4138
      @anthonyc4138 4 года назад +7

      @@ShroomKeppie lol

    • @Quadrenaro
      @Quadrenaro 4 года назад +4

      I need to see this broadcast.

    • @johnthomson8332
      @johnthomson8332 4 года назад +4

      what the hell kind of letters are those

  • @apollolasky2104
    @apollolasky2104 5 лет назад +932

    bartender pours a single jigger into a glass: man replies "i just fell out of a damn rocket, gimme the bottle."

    • @GlitchedBlox
      @GlitchedBlox 5 лет назад +9

      vodka

    • @souravthakur1252
      @souravthakur1252 5 лет назад +10

      A bottle of vodka

    • @GlitchedBlox
      @GlitchedBlox 5 лет назад +8

      sourav thakur No, A *LARGE* VODKA!

    • @GlitchedBlox
      @GlitchedBlox 5 лет назад +1

      Yosef Stalin yeah

    • @redsquirrelftw
      @redsquirrelftw 5 лет назад +4

      If Russia had Tim Hortons they'd probably serve vodka at the drive thru. "Hi I'd like to have a large double double vodka" "Hey you're back I thought you were going to space" "yeah... make that TWO extra large vodkas"

  • @davidwebb4904
    @davidwebb4904 5 лет назад +891

    “Leave the ISS empty”... inviting squatters to set up residence!!!

    • @Mostlyharmless1985
      @Mostlyharmless1985 5 лет назад +202

      David Webb heh, I could imagine Elon getting up there and being like “finders keepers, it’s mine now!”

    • @nathanaelvetters2684
      @nathanaelvetters2684 5 лет назад +57

      I can't wait for a time where that might be possible- some homeless guy in a tiny spaceship he stole going and settling in.

    • @FEE1DEAD
      @FEE1DEAD 5 лет назад +35

      @@Mostlyharmless1985 And without a space force, what are you going to do Kappa

    • @dbaider9467
      @dbaider9467 5 лет назад +87

      They can't leave it empty - when they get back it will just be full of Space Raccoons...

    • @mdrn-yj9rv
      @mdrn-yj9rv 5 лет назад +40

      If they leave the porch light on it might deter potential squatters

  • @JohnFrazier
    @JohnFrazier 5 лет назад +442

    The moment I heard of the abort, my first thought was "I wonder if Scott knows what happened."

    • @dbaider9467
      @dbaider9467 5 лет назад +13

      He's my first port of call to get the real info.

    • @stephen_101
      @stephen_101 5 лет назад +2

      Me too!

    • @W0Ndr3y
      @W0Ndr3y 5 лет назад +3

      I acutally went to youtube after hearing about this just to search for Scotts video on this. Was not dissapointed

    • @austinnewell8183
      @austinnewell8183 5 лет назад +1

      Same here. Scott is my go to guy for anything space related.

    • @gopr3117
      @gopr3117 5 лет назад +2

      I saw the news article and before I'd even finished reading it I checked Scott's channel lol

  • @Dextroyer77
    @Dextroyer77 5 лет назад +14

    A few fun facts about the crew that escaped the burning Soyuz on ground using the tower :
    - When the tower was activated, the capsule underwent an acceleration of *FIFTEEN* Gs for 5 seconds
    - During these five seconds, it broke the sound barrier *twice*
    - After it landed 4 kilometers away from the launch pad, the Russian crew was recovered safely, and the first question they asked was "So, when do we go back ?"

  • @Auriam
    @Auriam 5 лет назад +84

    4:30 I love the fact that the cosmonauts had the presence of mind to turn off the recording system before they started swearing. Now that's some self-control :-)

    • @sirbader1
      @sirbader1 4 года назад +17

      That's years of authoritarian rule that caused that.

    • @_bg179
      @_bg179 3 года назад +10

      @@sirbader1 lmao what

  • @RustedCroaker
    @RustedCroaker 5 лет назад +29

    The Souyz saved lives since 1983 when activation of LES saved Vladimir Titov and Gennady Strekalov. Soyuz just rocks!
    My only hope that engeenirs of SpaceX, Boeing and Lockheed will put the same passion to the safety of their capsules as Korolev and his teem did for Soyuz.

  • @Tobiasfowler
    @Tobiasfowler 5 лет назад +256

    I like how they called it ‘Ballistic descent mode’ that’s PHD for ‘OH My God! We are going to Crash!’

    • @scottmanley
      @scottmanley  5 лет назад +48

      Ballistic rather than aerodynamic

    • @Tobiasfowler
      @Tobiasfowler 5 лет назад +6

      Scott Manley it just seemed a funny phrase to me, but then I see things in a simple light. And thank you for the very informative videos, everyday is a school day.

    • @timothymclean
      @timothymclean 5 лет назад +25

      It's not quite "lithobrake" levels of "science-speak for 'we're screwed'," but I see where you're coming from.

    • @camojoe83
      @camojoe83 5 лет назад +6

      Ballistic, aerodynamic, whatever: the sudden stop at the end is the same.

    • @lake258
      @lake258 5 лет назад +3

      Ballistic descent is the best descent.

  • @actie-reactie
    @actie-reactie 5 лет назад +246

    Rockets can be replaced....human lives not..glad the crew made it out Alive!

    • @ttystikkrocks1042
      @ttystikkrocks1042 4 года назад +12

      @John Toas so you're volunteering to be dinner, then?

    • @sudonim7552
      @sudonim7552 4 года назад +10

      @John Toas Alright let's replace you then

    • @TheArtikae
      @TheArtikae 4 года назад +8

      John Toas not astronauts. They’re probably the most expensive single part of a rocket. Consider that, apart from a few exceptions, all rockets are single use. They would have to replace the rocket anyway. Replacing the crew much harder.

    • @GVTSounds
      @GVTSounds 4 года назад +1

      Try telling that to the crews of the space shuttles

    • @randbarrett8706
      @randbarrett8706 4 года назад

      Our futile obsession with getting everybody back alive is killing our expansion into space

  • @Vldimir
    @Vldimir 5 лет назад +492

    Im russian and i can say only one thing - shit happens. Meanwhile in our news sayed that something going wrong with connections between stages. Anyway it's the second Soyuz fail in history. Glad to see alive astronauts.

    • @dirkdiggler5525
      @dirkdiggler5525 5 лет назад +34

      Vl1dimir 777 Same.. ain't no shame in the Russians space game.. among them best

    • @niclazlindstrom6379
      @niclazlindstrom6379 5 лет назад +14

      Aren't they cosmonauts?

    • @fingmoron
      @fingmoron 5 лет назад +2

      Niclaz Lindström I think one russian one not.

    • @OriginalThisAndThat
      @OriginalThisAndThat 5 лет назад +10

      Cosmonaut and Astronaut

    • @merkabah2
      @merkabah2 5 лет назад +10

      That is amazing only 2 failures!!!

  • @TheExoplanetsChannel
    @TheExoplanetsChannel 5 лет назад +752

    I'm glad the crew is safe !

    • @MaddEndd
      @MaddEndd 5 лет назад +2

      I remember that you said on another video that this was a great month for astronomy, that was before Kepler ran dry, Hubble got trouble and now this. That month turned quickly on us, you might want to rethink that comment.

    • @fffUUUUUU
      @fffUUUUUU 5 лет назад +1

      Sure they are bit.ly/2Eo36v0

    • @Ron4885
      @Ron4885 5 лет назад +1

      lol, I like it :)

    • @AHSears
      @AHSears 5 лет назад

      T.E.C. --- I second that. Glad everyone is okay.

    • @gimli1467
      @gimli1467 5 лет назад +2

      The Exoplanets Channel ...the Crew? Actors!!!!!! Momo

  • @AnythingMachine
    @AnythingMachine 5 лет назад +408

    When you disable revert to Launch for the first time

    • @rasaecnai
      @rasaecnai 5 лет назад +1

      you can do that?

    • @lordaaa9945
      @lordaaa9945 5 лет назад +7

      Ducktape a few falcon 9s on there

    • @ArcherAC3
      @ArcherAC3 5 лет назад +6

      I felt bad never having to use the LES, so I disabled it.
      Then crew dies due to a bug and I enable it again....

    • @spacenoodles5570
      @spacenoodles5570 5 лет назад +3

      @@lordaaa9945 and use a lot of struts for safety

    • @JainZar1
      @JainZar1 5 лет назад +6

      That is my standard operating mode in career. I only fly crew on certified lift vehicles though, that have made at least 1 good flight with a similar weight. I don't have random parts-failure enabled though, so I generally don't need an escape system.

  • @TobiasDeml
    @TobiasDeml 5 лет назад +13

    Impressive that the abort worked so safely. Glad these guys are OK - spaceflight is such an important venture and we need to get better at doing it safely. Props to the engineers!

  • @MichaelSHartman
    @MichaelSHartman 5 лет назад +55

    I'm so pleased that the safety equipment worked so well. I confess that I am impressed by the reliability of Russian spacecraft.

    • @mikegallant811
      @mikegallant811 3 года назад

      Soyuz, the lil spaceship that could!

  • @Pechenka151
    @Pechenka151 5 лет назад +625

    We have to congratulate Roscosmos. They managed to complete Earth-to-Earth mission before SpaceX.

    • @char2c584
      @char2c584 5 лет назад +35

      lmao

    • @Ignacio.Romero
      @Ignacio.Romero 5 лет назад +14

      Roscosmos

    • @TimkaD736
      @TimkaD736 5 лет назад +11

      Roscosmos done it many times before, so nothing new here.

    • @ylette
      @ylette 5 лет назад +82

      Baykonur - Zhezkazgan 15 minute travel time confirmed.

    • @user-uo4qi3ip8n
      @user-uo4qi3ip8n 5 лет назад +27

      They also have good experiance in Earth-to-Ocean mission

  • @cheddar2648
    @cheddar2648 5 лет назад +242

    This is exactly why you want an abort capability. Glad those two men are safe.

    • @slaphappyduplenty2436
      @slaphappyduplenty2436 5 лет назад +19

      While I commend your compassion for the men, remember that capability to abort is more about women’s safety.

    • @raymundom6974
      @raymundom6974 5 лет назад +4

      While i applaud your consideration of the female, you would not need an abort system without the man

    • @cheddar2648
      @cheddar2648 5 лет назад +5

      This was a thinly veiled jab at the Space Shuttle, but hey man, there's not much law around these here Internet parts, so you drive this cart to wherever you want. ;}

    • @granddukeofmecklenburg
      @granddukeofmecklenburg 5 лет назад +16

      7 Space shuttle crewmembers disliked this comment, before abruptly dying...

    • @granddukeofmecklenburg
      @granddukeofmecklenburg 5 лет назад +1

      @MrBadBricks did you just assume there species?

  • @PapaDutch
    @PapaDutch 5 лет назад +51

    "Turned off the capsule recorders so that they could scream obscenities..."
    I totally understand that part, trust me I do...

    • @LionheartedDan
      @LionheartedDan 4 года назад +3

      Dutch J makes me think of the horrific recording from the Challenger crew - alive until impact..

    • @Alucard-gt1zf
      @Alucard-gt1zf 4 года назад

      @@LionheartedDan and Columbia

    • @TheRadioactiveBanana32
      @TheRadioactiveBanana32 4 года назад +1

      crew be like : Blyaaaaaaaattttt!!!!!!! Cykaaaaa;!!

    • @TheRadioactiveBanana32
      @TheRadioactiveBanana32 4 года назад

      actually yes it is terrifying if you spin 2wise a second at 5000km/hr i can also understand
      also it came in a nightmare once and i was TERRIFYED didnt sleep that night and had to skip school that day while sleeping

  • @jaakkooksa5374
    @jaakkooksa5374 5 лет назад +14

    I believe the Soyuz is a superbly reliable launch vehicle. Almost a thousand have been launched, and most of the failures happened early on, in the late 1960's. In recent decades the Soyuz has worked with the reliability of a Swiss watch.

    • @foximacentauri7891
      @foximacentauri7891 4 года назад +1

      Pretty ironic that my Swiss watch broke today but I get your point.

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann 2 года назад

      Fun fact: There were more Shuttle flights than Soyuz launches at the time it was retired.

    • @MOMO-zg8ll
      @MOMO-zg8ll Год назад

      @@HalNordmann Yeah but those astronauts didn't make alive from the shuttle.

  • @omermagen824
    @omermagen824 5 лет назад +155

    In 30 years from now, this will be featured in VintageSpace

    • @shebby0204
      @shebby0204 5 лет назад

      Lol wtf :-D

    • @masterodisguise2983
      @masterodisguise2983 5 лет назад

      Its weird but true

    • @yaj126
      @yaj126 5 лет назад +1

      We'll be showing this to our grandkids telling them it's too dangerous to go on their week excursion to the moon

    • @masterodisguise2983
      @masterodisguise2983 5 лет назад +1

      @@yaj126 yeah lol fieldtrips are gonna be on a whole another level

    • @MrDavidh4
      @MrDavidh4 5 лет назад +1

      You mean that hot-looking girl is going to become a grizzled old woman?

  • @DonTekNO
    @DonTekNO 5 лет назад +481

    4:34 .. "they turned the cockpit recorders off" ... damn that could have been one of the most well deserved "Cyka Blyat" tirades ever recorded. I dare to say this could have been meme-worthy material.

    • @AJZulu
      @AJZulu 5 лет назад +6

      Mark Abrams I say dear boy. You might be right

    • @user-lz6kf9ue8c
      @user-lz6kf9ue8c 5 лет назад +26

      Actually there is a video on RUclips of Russian cosmonauts in orbit swearing in Russian, its the best

    • @y__h
      @y__h 5 лет назад +5

      @@user-lz6kf9ue8c brb for links
      Edit: Was that cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov?

    • @Itoyokofan
      @Itoyokofan 5 лет назад +21

      Is that where they say "Я от тебя это слышу каждый раз"? That's not swearing that's idle mens' chatting.

    • @Yallan
      @Yallan 5 лет назад

      Bump

  • @Areanyusernamesleft
    @Areanyusernamesleft 5 лет назад +42

    I'm just glad everyone is safe. Remember people, "Space is hard".

  • @Neoptolemus
    @Neoptolemus 5 лет назад +18

    Isn’t it amazing how safe is Soyuz over the years? It has ultimate priority to protect the passengers.

    • @tetornow
      @tetornow 4 года назад +1

      No, Russians have used the same technology over the decades. They have perfected what they have. Russians (especially under the Soviet Union) put less concern on the safety of the "passengers".

    • @mareksykora5197
      @mareksykora5197 4 года назад +3

      @@tetornow Are you crazy? Americans put less concern on the safety of passengers. Space shuttle had no rescue system. Americans: "Who cares". Technicians said that it is too cold for SRB sealing system on Space schuttle Chalenger. NASA bosses: "Who cares, POTUS Reagan is waiting for the launch too long". And astronauts died.
      Astronauts critically complained that Apollo 1 is a danger shit full of danger materials. NASA bosses: "Who cares, POTUS Kennedy wants us quickly on the Moon". And astronauts died.
      Cosmonauts died in Soyuz 11, when they landed without space suits. Americans in Apollo landed without space suits all the time. Even after the Soyuz 11 tragedy in Apollo 15, 16, 17 .

    • @tetornow
      @tetornow 4 года назад

      @@mareksykora5197, as a culture for decades, Russians under the Soviet Union were property of the state and very disposable. To a lesser extent under the Czars but still second class. America did not kill 10's of thousands of its own citizens, Russia did. America did not kill 300 or so workers in a launch pad explosion, Russia did. Yes, we lost three Apollo I astronauts. But Russia can not hide the fact that they lost several more in their first attempts to put men (and a woman) in space.

    • @mareksykora5197
      @mareksykora5197 4 года назад +3

      ​@@tetornow Those 300 death workers on the launchpad where a bad accident. People under the Czar were the same "property" as all english people under queen Victoria in old England, or french people under Napoleon Bonaparte in France. Sorry, but America killed much more cosmonauts than the Russians. Thanks to incredibly safe Soyuz system.

    • @tetornow
      @tetornow 4 года назад

      @@mareksykora5197, the launch pad accident was the result of intentionally overlooking safety protocol, the topic was the American and Russian space programs and cultures not other aristocracies and cultures, and yes there were about seven or so people on each shuttle mission.

  • @OtherTheDave
    @OtherTheDave 5 лет назад +170

    I’m glad the crew are ok!

  • @ssnoc
    @ssnoc 4 года назад +24

    This was an extremely rare anomaly ... The Soyuz has proven to be a safe and reliable method to the ISS for a long time - Just remember, every flight is a test flight. 🚀

  • @Davin2014
    @Davin2014 5 лет назад +42

    Just thank you so much for always being unbiased, Scott.
    Thank you a lot from Russians for everything you do.

  • @alexandremagalhaes1774
    @alexandremagalhaes1774 5 лет назад +215

    Spent all day waiting for this!

    • @winfehler
      @winfehler 5 лет назад +1

      You and me both

    • @starshot5172
      @starshot5172 5 лет назад

      Same here! I kept refreshing my feed

    • @chatnoir1224
      @chatnoir1224 5 лет назад

      Commentory from Roskosmos - meh
      Commentory from NASA - ignore
      Commentory from Scot Manley - YES. We are waiting!

  • @yuriypostrekhin6154
    @yuriypostrekhin6154 5 лет назад +53

    Cosmonauts were first talking about feeling weightless, then getting ready for ballistic reentry. Towards the end they were describing g-forces, which were 2.. Considering the circumstances they did sound real calm and chill.

    • @QuantumFluxable
      @QuantumFluxable 5 лет назад +14

      Honestly staying calm and chill is your only chance at survival in a situation like this. Kudos to them for managing to do that instead of panicking.

    • @pietersteenkamp5241
      @pietersteenkamp5241 5 лет назад +6

      I don't think they select for panicky men in any such training problem but certainly not in Russia! These programs do have decades of experience in how to select men that may buckle but wont break.

    • @MrGman590
      @MrGman590 5 лет назад +5

      Russians panic? Don't they fight bears on a daily basis? :p

    • @danielkorladis7869
      @danielkorladis7869 5 лет назад +13

      Probably disappointed that they didn't get to go to the space station cause their rocket broke down, more than anything.

    • @weasle2904
      @weasle2904 5 лет назад +2

      Cosmonaut and Astronaut*

  • @stevedoe1630
    @stevedoe1630 5 лет назад +300

    In America, space rocket failure means the astronauts go for swim.
    In Soviet Russia, space rocket failure means the cosmonauts spend night in hotel. =)

    • @richardvernon317
      @richardvernon317 5 лет назад +81

      Correction - In America Space Launcher failure = Death (in the only case it has actually happened). This is the first case of an American surviving a launch failure which lifted off and didn't make orbit in the history of NASA.

    • @richardvernon317
      @richardvernon317 5 лет назад +47

      Both sides have had more than their fair share of close shaves. Yes the Russians have lost more launchers...But they have launched a hell of a lot more boosters than the USA have, therefore the statics (I.e. Facts!!!) are in their favour. They have only launched two manned flights without an escape system (both managed to land with the occupants alive) and have only lost 4 people in actual flight. USA have lost 14.

    • @MrDavidh4
      @MrDavidh4 5 лет назад +4

      And engineer gets thrown in the gulag.

    • @jodomo4279
      @jodomo4279 5 лет назад +34

      @@richardvernon317 To be fair, the Shuttle was a fucking catastrophe waiting to happen.

    • @NarwahlGaming
      @NarwahlGaming 5 лет назад +23

      In China an entire village gets wiped out.

  • @Hinch55
    @Hinch55 5 лет назад +40

    Most (if not all) of the early news agency reports on this today were awful. Lots of use of the words "bail out" and "7G" as if that was barely survivable, and "4,970 MPH" shows up as if it's significant, instead of just the speed the core was going when things went south. "Ballistic re-entry" always showed up in quotes , as if it's some kind of intentional maneuver the spacecraft makes ("Engage ballistic re-entry!"), instead of just falling back to earth. Then I came here, and all was made clear!

  • @adolfhamster1530
    @adolfhamster1530 5 лет назад +59

    feels like an appropriate time to say: "check yo' stagin"

    • @blueskull5727
      @blueskull5727 5 лет назад

      wow i think you need my profilepic xD but put one of these chubby lil fluffy pet things in there you know these "Hamster"

  • @lightvalve
    @lightvalve 5 лет назад +186

    I was looking forward to your excellent commentary. Thanks!

    • @papafrank7094
      @papafrank7094 5 лет назад

      Thank you for this Scott Manley. I was looking forward to seeing your take on this.

  • @N3tech
    @N3tech 5 лет назад +8

    Absolutely crazy! So glad they're safe! Col. Nick Hague's wife was my Air Force studies professor my freshman year of college! Hope he gets another opportunity to go to space!

  • @landroveraddict2457
    @landroveraddict2457 5 лет назад +22

    Two very lucky people, it's nice to hear good news for a change.

    • @OceanSwimmer
      @OceanSwimmer 5 лет назад +1

      Amen that!

    • @Unbelishitable
      @Unbelishitable 5 лет назад +1

      Unlucky* They wanted to get to ISS, but they're out of luck.

  • @safetyinstructor
    @safetyinstructor 5 лет назад +104

    Check yo Stagin !!!

    • @TheGodEmperorOfMankind_
      @TheGodEmperorOfMankind_ 5 лет назад +3

      Keybinding fucked them

    • @blueskull5727
      @blueskull5727 5 лет назад

      what is the staging you are refering to, young man
      because if i may say so "this shit darn fukken lit" these lads literaly fell out of a rocket and live to tell the tale.

  • @varaksin
    @varaksin 5 лет назад +111

    Transcription:
    - got the side blocks(boosters) engines shutdown, got the separation of side blocks
    - got the first stage separation
    - 150
    - second stage engine operating normally
    - 160
    *BANG*
    - here, launch vehicle fail. yes?
    - 2 min 45 sec
    - 170

    • @KJ6EAD
      @KJ6EAD 5 лет назад +11

      @Scott Manley maybe you could pin this translation.

    • @accckiy
      @accckiy 5 лет назад +10

      It was like that:
      The timing is as before.
      Groud: launch vehicle fail
      Souze: Yes?
      Groud: 2.45 launch vehicle fail
      Souze: Well, we got back quickly.
      Then it is just action taking on separation and re entry

    • @Volodimar
      @Volodimar 5 лет назад +2

      i believe he said "booster failure"

    • @CapScreenplay
      @CapScreenplay 5 лет назад +28

      This baffles me. Their ascent is going terribly wrong and this stoic bastard just goes,
      "Well that was a short flight."

    • @12isaac00
      @12isaac00 5 лет назад +16

      Rocket hast to be powerful to carry those men and their balls all the way up

  • @spacenomad5484
    @spacenomad5484 4 года назад +28

    "In the US, Dragon and StarLiner are still months away from being ready to fly"
    Just weeks from now. Time flies...

    • @nigelwigglwattle
      @nigelwigglwattle 3 года назад +3

      Just a couple of weeks ago
      Man that was quick

    • @kirillperov3843
      @kirillperov3843 Месяц назад

      @@nigelwigglwattle the StarLiner will fly in a few days

  • @edward3709
    @edward3709 5 лет назад +67

    damn, soyuz is pretty amazing to able to save them under such circumstances

    • @stargazer7644
      @stargazer7644 4 года назад +4

      Actually, it's pretty average. Every manned spacecraft except for one has had a launch abort system. That one is the Space Shuttle.

    • @backwoodsjunkie08
      @backwoodsjunkie08 4 года назад +8

      @@stargazer7644 the shuttle was the biggest death trap ever made. Glad it was decommissioned

    • @Mrcaffinebean
      @Mrcaffinebean 4 года назад +1

      Star Gazer and soon to be two when starship comes online

    • @KanyeTheGayFish69
      @KanyeTheGayFish69 3 года назад

      Eggbert08 the space station and Hubble wouldn’t exist without it

    • @Mrcaffinebean
      @Mrcaffinebean 3 года назад

      umop apIsdn not exactly true those goals would have just be achieved through other single use rockets.

  • @HiyuMarten
    @HiyuMarten 5 лет назад +387

    Saw this live. Was so intense. Those search and rescue guys are stellar.
    I’m pretty sure the LES had jettisoned already, as is normal for the Soyuz launch sequence - that and if they got up to a maximum of 6.7Gs, there’s no way the LES pulled them.

    • @AmbientMorality
      @AmbientMorality 5 лет назад +36

      The LES tower jettisoned, but the shroud was still over the entire vehicle. It used the RDG motors, which are part of the shroud and used in a tower launch abort sequence, to escape from the vehicle.

    • @chuckvanderbildt
      @chuckvanderbildt 5 лет назад +20

      The voice of Ovchinin over the radio really was quite something. I am so grateful that they escaped unscathed, because as they were left weightless and in a roll shortly after the incident, I am pretty sure that for a moment at least even they feared the worst. Maybe i am just projecting, but that is how it seemed to me at the time.

    • @rocketnerd7763
      @rocketnerd7763 5 лет назад

      It gone off when the boosters seperated and the failure happened when the fairing already flew off

    • @ale131296
      @ale131296 5 лет назад +13

      The LES was not jettisoned, it was the tower which is not the only component of the LES. The shroud pulled away te capsule automatically after the sensors felt something was wrong, that's why the crew was shaked at that point in the video. If you look back, you can see they "relax" after what should be "booster sep", which is normal. HOWEVER the booster sep didn't go well so rapidly after that the LES kicked in and they were shaking due to that

    • @AthAthanasius
      @AthAthanasius 5 лет назад +23

      The "6 to 7 g" was about the deceleration as they hit the atmosphere on the way down, being that high due to the ballistic trajectory. Nothing to do with how the orbiter/capsule got away from the rocket.

  • @jjtimmins1203
    @jjtimmins1203 5 лет назад +48

    First in history: Astronauts survive in-flight launch failure. Nice.

    • @catguta
      @catguta 4 года назад +1

      Jj Timmins Apollo 12 doesn’t qualify? Hit by lightning, twice, on launch.

    • @hereisyoursign6750
      @hereisyoursign6750 4 года назад +5

      @@catguta That was not the same as a critical failure of the rocket resulting in a compromised hull/explosion. The lightning caused fixable electronic issues which could have posed a major issue, but wasn't per say an in-flight launch failure.

  • @pacificbuildingcare
    @pacificbuildingcare 5 лет назад +4

    Still the most reliable rocket in the world, only 3 instances in 50 years, nobody can beat that record.

  • @Rapscallion2009
    @Rapscallion2009 5 лет назад +3

    You have to admit. That escape system is damned impressive.

  • @densealloy
    @densealloy 5 лет назад +129

    5:42 ISS has been occupied since November 2, 2000. There was a 15 month gap in between MIR being occupied (Sept. 8, 1989 to Aug. 28, 1999) and the ISS that reset the timer.

    • @Rhapbus1
      @Rhapbus1 5 лет назад +4

      that's a 10 year gap

    • @Dinaden
      @Dinaden 5 лет назад +12

      Rhapbus1 DenseAlloy was just giving the years the MIR was continuously occupied (3,644 days, about 10 years, according to wiki)

    • @kashyaptank9581
      @kashyaptank9581 5 лет назад +6

      @@Rhapbus1 he means human presence in space has had a 15 month gap between MIR last expedition and ISS first expedition when there was no human in space for 15 months

  • @fabiovezzari2895
    @fabiovezzari2895 5 лет назад +85

    KSP style: add more space tape and more boosters

    • @rocketnerd7763
      @rocketnerd7763 5 лет назад +7

      What tape? Struts

    • @moseszero3281
      @moseszero3281 5 лет назад +9

      They either forgot to add struts or forgot to set the staging. Everyone does it.

    • @antoniskazou
      @antoniskazou 5 лет назад +4

      Duct tape > Struts

    • @supermoris194
      @supermoris194 5 лет назад +2

      Antonaros Flex Tape > Duct Tape

  • @Wardell43
    @Wardell43 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you Scott for the great update.
    Thank God that the crew landed safely.

  • @WG-tt6hk
    @WG-tt6hk 4 года назад +13

    4:35 "the launch escape system did save the crew who of course immediately turned off the cockpit recorders so that they could scream obscenities without going on the record" LMAO

  • @RustedCroaker
    @RustedCroaker 5 лет назад +137

    Here is the difference between the Space Shuttle system and the Soyuz system. In one you are doomed during almost all of stages of the flight and in the other you are safe during ALL the stages! Korolev and his teem were geniuses!
    Never over-engineer where safety is concern. Hope it will be the lesson for SpaceX, Boeing and Lockheed and their future capsules.

    • @pietersteenkamp5241
      @pietersteenkamp5241 5 лет назад +9

      Yeh. If state capitalist get it right in any area it's that they can often figure out what really needs doing and then doing; as Eisenhower (or some other president) remarked when advised that the USSR was spending 5% of their Gdp on Defense " Remember that they have no one working in marketing" .

    • @milutzuk
      @milutzuk 5 лет назад +35

      First, you cannot really compare the Shuttle with Soyuz. No Soyuz can transport 7 people, put a satellite on orbit or bring it back and also act as a mobile orbital laboratory. Second, do you remember Buran? Yeah, the russian shuttle which was enough over-engineered to be able to get unmanned into orbit and back. Also, I woudn't place in the same basket the russian safety principles, with a long history of rather lacking of, with the, as you said, genius and managerial capability of Korolev, a former convict for anti-Soviet activities. In a sense, both the Americans and the Russians politics interfered with engineers creativity with disastrous results.

    • @mikasaackermann7362
      @mikasaackermann7362 5 лет назад +10

      Milutzu K you can very much compare them in terms of safety, reliability, punctuality and cost as vehicles for orbital spaceflight (for cargo both the USSR/Russia and the US had/have different rockets). and this comparison is devastatingly unfavorable for the US. the Soyuz is extremely safe and has not had a casualty in almost 50 years, while being basically THE workhorse of manned spaceflight for the whole time until today. www.upl.co/uploads/czREOoV3iKjq1Z3bDRv6c4Xyh1eUj9W5Xd0CTpMm46MCWfaHT10xdsHIpcKkOdq8qKOgmvpjQa0l7p7Jo2lGOs2S7xIpwlw2ONCTsYS6I1539300062.png speaks volumes (and that's just since 2001). while the Shuttle program was a complete disaster, with 2 total losses and 14 deaths, Columbia in 2003 basically leading to the termination of the whole program (along with wildly climbing costs and delays). the Buran, by the way, flew its whole mission on autopilot to orbit and back, something the Shuttles were never able to do (not that I encourage the whole idea of reusable space vehicles on chemical engines).

    • @milutzuk
      @milutzuk 5 лет назад +10

      Of course, you can always compare apples with melons or grapes on some properties. You can also compare chimps with humans. But if you want to design a spacecraft you'll use a human as engineer. The same human can teach his children, sing, paint, etc. The human is more versatile and the evolutionary price is that the human is more... squashy. Of course the Shuttle was a disaster, but... 1. There were 14 deaths because of the bigger transport capacity. With Soyuz's 3 people capacity it would have been 6 deaths. And with dropping the big cargo capabilities and adding safe extract, maybe it would have been none. If you really want to compare apples to grapes, you have to scale accordingly. 2. the much higher complexity of the Shuttle increased the risks, which was statistically expected. 3. I brought the Buran-Energia as a counter-example for over-enginnering on the Russian part. With only 1 orbital flight (compared with 135 of the STS) is hard to make any statistics regarding the reliability of the Russian Shuttle. So I wouldn't say the STS was a "complete" disaster unless I want to forget or deny everything else it has done. Let's now switch the perspective. The Russians used the golden KISS principle, they had a linear development of their (manned) space program: Vostok, Voskhod, Soyuz and I'll add as branches Salyut and Mir. US had Mercury, Gemini and STS, STS being a big departure from the "tradition". I'll put Skylab as a branch (and not the ISS which was an international project). And there's the Apollo project, another big departure from the "tradition" of a capsule on the top of a rocket. So, you see, we cannot REALLY compare the STS with Soyuz unless we REALLY want to be unfair.

    • @milutzuk
      @milutzuk 5 лет назад +2

      @ Akin Khoo I don't want to get into conspiracy theories because I don't have hard facts. But it's true that in the STS project entered some political (and financial) interests. About the civilian interests of Soviets in the space, if I remember well, the Buran was intended to be a match for the STS capabilities because the Russians were afraid that the Space Shuttle can "steal" their satellites directly from the orbit. It was purely a political and military decision. And please don't argue with me about the Soviets, I know them pretty well, basically I'm next door to them. I know how the communist mentality works from my own experience (you care about safety only if you care about loosing your face, the lives doesn't really count). More, as far as I know, only the Russians destroyed, as a test, a satellite on the orbit leaving a lot of junk flying around, but I may be mistaken. Buran-Energia, safer than STS? Not much data to get a statistical meaningful comparison (1 versus 135 launches?). Yes, Buran could have been a "STS destroyer", it was a more modern design, more clever in several aspects, but from an operational cost point of view it could have been even more expensive.

  • @trumuh
    @trumuh 5 лет назад +55

    A 1950s deign rocket that is still fairly reliable, the r-7 is one of my favs !

    • @InitiateDee
      @InitiateDee 5 лет назад +2

      *_T O T A L L Y R E L I A B L E_*

    • @xelaxander
      @xelaxander 5 лет назад +1

      And it looks so Damn cool, too.

    • @alex_inside
      @alex_inside 5 лет назад +24

      Fairly reliable? For a huge barrel filled with extremely flammable fuel powered by an controlled explosion its extremely reliable, you can count it failures with just one hand and in all of these cases the crew survived. The Soyuz is a space Lada.

    • @lake258
      @lake258 5 лет назад +6

      Soyuz is a space Porsche 911

    • @danielkorladis7869
      @danielkorladis7869 5 лет назад +1

      Space Honda. A rocket you can trust.

  • @davidca96
    @davidca96 4 года назад +90

    (click recorder off) "BLYAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAATTTTTTTT!"

    • @TheRadioactiveBanana32
      @TheRadioactiveBanana32 4 года назад +1

      More like BLYAAAAAAATTTTTTT CYKAAAAAAAAA!!!!!!!!!

    • @TheRadioactiveBanana32
      @TheRadioactiveBanana32 4 года назад

      must have said

    • @carljohan9265
      @carljohan9265 4 года назад

      I'm pretty sure they turned the recorder of because back then, you could get in trouble for swearing the wrong way. If you for example said something along the lines of "fuck those who put me in this thing", expect more then a simple paycut.

    • @jabanan
      @jabanan 3 года назад

      @@carljohan9265 headcut

  • @MichaelSteeves
    @MichaelSteeves 5 лет назад

    I was waiting for this! I was hoping for context and an explanation on a level that I could understand. You hit the sweet spot for the right amount of detail. Thank you Scott!

  • @Powerkillera
    @Powerkillera 5 лет назад +44

    Usually when you hear "There was a failure with a rocket..." it's usually followed by "...and there were no survivors."
    Good that this case is different.

    • @cbr7170
      @cbr7170 3 года назад +5

      Usually when you hear "There was a failure with a rocket..." it's usually followed by "and there was noone harmed". Because a huge majority of rocket launches don't carry crew.
      In fact, the last time we had humans die on a rocket was in 2003, and before that in 1986. So I'm really not sure where what you are talking about.

  • @TheWebstaff
    @TheWebstaff 5 лет назад +1182

    In russia even our failed space flights make it to space and back in one piece.

    • @MichaelS-vy1ku
      @MichaelS-vy1ku 5 лет назад +38

      Oh yes as opposed to the manned rockets in the US that have failed. Oh wait.

    • @metajarra
      @metajarra 5 лет назад +100

      @@MichaelS-vy1ku Apollo 13?
      Also crewed russian rockets have launched about 50x more than american ones

    • @dwightk.schrute6743
      @dwightk.schrute6743 5 лет назад +198

      @@MichaelS-vy1ku
      The crews of Columbia and Challenger might disagree with you.

    • @josecolon2717
      @josecolon2717 5 лет назад +1

      Dave Webster lol

    • @josecolon2717
      @josecolon2717 5 лет назад +51

      Michael S what do you mean by that? NASA has an entire section dedicated to the lives they lost

  • @indylovelace
    @indylovelace 5 лет назад

    Really appreciate the speed at which you respond to space news. This channel has become my first stop right up there with The Everyday Astronaut! Glad to have such excellent content to draw space news!

  • @watertriton
    @watertriton 5 лет назад +1

    Your space coverage is way better than the news I heard about this on NPR with no explanations.

  • @oscarjeans4119
    @oscarjeans4119 5 лет назад +3

    This happened to be one of the few launches I actually watched live and your right it was a bit confusing but im glad I can always rely on you to put out the truth

  • @DanijelTurina973
    @DanijelTurina973 5 лет назад +261

    I love the way Russians design things: they expect them to fail, and make them so that the failures aren't fatal.

    • @telumatramenti7250
      @telumatramenti7250 5 лет назад +87

      LOL So many is how many? As many as astronauts in Columbia and Challenger accidents? Soyuz flew for 50 years without fatalities, and as for the shuttle idea, whether Soviet or American designs, - sure it looked great, but designing something without an escape tower or parachutes in the event of an accident is not the most safe idea out there. Personally I would prefer crammed Soyuz, because if one doesn't make it to space, one at least has a very good chance of returning to Earth in one piece.

    • @Rubafix989
      @Rubafix989 5 лет назад +47

      There was a grand total of 4 cosmonauts death, 0 during launch procedure. Compare that to the 14 death of the US Space shuttle. 7 of which died on the STS-51 few seconds after launch.

    • @ArnaudMEURET
      @ArnaudMEURET 5 лет назад +51

      Russians ??? That is engineering 101 when designing any system in charge of lives. You watch too many Hollywood movies.

    • @jasonhall5966
      @jasonhall5966 5 лет назад +3

      I mean, weren't the Russians the first people to the moon? Just merica has been the "first" to make it there, and back alive, the Russian crew plummeted into the moon or something fatal like that atleast. So id say thats a pretty good reason to make things that fail not to be fatal lmao

    • @Bartonovich52
      @Bartonovich52 5 лет назад +11

      Arnaud MERET
      I guess the NASA engineers skipped that class... because there were so many single points of failure on the Space Shuttle-two of which cost the lives of 14 astronauts and destroyed two orbiters.

  • @CocoaBeachLiving
    @CocoaBeachLiving 5 лет назад +1

    Glad the guys are safe and sound. I'm also glad to see the Roscomos system works. Onward and forward!

  • @PawelK198604
    @PawelK198604 5 лет назад +4

    It's happened many times when I played KSP :-) I'm glad to hear that nothing bad happened to the crew.

  • @MysteriousStranger50
    @MysteriousStranger50 5 лет назад +96

    Needed more boosters and MUCH more struts, the strongest form of construction.
    When in doubt, strut it up, everyone knows that, use mirroring for easier strutting.

    • @ImperativeGames
      @ImperativeGames 5 лет назад +1

      KSP reference?

    • @user-rn2lj8kz1u
      @user-rn2lj8kz1u 5 лет назад +2

      It must be.

    • @florianlucs7229
      @florianlucs7229 5 лет назад +1

      autostrut has not jet been updated to run with the 1.4.5 version

    • @Engineer9736
      @Engineer9736 5 лет назад +2

      Imperative Games duh? Do you really think NASA has a “mirror” button in their construction hall?

    • @joni7fi
      @joni7fi 5 лет назад +3

      And probably little less reckless drivers with forklifts and trucks going around like they're in a great hurry :D

  • @magicpowification
    @magicpowification 5 лет назад +14

    One thing that stuck out to me and my fellow students at Cal Poly was the appearance of a significant yaw of the rocket following the failed booster separation. It appears that the entire rocket yawed significantly to the left, with the rocket body appearing from behind the exhaust plume. This seems to correspond to the capsule feed video where the astronaut and cosmonaut are violently jarred to the right of the capsule (consistent with a heavy yaw moment).

    • @KaliRaized
      @KaliRaized 5 лет назад +1

      ok im not far off reality then cause that what i seen the "yaw" you called it. I am not rocket scientist yet I seen an event that was not matching the narrative. Thank you

  • @publicsafetydan
    @publicsafetydan 5 лет назад

    Awesome video Scott! Thank you for detailing all that!

  • @whitedovetail
    @whitedovetail 4 года назад +5

    I have watched your video for the first time (July, 2019) and have Subscribed to your channel. This is interesting! Hello from Texas!!

  • @mikerowave1986
    @mikerowave1986 5 лет назад +25

    Soyuz is so awesome, it has a very long service record, it's like the AK-47 of spaceships. I'm so glad that those men survived. Soyuz maybe didn't get them to space but certainly saved their lives that day.

    • @topsecret1837
      @topsecret1837 Год назад

      Of rockets. Spaceships are in a completely different territory.

  • @thenasadude6878
    @thenasadude6878 5 лет назад +10

    "A manned spacecraft exploded! [...] Fly safe!" Mr. Scott I'm quite sure it's one or the other

  • @astudentpilotlife
    @astudentpilotlife 4 года назад +2

    I am glad that we come a long way to improve the safety protocol to save life. Good work engineer!

  • @IRMentat
    @IRMentat 5 лет назад

    Saw the headline on the BBC RUclips feed. Came to you for the details. Thanks for your diligence.

  • @armartin0003
    @armartin0003 5 лет назад +13

    Excellent engineering. Well done. Any flight you can wall away from is a successful mission!

    • @rowdyyates4273
      @rowdyyates4273 4 года назад +1

      Really???---like going up everest and turning back 200ft from the top???

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman 5 лет назад +24

    *"I'm Scott Manley. ABORT safe...."*
    😊😊😊

  • @kamatihasheela2995
    @kamatihasheela2995 5 лет назад +1

    Scott you are the best in this field. thank you so much for making these informative videos

  • @Lesardah
    @Lesardah 5 лет назад

    Thanks for breaking it down for us, Scott!

  • @sublimechalicefpv7714
    @sublimechalicefpv7714 5 лет назад +13

    Big up the safety systems! ... Imagine being strapped to a giant firework and living to see another day :)

  • @Stijn081
    @Stijn081 5 лет назад +35

    I was watching the stream live and all of a sudden the Russian translator started dropping the word "failure". Not something you want to hear on a manned mission.

    • @benbaselet2026
      @benbaselet2026 5 лет назад +10

      It was pretty funny though how the NASA commentator continued to read the script how everything is fine and the "telemetry" showed a normal launch when the engines had already stopped.

    • @Jehty21
      @Jehty21 5 лет назад +5

      @@benbaselet2026 i wonder if the NASA commentator was pre-recorded.

    • @captainz9
      @captainz9 5 лет назад +8

      On a manned mission any failure you can walk away from is a favorable outcome.

    • @voongnz
      @voongnz 5 лет назад +1

      Yep, had the stream reminder on all day to then watch and know something was wrong when the the word failure and frantic morse code like sounds were being broadcast. Glad they are safe and abort procedures worked.

    • @elliotwooley2630
      @elliotwooley2630 5 лет назад

      Me too!

  • @hammerh5131
    @hammerh5131 5 лет назад

    Thanks for the info..glad they're safe

  • @thearchibaldtuttle
    @thearchibaldtuttle 5 лет назад +1

    Amazing, so happy they made it back after the failed start!

  • @zlozlozlo
    @zlozlozlo 5 лет назад +87

    SpaceX is actually ready to do the unmanned Dragon 2 test flight, they've been standing by mostly because of the busy ISS schedule. NASA could greenlight the mission to happen now, and then speed up the crewed mission schedule. I'm sure SpaceX would rise to the challenge. In chess they call this tactic Accelerated Dragon.

    • @baronvonlimbourgh1716
      @baronvonlimbourgh1716 5 лет назад +29

      I'd still rather fly a soyuz to the iss then with spacex..
      I think nasa probably thinks the same... Soyuz is proven tech.

    • @465fire
      @465fire 5 лет назад +34

      @@baronvonlimbourgh1716 but how are you gonna get new proven tech without testing new tech?

    • @sayokbhattacharya
      @sayokbhattacharya 5 лет назад +3

      Catch 22

    • @Jehty21
      @Jehty21 5 лет назад +13

      @@465fire you sent it a few times unmanned into space.
      I don't know SpaceX schedule but I don't think they can launch 5 or so times in only 2 months.

    • @EricHallahan
      @EricHallahan 5 лет назад +14

      Just popping in to mention the Space Shuttle, a vehicle with a crewed first flight.

  • @ThePartyzanin
    @ThePartyzanin 5 лет назад +6

    Here's your translation from spaceflightnow.com, совпадает с расшифровкой.
    “Failure of the booster,” a translator called out, presumably relaying a report from Ovchinin to Russian mission control near Moscow. “Failure of the booster.” Moments later, he confirmed the Soyuz had separated from the rocket’s upper stage, saying “we are in weightlessness.”
    Moments after that, as the spacecraft plunged back into the thick lower atmosphere, it rapidly decelerated, subjected the crew to nearly seven times the normal force of gravity at one point.
    “We are getting ready for the G loads,” Ovchinin reported. “G load is 6.7.”
    “Copy,” a Russian flight controller replied.
    “We are feeling rotation, the G load is going down,” the cosmonaut reported. “G load is 2.72 and going down.”
    “Tighten the straps” for landing, the flight controller called.
    Actually, there was more talks, but this is the most relevant part of them.

  • @rileys8741
    @rileys8741 5 лет назад

    Fantastic overview, and very good narration of what happened with historical context. Also, love the KSP figurines in the background 👾

  • @j.gordonleishman6401
    @j.gordonleishman6401 День назад

    As always, great explanations.

  • @lordshipmayhem
    @lordshipmayhem 5 лет назад +39

    This is why we need CST-100 Starliner, SpaceX Dragon, AND SNC's Dream Chaser. Backups launch vehicles and spacecraft for the backup systems' backup systems.
    And I wouldn't turn down including the Chinese, Japanese and ESA either.

    • @FPV-wi8fw
      @FPV-wi8fw 5 лет назад

      Ya I was wondering if they could dock a Chinese spacecraft with the ISS

    • @TheRagingStorm98
      @TheRagingStorm98 5 лет назад +5

      The Russian vehicles are the best out there they been doing the job fine for ages

    • @axelbostrom3606
      @axelbostrom3606 5 лет назад

      @@TheRagingStorm98 yah but it would be great to have options at times like this

    • @tomryner5830
      @tomryner5830 5 лет назад +2

      ESA scrapped the whole Hermes system... Funding mostly but at the same time both the US-at the time-offered ESA Astronauts rides on the shuttle and Sojuz systems. Had ESA known the Shuttle program was going to be defunded the Hermes Shuttle would probably had been given the green light. The Ariane rocket is a champ and could easily lift the Hermes with crew and cargo. Sad really.
      Can't understand why Saab Space in coop with Saab defence in Sweden doesn't make a reusable spaceplane. Talk to Airbus (Ariane) and get things moving! Or involve Boeing now that Saab and Boeing won the bid for the new US TX Trainer jet. That shows they can work together..

    • @spiffles4347
      @spiffles4347 5 лет назад

      Put an adapter on the next dragon for a chinese one

  • @w9gb
    @w9gb 5 лет назад +48

    SpaceX unmanned demo flight was planned for November/December 2018,
    BUT moved to January - due to ISS cargo vehicle and Soyuz logistics.
    SpaceX started, last week, they would be ready for original time schedule.

    • @accckiy
      @accckiy 5 лет назад +3

      SpaceX moved to unmaned to April 2019

    • @lipzi2
      @lipzi2 5 лет назад

      accckiy Nope still January

    • @philb5593
      @philb5593 5 лет назад

      The current opportunity is before the astronauts have to come home, or many more months away.
      We just have to wait right now to see if Soyuz will go before the station hast to be uncrewed.
      No unnecessary risks will be taken

  • @hubbsllc
    @hubbsllc 5 лет назад

    Scott, thank you for posting about this so quickly; I was hoping you would. From the cockpit video it looks to me like the crew was experiencing some pogoing; what do you figure was up with that?

  • @iakazul
    @iakazul 5 лет назад

    Damn good reporting! Thank you for sharing.

  • @purposly
    @purposly 5 лет назад +37

    shoulda just toggled all the switches repeatedly until it started workin again tbh

    • @marcelldavis8513
      @marcelldavis8513 5 лет назад +16

      purposly “I t hink the booster exploded”
      “Have you tried turning it off and on again?”

    • @anubeia
      @anubeia 3 года назад

      IT Crowd = NASA’s tech support confirmed

  • @uchihasurvival
    @uchihasurvival 5 лет назад +256

    It probably had Windows 10 on board.

    • @theatom7264
      @theatom7264 5 лет назад +4

      OsakaRose you could change it out to the more favored Windows 7. I’m getting a new laptop pretty soon to replace my aging 2009 HP Pavilion but I’m gonna have the OS swapped for Windows 7. Windows 7 still should be supported until at least the mid 2020’s I think. Even after there are still ways to keep an older OS in check with 3rd party workarounds & support. Having to upgrade to Windows 10 is a total myth perpetuated by Microsoft.

    • @mudchair16
      @mudchair16 5 лет назад

      AAHHUEHUEHUEHUEHUEHUEHEU

    • @munsbi
      @munsbi 5 лет назад

      No, comrade Ivanoff, it was 100% Russian-made disaster.

    • @Carpet96
      @Carpet96 5 лет назад +3

      @@theatom7264 Microsoft announced that they will stop supporting win 7 in January 2020

    • @thex9165
      @thex9165 5 лет назад

      someone did an update before the launch

  • @squirrelmanyt6069
    @squirrelmanyt6069 5 лет назад +2

    Lucky escape. Good to see the Eject procedure worked this time.

  • @nealenewton4971
    @nealenewton4971 4 года назад

    An incredible escape. Reading others comments, who know Russian tongue, and were watching, they were very fortunate indeed. Supercharged re entry, " hold on to your joy joysticks , chaps ", and hoping for the best. Great upload, thanks.

  • @1shaya1
    @1shaya1 5 лет назад +13

    Did anyone else notice that the exhaust of the 2nd stage was not stable?

    • @HuntingTarg
      @HuntingTarg 5 лет назад

      No - and I'll give you props for even mentioning it.
      Maybe *you* should be on the investigation committee, and slap some ethics into the corrupt ruskys ;D

  • @iirossii2005
    @iirossii2005 5 лет назад +35

    I was waiting for this video! thank you for the explanation. NASA was very confusing.

    • @warpath375__
      @warpath375__ 5 лет назад

      NASA, never a straight answer.

    • @weasle2904
      @weasle2904 5 лет назад +1

      Wouldn't that be Roscosmos's fault and NOT NASA's?
      You people treat the shitty Russian space program like some deity lmao

  • @davidgifford8112
    @davidgifford8112 5 лет назад

    Excellent summery. The site to check at times like this! thanks

  • @GaryW48
    @GaryW48 5 лет назад

    Scott, great explanation!
    Look at the launch video shortly before the abort. I noticed on replay that the contrail looked a little wavy, like if perhaps there was an engine problem, or if the teardrop cluster of engines might not had separated cleanly.
    Then, just as the video inside the crew cabin was breaking up, the Russian ground controller switched to the camera back at the launch site, as it looked like then the booster after separation might had yawed slightly to the left prior to the cloud of liquid oxygen that you showed.

  • @Danbearpig
    @Danbearpig 5 лет назад +19

    My first reaction also was that the Soyuz has been so reliable that even with this accident I would be comfortable boarding one tomorrow, but then I was considering possible causes and remembering that the cause identified for the Falcon 9 failure in flight was the supplier of a small part of the rocket. It could be that a supplier for a critical part has let some faulty workmanship through their quality control, so while it is incredibly unlikely that there's anything sub-par about the rocket design and assembly, there are some other factors that could affect multiple rockets, and would like to hear what an investigation reveals.

    • @QuantumFluxable
      @QuantumFluxable 5 лет назад +1

      or the russian government is trying to sow more disarray into the world, wouldn't put it past them considering the ISS hole, their meddling in different elections worldwide and the annexation of Crimea. not saying that's what happened as so many things can go wrong in spaceflight, but I wouldn't rule it out either.

    • @nexviper
      @nexviper 5 лет назад +1

      Reading up there have been a significant number of failures in unmanned launches using much of the same system. 8 in the last 10-11 years and that is has finally happened on a manned mission probably wasn't a surprise to those who kept track of all this.
      Fair few people saying that with the generation switch over, the guys who built these things from the 50s till 2000 retiring, a lot of skill and knowledge has been lost on top of the regularly expected reduction in funding, fraud and dodgy dealings that can hit any large project in any country.

    • @HuntingTarg
      @HuntingTarg 5 лет назад

      Shady subcontractors. My bet is on shady subcontractors. A subcontractor QC failure is what caused the whole Apollo 13 drama.

    • @jgbreezer
      @jgbreezer 5 лет назад

      If its malicious, (with two issues so close together you wonder) supply chain attacks are the new hotness for criminals to use and for security to worry about. Significant ratio of companies recently that have been hacked/had breaches were due to problems with their suppliers (or their software/processes not considering security appropriately)

  • @blindbrick
    @blindbrick 5 лет назад +13

    A beautifully recovered failure Russia, Congratulations.

  • @MaltaMcMurchy
    @MaltaMcMurchy 5 лет назад

    Great discussion! Thanks. 👍

  • @ripplegaming7393
    @ripplegaming7393 5 лет назад +6

    I would go on that rocket. Seems safe as. Crazy story's of escape too.

  • @timothyfargo7845
    @timothyfargo7845 5 лет назад +4

    Alexey was calm and professional during the incident. The canned video had me confused during the replay I watched at 5:30 EST (9:30 UTC). After seeing the crew tossed like that, I was thinking - that is abnormal. Then I heard the translator saying, "Booster" and "Abort" while the NASA commenter was saying "Nominal" at 2:11 into flight. Then the "Weightless" translation. It was a scary moment for sure, but that is what training is all about. I am glad the crew is safe.

    • @themadhammer3305
      @themadhammer3305 5 лет назад

      There was a joke by louis CK about astronauts. "If you ever listen to black box recording pilots are calm right to the last second, astronauts are the very best of them". Im paraphrasing and probably butchered his bit but you get the idea, nothing is gained by panicking, all panicking will do is cause you to make further mistakes, dont panic and you have at least some chance

    • @Solidus1Syndicate
      @Solidus1Syndicate 5 лет назад +3

      You fly the plane/craft until it doesn't.

    • @Montecitodesign
      @Montecitodesign 5 лет назад

      Timothy Fargo NASA can’t afford a translator?

  • @jeeves-2
    @jeeves-2 5 лет назад +9

    Hey Scott, loved the video, but I do have a slight correction. In his press conference today, NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine did say Soyuz MS-09 can stay in space until January 4th of next year, so there is a little more margin then you were saying.

    • @HuntingTarg
      @HuntingTarg 5 лет назад

      I give your comment a like - although that doesn't really change the situation. There's still the same three options (leaving the ISS vacant I consider the far least desirable of the three).

  • @pancerneparadoksy1410
    @pancerneparadoksy1410 5 лет назад

    Thx max for this video....

  • @JaySilva88
    @JaySilva88 5 лет назад +2

    I'm glad everyone was safe.