Blue Origin Is Trying To Launch New Glenn This Year

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  • Опубликовано: 5 июл 2024
  • For a while now Blue Origin has been keeping to themselves for the most part while they construct and test New Glenn, a next-generation heavy-lift launch vehicle meant to become the company’s workhorse and future. With a reusable booster and significant payload capabilities, it’s hoping to become a large competitor within the industry, offering low prices and reliability.
    However, that’s a lot easier said than done, and considering this will be the company’s first truly orbital-capable rocket, it will need to prove itself starting with a maiden flight. Based on comments from Blue Origin, this first launch attempt could happen as soon as around 5 months from now. Here I will go more in-depth into New Glenn’s progress, progress on the booster’s landing ship, the launch date, and more.
    Full article here - thespacebucket.com/is-blue-or...
    For more space-related content check out - thespacebucket.com/
    Credit:
    SpaceX - / spacex
    NASA - / @nasa
    Rocket Lab - / rocketlabnz
    Blue Origin - / blueoriginchannel
    Landing Vessel Footage - x.com/YorukIsik
    Chapters:
    0:00 - Intro
    0:38 - New Developments
    3:53 - The Maiden Flight
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Комментарии • 157

  • @brentsmithline3423
    @brentsmithline3423 Месяц назад +14

    Cannot wait to see this thing fly.

  • @tkirby
    @tkirby Месяц назад +31

    Blue Origin - Yesterday's Rockets, Tomorrow.

    • @user-ow4oj1wk2o
      @user-ow4oj1wk2o 9 дней назад +1

      Or the decade after that.

    • @usmanshahid8277
      @usmanshahid8277 4 дня назад

      tkirby - a whining a**hole who sits behind his computer doing nothing but shitting on other people.

  • @ConradSpoke
    @ConradSpoke Месяц назад +22

    If anybody deserves a trip into space, it's Glenn Close. She's just awesome.

  • @TheMoneypresident
    @TheMoneypresident Месяц назад +15

    Great. We need everyone who tries to get there.

  • @patricklewis7636
    @patricklewis7636 Месяц назад +22

    Unless they are testing stages indoors, they have a lot of work to do.

    • @jamskinner
      @jamskinner Месяц назад +3

      On the computer.

    • @downix
      @downix 29 дней назад

      Stage testing for Vulcan began only weeks before launch, with the construction of the upper stage only beginning 7 months beforehand.

  • @kargi42
    @kargi42 Месяц назад +12

    Considering the landing platform crossing the Bosphorus in Istanbul, it originated somewhere in the Black Sea.

    • @Rizzler420-uh4yd
      @Rizzler420-uh4yd Месяц назад +2

      Lame! Leave it to Jeff Bezos to support Russia.

    • @theOrionsarms
      @theOrionsarms Месяц назад +9

      It was built in a Shipyards in Romania.

    • @theOrionsarms
      @theOrionsarms Месяц назад

      @@Rizzler420-uh4yd Bezos isn't a Russian supporter, that title belongs to Elon Musk,he is the one who publicaly claimed that Crimea should belong to Russia , and denied Ukraine the right to use starlink satellites that were purchased from his business above their own land ( requignazed by internationall laws, and the US government),because that land was occupied by Russia.

    • @sandbridgekid4121
      @sandbridgekid4121 Месяц назад

      ​@@Rizzler420-uh4ydDo you RESEARCH. Shipyard specializes in oil rigs and custom research and commercial vessels.

    • @downix
      @downix 29 дней назад +1

      ​@Rizzler420-uh4yd It was built in Constanța Romania, not Russia. And everyone knows the best shipyards along the Black Sea are Ukranian to start with.

  • @lanzer22
    @lanzer22 Месяц назад +17

    Remember in 2013 when Jeff wanted to keep SpaceX from hogging launchpad 39A? This is why! They're finally ready!

    • @davidstevenson9517
      @davidstevenson9517 Месяц назад +1

      Actually, Lanzer, Blue Origin use launchpad LC36 for New Glenn, 18kms South of LC39A.
      (For decades this launch pad launched Atlas/Centaur)

    • @lanzer22
      @lanzer22 Месяц назад +14

      @@davidstevenson9517 yup, they got their own launch pad and they didn’t end up sharing as Jeff asked for back in 2013. I just found it funny that he fought against Space X using it exclusively, 11 years before they have a rocket ready
      *He wanted pad 39a for historical significance, in case anyone missed the news back then

    • @GreyDeathVaccine
      @GreyDeathVaccine Месяц назад +1

      @@lanzer22 hilarious 🙂

  • @i-love-space390
    @i-love-space390 Месяц назад +10

    Crazy that BO is trying to launch payloads on its test flight. It is also crazy that they are going to try to land one AT SEA on the first flight. They have the potential to destroy their landing platform as well as several 3rd party payloads.
    That is the danger of delaying something for a period of ...like... forever. When you do fly, you are behind schedule, so you take more risks, and you have to make everything go perfectly. BO seems to be following ULA's model for booster development rather than SpaceX's method. This may be because of their vehicle takes longer to build and is more expensive, so they can't have a "hardware rich" development cycle like Starship. Stainless Steel definitely has its advantages.

    • @laujack24
      @laujack24 22 дня назад

      u know at this point this shit just story trying to proc up jeff bezos, this company is not launching shit. consider it was found 24 years ago way before space x, look where space x at. u telling me they can compete lol, tell me when they get to LEO and come back which something they still can not prove.

  • @briancheung5576
    @briancheung5576 22 дня назад +2

    There was no unmanned flight of space shuttle before John Young and Robert Crippen flew on Columbia.

  • @lyricbread
    @lyricbread Месяц назад +9

    “Glenn Close” in the title had me for a second. 😂

  • @mikedicenso2778
    @mikedicenso2778 17 дней назад +2

    @1:25 You didn't mention that the cryogenic pathfinder New Glenn is not being used for the tests currently underway with the GS-1 simulator because it is back at the factory being retrofitted with engines along with other hardware for the critical wet dress rehearsal and static hotfire tests that will validate the launcher systems ahead of the maiden launch.
    Another New Glenn will carry the twin EscaPADE spacecraft and then the pathfinder will be refurbished for a future mission.

  • @donaldtrammel2475
    @donaldtrammel2475 Месяц назад +6

    Thanks for the update.

  • @danielc3003
    @danielc3003 17 дней назад +1

    Good luck to Jeff never been to Spaceozs!

  • @Hoopaball
    @Hoopaball Месяц назад +3

    Nice update, again! Cheers

  • @don63
    @don63 Месяц назад +13

    Any year now........

  • @eddjordan2399
    @eddjordan2399 13 дней назад

    25 years and they haven't launched a orbital rocket!. It better be good this new glen, or is it old glen now?

  • @marks7502
    @marks7502 Месяц назад +5

    a lot of things going on

    • @davidstevenson9517
      @davidstevenson9517 Месяц назад +2

      Looks like 2024 could be a turning point in the Second Space Race. Very exciting.

  • @alexlabs4858
    @alexlabs4858 Месяц назад +10

    It’s a good looking rocket man. Hope to see it fly before 2030

    • @jamskinner
      @jamskinner Месяц назад +1

      I really think they should have built a smaller intermediate sized rocket first. Maybe it just didn’t look cost effective so they decided to take a huge leap in size and complexity.

    • @zanelittlegray
      @zanelittlegray Месяц назад +2

      @@jamskinner Rocket Lab did the same thing, going direct from their little Electron rocket to the much larger Neutron rocket.

  • @jamskinner
    @jamskinner Месяц назад

    If it’s behind schedule are they going to launch the probes on a different rocket?

  • @aeroflip97
    @aeroflip97 Месяц назад +31

    5 months for new glenn launch?? Tell me when Elvis gets here.

    • @jamskinner
      @jamskinner Месяц назад

      Seems a bit optimistic. As does landing on the barge. It will be much harder considering the much larger rocket landing on a moving target. Depending on how it lands it could also be multiple engines. I’m not sure on that though.

    • @UnexpectedBooks
      @UnexpectedBooks Месяц назад

      Wouldn’t be interesting if we could place bets?

    • @oeliamoya9796
      @oeliamoya9796 Месяц назад +3

      Elvis WILL return. When? ON the new Glenn....

    • @danielconway7190
      @danielconway7190 Месяц назад

      ​@jamskinner larger rockets are actually easier to land. Think about balancing a ruler vs a mop on your hand.

    • @ElectronicsPeddler
      @ElectronicsPeddler Месяц назад +1

      Calm down, there, Beldar.

  • @digitalplayland
    @digitalplayland 9 дней назад

    More CGI, Jeff? So cool! Competing with Meta space now.

  • @mercerconsulting9728
    @mercerconsulting9728 Месяц назад +7

    I hope I'm wrong, but I think that this rocket is going to have problems with delays, engines, and landing.

    • @davidstevenson9517
      @davidstevenson9517 Месяц назад +7

      Blue Origins BE-4 engines performed perfectly when they successfully launched ULAs Vulcan in January this year.
      Perhaps you're superimposing the "blunt" SpaceX modus operandi and acceptable performance levels on a more "refined" Blue Origin.
      These two companies have very different approaches to launcher development.

    • @alexlabs4858
      @alexlabs4858 Месяц назад +5

      I mean basically everyone who has made an orbital class rocket has had issues with these things, so it’s pretty much expected. I think it’s crazy what they are going for with the first flight and we’ll just have to see how it goes…

    • @jamskinner
      @jamskinner Месяц назад +2

      2 engines performed well on a single flight. That is certainly important, but it doesn’t tell us if they are reliable. They also have to relight on new Glenn which they have never done BE4. A 7 engine setup will be much more complicated then a 2 engine one.
      Once they have a couple of successful static fires then I may agree with you.

    • @jamskinner
      @jamskinner Месяц назад +1

      @alexlabs4858
      Especially considering they have never even launched into orbit before.

    • @mewintle
      @mewintle Месяц назад +1

      Yeah. See you in 2.5 years

  • @johnrday2023
    @johnrday2023 Месяц назад +3

    Is it true that Blue Origin has already rec'd FAA launch approval for New Glenn ???

    • @davidstevenson9517
      @davidstevenson9517 Месяц назад +1

      Good question! The United States FAA seems to take several months to give approval.
      Who announces FAA approval, the FAA or the launcher company applying?

    • @TheEvilmooseofdoom
      @TheEvilmooseofdoom Месяц назад

      Has BO even applied? I doubt it.

    • @sandbridgekid4121
      @sandbridgekid4121 Месяц назад +1

      This is at a level of planning beyond your RUclips. TIK TOK, education. Blue has been working with FAA for the range for several years, the permit application takes place at the END of this process.

    • @Mike_Dubayou
      @Mike_Dubayou Месяц назад +2

      @@sandbridgekid4121 The irony of your post....

  • @av_kovko
    @av_kovko Месяц назад +3

    Will the FAA delay in issuing a license to launch New Glenn?

    • @davidstevenson9517
      @davidstevenson9517 Месяц назад +6

      The FAA never delays; the FAA puts a rocket program on hold when there has been an unexpected deviation from the flight plan.
      The FAA never delays Starship; rather, SpaceX stalls when filing the mishap investigation report, and list of corrective measures taken, that the FAA has requested from SpaceX.
      The FAA processes these SpaceX Reports in HALF the time it took SpaceX to prepare and forward them to the FAA!
      SpaceX is to blame for every delay in both Starship AND Artemis launch schedules.

    • @-MeatsOfEvil-
      @-MeatsOfEvil- 29 дней назад

      BO moves slowly so they have plenty of time to get the launch license and environmental impact reports done. Will they launch this year who knows but someday!

  • @WyoSavage1976
    @WyoSavage1976 28 дней назад +2

    Very risky to launch a payload on a very first test flight.

  • @zlm001
    @zlm001 Месяц назад

    Thanks

  • @dissaid
    @dissaid Месяц назад +1

    😎😎😎

  • @foxthroat3410
    @foxthroat3410 7 дней назад

    Can't wait to see another "Trying to launch" next year 😂

  • @thomasmyid
    @thomasmyid Месяц назад +7

    Five months so.. November? I want to see it on a schedule before I have any faith it will go.

    • @davidstevenson9517
      @davidstevenson9517 Месяц назад

      WANT to see a schedule? What cheek! Who cares about a schedule when all that matters are results.
      Five months ago, ULA produced successful results with BO engines propelling Vulcan into the beginning of its intended long career.
      "Faith" is a concept that has no place in Science or with its offspring, Engineering.
      Yet, "faith" is a constant refrain from SpaceX Cultists which, Thomas, I believe you to be.
      Be sensible, Thomas; keep an open mind, learn patience and quietly observe. Otherwise, you look naive and foolish.

    • @thomasmyid
      @thomasmyid Месяц назад +4

      @@davidstevenson9517 Yeah, I want to see them actually set a date where they estimate it will be ready. Without it they just go years and years and years and years. Put all the colorful language you want around it, their progress has been glacial.

    • @mewintle
      @mewintle Месяц назад

      They’re not going to ready by November. It’s probably going to have to wait two years for the next Mars window.

  • @Oldman5261
    @Oldman5261 29 дней назад +3

    They can also use starship.

    • @sakshamShukla_
      @sakshamShukla_ 21 день назад

      They should use starship to tug the new glenn and then catch it with chopstics.

  • @mewintle
    @mewintle Месяц назад +2

    “Five months from now”
    *checks video to see how old it is.

  • @alexanderoransky7601
    @alexanderoransky7601 Месяц назад +8

    Outstanding CGI. As always.

  • @wyattnoise
    @wyattnoise Месяц назад +6

    I highly expect this first new Glenn flight to go off nearly perfect.
    The new Shepard vessel is solid and they've learned a lot with it...
    Also, Bezos clearly knows a lot about rocketry, despite not cosplaying as an engineer like Musk does.
    When asked "any build such a big rocket" Musk will ramble about how it's "cool", whereas Bezos will clearly tell you it's simply "easier" than landing a smaller rocket cause "imagine balancing a pencil on your finger instead of a mop."
    What was it Einstein said about not being able to explain things simply?
    It means you don't understand the concept.

    • @snakevenom4954
      @snakevenom4954 Месяц назад +10

      Misquoted Einstein and made completely false claims lol. Bezos is not a rocket expert nor an engineer.
      New Glenn is by no means anything new nor groundbreaking. It will attempt to do what a large Falcon 9 can.
      The BE-4 engine is nothing new either. A closed cycle oxygen rich engine has been mastered decades ago. So obviously talking about it would be easy.
      Starship is a vehicle in its own class entirely. Capabilities unparalleled with an engine that's a one of a kind.
      I do believe New Glenn will launch the payload perfectly. But it will not land. Then comes the several months after to make a new one

    • @lanzer22
      @lanzer22 Месяц назад +3

      Sarcasm meter is over 9000!

    • @thedausthed
      @thedausthed Месяц назад +7

      New Shepard is a small, sub orbital rocket that has been in development for a very long time and yet had a failure pretty recently, it is not even close to something like Falcon 9.
      Musk clearly knows more about rocketry than Bezo, SpaceX has been far more successful than Blue Origin, with (to dat)e hundreds of orbital launches vs 0 for Blue Origin, bar the fact they were founded around the same time. No guff about "pencils" and "mops" will change that.

    • @metriczeppelin
      @metriczeppelin Месяц назад +2

      Is it just your expectation of the new glenn to be "nearly perfect" or a vision you had after a heavy night of drinking? Bezos clearly knows "a lot about rocketry" is a fallacy. He pays people to know a lot about rocketry. Bezos is off on his yacht with his sweety. EM has forgotten more about rocketry than Bezos knows. Let's stop the delusion please.

    • @jamskinner
      @jamskinner Месяц назад +1

      @snakevenom4954
      Even that sounds optimistic. I believe it will fly eventually. I doubt it will have any, let alone 2 launches this year. We will get a better idea once it does a static fire of all 7 engines.

  • @LaFranceBonjour
    @LaFranceBonjour Месяц назад +3

    Space x that has 15 years experience and a high turnaround rate for design and manufacturing hasn’t gotten it right yet. How a company that’s never reached orbit and stuck with the same unproven design for 10 years. They haven’t even done a Wet dress rehearsal

    • @iamscoutstfu
      @iamscoutstfu 25 дней назад +1

      Theyve launched 24 rockets bro.
      They have plenty of experience.

    • @LaFranceBonjour
      @LaFranceBonjour 24 дня назад

      @@iamscoutstfu that's launching a single small rocket up then it falls down in exactly the same place. scaling up the rocket is another thing entirely

    • @robl1621
      @robl1621 21 день назад

      @@iamscoutstfuit’s a big stretch between those 24 suborbital launches vs SpaceX

    • @iamscoutstfu
      @iamscoutstfu 21 день назад

      @@robl1621 Only for you.

  • @glennlewman4186
    @glennlewman4186 Месяц назад +2

    At this rate, when will they pass SpaceX

  • @francescoscarinci7109
    @francescoscarinci7109 Месяц назад

    Always the same footage and animations.... give me something real and significative

  • @michaelreid2329
    @michaelreid2329 Месяц назад +3

    Not even a validation flight? Wow.!

    • @davidstevenson9517
      @davidstevenson9517 Месяц назад +4

      Yeah! Indicative of what confidence Blue Origin have in their reusable launcher.
      Even though the Martian payload is 'D' Class, let's hope BOs confidence isn't misplaced.

    • @JohnnyWednesday
      @JohnnyWednesday Месяц назад +3

      @@davidstevenson9517 - You call it confidence - history calls it arrogance.

    • @jamskinner
      @jamskinner Месяц назад +1

      @JohnnyWednesday
      It’s a throwaway flight. Doesn’t hurt to launch something cheap. The problem is they are on the clock.

    • @TheEvilmooseofdoom
      @TheEvilmooseofdoom Месяц назад +1

      @@JohnnyWednesday The F1 had paying payloads on the first flight.

  • @spazoq
    @spazoq Месяц назад +4

    Obviously, Elon is worried Blue Origin might actually try to land on a pad before he does. Elon seems to be pushing to try and catch the booster with flight 5.

    • @davidstevenson9517
      @davidstevenson9517 Месяц назад

      Your probably right, Spaz; Elon Musk must be cringing at the thought of New Glenn making a successful barge landing before Starship is caught in the maw of Mechazilla.
      Still, Elon Musk has installed Gwynne Shotwell as CEO of SpaceX, so he has a "fallguy" on hand for his SpaceX Cultists to blame.
      (For his sake, EM must hope that Shotwell will live up to her name)

    • @thedausthed
      @thedausthed Месяц назад +6

      Why would he be worried about what a rocket that is not even an equivalent to the 6 year old Falcon Heavy is doing?

    • @davidstevenson9517
      @davidstevenson9517 Месяц назад +2

      @@thedausthed New Glenn is just as reusable as either Falcon but lifts nearly four times the payload of both: 35-40tn, not a mere 10tn. Elon Musk knows that the Falcons are destined to work the lower end of the "Heavy Payload" market. So do investors.

    • @TheEvilmooseofdoom
      @TheEvilmooseofdoom Месяц назад

      @@davidstevenson9517 It lifts more AND it's coming out 10+ years later. It's not how much it can lift but how much it costs, that's what ACTUAL investors care about. That's a flashy organization. Lots of overhead.

    • @jamskinner
      @jamskinner Месяц назад +1

      @davidstevenson9517
      And starship will do the rest. Especially if the develop an expendable upper stage. Something I think they should have done first.

  • @mikefeierberg7712
    @mikefeierberg7712 Месяц назад +2

    What is your name, Mr. Space Bucket?

  • @TheMrPeteChannel
    @TheMrPeteChannel Месяц назад

    That's a big "bleeping" rocket.

  • @BeKindToBirds
    @BeKindToBirds Месяц назад +1

    They are really doing things right and it shows.

    • @jamskinner
      @jamskinner Месяц назад +4

      What does that mean? What have they shown? So far the rocket is still not finished with actual flight hardware. No static fire. No test landing. They have never launched an orbital rocket. And they had an engine failure on their tiny new shepherd not that long ago.

    • @metriczeppelin
      @metriczeppelin Месяц назад +3

      Hahahahahaha 😄

    • @barryscott6222
      @barryscott6222 Месяц назад +1

      That's sarcasm, to all you that missed it.

  • @jkleylein
    @jkleylein 26 дней назад +2

    "Blue Origin Is Trying To Launch New Glenn This Year" Or maybe next year, or maybe next decade . . .

  • @Doofwarrior88
    @Doofwarrior88 Месяц назад +5

    How exciting. The united states 🇺🇸 has multiple rockets.

  • @user-gw1rd7uc7s
    @user-gw1rd7uc7s 26 дней назад

    Blue Origin is not Seatle nor amazon

  • @barryscott6222
    @barryscott6222 Месяц назад

    So how exactly does New Glenn materially change the space industry ?
    "it’s hoping to become a large competitor within the industry, offering low prices and reliability"
    Riiiggght...
    I would bet on none of those points materialising.
    If ULA can't get Vulcan to close as a business case - what would make BO and NG ???

    • @davidstevenson9517
      @davidstevenson9517 Месяц назад +4

      Barry, ULA has signed at least 40 launch contracts for Vulcan/Centaur before the end of 2025 (including DoD).
      Evidently the Space Market doesn't agree with your assessment of ULA.
      Falcon max. lift to LEO: 10tn.
      Vulcan max. lit tn to LEO: 28tn
      New Glenn max lift to LEO: 45tn
      All three are partially reusable i.e. the New Age Heavy Lifters for Low, Medium and High Payloads to LEO and Beyond.
      The Space Market has room for each of these partially reusable Heavies .

    • @barryscott6222
      @barryscott6222 Месяц назад

      @@davidstevenson9517
      Then why is there gossip that ULA will be put up to be sold?
      If it was so solid...?

    • @TheEvilmooseofdoom
      @TheEvilmooseofdoom Месяц назад

      @@davidstevenson9517 When landing on a done ship the F9 can put 17 tons into LEO. Not 10 Max.

  • @tmcdowell5986
    @tmcdowell5986 Месяц назад +6

    I doubt Blew Organ is anywhere close at all to flight, unless something detonates. If there's any thought it's that they need to appear they are an aerospace company when they end up having to buy ULA.

    • @MalrusOSC
      @MalrusOSC Месяц назад +2

      “Blew Organ” that’s a new one

    • @davidstevenson9517
      @davidstevenson9517 Месяц назад +3

      I suspect, Mairus, the author of the above Comment was indulging in exactly that as he was typing his corruption of Blue Origin.
      What a "Freudian Slip"!🤛

    • @peternesteruk5386
      @peternesteruk5386 Месяц назад

      They bought ULA because there is no room to expand BO Huntsville plant and they expending big. from 400 employees At BO Florida in 2020 to 6000 in 2024 . same in all plants

    • @jaeluatl
      @jaeluatl Месяц назад

      I agree

  • @panzrok8701
    @panzrok8701 29 дней назад +2

    Landing Platform Vessel 1? Blue Orgin really knows how to be as boring as possible.

  • @David-dl3vj
    @David-dl3vj Месяц назад

    Blue organ; Launch this year???????????????🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @BRAHHHHHH
    @BRAHHHHHH Месяц назад

    Man dis bluerigin boocking s.u.u.u.x

  • @iamscoutstfu
    @iamscoutstfu 25 дней назад

    BO haters seething in the comments.

    • @laujack24
      @laujack24 22 дня назад +1

      no one is hating, we all just simply stating fact. this company just all talk, it was founded before space x launch their first falcon including test phase. 24 years later, it still has not launch 1 single rocket that made it to LEO. worst then ULA, at least they actually can launch something even if it cost u an arm or leg.

    • @iamscoutstfu
      @iamscoutstfu 22 дня назад

      @@laujack24 ULA Vulcan launched on Blue engines bro. The engines y'know, get you to orbit.
      Please continue to seethe

    • @laujack24
      @laujack24 22 дня назад

      @@iamscoutstfu ULA engine r all old russian engine, elon already said it multiple time. the new one u spoke off was a revision of a 60 years old engine coming some time next year lol. and by the way vulcan still not a reusable rocket lol, mean while space x on track to deliver 90% of the "entire world" payload by the end of this year with target of 140 launches. ULA and blue origin r a jokes at this point, not even worth mentioning. cope harder lol.

  • @jabyers
    @jabyers 28 дней назад

    talking way, way to fast

  • @user-bd8je6cb9z
    @user-bd8je6cb9z 27 дней назад

    I don't blame other mavericks for trying.. but Space X has terminal velocity in the industry ❤

  • @muhammaddahlan830
    @muhammaddahlan830 Месяц назад

    Saat applo kecil menempel ke dinding appolo besar lama waktu yang di butuhkan adalah 1 x 12 jam yaitu :
    1. Saat belahan gelap di setengah bukan purnama terang selama 12 jam gelap
    2. Selama di setwngah bukan yang terang appollo ditempek ke dinding appolo besar tidak seperti ROBOT BEKERJAAAAAAA
    3. Karwna saat start appolo kecil ke BTS dinding appolo nesar di perjaman appolo kecil seperti detik jam dinding berjakan jadi selama membuat pengembakinan waktu selama 2abad24 fahun lagi mendatang BIKAN PERGI MEMUTAR JARI. JAM DI DING NABAWI ini keejaanmj GAGABAH RIDAK ADA aturan berakibat TERJADINYA GERHANAN MATAHARI DI TAHUN 2016 samoai di tahun 2024 sekarang, 2024 ☔☔☂️☂️☂️☂️☂️☃️☃️⛄⛄⛄⛄⛄⛄🗼🗼🗼🗼🗼🗼🗼🗼☔☔☔☂️☂️🗼🗼🗼🗼📢📢📣📣📣📯📯📯📯📯☔☔☂️☂️☂️☂️☂️🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958
    @ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958 27 дней назад +1

    Is Blue Origin privately owned? If it has shareholders, their stock value is suppressed by hiding their accomplishments along the road to launch readiness. Stock prices are effected by how stoked the public gets about the project. Elon's ventures have overvalued stock because of the hype and public enthusiasm. Its literally money for showmanship, which baldie lacks.

  • @davidstevenson9517
    @davidstevenson9517 Месяц назад +2

    Blue Origins low profile PR (1:45) isn't such a bad policy after all. Silence, it's turning out, does not necessarily mean inactivity.
    BOs PR only comes into action when they have genuine results at each development stage (as does the PR of their business associate, ULA).
    This is in stark contrast to SpaceX; with their much touted Starship, they trumpet what they INTEND to do but when failure results, SpaceX claims success anyway.
    This year, 2024, the true colours of these three private launchers are coming to light; and Starship is looking rather pale in comparison to New Glenn and Vulcan.
    Why, Starship looks like it's lying prone at "Deaths Door"!

    • @lanzer22
      @lanzer22 Месяц назад

      Yeah, it's 2024, and SpaceX has nothing to show for it. Where as Blue Origin has had hundreds of launches and cornered a big chunk of the space launch market, while having developed and built hundreds of their new full-flow staged combustion engine that no company can come close in cost. Oh, what is SpaceX gonna do??? If only they're working on a fully reusable rocket that doesn't require you to throw away the second stage on every flight that no other companies can offer.

    • @thedausthed
      @thedausthed Месяц назад +2

      Vulcan and New Glenn are not even close to being competitors with Starship. Vulcan is only in the same class as a Falcon 9, but with no possibility of recovering the first stage and New Glenn is less capable than Falcon Heavy, both of them are also many years later than SpaceX's rockets. So neither is at all comparable with Starship, which should be flying to orbit and maybe even recovering the first stage before the much less capable New Glenn leaves the ground for the first time.

    • @metriczeppelin
      @metriczeppelin Месяц назад +4

      The only thing "pale" here is your deluded description of Starships progress. "BOs PR only comes into action when they have genuine results at each development stage," yes, inside their hanger, out of sight.

    • @mathewferstl7042
      @mathewferstl7042 Месяц назад

      They don't have any obligation to advertise themselves to the general public. Especially when spacex does it so much BECAUSE THEY STAY AFLOAT WITH INVESTOR MONEY

    • @davidstevenson9517
      @davidstevenson9517 Месяц назад

      I just LOVE baiting you naive SpaceX Cultists! My fellow EXPERIENCED Spaceflight Observers and I note that you "Brownshirts" for Elon Musk have been on the defensive ever since NASA announced they had chosen a second Artemis lander, Blue Moon from BO.
      NASA didnt trust SpaceX to come up with the goods; to date, it's seems they were right to be concerned.
      The sight of ULAs Vulcan with BOs BE-4 engines launching flawlessly had you SpaceX Cultists grinding your teeth in fury. Oh Dear. How sad.
      It's always a pleasure to watch arrogant, ignorant loudmouths get their comeuppance.
      Keep watching, "Brownshirts"!!!
      (Hello from New Zealand🇳🇿)

  • @ps3301
    @ps3301 10 дней назад

    Blue origin is a waste of time.

  • @PeteSty
    @PeteSty Месяц назад +4

    Old story. * months old.

    • @davidstevenson9517
      @davidstevenson9517 Месяц назад +3

      A recent PR statement from a private Space company is always news. Go back to sleep, Pete van Winkle.🛌💤

  • @cbongiova
    @cbongiova Месяц назад +1

    BO stinks. 😂