SpaceX launches Starship rocket but suffers mid-flight failure

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  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024
  • Elon Musk’s SpaceX launched its Starship rocket for the first time, but fell short of reaching space after suffering a mid-flight failure. No crew were on board. More here: cnb.cx/43QGn2o

Комментарии • 3 тыс.

  • @lightcomet3405
    @lightcomet3405 Год назад +4891

    It wasn’t a mid flight failure. It was a mid flight rapid unscheduled disassembly.

    • @adrianenrique879854
      @adrianenrique879854 Год назад +124

      Complet success, they expected it at tleast to lift off, and they detoned the explotion, it didn't explode by itself

    • @lightcomet3405
      @lightcomet3405 Год назад +38

      @@adrianenrique879854 rapid quickly scheduled disassembly.

    • @adrianenrique879854
      @adrianenrique879854 Год назад +13

      @@lightcomet3405 mmm rapid scheduled disassembly maybe🤣

    • @kb484
      @kb484 Год назад +10

      self destruct button😂

    • @Aortiz415
      @Aortiz415 Год назад +1

      None of us will ever get to do that. I wish he redirected it on himself.

  • @JustAGuy36-o7k
    @JustAGuy36-o7k Год назад +2482

    Einstein once said "You could do a million things right but people will point out the one thing you did wrong"

    • @VR.christianoo
      @VR.christianoo Год назад +38

      Well i don't think einstene blown away the world's biggest rocket in an animal reserve
      And tons of concrete shot away even in the safe zone
      They did vertical launch without fire deflection system , totally a stupidity
      Everybody warned them before and it's not like they didn't knew what's going to happen
      Still they did it like it's their persnoal property
      🙂

    • @JustAGuy36-o7k
      @JustAGuy36-o7k Год назад +94

      @@VR.christianoo I don't think Einstein is spelled like einstene

    • @VR.christianoo
      @VR.christianoo Год назад +12

      @@JustAGuy36-o7k ya that's why elders always says never try to give knowledge to someone who is unwilling 😤😤
      The spelling is the thing you got from all that
      Well for your kind information it was a typying error

    • @JustAGuy36-o7k
      @JustAGuy36-o7k Год назад +56

      @@VR.christianoo bro that whole thing must have been a typo because it looks like a 3rd grader wrote it

    • @VR.christianoo
      @VR.christianoo Год назад +10

      @@JustAGuy36-o7k once a fool is always a fool

  • @arad1257
    @arad1257 Год назад +3775

    "It needs to be pointy, Round is not scary, pointy is scary" lol

  • @41Atatsiak
    @41Atatsiak Год назад +1318

    “11,000,000 pounds got off the ground successfully”

    • @markmckinney9821
      @markmckinney9821 Год назад +20

      Exactly!!

    • @zeem2524
      @zeem2524 Год назад +1

      THAT gentlemen, is a lot of ass.

    • @NinjaPro57
      @NinjaPro57 Год назад +166

      Just like when your mom wakes up

    • @41Atatsiak
      @41Atatsiak Год назад +58

      @@NinjaPro57 haters gonna hate, potatoes gonna potate

    • @disgustedpotato6564
      @disgustedpotato6564 11 месяцев назад +30

      @@41Atatsiak did someone say potatos?

  • @BazamO
    @BazamO 7 месяцев назад +70

    Taylor Swift when she needs to get some milk from the store

  • @SwampSula
    @SwampSula Год назад +713

    When the comments didn't go as planned.

  • @Absolut531kmh
    @Absolut531kmh Год назад +778

    Getting that behemoth off the ground is impressive enough

    • @Palestine146
      @Palestine146 Год назад +7

      He’s trying to challenge GOD and reach to no one ever got there before that’s why every time he fails

    • @slipperylordtouchme7921
      @slipperylordtouchme7921 Год назад

      ​@@Palestine146hello dumb man.
      God does not exist science does.
      It got us to the moon and gues what god was not sitting on top of the clouds

    • @MrDuck797
      @MrDuck797 Год назад +86

      @@Palestine146if you believe these disasters are all divine punishments then you really know nothing about space itself

    • @davidhitchen5369
      @davidhitchen5369 Год назад +3

      Yeah, what guy he is. Next week we'll be building colonies on Mars.

    • @unusualkmc
      @unusualkmc Год назад +40

      @@Palestine146 we've already put satellites in space and been to the moon dawg 😭 you can buy a telescope and see the ISS or GPS satellites in orbit right now 😭

  • @danmartens8855
    @danmartens8855 Год назад +620

    I have never worked for a company that had the tiniest fraction of the enthusiasm of the SpaceX crew.

    • @nicnica6311
      @nicnica6311 10 месяцев назад +74

      Every single person that worked on this project is making history,their descendants will talk about in 1000 years, these are the ones who will colonize space , by all means I wish I was one of them just to have that unique privilege of being part of it, go SpaceX !!

    • @harry258
      @harry258 10 месяцев назад +16

      @@nicnica6311completely agree, it’s incredible to think we are living in the new space age

    • @alitaaa13
      @alitaaa13 10 месяцев назад +13

      ​@nicnica6311 💯💯💯 this was the test from April. Watch the one that happened yesterday. My husband is a welder that worked on the hot sage crew and we took our kids to watch the launch. It was incredible! We are so proud!!!

    • @carlacp8230
      @carlacp8230 10 месяцев назад +5

      afraid of losing their jobs?

    • @paradox11111111
      @paradox11111111 10 месяцев назад

      @@carlacp8230 I work at Blue Origin. The enthusiasm is genuine. We're building some of the most complicated and beautiful machines to ever exist

  • @rbmnova
    @rbmnova Год назад +509

    CNBC failed to state a great accomplishment. Congratulations to all involved and good luck on test 2

    • @notaulgoodman9732
      @notaulgoodman9732 Год назад +1

      I don't think we've ever had a rocket this big launch since Skylab

    • @romanplays1
      @romanplays1 Год назад +8

      @@notaulgoodman9732 it now holds the record for the largest rocket launched. being 31 foot taller than saturn V

    • @KerbalsandWackMacs
      @KerbalsandWackMacs Год назад +4

      @@notaulgoodman9732 Artemis I was launched, and had about 1.3 million more thrust

    • @kr-schon
      @kr-schon Год назад

      CNBC Would not endorse a failed launch in disguise 🚀

    • @romanplays1
      @romanplays1 Год назад +7

      @@kr-schon elon himself said that he considered the launch a success if the rocket even cleared the tower. It managed to pass the point of maximum aerodynamic pressure and held steady. I'd call that a success.

  • @andremartin8169
    @andremartin8169 Год назад +318

    This is not failure, this is learning how to do things better. We learn and progress this was awesome cannot wait for the next

    • @danharold3087
      @danharold3087 Год назад +13

      Exactly the flight achieved better then 100% of it projected goals. Gathered data. What most are missing is that they learned a LOT about the launch pad. aka stage zero. Lots of work there.

    • @prandomable
      @prandomable Год назад +6

      ​@@danharold3087This WAS a failure. But like you said. Success comes from learning from failures.

    • @BukuiZhao
      @BukuiZhao Год назад +8

      @@prandomableNo need to repeat the same thing twice. Plus for that to even lift off is insane.

    • @newax_productions2069
      @newax_productions2069 Год назад +2

      @@prandomable Considering the test was for liftoff and nothing else it was 100% a success, everything that came after were just learning opportunities so you are incorrect it was NOT a failure.

    • @prandomable
      @prandomable Год назад +4

      @@BukuiZhao it was a failed test. It was supposed to orbit and fly for hours and hours, and ended in 4 minutes instead.
      Separation was supposed to happen, and it failed.

  • @enfant0793
    @enfant0793 Год назад +1267

    "Failure is the first step to success"

  • @zeusb0i344
    @zeusb0i344 6 месяцев назад +4

    3,310,000 lbf

  • @helgin_lol
    @helgin_lol Год назад +348

    You cant have success without failure
    Hats off to spacex

    • @f33nix86
      @f33nix86 6 месяцев назад +8

      Sure you can. Assuming failure as a mandatory step is just as silly as assuming failure isn't an option at all. Plan for failure as a possibility and just incorporate that into the development process.

    • @nolandeaton1355
      @nolandeaton1355 5 месяцев назад +12

      @@f33nix86 I hate to break it to you, but when you’re building a rocket, you are almost certainly going to need to fail before you succeeded because you need a lot of data not to mention a lot of companies who build rockets will purposefully send 41s up to receive data on how to improve it.

    • @cb9a
      @cb9a 5 месяцев назад

      failure is not an option bucko

    • @pullfunnystick
      @pullfunnystick 5 месяцев назад

      @@f33nix86 there’s too much going on with a rocket to ensure it’ll work. they shoot tor it to work but there’s too many variables

    • @anonimes4005
      @anonimes4005 3 месяца назад

      They are morons for putting concrete under it and expecting it isnt gonna tear itself apart

  • @EstoesMentira-f3d
    @EstoesMentira-f3d 6 месяцев назад +1

    Video too short !!!! 😲😲
    It didn't show the end !!! 💥
    🤔🤔

  • @samrweall
    @samrweall Год назад +688

    Success takes many forms! Congratulations to the SpaceX team! That was AMAZING!

    • @ikwikwi
      @ikwikwi Год назад +3

      How much fuel got burnt up in non tesla petrol car equivalent

    • @GameFiai
      @GameFiai Год назад +13

      @@ikwikwi barely anything

    • @ikwikwi
      @ikwikwi Год назад +6

      ​@Kate Wiley you are a fan...atic,, not a scientist so I did not expect more

    • @stokesseegers5012
      @stokesseegers5012 Год назад +16

      @@ikwikwi not as much as they burn to make the electricity to charge your electric car LOL

    • @JB-pl1iu
      @JB-pl1iu Год назад

      Get a life.

  • @2bn2life62
    @2bn2life62 Год назад +298

    It's like a sky scraper flying.. amazing

    • @hoedemakerbart
      @hoedemakerbart Год назад +3

      Its only 9 meters longer than Saturn v

    • @7rock7
      @7rock7 Год назад +20

      @@hoedemakerbart it’s also way wider but Saturn V is also like a flying skyscraper

    • @hoedemakerbart
      @hoedemakerbart Год назад +1

      @@7rock7 Apollo is 33ft wide while Starship is 30ft

    • @hoedemakerbart
      @hoedemakerbart Год назад

      @@7rock7 en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/N1_(rocket)
      Looks a bit like that ussr moonrocket with the multiple engine

    • @---------c5741
      @---------c5741 Год назад +5

      ​@@7rock7 it also looks cooler than saturn 5

  • @MrSupercoolkid1998
    @MrSupercoolkid1998 Год назад +406

    This was very expected outcome! Congrats SpaceX team

    • @lakepanzer5749
      @lakepanzer5749 Год назад +22

      It wasn't. The flight was supposed to reach an altitude of 150 miles with a duration of 90 minutes. Stop praising this.

    • @kerbalengineer1243
      @kerbalengineer1243 Год назад +74

      ​@@lakepanzer5749 SpaceX stated multiple times before the launch anything after tower clear is successful for this launch.

    • @ken-mb5cp
      @ken-mb5cp Год назад +42

      @@lakepanzer5749 The largest rocket ever built almost reached orbit the first time. Huge success.

    • @krimson4626
      @krimson4626 Год назад +52

      @@lakepanzer5749 Try not to hate on literally anything Elon does Challenge (IMPOSSIBLE)

    • @hvip4
      @hvip4 Год назад +23

      ​@@lakepanzer5749 I know you're unable to comprehend this but I will try anyway.
      - the rocket is expandable, its only purpose is to gather data
      - more data is obviously better however anything more than 0 data is a win
      - one thing that is not expandable is the launch pad and tower and other ground equipment... All of that survived with minor damages
      But I get it bro.. a company dares to share the most optimistic scenario with you, so anything other than that must be sh*t.

  • @Overmotor
    @Overmotor Год назад +310

    A milestone in space exploration. So glad to have watched it live!

    • @ikwikwi
      @ikwikwi Год назад

      North korea

    • @tripler8502
      @tripler8502 Год назад +6

      Same

    • @agrajyadav2951
      @agrajyadav2951 Год назад +2

      Why is it a milestone exactly?

    • @thrax7550
      @thrax7550 Год назад +14

      @@agrajyadav2951 Because starship is the biggest and most powerful rocket ever made duh

    • @Supraboyes
      @Supraboyes Год назад +9

      A milestone, it didn't even get into space 😂

  • @philipberard867
    @philipberard867 Год назад +90

    Elon stated before the launch that was a 50/50 chance of failure. He's a realist. Knows it will take trial and error to get it right.

    • @tjnucnuc
      @tjnucnuc 10 месяцев назад +2

      How are you a real person 😂😂😂

    • @Xer405
      @Xer405 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@tjnucnuc You think the first saturn rockets didnt blow up? Theyre missiles bassicslly, and missiles need to be tested. A brand new thing doesn't automaticslly work right 100 percent. It's a brand new design.

    • @Maximbaumann
      @Maximbaumann 9 месяцев назад

      @@tjnucnucbot

    • @CriticalxMiss
      @CriticalxMiss 9 месяцев назад +5

      It had a 100% chance of failure, because it did fail...

    • @never_give_up90
      @never_give_up90 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@CriticalxMiss false, it was 50/50 and technically this wasnt a failure, it just wasn't 100% success. There is a lot of progress and the fact that it made it off the ground is already a success. It made it way further than expected and every small success will lead us closer to a complete success, and a fully functional design. That's how it always worked. Did you know that Apollo 1 killed all 3 astronauts? It was in a testing stage. That was a failure! This wasn't!

  • @Elon_Musk_antichrist
    @Elon_Musk_antichrist 8 месяцев назад

    "For those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted." Matthew

  • @davsaltego
    @davsaltego Год назад +192

    Flat Earthers: it crashed into the dome

    • @yeshuapleaseprotectthechil2150
      @yeshuapleaseprotectthechil2150 10 месяцев назад +15

      Ironically: Elon Musk said as a joke (?), a few days ago; that it would pierce the firmament. Google will have to delete that comment ASAP.

    • @yeshuapleaseprotectthechil2150
      @yeshuapleaseprotectthechil2150 10 месяцев назад +3

      Initially Elon wanted Star Link to orbit the globe at a significantly higher altitude, but NASA would not allow him to do so.

    • @paulm749
      @paulm749 10 месяцев назад +6

      LOL - I suspect a lot of flat-earthers don't believe what they're saying any more than the rest of us; they just enjoy being contrary.

    • @ADesolateAngel
      @ADesolateAngel 10 месяцев назад +3

      People who don't do their research:

    • @gullahgeechee2699
      @gullahgeechee2699 9 месяцев назад

      dome do exist but you’ll never see a person if color do the foolishness europeans do🤣💯

  • @arriagaadrian91
    @arriagaadrian91 Год назад +57

    Imagine trying to balance a toothpick at 2000 km/h compared to the amount of force being transferred to the surface of the ship it wasn’t able to stabilize itself.
    Previous tests they were able to launch and re enter with the ship only. Adding the rocket booster and having it detach while being able to be stable is proving difficult.
    Impressive nonetheless. I’m personally excited to see where this goes. I hope Tesla plans for this and sets up ways to clear out any debris (though I doubt it)

    • @danielnavarrette8464
      @danielnavarrette8464 Год назад +1

      Elon Musk drew inspiration for Starship design from Sacha Baron Cohen movie. He admitted it was not the best design when it came to functionality, but agreed that it looked cool 😎

    • @kr-schon
      @kr-schon Год назад

      The Aliens must be laughing at this whole retro-Tech 🚀

    • @macadoua4847
      @macadoua4847 10 месяцев назад

      I don’t know that it was the aerodynamics of the spacecraft that did it. In an analysis video, they said it was the failure of the engine to light after booster separation, and several explosions in the boosters after said separation. The ship got away though and almost made it to Hawaii, but crashes idk why I haven’t looked it up. Such a mighty vehicle though.

  • @CarLos-bt8uk
    @CarLos-bt8uk Месяц назад

    Thats why the astronauts have to wait till 2025😂

  • @bradleythorburn
    @bradleythorburn Год назад +109

    Some people see it as a failure (the media) others see it as a success (everyone else)

    • @fitulus
      @fitulus 8 месяцев назад

      The media WANTS to see it as a failure , knowing it's a success.
      That's a whole different thing

    • @tomdiets5079
      @tomdiets5079 7 месяцев назад +5

      If it wasn’t Elon Musk they would be calling it a successful first test launch, but now that they dislike him they had to say their was a failure instead of the fact that they were expecting it to fail. That’s what tests are for.

    • @never_give_up90
      @never_give_up90 7 месяцев назад +1

      It was amazing, can't wait to see the evolution of this tech.

    • @cssstylescommand4
      @cssstylescommand4 3 месяца назад +1

      Nah the media shapes and directs the opinions of everyone else, even contradictory opinions.

  • @warriornex
    @warriornex Месяц назад +1

    The next launch will be a mega success!!!! All the data needed is there now. Impressive, this is an achievement. Congratulations to everyone. 🎉🎉🎉🎉

  • @charlesnjeru4205
    @charlesnjeru4205 Год назад +60

    Step one is a BIG win - congrats SpaceX team

    • @sev_82
      @sev_82 Год назад

      How many step one will this explorers do?
      Their just wasting money they have said this too many times

    • @floriandiefenthaler2553
      @floriandiefenthaler2553 Год назад +7

      @@sev_82crawl walk run.
      Rocket science is still high risk business.
      Before Juri Gagarin was successful cruising orbit or before Neil Armstrong was touching the moon, many failures and high cost put these attempts in question.
      SpaceX is following this path with even further goals.

    • @charlesnjeru4205
      @charlesnjeru4205 Год назад +3

      Thomas Edison - failed a 1000 times-Light Bulb -for Elon this was the first one with Starship

  • @Enigma_files_
    @Enigma_files_ Год назад +57

    One step forward for humanity . That’s a win , bravo space x and all engineers who made made this possible

    • @TheAmericanCatholic
      @TheAmericanCatholic Год назад +6

      @خالد no after several dozen tests it will bring man to the moon and after hundreds of Launches it will go to mars.

    • @SisyphusJP
      @SisyphusJP Год назад

      Soviet dog!

    • @allisthemoist2244
      @allisthemoist2244 Год назад +3

      ​@خالد so I'll take that comment to mean that you're so completely clueless about building ANYTHING that you don't realize V1 always has problems

    • @gamvlogs9134
      @gamvlogs9134 Год назад

      @خالد okay troll 😂

    • @had3042
      @had3042 Год назад

      ​@RandomUser_360you are wasting our time
      .. go back under your rock where your comfy

  • @Gimme_210
    @Gimme_210 Месяц назад

    Pov me when my dad farts

  • @jeffdurall8353
    @jeffdurall8353 Год назад +4

    It wont be long and we'll be seeing this thing taking off all the time flying successful missions. God Speed, Space X.

  • @Nerukenshi1233
    @Nerukenshi1233 10 месяцев назад

    Flight was successful in every meaningful way.
    Everything after getting past the peak stress point was recorded, and noone was harmed. Next test is reentry, and that should be cake :)

  • @Inalienablerights15
    @Inalienablerights15 7 месяцев назад +3

    So what? Apollo 13 was called "The successful failure!"

  • @danielbriggs7110
    @danielbriggs7110 Год назад +15

    It was meant to fail...the test was to see if it had enough power to lift off by using different fuels and maintain going straight without ripping apart etc
    Congrats to the team ❤❤❤

    • @ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095
      @ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095 Год назад

      But it DID rip apart. There was a sudden, unexpected, catastrophic disassembly.
      {:o:O:}

    • @HeadsetHatGuy
      @HeadsetHatGuy Год назад +2

      @@ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095 and? what's your point? this is only the beginning. you clearly don't see the bigger picture here. you can't succeed most of the time without failing and failing again until you get it right.

    • @ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095
      @ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095 Год назад

      @@HeadsetHatGuy
      But we got it right over 50 years ago. Musk pushes nothing but vapourware and fails over and over and over again.
      Where's the Hyperloop? Where are the self-driving cars? Where are the reusable rockets? Where are the dancing robots that aren't actually men dressed in black body stockings?
      {:o:O:}

    • @shasta1481
      @shasta1481 10 месяцев назад

      @@ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095fts was activated

  • @joshma3305
    @joshma3305 Месяц назад +1

    Nothing failed... This is a test program, it was a complete success.

  • @rosean374
    @rosean374 Год назад +20

    Keep up the good work Spacex🎉

    • @SloppyCheesey
      @SloppyCheesey Год назад +1

      Good work for making a missile 😂

    • @gamvlogs9134
      @gamvlogs9134 Год назад

      @@SloppyCheesey okay? What’s your point 😂

  • @arturoeugster7228
    @arturoeugster7228 10 месяцев назад

    No failure for flight 2. The booster performed it's mission perfectly, absolutely perfectly, the landing of the booster is an option to reduce costs, it's post separation phase was used to test intentional fuel slosh behaviour on the engines and then the FTS was perfectly executed to certify it.
    Perfect performance for the prime goal of putting the upper stage at the required speed altitude and heading.
    Far better and cheaper than Artemis, which is no longer needed.
    For the tax payer: a huge cost savings for the return mission to the Moon, with or without an optional small savings with reusability.

  • @sheldonaubut
    @sheldonaubut Год назад +17

    The cause: The blast of the 32 engines lighting destroyed the concrete and ground under the pad, which kicked up concrete chunks that damaged at least 5 of the engines.

    • @DeathProofXXX
      @DeathProofXXX Год назад +1

      Not the cause of the separation failure

    • @spaced___x
      @spaced___x Год назад

      ​@@DeathProofXXXThat's why the next one(s) will hot-stage

    • @kaisersozia
      @kaisersozia 10 месяцев назад

      Time to dig a deeper hole underneath it!!!

  • @legoawsomeness
    @legoawsomeness 6 месяцев назад

    The fact that it’s not only a launch but a remote launch is so cool. I love that we can test the rockets like this without loss of life or danger of loss of life

  • @TRYCLOPS1
    @TRYCLOPS1 Год назад +9

    Nice firework 🧨

    • @krimson4626
      @krimson4626 Год назад +2

      It's a firework but only during the testing phases. Once patched up, it's gonna become a big change in Space Exploration

  • @sukhdevaram6036
    @sukhdevaram6036 Год назад +27

    Incredible moment , Congratulations Space X ❤❤ India 🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳

    • @zhenhuaren4637
      @zhenhuaren4637 Год назад

      anything related with india?

    • @sukhdevaram6036
      @sukhdevaram6036 Год назад +3

      No anything related india but we are excited to new Revolution in world and we are spot America and space X ,

    • @sukhdevaram6036
      @sukhdevaram6036 Год назад +2

      Where are you frome

    • @we_the_people_of_kashmir3534
      @we_the_people_of_kashmir3534 Год назад +1

      They are obsessed with their country so everywhere they bring it

    • @peak_911
      @peak_911 Год назад

      who isn't?@@we_the_people_of_kashmir3534

  • @azrinaswan80
    @azrinaswan80 10 месяцев назад

    There was a time news channels used to do actual research before publishing a news.

  • @Zen_Power
    @Zen_Power Год назад +25

    Some of the raptors didn’t fire hence the slow lift off. Either way successful first test. Bring on test 2

    • @spider0804
      @spider0804 Год назад +2

      They were likely damaged by all the concrete that was flying around.

    • @stokesseegers5012
      @stokesseegers5012 Год назад

      @@spider0804 there's a video from labpadre, it shows a bunch of vehicles they parked with camera equipment mounted on top, it was like a concrete storm, it look like combat footage chopping branches out of pine trees and smashing vehicles

    • @bipaladhikari2009
      @bipaladhikari2009 Год назад

      No, they held the rocket down for a few seconds.

    • @SloppyCheesey
      @SloppyCheesey Год назад

      @@bipaladhikari2009 they didn’t start even in the air 😂

  • @dalebecause2467
    @dalebecause2467 6 месяцев назад

    I believe this was the first launch...which was a huge success just for the fact that the Starship took off....

  • @byBestix
    @byBestix Год назад +4

    nice firework - no but seriously, what a great start

  • @1TheFreedomFile
    @1TheFreedomFile 6 месяцев назад

    The issue was that they counted to three instead of doing a count down. Made the rocket mess up

  • @tuckercase2449
    @tuckercase2449 Год назад +15

    Stage 0 looked unscathed, so that's a plus.

    • @TurtleFootMining
      @TurtleFootMining Год назад +1

      Lol bro Stage 0 got torn into pieces my uncle said 😅

    • @Xer405
      @Xer405 Год назад

      ​@@TurtleFootMining It did but only after rotating a ton of times showing off it's incredible durability owed to it's engineering.

    • @tuckercase2449
      @tuckercase2449 Год назад +1

      @@TurtleFootMining Stage 0 is the launch tower and the accompanying infrastructure. After I posted that, I heard the tank farm received a little damage. The first and second rocket stages were blown to bits.

  • @916medic
    @916medic 6 месяцев назад +17

    Elon is amazing. I dont know why so many people hate him, a bunch of useless people talking crap about a man that is actually making the world a better place.

    • @spazmonkey3815
      @spazmonkey3815 Месяц назад +1

      He is one of the best America has to offer he is our Tesla..

    • @WLBarton4466
      @WLBarton4466 Месяц назад

      Who cares
      The James Webb Space Telescope is more sending exciting pictures back
      Even Voyager 1 and 2 are still exploring into deep space.

    • @devoof
      @devoof 19 дней назад

      ​@@WLBarton4466ur expectations were set to high by NASA

  • @eisleyrd
    @eisleyrd 6 месяцев назад

    Failure is an unavoidable part of life. It is also not wrong to point out and criticize it. With the right attitude, you learn from both. With the wrong attitude, you learn from neither.

  • @Hex3DPatreon
    @Hex3DPatreon Год назад +6

    I would not go up in a rocket that had not crashed and had all the bugs sorted out first. That would be sort of like going down to the titanic in a carbon fiber tube as one of its initial test pilots. If only they had just sent the sub down remotely and tested it like Elon does with this. Yes, it exploded but no one died, they learned a lot, that essentially is a win.

    • @TheBrokenFarmer
      @TheBrokenFarmer 9 месяцев назад

      That stupid sub had dozens of successful dives. Many to the titanic.

    • @Hex3DPatreon
      @Hex3DPatreon 9 месяцев назад

      @@TheBrokenFarmer I agree it was a stupid sub, but it only reached the depth of the Titanic on 13 out of 90 dives.

  • @michaelenglish839
    @michaelenglish839 9 месяцев назад +11

    Can you imagine when we're watching that thing as it's catapulting the first humans to Mars? I get choked up just thinking about it.

  • @Kushvader
    @Kushvader Месяц назад

    Damn now I know what the people in the 60s and 70s felt when they witnessed the first one.

  • @garydaniels4426
    @garydaniels4426 7 месяцев назад +5

    No environmental pollution here

    • @JohnKoenig-db8lk
      @JohnKoenig-db8lk 23 дня назад +1

      Get a grip.

    • @devoof
      @devoof 19 дней назад

      That's actually true 👍 not lying. That is an actual fact not sarcasm

  • @garethsutherland9649
    @garethsutherland9649 8 месяцев назад

    The size of this thing is mind blowing. Thrust is incredible.

  • @PeterEdwardCaceci
    @PeterEdwardCaceci Год назад +4

    Everyone gets a trophy! We did it!

  • @calj01
    @calj01 Год назад +4

    Elon has said before that igniting the engine was the hardest part. They did it! Everything now is just adjustments during flight. No wonder they were all so happy and clapping

  • @Quartzplays309
    @Quartzplays309 3 месяца назад

    It’s not a “mid flight failure” A failure is when you don’t learn anything from something that happened wrongly. This was a learning moment for spacex and they have grown on this ever since. These headlines are terrible, do some research.

  • @baxterwilkinsbaxdoggiedo-bq9uq
    @baxterwilkinsbaxdoggiedo-bq9uq Год назад +6

    Talk about one giant leap for mankind! Wow!

    • @PatriciaLamb-i9q
      @PatriciaLamb-i9q Год назад

      Another huge waste of time and energy for mankind

  • @NAFE2S
    @NAFE2S 4 месяца назад

    99+ Missed Calls from Diddy

  • @richardgaya3965
    @richardgaya3965 6 месяцев назад

    Space X always in a " hurry hurry" mode!!!

  • @Soeks77
    @Soeks77 7 месяцев назад +4

    “Electric cars save the environment! (we also use rocket fuel that produces extremly large greenhouse gas emissions) but drive electric cars!”

    • @Soeks77
      @Soeks77 7 месяцев назад

      @natmarelnam4871 bro 😂 what’s the point of electric cars then y isn’t Tesla a fuel based brand rather than cheaply made unreliable electric?

    • @ZEPRATGERNODT
      @ZEPRATGERNODT 6 месяцев назад

      @@Soeks77
      Those cheaply made unreliable cars (unproven and false comment by the way) are more reusable than a Kia/Hyundai/Genesis product - as an example.
      I’m into old cars myself (pre 2009) and currently own cars from 1971-1996. My 2008 Acura and 2004 Ford Lightning are sold off.
      Getting back to your dumb comment. Out of all cars that are 100% electric…Tesla has the most on the road, the most compiled data for decreasing defect ratios per 100 units sold…etc. No other car manufacturer is even close by volume sold. Technology is changing rapidly and battery tech is key for these things to be able to be competitive in a world of ease with gas powered vehicles.

    • @pullfunnystick
      @pullfunnystick 5 месяцев назад

      @@Soeks77wait so how’s it unreliable. last time I checked they have half the chance of not running? they never need mechanics as there’s barely anything that can go wrong

    • @Soeks77
      @Soeks77 5 месяцев назад

      @@pullfunnystick bro teslas are Chinese made, their quality is horrible parts made as cheaply as possible. The most expensive part are their bad for the environment lithium module packs, costing 30k for just the battery pack! That’s almost as much as the whole car is worth lmao. I’ve never seen one Tesla over 150k miles without needing new modules or a controller or motors. Now instead of normal mechanics, we need specialized mechanics that work on only electric cars. Now people can’t modify their cars for more power, whatever you buy is what you get it’s pathetic, not to mention no people can work on their cars themselves they need to take them into a Tesla dealer it’s pathetic.

    • @pullfunnystick
      @pullfunnystick 5 месяцев назад

      @@Soeks77 they are only built in the usa so how would you even know anything else ab them? they can easily go 150k. tf is a controller? tesla doesn’t have dealers. there is only the price and it cannot be changed by anyone. there is no need for special mechanics as a tesla owner can drive to the nearest tesla center or call in road side assistance for free to get their problem fixed. mechanics will never have to deal with teslas… seems like you know nothing about the car from all of this!

  • @xaviertkkhickey2185
    @xaviertkkhickey2185 8 месяцев назад +1

    This is a man that has sucesfully built rockets that self land and are reusable the thing that vertually was impossible
    IN ELON I TRUST

  • @anthonyjohnson100
    @anthonyjohnson100 27 дней назад

    There cannot be success without failure

  • @midclock
    @midclock 9 месяцев назад

    Now I understand why people appreciated more the other video without the crowd.
    What the hell.

  • @shellac23
    @shellac23 10 месяцев назад

    The second one went better than the first. We will get there!!!!!

  • @hindugoat2302
    @hindugoat2302 10 месяцев назад

    the carbon emissions from a single rocket launch is more than 10,000 cars driving for 1 year continuously.
    instead of just stop oil, just stop rockets

  • @johannesmohner7823
    @johannesmohner7823 19 дней назад

    The American speakers are still anazed in voice Like a Sport Moderator when everything goes wrong😮

  • @hilaryminias9603
    @hilaryminias9603 10 месяцев назад

    Heat shields worked and can be doubled and multiplied so fly the rocket into orbit. Try it.

  • @krishna1nath
    @krishna1nath 7 месяцев назад

    Lot of effort and brains had gone into this launch. Feel bad to loose it halfway

  • @gar0188
    @gar0188 6 месяцев назад +1

    Where did it fail? When it was wobbling?

    • @archierush868
      @archierush868 6 месяцев назад

      This was flight 1 which blew up 4 minutes after lift off. All the debris fell into the ocean. The ocean was cleared of all boats for this exact reason

  • @H-Town_83
    @H-Town_83 5 месяцев назад

    Ok to be fair they had attempted a detonation but it didn't explode immediately. It wasn't an orbital flight .

  • @saralatrobikast
    @saralatrobikast 22 дня назад +1

    Failures are the source of next Success

  • @manp1039
    @manp1039 6 месяцев назад

    it occured to me that it might add more efficiency if they can put the first stage partially or completely under ground in a kind of tube that would add to thrust efficiency.. kind of like shooting a bullet from a rifle barrel?

  • @Poiinsettiaa
    @Poiinsettiaa 6 месяцев назад +1

    Taylor Swift moving to the other side of the couch

  • @MarynJohnForever
    @MarynJohnForever 2 месяца назад

    That is THE WORST misleading title I've ever seen.
    This and all starship flights have achieved all mission objectives and goals. Way to keep the masses uninformed as usual.

  • @alexmontero3642
    @alexmontero3642 Год назад +6

    The power of 33 raptor rocket engines was underestimated.

    • @CMT_Crabbles
      @CMT_Crabbles Год назад

      No the power of the launch pad was overestimated 😂
      The thing is a crater now. It sent debris flying everywhere, struck the engines potentially causing the failures, and dented the fuel tanks on site. If you see pictures of those fuel tanks, you’ll see how close they were to bursting.

  • @briankatula7426
    @briankatula7426 10 месяцев назад

    Getting through stage separation was the designated success criteria. Don't call this amazing test anything less than a massive success

  • @spacexcellent5919
    @spacexcellent5919 3 месяца назад

    The largest heaviest flying thing in the world. Unreal

  • @brandontucker7641
    @brandontucker7641 7 месяцев назад

    “The Rocketship got a little tickled”, “They hit his “. “TICKLE SPOT”😂

  • @lanesworld4000
    @lanesworld4000 10 месяцев назад

    2x the thrust of the Saturn V 😮 Insane!

  • @Fred_Nickles
    @Fred_Nickles 5 месяцев назад

    Not gonna lie that shot of it climbing away from the buildings into the clouds looks like the launch from any sci-fi movie where humans leave earth.

  • @johnchandler1687
    @johnchandler1687 8 месяцев назад +1

    I watched this 3 times. Where's the failure?

  • @TF58582
    @TF58582 Месяц назад

    People will always point out your faults
    and/or failures Elon. Whether it’s 25 successful times to each failure or completely ignoring your successes at all; most of us look up to you and respect you for your unmatched innovation

  • @Josh-ri7hy
    @Josh-ri7hy 2 месяца назад

    Prototypes don’t “fail”. Success is data collected.

  • @yashikiba4240
    @yashikiba4240 10 месяцев назад

    失敗を重ねても
    改善を繰り返して少しずつ前進していく姿は
    見てる側も励みになる

  • @bench7434
    @bench7434 10 месяцев назад

    The biggest fireworks company in the world 😂

  • @kessilrun6754
    @kessilrun6754 10 месяцев назад

    That thing is huge. They should have called it the Megalodon. lol

  • @brandonl1843
    @brandonl1843 10 месяцев назад

    How do we not have the tech to surpass the rocket era already?
    Seriously it's time to bust out the advanced star trek space ships that can breach the atmosphere into space.
    It's not 1960 anymore.

  • @RobertCataldo-e6s
    @RobertCataldo-e6s 6 месяцев назад

    I think they should go back to the drawing board besides the Saturn, five rocket didn’t have half the issues that SpaceX has

  • @sourdeisel9341
    @sourdeisel9341 9 месяцев назад

    Nobody can leave the milky way planet. Space is nothing but water

  • @luckyduck6921
    @luckyduck6921 5 месяцев назад

    Shouldn't the short include the climax?

  • @mce8799
    @mce8799 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the emission 🙏🏻

  • @peterwilliams7335
    @peterwilliams7335 7 месяцев назад

    A failure is a failure no matter how minor it is.

  • @cteegs6893
    @cteegs6893 8 месяцев назад +1

    What makes Elon Musk so successful
    is he’s willing to fail over and over without blinking an eye. The guy is a legend

  • @stevechilds9972
    @stevechilds9972 5 месяцев назад

    You know you’re a special human being when you can make dreams like that come true
    Elon musk, keeping dreams alive

  • @SuperpowersUniversity
    @SuperpowersUniversity 11 месяцев назад +1

    and we went to the 50 years ago ? 👁️
    Knowledge is Power
    become a Super Hero

  • @jacobperez8806
    @jacobperez8806 10 месяцев назад

    This is the old video for anybody wondering not the launch that happened today

  • @allengarcia00
    @allengarcia00 6 месяцев назад

    It didn’t “suffer” a mid flight failure. They wanted it to clear the damn tower and it did far more than that. I hate the wording of news outlets, making it seem like there were people on board or as if it wasn’t the first ever test flight. Jeeez

  • @robsondewayinvencoesecriacoes
    @robsondewayinvencoesecriacoes 11 месяцев назад

    Amo esse trabalho de Elon Musk

  • @vidya014
    @vidya014 6 месяцев назад

    The rocket was shivering.

  • @steviemc6992
    @steviemc6992 Месяц назад

    It had the ksp wobble for a few moments

  • @devdecker7812
    @devdecker7812 7 месяцев назад

    dont forget about the tests in which it landed the starship. on earth, which has higher gravity than mars. it can do this.