SpaceX l Starship rocket booster explodes after blast off
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- Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2023
- SpaceX’s spacecraft Starship, developed to carry astronauts to the moon and beyond, reached space for the first time on Saturday but was seen in footage experiencing a 'rapid unscheduled disassembly'.
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The two-stage rocket ship blasted off from the Elon Musk-owned company’s Starbase launch site near Boca Chica in Texas on a planned 90-minute uncrewed flight into space. The 120-metre Starship rocket system, the most powerful ever built, failed a first flight test in April, when the spacecraft pulverised the launchpad during lift-off and then exploded at altitude.
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#SpaceX #Rockets #ElonMusk #NASA #Texas
Rapid unscheduled disassembly
That's one way of putting it 😂
I will be borrowing it from henceforth for eff ups.
It blew itself to Kingdom Come, that's what the lady meant.
Sounds like how my life is going
Shortened to 💥
Divorce papers should be called like that xD😂
NOTHING can surpass the firmament. NOTHING
Yet it still didn’t break the firmament like they expected.
what
@@warthunderwithkiwi4953you seem lost
Exactly
@@warthunderwithkiwi4953 watch What on Earth Happened by ewaranon and the Lost History of Flat Earth. That to get started.
Glad I didn't say it, your right @Tygerlillybuttetflies
Traditional rocket development is to test each component thoroughly before the 1st launch. SpaceX uses a rapid prototyping approach:
1 Launch as fast as possible
2 Fix bugs found in last launch
3 Repeat steps 1 and 2 until no more bugs
False, each component actually is tested before the launch.
And they weren't even launching as fast as possible; if I'm not wrong, they've been waiting for FAA to approve the flight for months...
It’s been months since the last launch, the “fast prototyping “ approach is unnecessary and very expensive. NASA are saying the number of launches will have to be in the high teens before they will consider using it, SpaceX are going to need very deep pockets.
Seems dumb, risky and expensive
Absolutely and even with Traditional rocket development many don't reach orbit till their 3rd or 4th flight. Obviously the Grauniad is achieving their traditionally low bar for science reporting
@@dangerousfables Its certainly risky and burns cash quickly but it can lead to a functioning and more robust system much faster which gives SpaceX an edge over its competitors (like what they've done with Falcon 9)
That booster explosion was epic. Can’t believe it ran through boost phase flawlessly apparently even the 2nd stage until the last minute.
can tell you are a tiny tot
@@13Liberty50 I can tell you don’t have a job.
Hate to ask what the 3rd stage was...
@@briancorvello3620 There is no 3rd stage on starship. I wish it had made it far enough to break up on re-entry over the pacific.
@@cosmicinsane516 Sigh... This was a failure, fella. It was supposed to be 90 minutes, not 90 seconds. The original Sputnik did better.
A billion dollars down the drain, all to stoke a spoiled brat's ego.
Did they hit the firmament? 😉😎
Yeah, they did
A rapid unscheduled disassembly 😂😂😂
A somewhat downbeat headline for what was a very successful test
It's to be expected with the news. Gotta make the "failure" the title.
No, it wasn't.
@@AM-wg7qv It was successful, the rocket achieved it's secondary goal of testing hot-staging
Failed successfully.. yup
@@flashbarry6838 Yeah, for what?
It eventually lost signal.
Elon wants to pretend like everything is under control and according to the "plan", but actually it's not.
Rapid Unscheduled Dis-Assembly is rocket science for blew up.
No, it’s Elonspeak for catastrophic explosion. I feel sorry for the naive employees at SpaceX, but not the willing deceitful ones.
@@skunclep1938it's not an Elonspeak, it's an old term.
Here's from stackeexchange:
So far as I can tell, it was first a saying used by military personnel as the phrase "Rapid Unintentional Disassembly", for a phrase when a gun broke apart if you misused it. This was used by a book for Navy Personel in 1970, so I suspect it was in use for a while before then. This seems to have evolved from that phrase somewhat over the years.
The earliest I can find it in rocketry specifically was the book entitled "Rocket Religion", copyright 2002, again with the same phrasing.
It's an old engineering term, and totally tongue in cheek.
It hit the firmament lol yal can’t go pass the most high
Exactly
Exploded after separation, not after “blast off”, a huge difference!
My coworker showed us this and used it as proof that we've never landed on the moon.
Your coworker might be smart. Earth is flat and stationary. Watch What on Earth Happened by ewaranon.
The rocket got stuck in the… hmmm… I wonder what?
That just what it seems like...idk why people are so blind they will still say nothing unusual happened
@@knightyagami7841 it’s willful ignorance
“Would it help if I got out and pushed?”
~ (Princess Leia)
You would think someone would roll out the Saturn V rocket blueprints that worked for all six Apollo moon landings.
Just say it…… the rocket blew up
I don't understand how people say it was a success 😅...
The success of failure??? 🙈
It was a test we expected BOOM we hoped for a complete success it passed all but one of its primary objectives plus it verified the FTS which was an optional objective so it was a qualified success but not a complete success. As long as they learned from the failures it was a successful test
I felt that in my house. The whole house shook. I live in brownsville texas wherw spacex is located.
How come they lose connection and they had been to the moon and tv streamed?
"Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly" LOL
I was there for the launch. What an amazing experience. You could feel the vibration from the rocket!! 🚀
I saw you, I was near the fire escape
Sadly I was at the concession stand grabbing some popcorn. Missed the whole thing 😔
@@brianhetzel6688 that sucks....there was popcorn!?
And what about the pollution...could you feel that....and I bet you could feel the explosion as well ...and see all that pollution....it must have been amazing to see and smell.....lets go green its so beneifical for one's bank balance when fools follow every word you say.........
You mean FIREWORK
The text tho..."of its largest rocket" should read biggest most powerful rocket ever launched by far by anyone...
Termal Tiles were falling all over the place from the moment the ship starts to go up. I think it's a very bad system. They need to find another solution.
Fantastic achievement on only the 2nd TEST flight. Headlines always do a success story down.
Click bait news paper like the rest I surpose
Fantastic achievement had happened 66 years ago...
For the current case another name is available - Failure.
Nah. He didn't make it to Mars. No success. Also Twitter should be made profitable before he can be considered successful, but there's no more Twitter, there is X. So basically Musk will never be successful.
Patti, the original Sputnik did better.
A dud is a failure, not an achievement.
I only wanted to see the stage separation. How can you call something so beautiful a failure. They were multiple objectives for this integrated flight test
Number one lift off the launch pad, - Success
Two: light all 33 rockets engines, - Success
three: achieve hot stage separation - Success
Four: Booster does a boost back burn before landing in the ocean - failed
5: Starship makes it to orbit - Success
6: Starship survives reentry and crashes in the Pacific Ocean - fail
You must have been in awe of the Titanic.
5 was a fail it was nearly there but about 2K KM per second shy of the target velocity. Also you forgot verify the FTS which looks to be a success for both booster and Starship
@@stanleyklein524 The Titanic was supposed to work first time and be unsinkable. Starship is in iterative development
1 Try it out
2 Fix what went wrong
3 redo from start until 1 & 2 are successful
4 Catch the booster
5 redo from start until 1, 2, 3 & 4 are successful
6 Catch the Ship
etc
@@stanleyklein524 If the Titanic had no people on board, and it was a prototype specifically built to be destroyed in testing, yeah that too would have been awesome to watch. Why all the hate?
@@stanleyklein524 the Olympia.
A rapid unscheduled disassembly😂😂
How was your day honey? It was ok except for the fact that I had a rapid unscheduled disassembly 😂😂😂😂
What is filming this from the air???
NASA's B-52B.
Rapid scheduled disassembly sounds a whole lot of something putin would say
Maybe, but Putin would probably spell disassembly correctly.
@@donlarsenjr2332 😒
@@donlarsenjr2332 Fixed it
It's an old engineering joke, not politicised at all.
Couldn’t break that firmament nice try
This is not a failure, hate the clickbait title.
Amazing test.
Great progress. Literally fixed all the issues from the first flight.
Now for a third flight that fixes the problems from the second flight, and a fourth flight that fixes…
Anyway, at least we can all agree that Elon Musk’s promise to put a man on Mars “in 10 years” which he says every year for the past 10 years was an outright lie to juice up his stock price.
@@thl205Don't state facts 😡 you'll hurt their brain.
@abc42069 A couple things. First yes, they will keep testing until they get it right. Thats how a test program works, lol.
Second, SpaceX is private and does not have a publicly traded stock, lol....
@@thl205💀
@@thl205yep there will be around 5 test flights until the first commercial starship starlink flight and even after that there will be more improvements after that
Haven't they gotten over the technology of the 60s and 70s yet?
They said they lost the plan and the technology to bring us to the moon in nanoseconds said Don Petit
He sent a bullet to the sky
Bravo
"Rapid, unscheduled disassembly." IT EXPLODED LOL
It's amazing how many see the potential here and realize this is not a failure but another great step forward and understand that they will get this straightened out and fly.....
Yah. Think it can replace thermonuclear weapons?
Do you mean ICBMs? I don’t think Musk would allow that unless the government forced it under military law
It’s amazing how many Muskies have to put a positive spin on a failure of his Spacex program
Starship boosters blasts off after blast off !
The engines (ALL THE ENGINES) performed perfectly.
The hot staging however caused more problems than it cured.
After hot staging happens and the booster separates you can see an explosion in the top of the booster that destroyed everything.
The top of the boosters were fine, the one of the engines blew up after the restarted
@@Kerbal18 Loads of the engines went out probably air in the fuel lines from fuel slosh. They'll need to cut all the engines spin it round then do an ullage burn before they relight the engines. Should be just a flight profile reconfiguration. More interested in what went wrong with the Ship than the booster
I never trust that hot stage, it's too much fire pressure on the upper part of the booster, and that may be the cause for the super heavy didn't arrive to the destination. id prefer the system that falcon 9 uses
@@FrancisCordieri If you watched the launch you could clearly see hot staging preformed flawlessly
@@Kerbal18 yes, the hot stage was flawless but could let the booster in very bad shape.
It will never catch on
❤❤❤❤
When you try and put weapons in orbit. Strange things happen 😂😂😂
What have you achieved apart from needless debt
@anyone1704 happiness and true faith. Something sadly you'll never know. 🫡🙏🙏🙏
@@michaelbogan3940 fair enough
LOL Elon already has 5000 space lasers in orbit I wonder if he has a Persian cat ;)
@bigianh you friend will be amongst the first.
After that successful fireworks display I went and bought a window seat ticket for the next trip to the ocean floor
Congrats to the spacex team.
Did tbat rocket smash into some force field?
Yes….a sky pond. The ocean. 🌊
1984 New speech:
"Rapid unscheduled disassembly."
NOPE!
It's EXPLOSION! Explosion.
rabid unschedule disasmbly another name of it exploded like a bomb.
So did starship also explode or is it crashing down
You play with fireworks during a war just because you might die in 20 years and now it s the time ?
I am Very Sorry Mr. Elon Musk& Crew😢
Interesting that we could do this stuff in the 1960's, but now...
These are two very different types of rockets. They were not making fully reusable self propulsive landing rockets In the 60's...
@@legalisetoast4088 Well, all rockets are self-propulsive. And these ones aren't very re-usable, are they?
@@DenianArcoleo 'self propulsive landing rockets'
Space x's fleet of rockets are designed to LAND propulsivly using their own rockets engines. Falcon 9 has launched and landed their own boosters over 250 times without a single loss of vehicle since 2015. Some boosters have been re used 5 or 6 times. This not only makes the cost less than 10% of what it cost with rockets in the 60's but also rapid reusability reduces time between launch from years to a matter of weeks. Space x went through rapid development with falcon 9 and is currently going through the same process with starship (the vehicle you see here)
The point of my comment it to make a point about what space x have been doing with their rockets is something that could only been dreamed of in the 60s and 70s. Youre comparing 2 completely different class of rockets.
Saturn 5 in the 60s and 70s cost 1.2b per launch.
(Only thing that survives is command module. Everything else wasted)
Once starship gets going it'll cost around 10m.
(Fully reusable)
watch a falcon heavy launch and watch the 2 boosters land simultaneously on RUclips. Its truly perplexing to even compare what they're doing to nasa in the 70s.
Right? We should have space tourism by now.
@@DenianArcoleo They aren't re-usable until they are. You understand the basic concept of a prototype.... right?
I miss NASA
Obviously a major malfunction
A rapid unscheduled disassembly...lol
Maybe SpaceX can do fireworks on the National Mall this year?
Why the negativity? There were a ton of very successful items in this flight. Why focus solely on the explosion?
It's the Guardian Science Journalism limbo dance
Pessimism.
Culture war.
Maybe because it is built as badly as a tesla??
I suppose the crew of Challenger had an unexpected rapid sensation of being unalive
That's a bit harsh Starship isn't expected to be crew rated for a long time and frankly the Space Shuttle should have been abandoned before it flew because it was a flying death trap the Russians figured that out and abandoned theirs after the First flight.
They're all alive and well. Search for it.
Too bad people are making the same mistake again. First examine the area of sand and water. You should not be in space/universe 🔱⚛ 🔱
Much like his Twitter ...💥
Don't worry its part of the test, as Elon Musk would say, gathered data and information are secured, its a succes! 😂
Of course Musk would rather get data from exploding expensive rockets rather than using simulations that are much cheaper and less polluting.
@@223Drone This is a dumb comment
@@rogerpowers3891 No it ain't. You Musk bro's refuse to accept the fact that this was another test launch that ended in failure.
@@223Drone The main objectives of this test were a success and they were spelled out to us before the launch. How is it a failure?
@@GrantH2606 The goal was to achieve orbit and it failed. Musk wants to save face for a obvious failure just like the previous launch.
Fantastic achievement!
Would you like to fly Starhip?
Hit the firmament
yep, the firmament re-appeared for this one. decided to go back on holiday for every other successful mission.
@@CamFliesthey have never had a successful mission
@@awesomesauze7 based on what.. you mean that you trust every single video where it fails but the second it doesn't it's "CGI"? You've provided no evidence for your claim whatsoever
@@CamFlieshe won't respond to a valid answer lol
@@CamFliesshow us that video 😂
I called this on the early stages: Stainless steel is NOT used by Nasa et al as it doesn't work (Elon) - spend the money for normal fuselage material and quit blowing up!: nasa will pull its contract if you don't make a normal rocket!
Can’t get through the firmament!
Sorry folks but I have no control over what Elon Musk chooses to do.
A rapid unscheduled disassembly? The f--king thing exploded!
It's an old engineering joke!
Nothing gets past you.
Rapid unscheduled disassembly 🤦🤦 it basically blew up 😳
The Starship did not blew up. What you’re talking about? It’s like saying the Space shuttle exploded because the rocket that is lifting the Space Shuttle exploded after separating.
@@dewberry3043both the superheavy booster and the Starship itself exploded, likely caused by the Flight Termination System.
It's an old engineering joke - trying to get the word out on this comment section, people are too politicised nowadays!
Wasn’t going past the firmament anyhow
what about all the missions that work? like the space shuttle
@@warthunderwithkiwi4953 your parents must be siblings.
@@mushihimesarna728 answer my question
He is wasting US money .
Another Elon Musk failure. Love it.
Failure is when an objective is not fulfilled and you give up. There is nothing of that here. Maybe you should look up the definitionn of the word ignorance.
@@MadLFC… No! 😂
@@peasofmind9110Yes! (Inappropriate laughing emoji added 😂)
1000000% hit the firmament
If people were on board it would be a disaster. Waste of money when half the world has no food.
Shoud have called it Twittership.
why?
Just not funny
@@weekiely1233 your sense of humour deficit is showing.
@@donlarsenjr2332 IQ of a fence post time already?
I saw this live, but only about 3 minutes into it briefly. So I missed the explosion
What is the purpose of this? What is the point in wasting this much time, money and resource on something that ultimately does nothing for us.
Proud of USA,Proud of SpaceX,Looking forward to see the next launch❤❤
Lol they cant leave earth
Whyyy?? Just quite a lot of a waste of money from Musk there once again!
@@peasofmind9110It’s okay, he’s blowing his own money not the taxpayers’
@@hydrogenivtinyhare5218hes blowing your money 😂
@@Blackstar-ti4pyhis money
Fixed
Not an honest headline
Next...
It's not actually a starship though is it.
When the bugs are worked out it may become a planetship.
@@davesutherland1864 It's a spaceship. Call it what it is.
At the moment it's just a big fireworks hobby.
Lovely amount of pollution in the atmosphere and the ocean, climate changers,
What's the carbon tax charge on this one?
Now the question is…… are there really satellites in space or are we even able to leave because yeah
Rapid unscheduled disassembly up in here😅😅😂
Congratulations spaceX
They hit the firmament. 😮
Nope, they did in fact not hit the firmament, because the atmosphere is not a wall - isn't that baffling news to you?
JUNK
Nope
Yes.
You can't destroy the firmament, nor fool us about God's earth!
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
It's so sickly how they inexplain it- out comes the spin, Tory alike.
Whoop whoop whoop yeeehah.
Last time I comment this on this thread - rapid unscheduled disassembly is an old engineering joke. It's totally not political.
I saw the starship explode after it's tried to start 2 time's after mico it exploded..strange
Set to be a 90 minutes fly. Explodes in 8 minutes. Period.
I wonder if the owner of one of the largest social media companies would think to flood the comments suggesting to the average person that this was a success. 🤔 I'm impressed by the amount of expert opinion comments I've seen here.
Imagine failing this badly a 2nd time and claiming it was successful.
bro, it was a success, its called a flight TEST for a reason, they completed their mission targets and anything past that was icing🎉 on the cake
Ha
Bcoz what else do you do with billions of dollars for memes? Blowing up empty expendable rockets is super cheap to get billions of your dollars 😂😂
I wonder if the owner of one of the largest social media companies would think to flood the comments section suggesting to the average person that this was a success. 🤔 I'm impressed by the amount of expert opinion comments I've seen here.
😊
bro, it was a success, its called a flight TEST for a reason, they completed their mission targets and anything past that was icing🎉 on the cake
Next next What we learnt in Real Life Networks.
?
And we went and returned to the moon 70 years ago?
Apparently yes 🥹🤣
😂
aliens......