Artemis 1 blastoff 'blows doors' off launch pad elevators - See the aftermath

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  • čas přidán 20. 11. 2022
  • The pressure generated by the launch of the "world's most powerful rocket" at Kennedy Space Center's Launch Complex 39B literally blew the doors off of the pad's elevators, according to NASA's Artemis mission manager Mike Sarafin. See the damage and more in these post-Artemis 1 launch views from the pad. Full Story: www.space.com/artemis-1-moon-...
    NASA's Artemis 1 Orion spacecraft aces close moon flyby in crucial engine burn: www.space.com/nasa-artemis-1-...
    Credit NASA
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Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @roverchap
    @roverchap Před rokem +1649

    Although SLS is the most powerful overall it achieves most of the thrust from the pyrotechnic SRBs, the core only producing 2 million pounds. The Apollo Saturn V, although slightly less powerful, made all of its 7.6 million pounds lift-off thrust from 5 kerosene burning engines in the core, no detachable boosters. I still think the Saturn V is the most awesome launch vehicle ever.

    • @ASAVSP
      @ASAVSP Před rokem +120

      They are both INCREDIBLE and I love them both!

    • @eleventy-seven
      @eleventy-seven Před rokem +39

      And the Saturn 5 wasn't a rerun. Lets go to mars. These reruns suck.

    • @andrewday3206
      @andrewday3206 Před rokem +81

      The size of the Rocketdyne F-1 is beyond words!!
      By comparison the RS-25 is much smaller.
      They are very different by design and both wonderful tools

    • @charlesjustice8771
      @charlesjustice8771 Před rokem +5

      Was the sat 5 an ICBM delivery vehicle?

    • @gregsiska8599
      @gregsiska8599 Před rokem +60

      @@charlesjustice8771 Nope. Only for NASA. Unlike Redstone (Project Mercury), Atlas (Project Mercury) & Titan II (Project Gemini), which were designed as ICBM's & adapted to manned spaceflight by NASA.

  • @scrocrates6380
    @scrocrates6380 Před rokem +669

    I was expecting SLS to lift gracefully off the pad, like the Apollo missions from old video. But Artemis leaped off the pad, ready to rock! Beautiful to behold!

    • @nomar5spaulding
      @nomar5spaulding Před rokem +56

      The Saturn V lept off the pad too. Before it had flown it's own length, the Saturn V had already accelerated to over 100mph and executed a manuever to make sure it couldn't hit the launch tower. If that isn't leaping off the pad, I don't know what is.

    • @defeatSpace
      @defeatSpace Před rokem +34

      Artemis like: "I'VE BEEN WAITING FAR TOO LONG, SEE YA LATA SUCKAZ!"

    • @SixSilverStones
      @SixSilverStones Před rokem +9

      Those 5-segment boosters really have some kick!

    • @Papershields001
      @Papershields001 Před rokem +4

      SRBs for the win

    • @sl4983
      @sl4983 Před rokem

      @@defeatSpace LOLLL 😀👍

  • @Dudleymiddleton
    @Dudleymiddleton Před rokem +144

    Elevator door has a sign on it saying " Out of order due to rocket damage!" Amazing, awesome, epic! :)

    • @davidcopplestone6266
      @davidcopplestone6266 Před rokem +3

      I can't believe they let Leonard near the rocket fuel again At least Sheldon saved the day again.

    • @MrTangent
      @MrTangent Před rokem +1

      Where is sign in video?

    • @papagrounds
      @papagrounds Před rokem +1

      Where did you see a sign like that?

    • @Nerpson
      @Nerpson Před rokem

      @Mr. Tangent @@papagrounds The Big Bang Theory S03E22

  • @AKjohndoe
    @AKjohndoe Před rokem +497

    That launch literally blew the doors off of the place!

    • @spencerwilson3298
      @spencerwilson3298 Před rokem +21

      Sorry I accidentally gave you a dislike. I corrected it.

    • @migs6674
      @migs6674 Před rokem +23

      ^ most wholesome comment thread in the entirety of the internet ^

    • @leaftye
      @leaftye Před rokem +5

      That rocket was lit af

    • @JackThelRipper
      @JackThelRipper Před rokem +3

      That rocket lifted off like ah Boss!

    • @watchoutforcopyright9339
      @watchoutforcopyright9339 Před rokem +3

      @@spencerwilson3298 people can’t see dislikes anyway

  • @info_fox
    @info_fox Před rokem +147

    The raw power of Artemis was incredibly impressive

  • @soppdrake
    @soppdrake Před rokem +36

    "You're only supposed to blow the bloody doors off!"

    • @trevgev
      @trevgev Před rokem

      I was looking for this comment 😂👍

  • @micos94
    @micos94 Před rokem +57

    I recommended a diverting wedge to divert the flow but the project manager was concerned about the weight the crawler was limited to-Apollo had a wedge on the drawings. I was the Electrical Engineer on theproject so I had no clout with the rest of the engineers. This comment is in reference to the doors.

  • @timmainson
    @timmainson Před rokem +407

    A launch so damn good it blew the doors off! I'm proud of you Artemis.

    • @patrickjmorgan
      @patrickjmorgan Před rokem +2

      Lift hoistway looks like a typical social-housing estate that I used to do call-outs to after a weekend of 'partinging'!

    • @banzaiib
      @banzaiib Před rokem +4

      by good, do you mean a $30 billion waste of tax payer money?

    • @gasaholic47
      @gasaholic47 Před rokem +1

      @@banzaiib Shut up. Go away. You have zero clue as to the benefits of space exploration.

    • @jackb3493
      @jackb3493 Před rokem +8

      @@banzaiib yeah, a billion dollar rocket launch tower that isn’t rocket proof. That’s how you guarantee repeat contractors

    • @timmainson
      @timmainson Před rokem +1

      @@banzaiib Go to bed child

  • @Josh3sh
    @Josh3sh Před rokem +165

    That photo of the scorched wires is pretty incredible, would like to see what that camera looks like after the launch. 2:36

    • @THE-X-Force
      @THE-X-Force Před rokem +4

      Shouldn't they have designed the wires to withstand the heat? They knew the heat that would be generated.
      Random failures like this is why Challenger's crew needlessly lost their lives, and America lost it's entire shuttle program.

    • @ixxxxxxx
      @ixxxxxxx Před rokem +14

      @@THE-X-Force its literally just the launchpad

    • @KOZMOuvBORG
      @KOZMOuvBORG Před rokem +22

      @@THE-X-Force Maybe the material encasing that cable is meant to ablate, protecting the wires, and meant to be replaced every few launches?

    • @drewhutchison2954
      @drewhutchison2954 Před rokem +8

      They must expect to replace these items, there not rare earth material.

    • @nickbisson8243
      @nickbisson8243 Před rokem +5

      @@THE-X-Force you must be new here. Probably watched a couple Blue Origin flights maybe a couple SpaceX launches huh

  • @ReveredDead
    @ReveredDead Před rokem +326

    Artemis Engineers: How much thrust do you want?
    NASA: Yes.

    • @emkkahn
      @emkkahn Před rokem +13

      I'll give her all she'll take captain! We're going to the Moon!

    • @Monkey80llx
      @Monkey80llx Před rokem +2

      @@emkkahn near the moon. Not to the moon. 60 odd years and all they can manage is ‘slightly better’ 😂
      Meanwhile, at Space X …. 😆

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 Před rokem +2

      Not very original

    • @defeatSpace
      @defeatSpace Před rokem +7

      @@Monkey80llx what are you managing though?

    • @BrowncoatInABox
      @BrowncoatInABox Před rokem +2

      @@thethirdman225 who cares it was funny

  • @DeathValleyDazed
    @DeathValleyDazed Před rokem +210

    Much admiration for NASA staff during this revealing post launch damage report 🚀

    • @joshpro3816
      @joshpro3816 Před rokem +7

      They are only telling us the minor damage that they want us to here about to make us say OOOH AAAH. Imagine the REAL DAMAGE information that is being withheld from us... 😱

    • @a8495turtle
      @a8495turtle Před rokem +23

      @@joshpro3816 That tower has withstood tens of Shuttle launches and a few Saturn V launches and it’s still standing. There’s not much to be damaged there as they know a massive rocket will be launching on it.
      Edit: should’ve said crawler

    • @sl4983
      @sl4983 Před rokem

      @@a8495turtle uhh that.. makes..sense...

    • @DeathValleyDazed
      @DeathValleyDazed Před rokem +14

      @@joshpro3816 So what additional damage are you aware of that NASA withheld from the Artemis launch?

    • @theabyssaldemon
      @theabyssaldemon Před rokem +1

      Yeah! I really enjoyed this report.

  • @trespire
    @trespire Před rokem +15

    For those wondering, RTV as mentioned @4:22, is a silicone based sealant (and adhesive) of high quality. It's a single componant and cures upon contact with air. There are three grade levels, home use, automotive and aerospace. Aerospace grade RTV is type white for lower temperature application, and type red for higher temperature.
    The Shuttle's tiles were stuck on using red RTV.
    Aerodynamic blending & panel gaps on the Mach7+ X-15, and the Mach3+ SR71, Jet engines, and recently on Starship is with red RTV.
    Actually, anywhere you see red smears and red hand / finger smudges, it's red RTV.
    The best is by Dow Corning, and good up to 370 celsuis. Amazing stuff.

    • @dsjgfhidupgjret
      @dsjgfhidupgjret Před rokem

      This is very interesting - do you have a related background in aerospace?

    • @ADAMJWAITE
      @ADAMJWAITE Před rokem

      Coming from the automotive world it does not surprise me they've had failures with RTV.

    • @trespire
      @trespire Před rokem

      @@dsjgfhidupgjret Was a maintainer.

    • @trespire
      @trespire Před rokem +1

      @@ADAMJWAITE Not the same RTV. Work procedures strict and controld.

    • @ge2623
      @ge2623 Před rokem

      Wow thanks for the caulk lesson.

  • @Mike19737
    @Mike19737 Před rokem +17

    Damn. Artemis ain’t playing. She is making Apollo proud!

    • @tankourito5419
      @tankourito5419 Před rokem +2

      Aye, but it's just the start. There's a million things that can go wrong and they need to make sure that every little issue is fixed. But if it all goes to plan, it will be amazing.

  • @alexnutcasio936
    @alexnutcasio936 Před rokem +12

    Gives new meaning to the term, “ I blew your doors off.”

  • @ralphangel561
    @ralphangel561 Před rokem +24

    If you think about it, Saturn V is the most powerful fueled rocket ever built. The SLS is the powerful with the help of solid rocket boosters. It just shows you the engineering marvel the Saturn V was.

  • @sunny-sq6ci
    @sunny-sq6ci Před rokem +103

    so nasa basically underestimated the overall power of the sls. that's pretty metal of nasa. rock on!!

    • @dakmycat3688
      @dakmycat3688 Před rokem +3

      So it takes more than just rocket science 😂🤣

    • @THE-X-Force
      @THE-X-Force Před rokem +17

      It seems pretty awful to me. _"underestimated"_ is problematic at best .. considering it rely's on *_estimating_* what the power of a massive rocket can do. They should know exactly what will happen, and design / engineer it to happen exactly the way it needs to happen. Having to re-build doors so they can even get up inside to inspect the rest of the thing wasn't part of the plan. The fact that this guy seems so casual about it is worrisome.

    • @mugiyono6567
      @mugiyono6567 Před rokem

      NASA work on thebeasth ofdecade history in proyec to go 🌙.

    • @mugiyono6567
      @mugiyono6567 Před rokem

      To said succesfuul NASA good mornings for to healthy oll job program thanks.

    • @you2be839
      @you2be839 Před rokem +1

      I can't exactly just say that they've underestimated anything because I don't even know what was estimated, but it sure seems quite the repair work to be made... and I'd be highly surprised if nothing changes about it for Artemis II!...

  • @captainpicard1701e
    @captainpicard1701e Před rokem +6

    NASA: "Make sure you mention 'World's most powerful rocket" a few times...

  • @ultralaggerREV1
    @ultralaggerREV1 Před rokem +82

    Artemis 1 is so powerful, it turns the night into day,and destroyed doors

    • @ultralaggerREV1
      @ultralaggerREV1 Před rokem +3

      @@karlwithak1835 but SLS launched like a champ

    • @EchoNovemberDelter
      @EchoNovemberDelter Před rokem

      All rockets turn the night into day if your close enough

    • @TheMrPeteChannel
      @TheMrPeteChannel Před rokem +2

      @Karl with a K starship is nearly 2 years behind schedule.

    • @idontknowanygoodnames1498
      @idontknowanygoodnames1498 Před rokem +2

      @@karlwithak1835 fuck something wrong with you. You're going around commenting the same shit on every comment. You clearly don't know how it works, this isn't a case of messing up engineering, it wasn't launch critical nor is some of it preventable. It's called learning, foreseeing that elevator doors would blow in is unrealistic. I don't know how you can see a new generation of rocket, the most powerful rocket, and the most advanced human rated space craft ever, working successfully but two elevator doors breaking a failure.

    • @user2C47
      @user2C47 Před rokem

      @JZ's BFF Crashing is something SpaceX sometimes does intentionally while figuring out a thing. Production launches are not meant to crash, and rarely do. So far, only 2 Falcon launches (out of close to 200) have failed to deliver their payload to its destination.

  • @lnr12241
    @lnr12241 Před rokem +3

    I.just said the other day I'd love to see the aftermath of the launch on the launch pad. Thank you for this 👍👍

  • @callumhardy5098
    @callumhardy5098 Před rokem +5

    “You were only supposed to blow the bloody doors off!”

  • @nickblackburn1903
    @nickblackburn1903 Před rokem +4

    Awesome work guys. Also, award to Mike Sarafin for a most impressive Moustache!

  • @pauljensen5699
    @pauljensen5699 Před rokem +10

    Same thing happened in 1981 when the first Space Shuttle went up. The launch damaged the tower, and it took a while to fix.

    • @CardZed
      @CardZed Před rokem +1

      Same thing also happened on the Ares1X flight in 2009

    • @pauljensen5699
      @pauljensen5699 Před rokem

      @@CardZed Did not know that, thank you.

  • @ian_b
    @ian_b Před rokem +47

    I just wish he'd clarify whether or not this is the world's most powerful rocket.

    • @The_White_House
      @The_White_House Před rokem +6

      It is

    • @Suppise152
      @Suppise152 Před rokem +19

      It’s the most powerful rocket to have ever flown successfully. I believe the N1 was the most powerful rocket, but it exploded or something like that

    • @ZeroSpawn
      @ZeroSpawn Před rokem +5

      2:09 he did

    • @ioijiopjkiopjkp
      @ioijiopjkiopjkp Před rokem +3

      you know google exists

    • @RC-fp1tl
      @RC-fp1tl Před rokem +25

      Everyone in the comments got whooshed

  • @Crobisaur
    @Crobisaur Před rokem +40

    Pretty remarkable that this platform has been around so long but is still capable of facilitating the SLS.

    • @Verbal_Sin
      @Verbal_Sin Před rokem +4

      Ummmm... This is the first rocket to use this Mobile Launcher... its was built for the Constellation program which never flew and altered slightly for SLS, which was the first launch from the platform...

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 Před rokem +5

      @@Verbal_Sin No, this is one of the two original launch platforms that were built for Apollo. They were modified for the Space Shuttle and then one was modified further for Artemis.

    • @T_Mo271
      @T_Mo271 Před rokem +2

      This tower is entirely new. Only the base is re-used from Shuttle and Apollo.

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 Před rokem

      @@T_Mo271 And the crawler. I wouldn’t be surprised if towers are just considered an expendable item to so no e degree.

    • @raynic1173
      @raynic1173 Před rokem +3

      Folks very little of this ML is from Apollo, the Base is all new, the tower is all new. As stated it was originally designed for Ares/Constellation back in '09-'10. It was then extensively modified for SLS.
      -The '09 build was mostly structural with basic systems like the electrical power system in the base, fire suppression systems and the elevators.
      -In '2013 the blast hole was modified, with extensive structural changes in the base and bulkheads needed to be performed.
      -Then in 2015 the SLS contract was started to finish the mods and add all the subsystems that are needed to fly the rocket. Including, finishing the structural mods, adding fuel systems, electrical, hydraulic, modified fire suppression, Enviromental control, adding hundreds of equipment cabinets... It was a huge contract topping 100 mill, I believe.
      p.s. back to the reused parts...the only thing I know of was the LOX and LH2 piping systems that were scavenged form a shuttle or two ML bases and maybe a few misc. parts. Peace.

  • @filipineaux
    @filipineaux Před rokem +1

    The cameras used are incredible with that clarity!

  • @letsgored831
    @letsgored831 Před rokem +15

    Mike Sarafin is the kind of project engineer who dots his i’s and crosses his t’s, and always has a pen and paper handy

    • @Mrshoujo
      @Mrshoujo Před rokem +1

      *"I"s
      *"T"s

    • @jakemacneal9897
      @jakemacneal9897 Před rokem +1

      @@Mrshoujo you don’t dot an uppercase « I »

    • @raynic1173
      @raynic1173 Před rokem

      Bro, this project was a major goat fook. Way over budget, way passed all time lines and a massive engineering and management fandangle. Go investigate the Inspector generals reports...

    • @raynic1173
      @raynic1173 Před rokem +2

      @Karl with a K Not sure they'll learn much or take away much. There's a tendency to blame the weak links on arbitrary blah, blah, blah. Some of the NASA engineers believe their own hype. How smart and inventive they are, meanwhile the ships sinking right under their feet. The refurbishment of the VAB was also a giant fiasco of money and management. I worked on all of these contracts and the stories I could tell...But it's not just NASA's fault, the contractors are in sanely greedy, deceptive and manipulative, in my opinion and the unions and productivity output...oh boy....The whole thing is system of inefficiency and marginal quality control.

    • @raynic1173
      @raynic1173 Před rokem +1

      @Karl with a K it all comes down to the "6 P's.""

  • @truepatriot223
    @truepatriot223 Před rokem +82

    They are gonna call this "The Worlds Most Powerful Rocket" as many times as they possibly can because they know their window is short.

    • @Sam-pc4fe
      @Sam-pc4fe Před rokem +4

      Stole the words right out of my mouth lol

    • @Bez34
      @Bez34 Před rokem +16

      its only the most powerful _operational_ rocket

    • @kilianhufgard1035
      @kilianhufgard1035 Před rokem

      what do you mean by that ?

    • @bkseitz
      @bkseitz Před rokem +6

      That's fine. It's the next milestone. Goddard>V2>Mercury>Gemini>Apollo>Shuttle>... Eventually they'll be another, then another and so on. Having a little competition is a good thing.

    • @bladebolden9560
      @bladebolden9560 Před rokem +3

      @@kilianhufgard1035 SpaceX Starship

  • @Josh3sh
    @Josh3sh Před rokem +16

    That launch tower got a beating, I'd imagine they are going to need to do thermal upgrade on a lot of the exterior pipes/cables, even the launch structure could use some reinforcement I'm sure after the first test.

    • @tankourito5419
      @tankourito5419 Před rokem +3

      They have a year or two for repairs and upgrades so that's plenty of time.

    • @crazyspace6792
      @crazyspace6792 Před rokem +2

      @Karl with a K Nope, Artemis 2 and 3 will also go to the moon with Artemis 3 having people on it.

    • @raynic1173
      @raynic1173 Před rokem +1

      @Karl with a K They're already contracted for the ML2. To reuse the ML1 it was estimated it would take a 3 1/2 year remodel.

    • @sanbruno6010
      @sanbruno6010 Před rokem

      PEACE
      LOVE
      UNITY
      HONESTY
      PROSPERITY
      FREE THINKING
      GOOD HEALTH
      SOBRIETY
      FUN
      LAUGH
      OPTIMISM

    • @Porsche4life
      @Porsche4life Před rokem +1

      @Karl with a K Karl shut up please😂 so negative

  • @ThePrybra07
    @ThePrybra07 Před rokem +12

    At 40 seconds he says the mobile pad has damage but will be ready for the second launch. Well you have almost two years to get it fixed so I hope so

    • @TicTac-g7m
      @TicTac-g7m Před rokem +1

      @Karl with a K
      What the heck is your problem?

    • @WimsicleStranger
      @WimsicleStranger Před rokem

      @@karlwithak1835 Why are you the way that you are? And by that, I mean "retarded".

    • @WimsicleStranger
      @WimsicleStranger Před rokem

      @@karlwithak1835 Mad. Don't make your personal info so easy to find next time ;)

  • @x1expert1x
    @x1expert1x Před rokem +154

    whatever the future holds for us, I think it's incredible to be in the first sliver of history where amazing things like this can be collaborated on and built. it's incomprehensible to me how something like this can be all coordinated

    • @Caseytify
      @Caseytify Před rokem +9

      And just think, they're only 6 years behind schedule right now!

    • @John_Redcorn_
      @John_Redcorn_ Před rokem +4

      @@Caseytify no other country is doing this kinda stuff so time is irrelevant

    • @sammencia7945
      @sammencia7945 Před rokem +10

      We experienced this from 1957-1973.
      I have already seen this.
      We already DID this!
      And now they fail at engineering fuel hose connections and doors.

    • @user-yd6tm5ne2e
      @user-yd6tm5ne2e Před rokem +10

      @@sammencia7945 Moaning about how the door failed without realising the success and marvel of engineering that the rocket took off in the first place is kinda cringe, my guy.

    • @UkrainianBazooka
      @UkrainianBazooka Před rokem

      The future holds fire and brimstone.

  • @pvb876287
    @pvb876287 Před rokem +14

    Rare analysis from NASA. Interesting information for Artemis. Reinforce those elevators. Great Job.

    • @pantheraerospace752
      @pantheraerospace752 Před rokem

      I thought NASA wanted to keep this secret?

    • @davidhenderson3400
      @davidhenderson3400 Před rokem +1

      At some point they will have to install blast doors to protect the elevators. It could get costly rebuilding the elevators every time

    • @WimsicleStranger
      @WimsicleStranger Před rokem +2

      @@pantheraerospace752 why would they want to do that?

    • @ericssmith2014
      @ericssmith2014 Před rokem +2

      Not sure that this is rare - they tend to go into detail about stuff once they’ve figured it out.

    • @loganbaileysfunwithtrains606
      @loganbaileysfunwithtrains606 Před rokem

      @@pantheraerospace752 they legally can’t keep secrets, it’s public taxpayer funded organization, taxpayers have every right to know what their money is being spent on

  • @hawkeyeten2450
    @hawkeyeten2450 Před rokem +37

    Wow...hope they can find a way to prevent that on future launches. That's definitely not an expense you'd want to have to constantly pay.

    • @abizair1832
      @abizair1832 Před rokem +12

      It's NASA dude, a quite-rich space agency... Paying for those doors is like spending 0.01 _cents_ on mundane door.

    • @iamaduckquack
      @iamaduckquack Před rokem +15

      Yeah, thats what is going to cost a lot to replace every launch... 🤨

    • @Bosscheesemo
      @Bosscheesemo Před rokem +5

      It's a bunch of scientists and engineers they'll figure it out

    • @Cobalt135
      @Cobalt135 Před rokem +6

      The thing will only fly every 2 years at best....

    • @mrjohnklake
      @mrjohnklake Před rokem +26

      @@abizair1832 NASA is actually underfunded and still manages to amaze. Hopefully the funding can get further as we get closer to inhabiting the Moon surface!

  • @Philly_Willy
    @Philly_Willy Před rokem +3

    Bro deadass knocked its socks off 💀

  • @BrianHoff04
    @BrianHoff04 Před rokem +1

    Makes me curious... how does this compare to damage during a shuttle or an Apollo launch?

  • @leokimvideo
    @leokimvideo Před rokem

    The SRB's were like the gates of hell opening when they ignited and the Devil doesn't need to ever use the elevator

  • @andrewday3206
    @andrewday3206 Před rokem +4

    I was up close at Feel the Heat seats for Artimus-1… it was IMPRESSIVE

  • @_kijetesantakalu
    @_kijetesantakalu Před rokem +2

    There can't possibly be a better analogy for Artemis I.

  • @StealthMode139
    @StealthMode139 Před rokem +3

    The SRB's are like a Welding torch. Not Bad NASA. Great job on the Launch. Damage was expected. ty. FL

  • @urbanspaceman7183
    @urbanspaceman7183 Před rokem

    What temperature are the boosters in modern degrees?

  • @tmc200527
    @tmc200527 Před rokem +3

    I thought the statement was just a compliment to the successful launch but it actually did blow the doors off the elevator.

  • @maximusstarblazer
    @maximusstarblazer Před rokem +19

    So much fascinating things to learn just from the launch structure and all the magical things happening at hot end of the rocket! 😎

    • @sanbruno6010
      @sanbruno6010 Před rokem

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      GOOD HEALTH
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      FUN
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  • @rkolsen
    @rkolsen Před rokem

    I’ve wondered a) what kind of cameras they use and how they protect them (I know some are broadcast) and secondly b) how are the access arms not blown off - are they just attached and fall right to T-0?

  • @kith00000
    @kith00000 Před rokem

    Thank you for the transparency...

  • @iamaduckquack
    @iamaduckquack Před rokem +6

    Based on this, me thinks there needs to be some kind of flame diverter at Starbase...

    • @iamaduckquack
      @iamaduckquack Před rokem +1

      @JZ's BFF Yes it is very weird because boosters will never launch from Mars so that thought process doesn't make much sense to me.

  • @LasVegas68
    @LasVegas68 Před rokem +4

    He was pretty calm describing the damage but inside he's thinking this is going to cost a lot of money to fix! Lol

    • @TheLightypants
      @TheLightypants Před rokem +5

      Kinda doubt it. Some non-important cameras with sacrificial coverings, burn off of ablative paint on the deck near the flame trench, and some doors. The doors are the only thing that wasn't supposed to be damaged like it was. Everything else was meant to burn off or be damaged during launch.

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 Před rokem

      @@TheLightypants No, with the kind of budget pressure NASA is constantly under, especially fro experts on Twitter (or what’s left of it), it’s just another thing they will have to plan to fix when and if the money arrives.

  • @maddoxinc1642
    @maddoxinc1642 Před rokem

    Incredible cinematic! Hollywood has come so far, they even gave the guy a mustache! I love it!

  • @chester8420
    @chester8420 Před rokem +1

    Wow! $4 billion broke an elevator door. Why am I rolling my eyes?

  • @destanymiller7565
    @destanymiller7565 Před rokem +16

    She said enough with these damn delays im ready to go damn it 🤣🤣🤣💀 i think she just earned her name in one launch ❤️

    • @Mrshoujo
      @Mrshoujo Před rokem

      Artemis is also the name of the BOY cat in Sailor Moon, donchaknow.

    • @timmainson
      @timmainson Před rokem +2

      @@Mrshoujo Artemis is the sister of Apollo. Not some damned pussy. LOL

    • @ronaldrobertson2332
      @ronaldrobertson2332 Před rokem

      Also, Artemis Gordon, from "Wild, Wild West", who was known to dabble in explosives on occasion.

    • @theweatherlizard2094
      @theweatherlizard2094 Před rokem +1

      Keep in mind that the rocket is called SLS

    • @sanbruno6010
      @sanbruno6010 Před rokem

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  • @egypthobby
    @egypthobby Před rokem +4

    I'm surprised after all this time since Apollo they didn't come up with a possible solution to protect the elevator

    • @timmainson
      @timmainson Před rokem

      unlike the main engines the boosters have less finesse to them. They will have to figure out how to deflect the exhaust differently in the launch bay.

    • @sanbruno6010
      @sanbruno6010 Před rokem

      PEACE
      LOVE
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      HONESTY
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      FREE THINKING
      GOOD HEALTH
      SOBRIETY
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  • @highdriver100
    @highdriver100 Před rokem

    I love that on the time, it doesn't say year, month, day. It just says 2022 and day 320.

  • @WDLawless
    @WDLawless Před rokem

    Are those elevators Otis Gen 2 with 2-speed doors by chance?

  • @davidlarson9125
    @davidlarson9125 Před rokem +3

    The real problem is this idea that we (the US) spent all this money, and somehow after years of delays forgot to engineer the pad and it's components before a launch. Not wanting anybody to take photos of the pad and telling us here that "everything is fine" is both a public relations screw-up and an embarrassing lie to anyone with half a brain.

  • @chrisbrzon3917
    @chrisbrzon3917 Před rokem +4

    Why weren't elevator doors facing safe side of tower?

  • @iLumberjack
    @iLumberjack Před rokem +2

    NASA Math: At $4.1B per launch, that's roughly a million dollars per metric ton of thrust at launch. Clearly those elevator doors weren't expensive enough.

  • @DSE8991
    @DSE8991 Před rokem +5

    OK so Superheavy is close to 2x more powerful with practically no water deluge system...Hmm...

    • @ReachOutToWilliam
      @ReachOutToWilliam Před rokem +3

      SpaceX has a long ways to go with Starship. I doubt early attempts will make it to space, let alone orbit.

    • @samozabijaka
      @samozabijaka Před rokem

      @DA lol how can You say things like that "no water deluge system" , it was there on KSC for every falcon 9 launch , not sure why do You think they will not install it for super heavy , also we dont know how powerful super heavy is because it has not been launched even once and its just a big work in progress

    • @ezragonzalez8936
      @ezragonzalez8936 Před rokem

      Starship tower already sustained damaged with only half the engines Running and Nasa Mobile launch system is way more robust only issues with it are the hydrogen leaks mostly due to the fuel itself being notoriously difficult to work with .

    • @tankourito5419
      @tankourito5419 Před rokem

      @@ezragonzalez8936 The nasa mobile launch tower is the reason why so many launches were delayed, and it was the root cause of 90% of their problems.

  • @HandbrakeBiscuit
    @HandbrakeBiscuit Před rokem +15

    Even with the doors blown off, somehow I just know the elevators are still quietly playing music.
    _(Flyyyyy Me To the Moooon, and let me play among the stars...)_

  • @twizz420
    @twizz420 Před rokem

    I wonder what brand of elevators those are... I know the TKE US/NA headquarters is in Atlanta which isn't THAT far away...
    Are they just normal elevators? Or are they specially built somehow? I would imagine yes.

  • @wonjez3982
    @wonjez3982 Před rokem

    You see the cable dissolving, now imagine the inside of those boosters...

  • @xanderjustimbaste2224
    @xanderjustimbaste2224 Před rokem +3

    😄😄😄 THE PROUD VOICE WHEN HE SAYS THE WORLD MOST POWERFUL ROCKET BUT WELL DESERVED I CANT W8 FOR STARSHIP HAHAHA

  • @eneking2022
    @eneking2022 Před rokem +5

    Umm. Just stunned. It’s ONE extra shuttle engine & the same side boosters with an added ring so it burns longer. Right? Or did I miss something important in the booster re-boot? Did the shuttle trash the pad like this each launch?

    • @concordsst
      @concordsst Před rokem

      The SRBs are much higher thrust as they are larger than the shuttle

    • @TheLightypants
      @TheLightypants Před rokem +3

      I wouldn't say the pad is trashed. Everything he mentioned except for the doors, are meant to be burned off, or are just not important. Cameras? Not important. The scorching? Ablative painting being burned off. All pretty typical at most launches. As for the camera, NASA isn't a company that has to sell it's product. SpaceX is, which is why they have much better cameras and video feeds on their rockets. At the end of the day, NASA is a public agency with the goal of space and aeronautical science, and SpaceX is a company with the goal of selling cargo/seats on rockets. Those two different goals, mean they have two different focuses.

    • @KOZMOuvBORG
      @KOZMOuvBORG Před rokem

      The extra segment on the SRB adds a quarter more ammonium chlorate/aluminum propellant to be burned in the same time as the Shuttle's.
      Don't think it can be thicker as that would narrow the space for the exhuast, off my head.

    • @chrisantoniou4366
      @chrisantoniou4366 Před rokem

      Not quite... Each booster is longer and that translates to same burn time but more power. A wider booster would correspond to a longer burn time. Either way, they had enough data from the Shuttle era to understand what that amount of power could do to the launch tower.

    • @tankourito5419
      @tankourito5419 Před rokem +1

      @@TheLightypants Yeah you can waffle on about that, clearly you have no business sense at all. It's pretty basic to understand that NASA cannot afford to throw money around and burn it. The fact that you need to deflect onto private companies, which isn't relevant at all to what was said, is embarrassing.

  • @doddyvanstraaten2774
    @doddyvanstraaten2774 Před rokem

    Was Sir Michael Caine at the launch? - "You're only supposed to blow the bloody doors off!"

  • @1dgram
    @1dgram Před rokem

    Hell hath no fury like the blast of Artemis' engines.

  • @markawilliams4829
    @markawilliams4829 Před rokem +3

    It’s no Saturn V, but still a big rocket 😃

  • @freeman2399
    @freeman2399 Před rokem +6

    It saddens me that NASA still uses imperial measurements.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Před rokem +7

      NASA does that outwardly to the US public.

    • @kardondo
      @kardondo Před rokem +1

      Amen to that

    • @freeman2399
      @freeman2399 Před rokem +7

      @@RideAcrossTheRiver Ha ha, that's what I figured. They don't expect the average US taxpayer to know the measurement system the rest of human civilization uses.

    • @tomservo5007
      @tomservo5007 Před rokem +3

      only the communication/PR department uses imperial measurements

    • @chrisantoniou4366
      @chrisantoniou4366 Před rokem +1

      @@RideAcrossTheRiver Pandering to the ignorant mob?

  • @geneard639
    @geneard639 Před rokem +1

    Had the opportunity to open with 'She literally blew the doors off! AWESOME! off, off ....the elevators"

  • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
    @SpaceCadet4Jesus Před rokem

    That it did so little damage is amazing. I would have expected more. Nothing to do but fix it and move on.

  • @SteverRob
    @SteverRob Před rokem +8

    Now this is the stuff I like to see 😎

  • @ayyanali2
    @ayyanali2 Před rokem

    so how can put the boosters in my honda

  • @alexanderhill4002
    @alexanderhill4002 Před rokem

    Michael Caine "you were only supposed to blow the bloody doors off"
    NASA "Roger that!"

  • @daemn42
    @daemn42 Před rokem +3

    Now imagine what Starship's Super Heavy booster is going to do to its launch facility (and maybe itself) with no flame trench.. I don't buy that just dumping a lot of water on it is going to be enough.

    • @almostfm
      @almostfm Před rokem

      I'm just wondering if it will stay vertical enough for the booster to clear the tower. If not, there's a not insignificant chance that the tower will take out the booster.

    • @sanbruno6010
      @sanbruno6010 Před rokem

      PEACE
      LOVE
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      HONESTY
      PROSPERITY
      FREE THINKING
      GOOD HEALTH
      SOBRIETY
      FUN
      LAUGH
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  • @jimsmith7212
    @jimsmith7212 Před rokem +3

    Knock knock......who's there?.......

  • @projectdelta50
    @projectdelta50 Před rokem +2

    2:50 looks like the lego man from hell

  • @lrobie123
    @lrobie123 Před rokem

    Considering the power of this rocket, seems to be expected to have some design changes be needed at the launch pad to accomodate the new rocket

  • @gpupg3131
    @gpupg3131 Před rokem +6

    In the photo of the charred camera I found it very unusual to keep the camera cabling on the outside of the camera support. If the cabling went inside the metallic support, there would be no damage.

    • @electronicsworkbench
      @electronicsworkbench Před rokem +5

      I think it's because every hole in the main superstructure made to accommodate conduits compromises the structural integrity of that same superstructure. The more holes, the more points of failure. I agree some shrouding of certain areas would be beneficial to some items of interest. However, they themselves have to be held on with reinforced attachment points to handle the blast of a launch lest they fly off and do more damage. Reinforcements to the tower are required to mitigate the failure points of the added holes adding to the cost of infrastructure. Using exterior conduit away from the direct blast does help but inevitably something must be exposed somewhere to get something useful out of the system. In the end cameras and cabling are much cheaper to replace than repairs to launch towers.

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 Před rokem +1

      @Karl with a K Quick, go and tell them, genius!

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 Před rokem

      @Karl with a K What was their response?

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 Před rokem

      @Karl with a K Well, here’s what I think: I think you overestimate your knowledge and understanding of rockets and missions and underestimate what NASA knows. Be sure to let me know when you launch a successful mission to the moon, won’t you.

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 Před rokem

      @Karl with a K So is everyone else, so your point is meaningless.

  • @TheTikiMan
    @TheTikiMan Před rokem +12

    Luckily the elevator contractor only charges $764 billion per hour.

  • @mr.stately9205
    @mr.stately9205 Před rokem +1

    It's very interesting that although the SLS is more powerful, Saturn V was bigger and could carry almost double the cargo. Here in Alabama rockets are big business so I'm always curious about the thought process behind the design of new tech in aerospace. If anyone has any good suggestions for videos I could watch about the design of the SLS and why NASA felt it was the best direction to go in I would be thankful.

    • @ora6925
      @ora6925 Před rokem +2

      It‘s not the best way from an engineering perspective - but the only way that would politically be feasible. It‘s not expensive because it needs to be - it‘s expensive because otherwise it would not have gotten enough political support.

  • @jaedanb
    @jaedanb Před rokem

    It will be pretty awesome to see Starships and SLS configurations launching side by side at the Cape in the coming years!

  • @zyloproductions4870
    @zyloproductions4870 Před rokem +14

    Man, that rocket is powerful!!

    • @LiliWhyte
      @LiliWhyte Před rokem +1

      Well, it is the world's most powerful, afterall.

    • @TypicalBlox
      @TypicalBlox Před rokem +2

      @@LiliWhyte Most powerful ORBITAL rocket, N1 still produced more thrust but when Starship launches it will be the most powerful ever flown.

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 Před rokem +1

      @@TypicalBlox Starship isn’t going to the moon anytime soon.

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 Před rokem +1

      @@TypicalBlox N1 didn’t make it to orbit.

    • @TypicalBlox
      @TypicalBlox Před rokem

      @@thethirdman225 Thats why I said most powerful orbital rocket dummy, also it doesn't need to go to the moon to count as most powerful rocket. How did you manage to be confused twice.

  • @DBO3671
    @DBO3671 Před rokem +4

    I wonder if he drove home in the World's most Powerful Pickup Truck

  • @philiptarvin7901
    @philiptarvin7901 Před rokem

    How were the cameras versus the Saturn 5

  • @ntmdisco
    @ntmdisco Před rokem +2

    "You were only supposed to blow the bloody doors off....."

  • @THE-X-Force
    @THE-X-Force Před rokem +6

    If those oxygen sensors *_had_* failed, the inspectors who went to the pad wouldn't even know they were suffocating, because nitrogen and helium are both inert gasses. This is an absolute failure on NASA's part, and it could have been so much worse. They had to "lock down" and disperse those gasses before inspection could take place. I'm going to paste my previous comment:
    "Shouldn't they be engineering for this? It sounds like the doors being destroyed was not a planned event. They're doing a damage assessment and finding things that they don't even know if they damage came from the launch or from the hurricane. Was it damaged *_before_* launch and no one noticed? What if it was like the valve no one knew was damaged that made SpaceX's vehicle (which was planned to carry people) explode during testing?"
    There is so much spin in this guy's delivery of information here. Him saying _"This is my favorite picture"_ .. it's a picture of camera equipment and wiring *ON FIRE* .. camera destroyed .. but hey .. the "housing survived". What if that was a crew module? He just wants to extol how powerful the rocket system is, and then use the power of it as an excuse for why the damage happened. Another reply I made earlier .. to someone thinking how cool it is that they _"blew the doors off the place"_ :
    "Shouldn't they have designed the wires to withstand the heat? They knew the heat that would be generated.
    Random failures like this is why Challenger's crew needlessly lost their lives, and America lost it's entire shuttle program."

    • @chrisantoniou4366
      @chrisantoniou4366 Před rokem +1

      Well said.

    • @lenger1234
      @lenger1234 Před rokem +2

      We don't know if the caulking that came off the capsule came off from the launch or from the hurricane 🤔 really?? You didn't inspect both the capsule and the launch area after the hurricane? Wait, didn't you announce previously you had to repair some of that caulking after the hurricane 🤔 I don't know how important that stuff is, but seems to me you knew it was damaged from the hurricane, repaired it and then it fell off again during launch.

    • @SloaneLasers
      @SloaneLasers Před rokem

      The storm did not do that to the elevators. I have family who live a few miles away & Ian passed over the Cape as a weakened tropical storm. If you really think they wouldn't have noticed that kind of damage to the doors, you don't know how NASA operates. The oxygen sensors are certainly not the only way they test for toxic gasses after launch. As far as the camera equipment burning, understand the temps you are dealing with. Also, the crew module is located on top of the vehicle not underneath. Sad to say, you are providing the "spin".

    • @tankourito5419
      @tankourito5419 Před rokem

      @@SloaneLasers What you wrote sounds like a lot of waffle to me.

    • @SloaneLasers
      @SloaneLasers Před rokem

      @@tankourito5419 Wish I knew what that meant.

  • @High-Tech-Geek
    @High-Tech-Geek Před rokem +3

    I noticed this in Everyday Astronaut's coverage video of the launch. I could see the left elevator door fly open and start flapping violently back and forth (upper right of the frame). No one mentioned it, so I just thought it was norminal, lol
    czcams.com/video/nUozQWAg0wE/video.html

  • @zeramino
    @zeramino Před rokem +1

    "Will be ready for Artemis II", well that's at least 2 years away....

  • @Riiyan
    @Riiyan Před rokem +1

    I thought this when I heard they were talking about not letting press take pictures, I said I bet it blew every single door off the pad or they had some weird tech broken and exposed.

  • @274727
    @274727 Před rokem +3

    “You're only supposed to blow the bloody doors off!” 😜

  • @3dtexan890
    @3dtexan890 Před rokem +3

    How many times did he say "World's Most Powerful Rocket"? With all the damage, too bad the engineers could not for see the possible damage. Just sayin'.

    • @russellh8702
      @russellh8702 Před rokem

      He only said it twice. Can we see the damage done by Saturn V rockets or the Shuttle stacks for comparison before criticizing the engineers who didn’t “foresee the possible damage”?

    • @curtishegner9245
      @curtishegner9245 Před rokem

      Saturn did damage too

  • @TheMightyKinkle
    @TheMightyKinkle Před rokem

    Those camera housings look cool. There's 8 of them at 1:32!

  • @9012505
    @9012505 Před rokem +1

    With how much access and information is given for the SpaceX/NASA missions, it's going to be difficult for NASA to cover anything up for these launches. People are going to demand quicker results each time.

  • @stevenattaway
    @stevenattaway Před rokem +7

    "The world's MOST powerful rocket..." For now.

  • @ReachOutToWilliam
    @ReachOutToWilliam Před rokem +7

    Let this be a lesson to you, Elon! Please pay attention to the damage caused by the world's most powerful rocket!

    • @jamesjesus1828
      @jamesjesus1828 Před rokem +3

      This is elon musk using my brothers account I just want to thank you for bringing this to my attention.

  • @ryanfolin5712
    @ryanfolin5712 Před rokem +1

    I wanna go back and find out how many times he said the worlds most powerful rocket but I don’t care enough

  • @jenkem4464
    @jenkem4464 Před rokem

    Wow, that camera shot!

  • @eddiebowens1919
    @eddiebowens1919 Před rokem +9

    Most POWERFUL!! Not for long. Just kidding, good job NASA

    • @digi3218
      @digi3218 Před rokem +3

      You are not kidding though

    • @mysussyisnotbaka
      @mysussyisnotbaka Před rokem +6

      Starship is such a scam 💀

    • @digi3218
      @digi3218 Před rokem +2

      @@mysussyisnotbaka it might take a while until it's fully developed but Starship is not a scam.. it will be launching Starlink satellites in no time
      Edit: dang idk If you are serious or not now lol

    • @tankourito5419
      @tankourito5419 Před rokem

      @@mysussyisnotbaka Yeah, because you sound really educated on the topic. All the blue haired snowflakes have been crying about it ever since Elon ruined their sad little platform.

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 Před rokem

      @@digi3218 There’s a bit of a difference between LEO and going to the Moon.

  • @thaonethalast8278
    @thaonethalast8278 Před rokem +3

    Makes me proud to work for NASA

  • @fredrikfarkas
    @fredrikfarkas Před rokem

    Well, the sound was wobbly bubbly wonky, like subtile in the background, really awesome, i’d like to hear that without his voice on top

  • @moogman5
    @moogman5 Před rokem

    Dayummm...Let's see how starship super heavy booster works out on the orbital launch pad

  • @RideAcrossTheRiver
    @RideAcrossTheRiver Před rokem +3

    Kinda blew SpaceX's doors off too ...

  • @ThisIsMyRealName
    @ThisIsMyRealName Před rokem +1

    Just curious as to why a concrete housing wasn't thought of to be installed in front of the elevator doors 🤷🏽

  • @iridescentsquids
    @iridescentsquids Před rokem +2

    I find hard to believe they miscalculated the strength of their elevator doors by that degree.

    • @SloaneLasers
      @SloaneLasers Před rokem

      So, you think they knew it was going to happen? Poppycock. And those are not reenforced doors.

    • @iridescentsquids
      @iridescentsquids Před rokem +2

      @@SloaneLasers no. I find it hard to believe they would make that mistake yet I fully believe they did.

    • @sanbruno6010
      @sanbruno6010 Před rokem

      PEACE
      LOVE
      UNITY
      HONESTY
      PROSPERITY
      FREE THINKING
      GOOD HEALTH
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