Watch: SpaceX’s Starship Successfully Completes Re-entry and Splashdown | WSJ News

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  • čas přidán 5. 06. 2024
  • SpaceX achieved a new milestone with its mega Starship rocket, after both the booster and the spacecraft made controlled returns to Earth. Photo: Brandon Bell/Getty Images
    #SpaceX #Starship #WSJ

Komentáře • 496

  • @wisemanofsorts6068
    @wisemanofsorts6068 Před měsícem +396

    This progress is amazing!!!!

    • @Kev376
      @Kev376 Před měsícem +13

      Man the little flap that could.

    • @dahawk8574
      @dahawk8574 Před měsícem +3

      "I think I can...
      I think I can...
      I think I can...
      I think I can...
      Ooh, Owch
      Make it stop!
      Oh, it BURNS!"

    • @moejoe1863
      @moejoe1863 Před měsícem +2

      First one that didn't explode. So if NASA blew up 3 rockets in a row what would the headlines be?

    • @pindot787
      @pindot787 Před měsícem +5

      Yup, every itiration get a lot better. as always with space X, lucky number 4.

    • @Jehty_
      @Jehty_ Před měsícem +15

      ​@@moejoe1863different design philosophies create different expectations.
      SpaceX does a rapid iterative process. Build a rocket, test it, fix the problems, fly the next rocket.
      The rocket that flew yesterday was Ship 29 and Booster 11. SpaceX already has built Ship 31 and Booster 13.
      Nasa, or rather the manufacturers that build for NASA, use a more traditional design process. Completely design a finished rocket, build it and if all goes well it works on the first try.
      In the same time frame that SpaceX build 31 Ships and 13 boosters Boeing build 2 SLS rockets.
      That's why the headlines would be different. Because the expectations are completely different.

  • @Jacckh
    @Jacckh Před měsícem +90

    That Flap needs to be in a museum! A hero for the progress and longevity of mankind.

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      We already know that hot plasma can damage or destroy spacecraft.

    • @smashinbedrock4903
      @smashinbedrock4903 Před měsícem +1

      that flap is at the bottom pf the Indian ocean right now, it pains me to report

    • @user-jh6ik1qd7p
      @user-jh6ik1qd7p Před 27 dny

      @@rdbchase obviously, but what's impressive is how star ship didn't tumble and break up during reentry from that and it still managed to vertically land as planned too.

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před 27 dny

      @@user-jh6ik1qd7p Neither Starship nor its booster landed successfully; a relatively soft splashdown isn't the same thing.

    • @Johannrothschild
      @Johannrothschild Před 5 dny

      @@rdbchase i think NASA knows better than you

  • @fwanknmt
    @fwanknmt Před měsícem +233

    That hero fin guided the upper stage all the way back!

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      It nearly burned off -- do you suppose it's fully reusable?

    • @KevinNguyen1
      @KevinNguyen1 Před měsícem +2

      @@rdbchaseObviously not, especially since they were not even recovering starship. Seems like they may had expected this.

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem +1

      @@KevinNguyen1 I don't think that either of us have much insight into fwanknmt's thinking processes, but lauding the fact that the winglet didn't actually break off in flight sure seems like avoidance of the fact of the failure of the thermal protection system to me. Starship's test flights can be deemed successful if relatively tiny goals are set for them, but the fundamental design goals for the system as a whole clearly have not been met and I am very dubious that they will be. If Musk and SpaceX are so confident in Starship, it seems to me we should have heard about their plans to improve performance so that 100-150 tons of cargo can be carried to orbit already and we haven't.

    • @MoraleIsHigh
      @MoraleIsHigh Před měsícem

      It was likely all 4 that melted. If it happened to one, it happened to all of them.

    • @josemiguelgonzalezrodrigue9819
      @josemiguelgonzalezrodrigue9819 Před 24 dny

      ​@@rdbchaseEl problema de las losetas térmicas en las bisagras ya se sabía pero aún así se decidió lanzar y se probó otro sistema térmico, el lanzamiento fue un total éxito se obtuvieron grandes cantidades de información qué beneficiarán al desarrollo acelerado de spacex y se cumplieron los objetivos de lanzamiento qué se consideraban imposibles la versión final de la Starship podrá transportar hasta 150 toneladas de carga útil a órbita

  • @TamagoHead
    @TamagoHead Před měsícem +123

    The potential for re-usability is a game-changer. Falcon has changed the landscape, and the next paradigm shift is only a few test flights away.

    • @ariewijaya1679
      @ariewijaya1679 Před měsícem +1

      How did they catch that giant things. And the most expensive is changing all the heat tiles

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      Augurer?

    • @TamagoHead
      @TamagoHead Před měsícem

      @@ariewijaya1679if the stainless steel alloy they use tolerates a giga press to recess the tile inserts, it might help with tile retention.
      Even the Space Shuttle was prone to tile loss. A single-use ablative material between seams might help too, but the SpaceX team far smarter than me.

  • @jimmyryan5880
    @jimmyryan5880 Před měsícem +128

    Great job SpaceX.

  • @kiwakatoraco8533
    @kiwakatoraco8533 Před měsícem +190

    Flappy, the one that could.

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      Every failure is inverted by the fanboys -- winglets that nearly burn off cannot be part of a fully reusable rocket!

    • @jamescarter8311
      @jamescarter8311 Před měsícem

      @@rdbchase It's called progress, genius. It's obvious you aren't involved in anything meaningful or difficult.

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      @@jamescarter8311 Abject ad hominem, not reasoned disagreement -- meaningful or difficult enterprises are certainly capable of failure.

    • @kiwakatoraco8533
      @kiwakatoraco8533 Před měsícem

      @@rdbchaseI know it’s a failure, but at the same time the flap still manage to actuate even if plasma ate a hole through it during the bellyflop maneuver.

    • @panzer.1
      @panzer.1 Před měsícem

      ​@@rdbchasestick to the comment dude.
      That's why it's called the one that could.

  • @Delli88Burn1
    @Delli88Burn1 Před měsícem +61

    The Fin that never gave up, just like the amazing engineers over at SpaceX. It needs to be placed in a museum somewhere.

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      A museum of engineering failures, perhaps. The winglets would have to suffer no damage (as opposed to nearly burning off) if Starship were to be reusable at all; with the loss of all Starships and boosters (with their 144 Raptor engines) so far launched, there is zero cause for optimism that the goal of full reusability will be attained.

    • @rossh2386
      @rossh2386 Před měsícem +2

      @@rdbchaseyou do realize these are test flights of a new generation of super heavy lift capable rockets right?

    • @jamescarter8311
      @jamescarter8311 Před měsícem

      @@rdbchase It's called progress. It was the same with Falcon only smaller scale. Computer simulations only go so far. They literally have to fly to find every weak point. Seriously, why do we have so many losers in this world that cannot understand this?

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      @@rossh2386 I realize that four test flights in, the system has not demonstrated that 1) it can transport its claimed 100-150 tons of payload to low Earth orbit, 2) it can be refueled in orbit, 3) it can relight its engines in microgravity, or 4) it can be recovered intact -- Starship has yet to achieve any of its primary design goals, so fanboys' wild enthusiasm is unwarranted.

    • @Yusuke_Denton
      @Yusuke_Denton Před měsícem +1

      @@rdbchase Were you one of the people who said "there's no reason to think this will ever succeed" when Falcon 9's were blowing up?

  • @linuxmill
    @linuxmill Před měsícem +11

    it is so refreshing to see the engineers entertained by the errors. I hear joy in the discovery. What a great place to.work.

  • @syspowertools3372
    @syspowertools3372 Před měsícem +255

    Wow, for once in my lifetime... The wall street journal didn't try to spin a story to attack Elon.
    This was an amazing test! Go SpaceX and go Elon!

    • @foxthroat3410
      @foxthroat3410 Před měsícem +27

      Cuz they can't do anything about on how successful it was 😂

    • @christopherrdulin7289
      @christopherrdulin7289 Před měsícem +24

      Not a fan of Elon, but he and SpaceX have done amazing things for space exploration.

    • @thekaempfer
      @thekaempfer Před měsícem +23

      Elon himself is terrible. SpaceX on the other hand, lovely almost every time.

    • @nowords7737
      @nowords7737 Před měsícem +39

      ​@@thekaempfer How is her terrible? Supports clean energy, space exploration, new healthcare products, and free speech. What's your qualms?

    • @sirkiz1181
      @sirkiz1181 Před měsícem

      @@nowords7737his personality

  • @Hyperious_in_the_air
    @Hyperious_in_the_air Před měsícem +70

    incredible, the hinge on that one flap got plasma cut by the reentry plasma and was still functional. I hope they pull that out of the water and save it

    • @alanmay7929
      @alanmay7929 Před měsícem +2

      who said it was still functional?

    • @wisemanofsorts6068
      @wisemanofsorts6068 Před měsícem +33

      @@alanmay7929 It was still able to guide the ship.

    • @alanmay7929
      @alanmay7929 Před měsícem +1

      @@wisemanofsorts6068 its actually the engines that did all if not most of the job lol!!! that flat has barely any capacity to do that

    • @wisemanofsorts6068
      @wisemanofsorts6068 Před měsícem +42

      @alanmay7929 During the belly flop, the flaps are the only things that can orient the ship properly for the flip maneuver. The engines only ignite a few seconds before landing, and RCS is not strong enough at low altitudes to adjust orientation. That is why the flaps exist....

    • @Blueskull390
      @Blueskull390 Před měsícem +23

      Toward the end of video you can still see it actuate a little.

  • @greedo42069
    @greedo42069 Před měsícem +67

    Humanity restored +1

  • @Randomguy-wy4xi
    @Randomguy-wy4xi Před měsícem +6

    Marvellous. SpaceX has achieved what Sergei Korolev dreamed of 60 years ago and more than it.
    This should be what every engineering student must aspire for.

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      The N-1 failed in all four test launches too, but engineering students should aspire to succeed rather than fail.

    • @jamescarter8311
      @jamescarter8311 Před měsícem +1

      @@rdbchase What a stupid comment. None of Starships launches were failures. They were prototypes and each got further than the last. It was the same with the Falcon rockets. SpaceX pushes every part to failure. It's how they learn.

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      @@jamescarter8311 SpaceX has achieved none of the primary design goals for Starship in four test flights -- that is how far it's gotten. Debris in the Gulf of Mexico and Indian Ocean has been the result of both IFT-3 and IFT-4. I am perfectly willing to accept evidence of Starship's success as soon as it succeeds -- in carrying payload to orbit, in being refueled there, in re-lighting its engines in microgravity, in being recovered intact -- none of these have happened yet. Praising the fact that one or both winglets didn't actually break off in flight despite suffering catastrophic damage during re-entry is indicative of how warped fanboy's notion of success is.

    • @archierush868
      @archierush868 Před měsícem +1

      ⁠​⁠@@rdbchaseit has shown everyone that a fully reusable rocket is possible, but it clearly won’t be easy.
      All starship flights had a simulated payload weight of 50T by not filling it to 100% with the exception of IFT-1 i think, and they have also proven to literally everyone in the aerospace space that they can at least send a super heavy payload into space and soft land the booster in the water, just like what SpaceX did around a decade ago with the Falcon 9. Right now, they have proven that the Starship is “fully” reusable with the 4th test flight, minus parts of the flap but basically everyone already knew the flaps and placement of them will change with V2 ships under construction right now and which may fly later this year or early next year. What failed here was the flaps hinge cover which allowed plasma to seep into the internals of the flap. Newer ships will push the flaps more leeward so that plasma won’t be able to get within the flaps but for now, they’ll increase insulation in this spot for the last few V1 ships before V2 comes online. SpaceX also is gonna do all of the points you said, it’s just that proving starship can be fully reusable is much more important as they want to get that done first. After they have proven that they can reenter without any major damage, then they will demonstrate raptor relights in space, and only then will they demonstrate deploying a payload. This could all be done in 2 or so flights as Elon said that flight 5 is probably gonna attempt a booster catch with the tower arms however this could be pushed back to flight 6. Also, they did demonstrate a cryogenic fuel transfer from within the ship for flight 3, which was never done before in space before, and is a step towards ship to ship fuel transfers. They are working towards accomplishing all the goals that you said. A ship to ship fuel transfer should occur next year which means that all the other things said also should be done within a year.
      Another thing you don’t seem to mention is the costs. Starship costs around $5B. Not the rocket, the entire program, meaning literally everything starship related has costed SpaceX $5B which they are able to fund with revenue from StarLink raking in around $1.5-2B each year. If you funded SpaceX as much as NASA and give them the same amount of time as projects like SLS, there probably wouldn’t be as many failures and test launches but that also means that more money was spent in the program.
      Edit: look at how far they have gone from IFT-1 to IFT-4 in over a year and a few months. From spiralling out of control to successfully reentering and splashing down both ship and booster.

    • @Randomguy-wy4xi
      @Randomguy-wy4xi Před 21 dnem

      ​@@rdbchaseIFT-4 soft landed in the Indian Ocean. Unlike the preceding 3 tests.

  • @melovewhite
    @melovewhite Před měsícem +5

    0:04 this shot is amazing

  • @buliameenoladayo3074
    @buliameenoladayo3074 Před měsícem +11

    To a non aero space engineer you have no idea how historic this day is. SpaceX is redefining our civilization as we know it Thank you amazing team for this monumental pineering work on full rocket reusability

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      Pure nonsense -- the system won't be "redefining our civilization" even if it can be made to function, very much an open question at this point.

  • @demeurecorentin
    @demeurecorentin Před měsícem +15

    The release of the hot-stage ring at 1:44 and the flap disintegration at 4:09 both remind me of that one scene in Interstellar. Just incredible.

  • @williamdeoradesilva9444
    @williamdeoradesilva9444 Před měsícem +11

    Congratulations to SpaceX!!!!
    A massive success

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength.

    • @MyElectricAdv
      @MyElectricAdv Před měsícem

      ​@@rdbchasebot is bot

  • @Lolopogie
    @Lolopogie Před měsícem +173

    Wow. I never thought that I will read something like this on media. I expected them to right “Elons Rocket got destroyed after splashdown” 😂

    • @biscottigelato8574
      @biscottigelato8574 Před měsícem +6

      Cynical, understandably so 😂

    • @originaloffical
      @originaloffical Před měsícem +22

      Elon gave the middle finger to all the Elon hating liberals that pray for him to fail lol - Science > Feelings

    • @alanmay7929
      @alanmay7929 Před měsícem

      grow up!!!!

    • @ddandymann
      @ddandymann Před měsícem +10

      @@originaloffical You don't know what 'liberal' means do you?

    • @namei8967
      @namei8967 Před měsícem

      ​@@ddandymannwhat do they mean?

  • @N75911_
    @N75911_ Před měsícem +7

    Kinda terrifying, that glowing fin is reminiscent of what Space Shuttle Columbia probably looked like.

  • @TheCuteworm
    @TheCuteworm Před měsícem +27

    amazing

  • @bartoszbaczynski3289
    @bartoszbaczynski3289 Před měsícem +3

    We have waited 1year and 3 months for this moment😄

  • @handle6187
    @handle6187 Před měsícem +10

    So many blast waves at the start of the launch

  • @CasualObserver-jx4zh
    @CasualObserver-jx4zh Před měsícem +4

    Congratulations Space X !! American ingenuity at its best.

  • @hardstylerawstylelover8110
    @hardstylerawstylelover8110 Před měsícem +8

    Letssss goooo SPACEX ❤

  • @user-sf3dw2sm3b
    @user-sf3dw2sm3b Před měsícem +11

    The tightness of the flame is impressive

    • @Ryan-mq2mi
      @Ryan-mq2mi Před měsícem +6

      It’s incredible how strong this beast is. When it was surviving doing cart, flips on its first flight, the length of a giant skyscraper, the toughness prowess had been set. They literally had to forcefully destroy it. I’m turning 50 this summer, I’ve watched this whole thing, it’s absolutely incredible. Anyone who was an alive it’s very hard to imagine Elon’s vision, and how impossible it was.

    • @user-sf3dw2sm3b
      @user-sf3dw2sm3b Před měsícem +4

      @@Ryan-mq2mi Yes the technology space X launches and then lands like bird is awesome to watch. With nasa it all just looked ugly. The payload capacity is going to alter the future In many ways

    • @viperswhip
      @viperswhip Před měsícem +3

      What amazed me is how often I thought the feed had stalled but it was actually live, it just was so stable.

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      @@Ryan-mq2mi It may well be impossible -- great job sabotaging your own case!

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      @@user-sf3dw2sm3b It hasn't landed at all yet.

  • @agdeutr03
    @agdeutr03 Před měsícem +19

    Bravo SpaceX! For all humanity✊🏼👏🏼🌎

  • @scottarn96
    @scottarn96 Před měsícem +12

    Madness, it's insane!

  • @GlxyEntertainment
    @GlxyEntertainment Před měsícem +17

    Absolutely incredible job.

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      Right, the fourth test flight of the system ended like the last three with the loss of both the Starship and its booster -- SpaceX had planned on landing it on the Moon already. More incredible than anything SpaceX has done are fanboys' inversion of failure into success.

    • @GlxyEntertainment
      @GlxyEntertainment Před měsícem +2

      @@rdbchase let's see you build a rocket. In reality, it was a huge success. The mission was to go to space and do a soft landing on return. It did that. Also if you pay attention, since the first flight SpaceX has been ready to launch more, but have had to wait for the FAA to clear it, so that slowed things way down, multiple times. Your assessment is wrong on every level.

    • @jamescarter8311
      @jamescarter8311 Před měsícem

      @@rdbchase It's called progress. It was the same with Falcon only smaller scale. Computer simulations only go so far. They literally have to fly to find every weak point. Seriously, why do we have so many losers in this world that cannot understand this?

  • @GalenlevyPhoto
    @GalenlevyPhoto Před měsícem

    Amazing job! Finally

  • @dobbyisfree7303
    @dobbyisfree7303 Před měsícem +18

    amazing!

  • @SLPC_
    @SLPC_ Před měsícem +1

    5:55 water splash on the top right corner. Flapping amazing.

  • @johnstewart579
    @johnstewart579 Před měsícem +3

    The Moon and Mars is one step closer! It was a magnificent test flight, looking forward to launch #5

    • @zzzzzz-zv9ev
      @zzzzzz-zv9ev Před měsícem

      Yes they told us in 80 they will be on mars in 90 2000-2011-2022 and we didnt hit the moon 😂😂

  • @davecarvell
    @davecarvell Před 28 dny

    Great work!

  • @77555kuyt
    @77555kuyt Před měsícem +1

    True joy of engineering.. goosebumps every single time. Congrats SpaceX

  • @antun10290
    @antun10290 Před měsícem +2

    great job

  • @Swefish7217
    @Swefish7217 Před měsícem +6

    Nice

  • @jimmyconway8025
    @jimmyconway8025 Před měsícem

    Badass! The cheers from crowd and team were awesome!

  • @cokyrobes
    @cokyrobes Před měsícem +9

    Thank you for Elon and his teams of incredible engineers

  • @letsexperienceearth3034
    @letsexperienceearth3034 Před měsícem +1

    INCREDIBLE

  • @pushwesthand_01
    @pushwesthand_01 Před měsícem +2

    Congratulations😁😁

  • @duran9664
    @duran9664 Před měsícem +1

    👏 👏 👏 IT WAS MAJESTIC 👏 👏 👏

  • @axem.8338
    @axem.8338 Před měsícem +1

    That sheer power!

  • @ethanlin2445
    @ethanlin2445 Před měsícem

    incredible!

  • @lilbrother45
    @lilbrother45 Před měsícem +1

    It is amazing to see the engineering teams progress through trial and error. It hurt my soul to see the media make fun of space x when a starship would explode. Why can’t they realize it is part of the process? They need those failures to perfect what they are working towards.
    Well done SPACE X!!!!!!

  • @explorer3500
    @explorer3500 Před měsícem +17

    You can’t hate the one who thinks and works for humanity sustainability.

    • @Pit1993x
      @Pit1993x Před měsícem +1

      No I can, but I can still appreciate the scientific advancements his money finances. People can have more than just 1 emotion. :)

    • @mirafan3348
      @mirafan3348 Před měsícem +2

      Elon needs to stay in his lane, and keep his conspiracy driven politics to himself

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      Musk definitely is not doing anything of the kind.

  • @musiqueetmontagne
    @musiqueetmontagne Před měsícem

    Great!!!

  • @DihelsonMendonca
    @DihelsonMendonca Před měsícem +1

    This is really HISTORIC ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @user-jap84tlv24sq
    @user-jap84tlv24sq Před měsícem

    I cannot believe that the front flap still worked after this inferno! Incredible engineering on part of SpaceX. What a clairvoyant decision to go with steel alloy and not some aluminum.

  • @HMM9817
    @HMM9817 Před měsícem

    So incredibly good

  • @zeanamush
    @zeanamush Před měsícem

    It's so cool

  • @maemilev
    @maemilev Před měsícem +5

    Boeing and Nasa days are over. The pace of space x is unbeatable.

  • @EduardoSabinoSommelier
    @EduardoSabinoSommelier Před měsícem +1

    Espetacular.

  • @gacctom
    @gacctom Před měsícem

    amazing~It make a history and mericle

  • @tuttappanna1
    @tuttappanna1 Před měsícem

    Awesome job Space X

  • @pyrolopez854
    @pyrolopez854 Před měsícem

    Heck ya! Hopefully starship will be buffed 💪 up for the next go

  • @aaronelijahcolyer
    @aaronelijahcolyer Před měsícem +22

    Mars here we come.

    • @tx9ju
      @tx9ju Před měsícem +2

      Unlucky that the ocean on Mars is already dry

    • @aaronelijahcolyer
      @aaronelijahcolyer Před měsícem +3

      @@tx9ju there's water on mars at the poles or one of the poles, maybe even underground, there's a whole ocean inside earth's core

    • @mkocel
      @mkocel Před měsícem +2

      @@tx9ju cry more hater

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      The fanboys are oblivious of Starship's intended role as a lunar ferry and imagine that the first load of colonists are leaving for Mars any day now. There's zero reason to believe that Starship will ever land on Mars, by the way.

    • @aaronelijahcolyer
      @aaronelijahcolyer Před měsícem +1

      @@rdbchase cry harder

  • @tamorisdraine
    @tamorisdraine Před měsícem

    Unfortunately I was totally caught off guard visiting south Padre. What an experience.🙌🏾

  • @netizenplanet
    @netizenplanet Před měsícem

    Amazing 💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻

  • @kco1270
    @kco1270 Před měsícem

    Go Starship!

  • @MikeNel33and49
    @MikeNel33and49 Před měsícem

    WOW!!!

  • @rafts02
    @rafts02 Před měsícem

    Space X leveling up again and again ❤

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      Right -- it's actually a video game.

  • @mkocel
    @mkocel Před měsícem +1

    i hope they recover both vehicles so they can get as much data as possible

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem +1

      There is no plan to do so -- all the data that can be gathered has been.

  • @alionx
    @alionx Před měsícem +1

    Space x is the future

  • @pinn
    @pinn Před měsícem +1

    this looks like movie. WOW!
    MOVE HUMANITY FORWARD GUYS, with love!

  • @Jonathan-ru9zl
    @Jonathan-ru9zl Před měsícem +3

    Great feat of humankind 🎉

    • @rdbchase
      @rdbchase Před měsícem

      Many rockets have already failed.

    • @jamescarter8311
      @jamescarter8311 Před měsícem

      @@rdbchase None of rockets that "already failed" were brought back.

  • @joe_8699
    @joe_8699 Před měsícem

    Wow

  • @cboy-ou2hr
    @cboy-ou2hr Před měsícem +2

    HISTORY!!! No wait THE FUTURE!!!!

  • @stunssi4082
    @stunssi4082 Před měsícem

    wow

  • @TheEliminator1992
    @TheEliminator1992 Před měsícem

    The true heroes are the welders who welded that fin.....

  • @Gold586
    @Gold586 Před měsícem +8

    this month, China landed a craft on the dark side of the moon for samples, NASA launch their star ship like star theatre in FLINT or our man FLINT, Musk completed all tasks of launch and landing, what a show involving the THREE RING CIRCUS of PT BARN UM... greatest show on earth...

  • @GasMaskManPNW
    @GasMaskManPNW Před měsícem +1

    This restores so much hope faith in me for our species.

  • @striderQED
    @striderQED Před měsícem

    Rock and Roll.

  • @CerroZimm
    @CerroZimm Před měsícem +1

    can someone explain to me why the boosters land in the ocean instead of land like previous flights?

    • @weekiely1233
      @weekiely1233 Před měsícem +5

      This is a different rocket than Falcon 9. For starters it’s in development currently (these flights are to do that) and so they don’t want to risk hardware or endanger anyone by targeting a land landing
      Secondly it doesn’t have legs and instead will be caught by the towers arms. They don’t want to risk losing the tower so they wanted to simulate a landing at sea first to demonstrate the capability
      A recovered booster attempt will happen either next time or the time after depending on how it goes
      Ship is still a while away from a landing on land

  • @DavidHanley-ov1mb
    @DavidHanley-ov1mb Před měsícem

    This is amazing an inspirational.
    Congratulations to Elon and the whole spacex crew.

  • @momochi9790
    @momochi9790 Před měsícem +1

    凄まじいな。ビルごと打ち上げてるようなもんだものね。

  • @Quwucuqin
    @Quwucuqin Před měsícem

    "One small step for man one big leap for mankind "

  •  Před měsícem +2

    Why was there no cameras at sea so one coyld se the landings ?

    • @sciencepowerpoints
      @sciencepowerpoints Před měsícem

      exactly we never get to see the landings

    • @FnAstroBoi
      @FnAstroBoi Před měsícem

      Because the camera on the other Fin got melted

    • @archierush868
      @archierush868 Před měsícem +1

      @@sciencepowerpointsit was at night and the ship was a tiny bit off course by just 6 miles so there likely isn’t any footage from the water at the ship

  • @suraag2428
    @suraag2428 Před měsícem

  • @shakstzy
    @shakstzy Před měsícem +2

    actually sick

  • @Diptonil_Mukherjee
    @Diptonil_Mukherjee Před měsícem

    People will now give example of true friendship by the 'Starship and it's fin'....

  • @CWN2024
    @CWN2024 Před měsícem

    super 🎉

  • @NickVu1
    @NickVu1 Před měsícem

    Just a bit of buffing the paint and it will be ready again! /s

  • @benzed1618
    @benzed1618 Před měsícem +1

    OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOooooooooooooooooooo
    GO GO GO

  • @Delilah-kh6yu
    @Delilah-kh6yu Před měsícem

    Wow, SpaceX's Starship launch was incredible! 🌟 Thinking about starting to learn video editing to spread the word about their groundbreaking missions! #SpaceExploration #VideoSkills

  • @gierdziui9003
    @gierdziui9003 Před měsícem

    "How hard can rocket science be anyway?"

  • @KerptacularGaming
    @KerptacularGaming Před měsícem

    The fin that could

  • @bijanok1361
    @bijanok1361 Před měsícem

    👏👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @brakmaster
    @brakmaster Před měsícem

    They have a huge heat problem. I'm sure they can solve it.

  • @jichaelmorgan3796
    @jichaelmorgan3796 Před měsícem

    Watch in 2x after 1x!

  • @standingbear9810
    @standingbear9810 Před 28 dny

    😮NO way to really adjust settings..Auto play can NOT be disabled

  • @reychua7538
    @reychua7538 Před měsícem

    looks fkin unreal and cool

  • @ZJProductionHK
    @ZJProductionHK Před měsícem

    Whats that at 1:45???

    • @Nasser-bp6qf
      @Nasser-bp6qf Před měsícem

      U deaf?

    • @ZJProductionHK
      @ZJProductionHK Před 28 dny

      @@Nasser-bp6qf temperory fix to help to reduce weight? any more details about that and what's the name of that device?

  • @ArtificialJetleg
    @ArtificialJetleg Před měsícem

    So did it land? Bur land without exploding?

  • @dragon-lordember4801
    @dragon-lordember4801 Před měsícem +1

    Another Happy Landing. ~Obi Wan Kenobi

  • @rishmastering
    @rishmastering Před měsícem +2

    it's cool that private enterprise can go step by step towards full development so they can try more ambitious projects. Govt agencies like NASA never have such a luxury, which is why humanity has been languishing for so long.....

    • @tewkewl
      @tewkewl Před měsícem

      Government thinks big. The plan obtusely and try to test everything on paper all the way before doing anything. Musk is different. He knows things will fail in ways we can never anticipate. Better to test and fail in real life. Because there is t this giant bureaucracy and giant infrastructure, each rocket costs a fraction of what a NASA rocket costs. So they can be agile in their testing,

  • @Call-meh_kb
    @Call-meh_kb Před 29 dny

    So there was a camera just floating in the fire to film this

    • @archierush868
      @archierush868 Před 29 dny +1

      The camera was inset slightly into the ship and had some bulletproof glass in front to film it

  • @user-tl2ts3ob4d
    @user-tl2ts3ob4d Před měsícem +4

    جميل جدا 🎉🎉🎉

  • @tuttappanna1
    @tuttappanna1 Před měsícem

    Be nice if the astronaut could film the launch from Space

  • @justcurious1940
    @justcurious1940 Před měsícem +1

    Where is the landing?

    • @FnAstroBoi
      @FnAstroBoi Před měsícem +1

      The camera lens was burnt so you couldn’t see much but you could see the engine light up and it land perfectly

  • @user-oi3nd8hs8b
    @user-oi3nd8hs8b Před měsícem

    💙👍💪👍💙

  • @Frying_Owl
    @Frying_Owl Před měsícem +1

    any views from observers would love to see that!