made this old SF reading nerd tear up a bit. The jackass's behavior makes me sick to my stomach, but I can't protest the human race returning to space.The clip of the satellite leaving starship whilst looking back is probably the best example of I've ever seen of Newton's 1st law in action. Hope they show this in schools and colleges.
“Return to space”?made this old SF reading nerd tear up a bit. The jackass's behavior makes me sick to my stomach, but I can't protest the human race returning to space.
Huh?NASA sends humans to space.
SpaceX sends trash to the bottom of the ocean, over and over and every time it's "wait for the next one!"
Was this sentence a typo (emphasis mine)?
As expected, the ship—wider than and nearly as long a Boeing 777 jetliner—tipped over and exploded in a fireball, putting an exclamation point on V3’s trip halfway around the world from the Texas Gulf Coast.
Honestly, was the RV exploding part of the checklist for a successful flight?
Yes. To maintain ITAR and make sure it is unrecoverable by an adversary company or nation, it was detonated on purpose. All of them that have made it to the ocean, controlled have been purposely destroyed with a kaboom for those reasons.Was this sentence a typo (emphasis mine)?
Honestly, was the RV exploding part of the checklist for a successful flight?
The expected result of tipping over a skyscraper filled exclusively with oxygen gas and methane fumes is an explosion.Was this sentence a typo (emphasis mine)?
Honestly, was the RV exploding part of the checklist for a successful flight?
No it was the mostly likely and expected out come of the craft toppling over post soft landing.Was this sentence a typo (emphasis mine)?
Honestly, was the RV exploding part of the checklist for a successful flight?
I think that they planned to roll the ship, but with everything else happening due to the engine out, they cancelled the roll. Can't be sure, but it seems they were trying to do whatever they could get done, even partly.The satellite view was very cool, but one thing I was a little confused about: they said on the broadcast that they were doing that to be able to inspect the heat shield. But the satellites are released from the top of the ship (the side without heat tiles). Was it supposed to do a flip maneuver after they released, or did they mean they wanted to inspect the few tiles they stuck on the top of the flaps?
During the past 6 years SpaceX has sent far more humans to space than NASA. SpaceX has sent 78 individuals to LEO in 20 Dragon spacecraft missions as of mid 2026. NASA has sent 4 of its astronauts to space during that time on the Artemis II flight last month using its SLS/Orion vehicle that costs $4.1B per flight of taxpayer money. The most recent time NASA astronauts flew on a NASA launch vehicle before Artemis II was on the final Space Shuttle flight (July 2011) 15 years ago. That's how long NASA's human spaceflight program has been grounded and has been reliant on other people's launch vehicles (the Russians and SpaceX).NASA sends humans to space.
SpaceX sends trash to the bottom of the ocean, over and over and every time it's "wait for the next one!"
From the article: "mega-rocket"
Seriously? Mega-rocket?
What did you expect to happen instead?Was this sentence a typo (emphasis mine)?
Honestly, was the RV exploding part of the checklist for a successful flight?
Huh?
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xY96v0OIcK4
I guess you could argue NASA paid for it, but by that logic NASA has never sent anyone to space, US citizens have since they pay taxes which fill NASA's pockets.
I think we're being overly pedantic here. Access to space is all about capabilities. Next generation capabilities will clearly rely on a cheap way to access space and SpaceX seems to be tackling it head on.
Or maybe there's more footage they haven't shared?I think that they planned to roll the ship, but with everything else happening due to the engine out, they cancelled the roll. Can't be sure, but it seems they were trying to do whatever they could get done, even partly.
It is clearly wrong. It is built in the Gigabay, it should be Giga-rocketFrom the article: "mega-rocket"
Seriously? Mega-rocket?
It also looked like they had several test tiles on the top side of flaps and other locations, they would certainly be visible to the camera. And in the past they have done things like deliberately test tiles with missing pins or similar to see how they hold up through launch, the top side is the perfect place to test that since those aren't actually necessary tiles.The satellite view was very cool, but one thing I was a little confused about: they said on the broadcast that they were doing that to be able to inspect the heat shield. But the satellites are released from the top of the ship (the side without heat tiles). Was it supposed to do a flip maneuver after they released, or did they mean they wanted to inspect the few tiles they stuck on the top of the flaps?
I mentioned this in the comments on the older article about this flight, but to me it looked like the ship did roll. The lights reflected on the outer hull changing periodically during the coast phase are a pretty clear indicator for that. The just didn't release the footage so far. The only thing they showed was the camera view a few seconds after deployment during the stream.I think that they planned to roll the ship, but with everything else happening due to the engine out, they cancelled the roll. Can't be sure, but it seems they were trying to do whatever they could get done, even partly.
Can you expand on this? I understand what you are saying, but I don't understand why this example is better than others?The clip of the satellite leaving starship whilst looking back is probably the best example of I've ever seen of Newton's 1st law in action. Hope they show this in schools and colleges.