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Starship Flight 7

628 points1 dayspacex.com
dpifke20 hours ago

Preliminary indication is that we had an oxygen/fuel leak in the cavity above the ship engine firewall that was large enough to build pressure in excess of the vent capacity.

Apart from obviously double-checking for leaks, we will add fire suppression to that volume and probably increase vent area. Nothing so far suggests pushing next launch past next month.

https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1880060983734858130

perihelions6 hours ago

Reminds me of one of NASA's reckless ideas, abandoned after Challenger in 1986, to put a liquid hydrogen stage inside the cargo bay of the Shuttle orbiter [0]. That would have likely leaked inside that confined volume, and could plausibly have exploded in a similar way as Starship.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuttle-Centaur

- "The astronauts considered the Shuttle-Centaur missions to be riskiest Space Shuttle missions yet,[85] referring to Centaur as the "Death Star".[86]"

anentropic4 hours ago

I wonder if it's related to the loose panel flapping about at the left of the screen here: https://youtu.be/qzWMEegqbLs?si=aUlI6zfkH3bZCmVm&t=111

Alive-in-20255 hours ago

This sounds like one of those "and also" things. I'd say you add fire suppression AND ALSO try more to reduce leaks. It's got to be really difficult to build huge massive tanks that hold oxygen and other gases under pressure (liquid methane too will have some vapor of course). Are leaks inherently going to happen?

This is meant to be a human rated ship of course, how will you reduce this danger? I know this stuff is hard, but you can't just iterate and say starship 57 has had 3 flights without leaks, we got it now. Since I have no expertise here, I can imagine all kinds of unlikely workarounds like holding the gas under lower pressure with humans on board or something to reduce the risk.

wat100004 hours ago

This might be one of those components where it just needs to be built without problems, and improved safety means fixing individual design and manufacturing flaws as you find them, until you’ve hopefully got them all.

This can work. Fundamental structural components of airliners just can’t fail without killing everyone, and high reliability is achieved with careful design, manufacturing, testing, and inspection. I’m not sure if a gigantic non-leaky tank is harder to pull off that way, but they might have to regardless.

We’re going to have to accept that space travel is going to be inherently dangerous for the foreseeable future. Starship is in a good position to improve this, because it should fly frequently (more opportunities to discover and fix problems) and the non-manned variant is very similar to the manned variant (you can discover many problems without killing people). But there are inherent limitations. There’s just not as much capacity for redundancy. The engines have to be clustered so fratricide or common failure modes are going to me more likely. Losing all the engines is guaranteed death on Starship, versus a good chance to survive in an airliner.

All other practical considerations aside, I think this alone sinks any possibility of using Starship for Earth-to-Earth travel as has been proposed by SpaceX.

mavhc5 hours ago

Given that a) most human rated rockets have had 0 flights before use, and b) I'd expect each starship to have at least 10 flights, and at least 100 in total without mishap before launching, the statistics should be good

wat100004 hours ago

I don’t think (a) is true. The Shuttle flew with people on its maiden voyage, but that’s the only one I can think of.

(b) is true and should make it substantially safer than other launch systems. But given how narrow the margins are for something going wrong (zero ability to land safely with all engines dead, for example) it’s still going to be pretty dangerous compared to more mundane forms of travel.

raverbashing16 hours ago

I'm not sure there's fire suppression effective enough for this type of leak (especially given rocket constraints)

psunavy036 hours ago

Aerospace fire suppression is generally Halon, which would purge the cavity with inert gas.

spandrew4 hours ago

It might not even be about fire suppression. Oxygen and different gases can pool oddly in different types of gravity. If oxygen was leaking, it may be as simple as making sure a vacuum de-gases a chamber before going full throttle.

We know nothing, but the test having good data on what went wrong is a great starting point.

m4rtink13 hours ago

Actually the Super Heavy (first stage) already uses heavy CO2 based fire suppression. Hopefully not that necessary in the long term, but should make it possible to get on with the testing in the short term.

+1
Alive-in-20255 hours ago
raverbashing12 hours ago

That's interesting

However if you see the stream you can see one of the tanks rapidly emptied before loss of signal

It seems this was not survivable regardless of fire or not

echelon6 hours ago

Replying to this comment so people can see the incredible video of the breakup taken from a diverting aircraft:

https://www.reddit.com/r/aviation/comments/1i34dki/starship_...

varjag13 hours ago

If you can displace the oxidizer/air remaining in the volume why not.

+1
littlestymaar9 hours ago
metalman8 hours ago

just increased venting to keep any vapor concentrations of fuel and oxidiser below that capable of igniting, even simple baffling could suffice as the leaks may be trasitory and flowing out of blowoff valves, so possibly a known risk. Space x is also forgoeing much of the full system vibriatory tests, done on traditiinal 1 shot launches, and failure in presurised systems due to unknown resonance is common. Big question is did it just blow up, or did the automated abort, take it out, likely the latter or there would be a hold on the next launch.

vessenes6 hours ago

There’s no way that was anything but the automated abort — it was a comprehensive instantaneous rapid event. Or I guess I’d say, however it started, the automated abort kicked in and worked.

api10 hours ago

Would be unpleasant if there was crew. Of course this thing is pretty far from human eating.

onion2k9 hours ago

Would be unpleasant if there was crew.

19 people have died in the 391 crewed space missions humans have done so far. The risk of dying is very high. Starship is unlikely to change that, although the commoditization of space flight could have reduce the risk simply by making problems easier to spot because there's more flights.

+2
gr3ml1n7 hours ago
BurningFrog7 hours ago

Modern space ships are very likely to change that, as designs mature and improve.

Early aviation was extremely dangerous. Now a plane is among the safest places to be.

api8 hours ago

I could imagine the risk going down to a few times air travel after 50+ years of operating a mature launch system.

helpfulContrib7 hours ago

[dead]

coldtea17 hours ago

[flagged]

pmontra13 hours ago

Test flights.

My tests keep failing until I fix all of my code, then we deploy to production. If code fails in production than that's a problem.

We could say that rockets are not code. A test run of a Spaceship surely cost much more than a test run of any software on my laptop but tests are still tests. They are very likely to fail and there are things to learn from their failures.

+2
notorandit11 hours ago
+4
askl9 hours ago
Cipater8 hours ago

He just means MORE checking for leaks.

They already implemented a whole host of changes to the vehicles after the first test back in 2023. There's a list of corrective actions here.

https://imgur.com/a/Y9dd43o

1416 hours ago

Even NASA years into their existence has suffered catastrophic fatal failures. Even with the best and most knowledgeable experts working on it we are ultimately still in the infancy of space flight. Just like airlines every incident we try and understand the cause and prevent it from happening again. Lastly what they are doing is incredibly difficult with probably thousands of things that could go wrong. I think they are doing an amazing job and hope one day, even if I miss it, that space flight becomes acceptable to all who wish to go to space.

+2
rob7412 hours ago
razemio16 hours ago

Can you name a space company with less failures? Also I think it is unfair to even compare SpaceX to anything else, because of the insane amount of starts / tests combined unparalleled creativity.

According to this website their current success rate is 99,18%. That's a good number I guess? Considering other companies did not even land their stages for years.

https://spaceinsider.tech/2024/07/31/ula-vs-spacex/#:~:text=....

+1
pyrale14 hours ago
+4
input_sh15 hours ago
askl9 hours ago

It's just taxpayer money they're blowing up, so it doesn't really matter.

jacobr17 hours ago

The taxpayer money is for r&d. We should be very tolerant of failure. Aggressively testing with real hardware is a key part of how we learn to make a more robust systems. Fear of failure and waste will slow down progress.

+2
ericd8 hours ago
fsloth16 hours ago

It sounds like he's talking to investors and not to general public.

In my experience in corporate america you communicate efficiency by proclaiming a checklist of things to do - plausible, but not necessarily accurate things - and then let engineers figure it out.

Nobody cares of the original checklist as long as the problem gets resolved. It's weird but it seems very hard to utter statement "I don't have specific answers but we have very capable engineers, I'm sure they will figure it out". It's always better to say (from the top of your head) "To resolve A, we will do X,Y and Z!". Then when A get's resolved, everyone praises the effort. Then when they query what actually was done it's "well we found out in fact what were amiss were I, J K".

+1
the_duke15 hours ago
throw0101a19 hours ago

> (as seen from ground)

As seen from a plane in the air with the break up right in front of it:

https://old.reddit.com/r/aviation/comments/1i34dki/starship_...

mrandish18 hours ago

While the video post does mention "Right in front of us", and it may have appeared that way to the pilots, it wasn't. Gauging relative distance and altitude between aircraft in flight can be notoriously deceptive even to experts, especially in the case of intensely bright, massive, unfamiliar objects at very high speed and great distance.

The RUD was in orbit over 146 kilometers up and >13,000 mph. I'm sure using the FlightAware tracking data someone will work out the actual distance and altitude delta between that plane and the Starship 7 orbital debris. I suspect it was many dozens of miles away and probably still nearly orbital in altitude (~100km).

Spectacular light show though...

aredox12 hours ago

Stupid comment. Several flights had to be diverted because of the break-up, and anyone in flight at that time would be rightly concerned about barely-visible high-speed shrapnel showering a much larger area than where the visible debris are - especially when you are responsible for keeping your hundreds of passengers safe in a very unexpected situation with no rehearsed procedure to follow.

stouset5 hours ago

Nobody is saying it wasn’t prudent to divert.

It would have been impossible for the pilot to know if that debris was shortly in front of them and at co-altitude or extremely far in front of them and at a significantly higher altitude.

In this case it was almost certainly the latter. But the uncertainty alone was enough to warrant diverting.

> Stupid comment.

Aim higher on HN.

javawizard2 hours ago

Ok, this:

> Stupid comment

got me. There's literally an HN rule about this: [0]

> When disagreeing, please reply to the argument instead of calling names. "That is idiotic; 1 + 1 is 2, not 3" can be shortened to "1 + 1 is 2, not 3."

I feel like the world would be a better place if people would tone down the ad-hominem in their day-to-day discourse just a little bit.

[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

pineaux11 hours ago

this.

kryptn17 hours ago

It's in front of them enough.

+1
mrandish17 hours ago
muteh17 hours ago

To be clear, you’re claiming that this was in fact behind them?

fastball15 hours ago

No, I think he is claiming that if they kept flying straight they would not collide with any debris.

varjag13 hours ago

Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion

gcanyon9 hours ago

I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate.

ashoeafoot5 hours ago

Fiery the angels fell, Deep thunder rolled around their shores, burning with the fires of Orc

IAmGraydon18 hours ago

That is absolutely insane. Honestly, I would probably assume a MIRV given the current environment.

Cu3PO4223 hours ago

What a strangely beautiful sight. While I was excited to see ship land, I'm also happy I get to see videos of this!

mrandish20 hours ago

Yes, both spectacular and beautiful. I guess Starship can now say what the legendary comedy actress (and sex symbol) of early cinema Mae West said:

"When I'm good... I'm very good. But when I'm bad... I'm even better." :-)

Combined with another tower catch, that's two spectacular shows for the price of one. Hopefully the onboard diagnostic telemetry immediately prior to the RUD is enough to identify the root cause so it can be corrected.

Molitor590121 hours ago

I felt.. bad watching that breakup, it reminded me of Columbia.

dpifke20 hours ago

Which coincidentally launched 22 years ago today: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/STS-107

birdman313120 hours ago

I remember being woken up by the thunder from Columbia.

Lost it over the years but I used to have a photo of about 20 vans of people parked on our property doing the search for debris. Don't think they found any on our land but there was a 3 ft chunk about 5 miles down the road.

wingspar19 hours ago

I remember waiting for the sonic boom, that never came…

inglor_cz12 hours ago

OTOH I remembered Columbia too and I felt good knowing that Starship is being tested thoroughly without jeopardizing the crew.

The space-shuttle could not fly to the orbit automatically. It had to have people on board, and the first flight, IIRC, came close to a disaster.

xattt21 hours ago

I don’t know why you’re getting downvoted, but I thought this too.

throitallaway18 hours ago

Meta-commentary is annoying (yes, I realize the irony.)

afavour22 hours ago

As long as the debris has no effect wherever it lands, I agree with you

verzali22 hours ago

A lot of flights seem to be diverting to avoid it...

https://bsky.app/profile/flightradar24.com/post/3lfvhpgmqqc2...

+3
Kye22 hours ago
+1
ralfd22 hours ago
dylan60420 hours ago

More as long as there were no humans onboard

ijidak21 hours ago

Looks like something out of a sci-fi movie.

mrandish19 hours ago

The number of SpaceX video clips that I know are "actual things really happening" which still activate the involuntary "Sci-Fi / CGI effect" neurons in my brain is remarkable.

+1
bigiain19 hours ago
dotancohen14 hours ago

Excitement guaranteed

TMWNN17 hours ago

>What a strangely beautiful sight.

"My god, Bones, what have I done?"

badgersnake10 hours ago

It’s a pretty expensive way to make fireworks.

olex23 hours ago

Inadvertently perfect timing for this footage. Glowing and backlit by the setting sun, against clear and already darkening evening sky... couldn't plan the shot any better if you tried.

Let's hope no debris came down on anyone or anything apart from open water.

andrewinardeer22 hours ago

I take it if SpaceX debris hit and destroyed a boat the owner can claim damages from SpaceX?

Does international space law allow for this?

ceejayoz21 hours ago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Liability_Convention

Only used once, when the Soviets dropped a nuclear reactor on Canada.

> States (countries) bear international responsibility for all space objects that are launched within their territory. This means that regardless of who launches the space object, if it was launched from State A's territory, or from State A's facility, or if State A caused the launch to happen, then State A is fully liable for damages that result from that space object.

dr_orpheus3 hours ago

But don't forget about a local government in Australia fining NASA $400 for littering after debris from Skylab re-entry landed there.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skylab#Re-entry_and_debris

+5
krick20 hours ago
twic19 hours ago

Does the thing have to have got into space and then come back for this to apply?

walrus0119 hours ago

As I recall a village in Australia also billed NASA with their standard municipal littering fine, for skylab debris that landed there, and the bill was paid 20+ years later by a radio station as a publicity stunt.

bigiain19 hours ago

[flagged]

somenameforme17 hours ago

Most things put into space are designed to burn upon uncontrolled descent through orbit. And then the overwhelming majority of Earth is water and even on land the overwhelming majority of land is either completely uninhabited or sparsely inhabited. And then even if against all odds somehow something doesn't burn up in the atmosphere, and somehow lands in a densely populated area - the odds of hitting a spot with somebody or something relevant on it is still quite low. The overall odds of actually hitting somewhere really bad are just astronomically low.

Nonetheless, recently NASA won the lottery when part of some batteries they jettisoned from the ISS ended up crashing through a house in Florida. [1] Oddly enough there are treaties on this, but only from an international perspective - landing on your own country was not covered! But I'm certain NASA will obviously make it right, as would SpaceX. If they didn't, then surely the family could easily sue as well.

[1] - https://www.space.com/space-debris-florida-family-nasa-lawsu...

HPsquared22 hours ago

It's probably similar to if a US ship crashed into your yacht.

+2
dylan60420 hours ago
delichon21 hours ago

Musk said that part of the launch licensing was a requirement to estimate the potential damage to whales in the ocean. He said that the odds turned out to be so low that in his opinion if a whale gets hit it had it coming.

https://jabberwocking.com/did-elon-musk-really-have-to-study...

+1
slippy21 hours ago
9cb14c1ec023 hours ago

Given that the engine telemetry shown on the broadcast showed the engines going out one by one over a period of some seconds, I could easily imagine some sort of catastrophic failure on a single engine that cascaded.

s1artibartfast22 hours ago

It could be many things, plumbing to the engines, tank leak, ect. You could see fire on the control flap actuators, so the ship interior was engulfed in fire at the same time the first engine was out.

consumer45122 hours ago

Given the huge spread of the debris, it must have been a decent sized boom, no? I mean that's got to be 10's of miles wide in this video.

https://x.com/adavenport354/status/1880026262254809115

nialv720 hours ago

do we know when this video was taken? this could just be ship breaking up during re-entry because it lost altitude control. not necessarily the moment of the primary failure.

+2
walrus0122 hours ago
m4rtink22 hours ago

Yeah, most likely engine bay fire taking out systems one by one. Would be interesting to compare the telemetry cutoff with the video of explosion if possible. That could indicate if the fire even triggered an explosion, flight termination being activated or just reentry heating making the tanks explode.

+1
s1artibartfast21 hours ago
jiggawatts22 hours ago

I noticed that the CH4 tank level was much lower than the O2 tank level. That suggests a leak.

dotancohen13 hours ago

Or FOD in the LOx supply lines. The methane would keep following, even with the turbopump shut down, until the valve closes. And the methane turbopump might actually keep running with reduced supply oxygen - Raptors have two turbopumps.

idlewords21 hours ago

There's a flickering flame briefly visible on the flap hinge of the second stage in the last footage it sent down.

s1artibartfast23 hours ago

Most Sci-Fi real footage I have ever seen.

Edit: Reminds me of "The Eye" from star wars Andor

https://youtu.be/9lrr0CWHDGA?t=43

JumpCrisscross22 hours ago

Wow. It reminds me of the comet scene from Andor. I wonder if suborbital pyrotechnics will become a thing one day.

ralusek21 hours ago

> one day

today!

dylan60420 hours ago

Watching those videos, my hand naturally looks for the roller ball from too much time playing missile command

echoangle23 hours ago

Probably one of the most expensive fireworks (but probably still cheaper than the first Ariane 5 launch), but it looks very cool.

m4rtink22 hours ago

I think the N1 test flights are also a contender. I still remember something about kerosene raining for 15 minutes after the explosion.

r0m4n09 hours ago

Does anyone know the timing of when the breakup actually occurred?

I’m curious because I was on a flight to Puerto Rico from Florida at 3pm ET they diverted our flight. They didn’t really give us many details but said the “landing strips were closed”. Our friends on a slightly early flight diverted to ST Thomas. We were going to divert to a nearby airport in Puerto Rico (we were going to land in Aguadilla instead of San Juan) so I feel like these diversions wouldn’t be related but the timing seems pretty odd.

espeed8 hours ago

Depending on the precise launch time (4:36/4:37 PM CST) "Ship exploded at ≈T+00:08:26": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starship_flight_test_7

krick20 hours ago

I'm not worried about the Starship itself, but it looks kinda dangerous. Is it?

dmix20 hours ago

It's very likely it exploded on purpose by SpaceX after it wasn't showing good data (aka Flight Termination System). Specifically over water.

llm_trw21 hours ago

Is there a video you don't need to log in to view?

nomilk20 hours ago

The fourth one (instagram) doesn't require login.

Side note: annoying that twitter/X requires login. I'd have sworn Elon said he was removing that requirement to login to view tweets (I think he discussed it with George Hotz).

Found it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FkNkSQ42jg4&t=49m30s

Elon:

> This is insane. You shouldn't need a twitter account at all unless you need to write something

George:

> Why did you put the pop up back?

Elon:

> We should not be prohibiting read-only scroll

So there seems to be agreement that twitter shouldn't require an account to read (view) posts. The Twitter Space is from 23 Dec 2022 so perhaps things changed since.

llm_trw20 hours ago

Instagram requires login. Twitter does not.

numpad018 hours ago

Twitter started requiring login post acquisition. Never did before.

dylan60420 hours ago

I just closed the login prompt for the insta link, and watched the video. So it does prompt one to login, but it definitely isn't required to watch the video from that link

+1
nomilk20 hours ago
krick20 hours ago

Musk's promises never age well, but, really, this particular dialog should be a meme.

hrldcpr20 hours ago

for the record I was able to watch without logging in, on Firefox Linux

TechTechTech23 hours ago

Where will this debris land? Can it impact airplane routes?

mh-23 hours ago

https://x.com/DJSnM/status/1880032865209184354

>Commercial flights are turning around to avoid potential debris.

ricardobeat22 hours ago

That sounds... unlikely, to say the least. The ship blew up at 145km altitude over Turks and Caicos. Debris would fall thousands of kilometers to the east, if anything survives re-entry.

EDIT: at these speeds, over 20000km/h, the falling debris will travel a very long way before coming down. For satellite re-entry, the usual estimated ground contact point is something like 8000km+ downrange [1]. There is little chance debris would come anywhere near commercial flight altitude in the area around where the videos were made.

Apparently the planned splashdown was in the Indian Ocean near Australia, but this being an uncontrolled re-entry it could be far off from that, in either direction.

[1] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S009457652...

s1artibartfast22 hours ago

Im not sure what part you are skeptical about. The debris videos filmed at Turks and Caicos are about 800km east of the explosion video in the Bahamas. They appear to be real. Still high but coming down fast.

Airspace is big, but I wouldn't want to fly a Jet with hundreds of people near it either.

I imagine aviation radar towers would only have the most limited data as the event unfolded.

jjk1663 hours ago

> at these speeds, over 20000km/h, the falling debris will travel a very long way before coming down.

Without air resistance, falling 145 km takes 172 seconds, which would result in the debris falling 956 km east of the explosion point if it were moving horizontal to the ground to begin with. With air resistance, it is substantially shorter as everything is decelerating proportional to the velocity cubed. If we approximate the terminal velocity of the debris as 500 km/h, to a first order approximation it would travel approximately 79 km east. The distance from West Caicos island to Grand Turk island is 138 km, for reference.

Satellites are moving much faster and at much higher altitude. Starship was not in orbit.

+2
Retric22 hours ago
seb120422 hours ago
mh-22 hours ago

I'm not at all qualified to speculate. So I'll just add that for those unfamiliar with him, the person who posted that tweet is an astrophysicist with a popular YT channel.

m4rtink22 hours ago

Yeah, most likely an understandable overreacting givent the fireworks. But better safe than sorry in this case. :-)

lysace22 hours ago

[flagged]

+1
mh-22 hours ago
s1artibartfast22 hours ago

upvoted and flagged.

s1artibartfast23 hours ago

east of Turks and Caicos Islands in the Caribbean. Draw a line from Boca Chia to Turks and keep going

adolph20 hours ago

A great circle line tho

kylebenzle23 hours ago

HN comments is just reading strangers steam of consciousness now?

hinkley19 hours ago

It’s crazy how fast that ship is moving and how big the explosion was that it looks like something much, much lower in the air went boom. It was transitting the sky faster than a commercial aircraft does. So it gives an impression more like a private aircraft breaking up at 5-10k feet.

teractiveodular23 hours ago

The last one is stage separation, not an explosion. You can clearly see the "exploded" rocket continuing to fly afterwards.

olex23 hours ago

Separation is much closer to the launch pad in Texas, the booster barely makes it downrange at all before turning around. This being filmed from the Bahamas with this much lateral velocity, gotta be the Ship breaking up. Likely the FTS triggered after enough engines failed that it couldn't make orbit / planned trajectory.

s1artibartfast23 hours ago

I dont think so. I think it is the breakup, with a large mass visible. most of the material will continue on until it parabolically renters and burns up in a visible manner

Polizeiposaune23 hours ago

No, if that was taken from the Bahamas, that's an explosion connected to the loss of the 2nd stage.

Staging happens closer to the Texas coast and I don't believe you'd have line of sight to it from the Bahamas.

pixl9723 hours ago

I'd say it might be after the loss of the craft. It was losing engines for a while then lost telemetry. This would have been a bit later when it started tumbling in the atmosphere on re-entry. Hopefully we'll know for sure in a few days.

walrus0123 hours ago

That's for sure not stage separation, that's an explosion from the FTS rupturing the ship tanks.

ericcumbee22 hours ago

If it was the FTS wouldn't the flight control systems send a message back to the ground saying "things are going sideways here, FTS Activated"

anothertroll45620 hours ago

Maybe it did, or is it public that it didn't? A possible sequence (very typical in rocket failures) is: fire, engine failure(s), loss of control, rupture due to aero forces or FTS activation, explosion due to propellant mixture. Not all of these have to happen, but it's a typical progression. Before the days of AFTS the FTS activation would be pretty delayed.

pixl9723 hours ago

Eh I'm thinking more it was a reentry explosion from pressurized tanks. Engines had failed a while before then.

s1artibartfast22 hours ago

This is over the Bahamas. Re-entry was much further east, near Turks and Caicos Islands.

Also, if a pressurized tank is reentering, that means the FTS failed to detonate.

anothertroll45622 hours ago

Nope. That's definitely an explosion (source: I'm in the rocket business). However it may not be an explosion of the whole stage. Probably of the engine section.

anothertroll45622 hours ago

Nevermind. It was probably the FTS like other people pointed out.

oo231221 hours ago

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xjiaw2319 hours ago

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raincole18 hours ago

Does anyone know where the debris landed? In the ocean? Or just burnt out in the atmosphere?

tjpnz11 hours ago

Wasn't going fast enough to fully burn up. There'll be small pieces of debris scattered over quite a large area.

oceanadventures19 hours ago

I have a boat and want to pick up floating heat tiles in the ocean, do you think we can find the parts by Puerto Rico?

pinoy42019 hours ago

No

RecycledEle19 hours ago

I think this was the first test of StarShip v2. I'd be surprised if everything worked after they redesigned the whole StarShip. That would be like refactoring Microsoft Windows by hand-typing new code and expecting it to run without errors on the first try.

oceanadventures19 hours ago

Where can I find the heat tiles? Will they be landing near Puerto Rico?

rkagerer15 hours ago

What a show

tsimionescu13 hours ago

Another failure, another few months of figuring out why this isn't working and can't stick to its flight path. They caused chaos for many commercial planes, so they'll definitely need some full reports to the FTA to know what they're doing about this, why the debris is falling over flight paths, and so on.

ijidak21 hours ago

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DE54iL7xbZL/?igsh=dTNtZ2Q4aHl...

It's beautiful. Looks like something out of a sci-fi movie.

hinkley18 hours ago

Cue Aerosmith song.

inglor_cz23 hours ago

Looks like work of the Flight Termination System. Something measurable had to go very wrong.

olex23 hours ago

While the telemetry was still going, you could see Ship engines going out one by one. Earlier when there was video there was what looked like flames visible inside one of the flap hinges, definitely shouldn't be there on ascent. Presumably something failed internally and caused the Ship to shut down before reaching target trajectory, at which point either FTS or the failure itself caused it to blow up, as seen on the Insta reel.

enraged_camel22 hours ago

On the NSF youtube channel they pointed out that at some point the methane indicator started decreasing much faster than the LOX indicator, which points to some sort of leak. It would explain why the engines started to shut down.

JumpCrisscross22 hours ago

> Something measurable had to go very wrong

Or slightly wrong. An FTS is programmed to be conservative. Particularly on unmanned flights. Doubly particularly on reëntry. Triply so on experiments bits.

DeepYogurt21 hours ago

Depends on the programmers I guess ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

BuyMyBitcoins16 hours ago

All of the exception handling was spent on the try/catch of the booster.

JumpCrisscross21 hours ago

> Depends on the programmers I guess

It depends on the Air Force.

enragedcacti21 hours ago

It wasn't FTS, it just blew up: https://x.com/SpaceX/status/1880033318936199643

anothertroll45620 hours ago

That doesn't negate FTS.

+1
enragedcacti19 hours ago
EncomLab11 hours ago

First Shuttle orbited astronauts and successfully recovered all intended components. Every Saturn 5 was successful, the 3rd flight sent a crew to lunar orbit, and the 6th put a crew on the moon.

To date a Starship has yet to be recovered after flight - and those launched are effectively boilerplate as they have carried no cargo (other than a banana) and have none of the systems in place to support a crew.

Some people are really fetishizing iterative failure - but just because you are wandering in the desert does not mean there is a promised land.

fernandotakai10 hours ago

>Some people are really fetishizing iterative failure - but just because you are wandering in the desert does not mean there is a promised land.

i guess you didn't follow the falcon 9 failures right? here's two minutes of failures https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvim4rsNHkQ

and guess what? they finally got it right and now falcon 9 is not only extremely reliable but quite cheap for everyone.

NASA (with the shuttle and saturn V) had a completely different idea on rocket development (and blue origin seems to follow their mindset), which is fine. but to say that this is "failure fetish" when spacex has an amazing track record is just hating for the sake of hating.

i would recommend, if you have the time, the book liftoff, by eric berger https://www.amazon.com/Liftoff-Desperate-Early-Launched-Spac... -- it was the book that opened my eyes to why spacex works like they do.

computerex7 hours ago

SpaceX’s track record is too fetishized by the Musk fanboys. Falcon 9 has some weird Demi god status even though the launch vehicle is no different than the competitor like Soyuz.

pieix6 hours ago

I might have missed it, but I’ve never seen a Soyuz booster fly twice, let alone 25 times.

blendergeek7 hours ago

Part of why it has "weird Demi god status" is that it is not only so reliable but also so cheap. Soyuz is not reusable. Falcon 9 is. That is why Falcon 9 is so celebrated. No other rocket company or state-sponsored space agency comes close to its track record of cheap, reliable, reusable rockets.

TrapLord_Rhodo7 hours ago

Soyuz? an expendable rocket with 40% less payload capacity? How is that a competitor to falcon 9? More like a competitor to rocketlab's current generation.

marknutter2 hours ago

It's been so weird to see people say willfully ignorant shit just because they don't like Elon Musk.

inglor_cz6 hours ago

"though the launch vehicle is no different than the competitor like Soyuz"

That is ... so obviously and blatantly untrue. That is like saying that an old wooden biplane from 1917 is not different from Boeing 777.

bradgessler2 hours ago

> Every Saturn 5 was successful

Do you not count the Saturn 1B rocket capsule that caught on fire on the pad and burnt the Apollo 1 astronauts alive?

What about Apollo 13?

> but just because you are wandering in the desert does not mean there is a promised land

The "promise land" in this analogy is visible past the desert. What's not known is what route to get there.

In your tortured analogy, the people who "are really fetishizing iterative failure" are not doing that; they're fetishizing the fact that the person walking through this desert is trying, and if they hit a barrier, they iterate and try again until they reach the promise land. Along the way they are accomplishing what was once thought to be impossible.

EncomLab41 minutes ago

The command module fire had zero to do with the Saturn V. Apollo 13 again was the command and service module, and in that case the crew was "returned safely to the Earth".

jve10 hours ago

Apollo WAS an impressive achievement

Starship IS an impressive achievement while they speed up development process with real-world hard data

New Glenn IS an impressive achievement while taking their time to develop a vehicle that reached the orbit on first time

Per wiki on Apollo

> Landing humans on the Moon by the end of 1969 required the most sudden burst of technological creativity, and the largest commitment of resources ($25 billion; $182 billion in 2023 US dollars)[22] ever made by any nation in peacetime. At its peak, the Apollo program employed 400,000 people and required the support of over 20,000 industrial firms and universities.[23]

Different budget, different number of people working on this stuff and different mindset. Actually the Apollo program was also iterative and it paid off.

tsimionescu10 hours ago

The Apollo program was inventing all of this technology, and using only extremely rudimentary computers, still doing many calculations with slide rulers.

SpaceX has all of the Apollo program's work to build on, and computers that could do all the computing work that the Apollo program ever made, in total, in probably a few minutes.

throw595910 hours ago

SpaceX is inventing quite a lot, there's more areas where they started greenfield than where they got help.

+1
tsimionescu9 hours ago
me_me_me10 hours ago

this doesn't even scratch the surface. Slow motion cameras and real time sensors for debugging hardware issues, computer simulations, 3d printing.

Apollo program directors would advocate to start a nuclear war with ussr if they could get hands on that kind of tech.

But also NASA landed two SUVs on mars first try, using skycrane, Full remote. they developed and built mars helicopter/drone (rip). First try. But spaceX gets the glory because... break things??

drillsteps57 hours ago

Apollo program was a major achievement, probably the largest in the history of humanity as of yet. But SpaceX definitely should get a credit for "breaking things", or for running agile dev cycle with hardware ("hardware heavy"). Let's just strap engines to a fuel tank and try to fly it. Let's just build a body by welding steel plates together and see what happens. Let's just launch this thing to 20 miles and see if we can make it aerobrake and land it with the engines. Iterate by learning and constantly improving. Nobody done it at that scale as of yet.

(Which of course is only possible if you have the Founding Father with a few billion $$ just laying around)

+1
ceejayoz7 hours ago
Albatross92375 hours ago

SpaceX getting credit for innovating in their own way doesn't mean NASA doesn't get credit for all the great things it has done.

+4
saberience9 hours ago
philipwhiuk7 hours ago

Congratulations for neatly excluding Apollo 1, Columbia and Challenger's crews, may their memories rest heavy on your conscience.

Your supposed excellent programs killed people.

wolf550e6 hours ago

NASA put people on the first flight of the shuttle to space, which turned out after the fact to have 1 in 12 chance of killing the crew. Can't do that in 2025.

https://x.com/eager_space/status/1879291376418120184

1970-01-013 hours ago

Apollo 6 (2nd Satun V launch) was "less than nominal" and warranted a congressional hearing. It did succeed, but luck played a part. George Mueller declared later that Apollo 6 was a failure for NASA.

https://web.archive.org/web/20080120112115/http://www.hq.nas...

https://web.archive.org/web/20080227133401/http://www.hq.nas...

snakeyjake6 hours ago

>Every Saturn 5 was successful

>Some people are really fetishizing iterative failure

Subassemblies that made up Saturn V went through several hundred (inflation adjusted) billion dollars' worth of iterative failure before the Apollo program was announced.

The only reason it WAS announced was all of the iterative failure that had been paying off.

The day JFK uttered "shall go to the moon in this deck-aid", the F-1 engine had already been exploding and failing for three years.

My memory is hazy, from a brown bag I went to at work 15 years ago, but they blew up around 50 F-1s before one worked right.

And while the Saturn isn't an upgraded Jupiter it is EXTREMELY closely related to Jupiter and Jupiter had a shit-ton of failures before they got it right, turned around, and used all of that knowledge to build Saturn.

onion2k10 hours ago

The shuttle programme was signed off in 1972, had it's first flight in 1977, and it's first crewed flight in 1981. Starship has been going for 5 years (albeit on the back of lots of other SpaceX work.) It's getting to orbit in the same time that Shuttle took to 'fly' on the back of a 747. A few lost ships is a pretty small price to pay for going twice as fast on delivery.

me_me_me10 hours ago

Oh wow a company in 2020s is compared to company in 70s. Wow nice benchmark. We are going to be good as guys from 50 years ago.

Imagine Mercedes said it, or Intel or anyone. They would be a laughing stock.

skirge8 hours ago

compare the cost

esotericimpl7 hours ago

[dead]

bboygravity10 hours ago

So what does a rocket company need to do to be imrpessive in your eyes?

hooli_gan10 hours ago

A Mars cargo mission, according to the timeline spacex set for themselves. https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-F2HFqsVkiZc/YT9bPpXSKDI/AAAAAAAAG...

pms8 hours ago

Thank you. This needs to be emphasized more.

pclmulqdq7 hours ago

A lot of people have been shitting on SLS for being too expensive over the last 5 years, but it's worth noting that the Artemis program has been completely fucked due to SpaceX massively missing its milestones on Starship. So many people believe that Elon Musk is going to bring humanity back to the Moon, but he is largely the reason that humanity is not back on the moon already.

The GAO put out a report on this a few months ago, pointing out the failures of SpaceX here (including massive cost overruns) much more than the supposed cost overruns of SLS. Incidentally, after this GAO report came out, Elon Musk became very interested in being in charge of managing "government waste."

+1
ceejayoz6 hours ago
panick21_4 hours ago

Complete nonsense. There are many issues with Artemis timeline.

And of course its completely ridiculous to blame a program that received 2 billion $ and only really started a few years ago, vs things like SLS Orion that have been going for decades and absorbed 50 billion $.

Mistletoe4 hours ago

Ah Elon time strikes again.

tsimionescu10 hours ago

Maybe match some achievements from 60 years ago, like having a rocket that can put someone on the moon, back when the largest supercomputer in the space program had less FLOPS than my watch.

jve10 hours ago

Decreasing price of a launch by multiple orders of magnitude and increased cadence is also an achievement that hasn't been achieved previously.

+3
tsimionescu10 hours ago
avereveard5 hours ago

That's a 60billion government program I guess to match the program you need to match that as well, starship is doing what it's doing at a tenth of a cost so far.

pelagicAustral10 hours ago

Go to the moon, land a rover, wander about, come back with everyone alive... should be easy right?, I mean, it's already been done... RIGHT????

rco878610 hours ago

We'll have to get to parity with what we were doing 50-60 years ago.

The reusability is awesome, of course. More of that!

And also, still gotta get the basics right. Oxygen/fuel leaks aren't a great look (spoken as a not rocket scientist).

Over2Chars10 hours ago

It needs to give him a job :-)

pfannkuchen6 hours ago

It’s pretty weird to get any engineering thing right on the first test, no? The entire development strategy would have to be based around that goal. I think the standard engineering strategy would be to test early and often.

I hadn’t thought about it before, but, especially during the Cold War, the US government had a big incentive to appear infallible that SpaceX doesn’t have. Are we sure there weren’t more tests in secret? USG also has access to huge tracts of land that is off limits, and rocket tests are easily ‘national security issue’ enough to justify being conducted in secret. Just a thought.

jiggawatts46 minutes ago

As others have pointed out: Compare the budgets.

That “first success” was actually on the back of a long series of related rockets with technology and engines inherited from a huge missile program. Those NASA eggheads didn’t start from zero on a shoestring budget and make things work on the first try! The Saturn V was just a stretched version of the Saturn series of rockets. These all cost hundreds of billions in today’s money to develop!

Second, they’re not “the same thing”. A single-use piece of technology has very different design constraints and engineering considerations as a reusable piece of technology.

A single-use weapon is a bomb. A reusable weapon is a sword. Just because you can shove a fuse into some explosives doesn’t mean you can forge a sword that won’t shatter on first use.

An equivalent example from space technology are explosive bolts. NASA uses them extensively, SpaceX never does… because they’re not reusable and not up-front testable. They’re expensive too. So instead they iterated (and iterated!) on vacuum-rated actuators that can serve the same role. This is a non-trivial exercise that resulted in a few RUDs. This is why NASA didn’t even try! It’s harder and not needed if reusability was a non-goal.

DrBazza3 hours ago

> Every Saturn 5 was successful

On the other hand every Russian N1 wasn’t.

Rocketry is hard. It’s seems proven that if you’re a government space agency it’s even harder.

christophilus10 hours ago

I will say, though, that booster catch is one of the coolest things I’ve ever seen.

EncomLab10 hours ago

Yes- very impressive feat of engineering.

nicky010 hours ago

> To date, no Starship has been recovered after flight.

This is irrelevant, as none of the flights included any plans to recover the Starship. The objective for each flight has been to dump the vehicle in the sea at the target zone.

Over2Chars10 hours ago

I think wandering in the desert is done because there is a promised land. Yes, it doesn't mean that it exists.

But if you don't wander, you'll never find out. You gotta believe

skirge8 hours ago

practically infinite resources and "classified" failures

notjustanymike8 hours ago

I mean, yeah, it's a lot easier to build a rocket that only goes up.

geetee3 hours ago

Musk derangement syndrome

TypingOutBugs9 hours ago

> First Shuttle orbited astronauts and successfully recovered all intended components.

There were 16 taxi and flight tests with Enterprise before the launch in 1981 (Approach and Landing Tests - Enterprise) where the first 8 were uncrewed. Just saying there were prior test flights using it.

There was something like 4 years of testing before the proper launch.

make_it_sure9 hours ago

you are quite stupid or purposely ignore Falcon 9

esotericimpl7 hours ago

[dead]

charles_f23 hours ago

That "landing" (is it still considered a landing if it's chopsticked a few meters before it touches the ground?) is so unnatural it almost looks fake. So big and unimaginable that it feels like watching fx on a movie!

The close-up camera right after was interesting, I thought it captured on the grid fins, but it looks like there are two small purpose-built knobs for that.

The times we live in!

yreg23 hours ago

You have perfectly described the feeling I had regarding the first belly flop demo (at least I think it was the first one?)

https://youtu.be/gA6ppby3JC8?si=wY7TQsbR_wxoud75&t=70 (ten seconds from the timestamp)

sneak23 hours ago

Yeah, that shot is so clean and smooth it feels like a render. Absolutely iconic even after a dozen rewatchings. The iris flares and the framerate… gotta hand it to whoever planned that shot and placed that camera. A+ videography.

Cthulhu_12 hours ago

As another commenter pointed out, it's down to better cameras; higher resolution and framerates than "traditional" cameras used in this kind of recording. But it could be better still, the camera setup in the clip still gets a lot of shaking from the blasts.

IIRC they use regular off the shelf gopro cameras to mount on the ones going into space. Granted, the mount is ruggedized metal else the cameras wouldn't survive, lol [0].

I'm also reminded of NASA's cameras which were mounted on the mechanisms of an anti-air gun, great for slow and precise movements. I'm sure they still use that today but I couldn't find a good source. I did find an article about NASA's ruggedized cameras for use on spacecraft and the like though [1].

[0] https://www.quora.com/Was-the-GoPro-camera-modified-for-the-... [1] https://spinoff.nasa.gov/Redefining_the_Rugged_Video_Camera

diggan11 hours ago

> it's down to better cameras; higher resolution and framerates than "traditional" cameras used in this kind of recording

It looks cool because of the angle and framing though, someone knew exactly what they were doing. Without the angle/framing, you can have all the resolution and framerates in the world, it still wouldn't look as cool. It's a cinematographic choice that made that shot.

> But it could be better still, the camera setup in the clip still gets a lot of shaking from the blasts.

I'd love to hear ideas how you'd prevent the shaking. Forget gimbals or similar semi-pro setups as they wouldn't be nearly enough. What are you attaching it to, in your better setup? A drone would be blown away, and anything attached to the ground would likely start to shake regardless of your setup.

dzhiurgis20 hours ago

It the high dynamic range (HDR) that makes it look "unnatural" because we are so used to seeing over-compressed photos and videos.

Plus maybe something they do with stability and frame-rate.

keepamovin10 hours ago

If cutting edge engineering with conventional physics looks fake to you folks imagine what a hard time you’re going to have with real videos of actual UFOs.

elicksaur8 hours ago

They’re being rhetorical for emphasis. No need to twist it into an ad hominem.

keepamovin6 hours ago

It's not twisted and not ad hominem. No attack on a person, just a statement of the relative difficulty of appreciating something truly new when cutting edge looks fake.

ortusdux23 hours ago

IIRC, the grid fins are not strong enough to support the rocket, and reinforcing them would add too much weight to the vehicle.

The plan is to catch the second stage the same way, and the starship in flight now is the first to have mockup pins to test the aerodynamics and see if they cause issues during reentry.

sfblah20 hours ago

It seems like they'll need a lot of different vehicles to catch the second stage given the number of pieces I saw in the video.

charles_f23 hours ago

I was surprised they were landing them on those fins, makes more sense now.

noneeeed10 hours ago

I found the same when the first Falcon Heavy executed the simultaneous booster landing. Watching them both come down, within moments of each other at neighbouring pads was incredibly cool.

Its sad that Gerry Anderson never got to see this. It's like something from a Thunderbirds episode.

0_____020 hours ago

You can hear some sounds in the stream that I think are one of the presenters weeping during the launch and landing sequences. I think I would be similarly awe struck to witness such a thing

gazchop23 hours ago

I heard someone say it's like trying to land the Statue of Liberty. Turns out the statue is actually shorter.

levocardia23 hours ago

The clearance is amazing -- probably bigger IRL than it looked on the camera, but it looked like only a foot or two between the chopsticks arm and the top of the rocket! The control algorithms on the gimballed engines must be insanely precise.

adolph20 hours ago

Since I’ve never seen an f9 landing, watching ift5 land was kinda mind blowing. Even 6k away you can tell it’s really big but moved with a grace and smoothness like a hippo in water only with crackling flame.

smusamashah19 hours ago

View of previous catch (flight 5) from a very distant vantage point was even more incredible for me. You can see the scale of things right there

https://x.com/shaunmmaguire/status/1845444890764644694

https://youtu.be/Vzyaud250Xo

https://youtu.be/ntmssdzp_qY

Anyone has similar view of this landing?

Edit: distant view of flight 7 by the same person

https://x.com/shaunmmaguire/status/1880044690428645684

ruivil713 hours ago

Back a few years ago. This was the starship that in 2024 would reach Mars with humans, with so much space taken by crew and materials, and almost no fuel, and "10 times cheaper". And currently is an empty shell. Nice fireworks and show, but no meaningful payload yet. Not even LO. And this will be ready for 2026 artemis mission?

GiorgioG8 hours ago

I’m not a big fan of Elon Musk, but this is just the typical executive talking up their product and to some extent being overly optimistic about timelines. You’d think with the quantity of software engineers in HN this would be obvious, but the (rightful IMO) disdain for Elon Musk is resetting people’s brains.

computerex7 hours ago

Guy is a serial liar and you are making excuses on his behalf.

GiorgioG5 hours ago

I hope you’re as vocal about your higher ups.

hooli_gan5 hours ago

The taxpayer is paying for these lies

schiffern5 hours ago

If you think delays in aerospace constitute "lies," you're not going to have a good time following any aerospace company. Unexpected delays are par for the course.

hooli_gan5 hours ago

If you think these are mere delays, then I have a bridge to sell to you

GiorgioG5 hours ago

The taxpayer pays for all the lies.

inemesitaffia7 hours ago

Ask NASA about MSR

modeless23 hours ago

Oh no they lost the ship after the booster landed! Seems like they lost an engine, then I saw fire around the rear flap hinges in the last images before they cut out, and then the telemetry showed more engines shutting down until it froze.

During ascent I also noticed a panel near the front fins that seemed to be loose and flapping. Probably not related but who knows.

Edit: Here's a video of the aftermath. Strangely beautiful. https://x.com/deankolson87/status/1880026759133032662

londons_explore23 hours ago

> fire around the rear flap hinges

I believe it's pretty hard to have a fire at that altitude. You need a leak of both methane and oxygen, and an ignition source.

I wonder if perhaps one of the engines split open and the exhaust wasn't going into the engine bell?

pixl9723 hours ago

I mean blowing liquid oxygen on something with a hot heat source beside it typically turns things to fuel you wouldn't expect. Like metal.

londons_explore7 hours ago

At atmospheric pressure, yes.

But up at 140km altitude, the pressure is so low that I don't think even pure oxygen would lead to combustion.

fooker4 hours ago

There are two huge tanks providing the pressure here.

modeless22 hours ago

Good point, must have been an O2 leak oxidizing random stuff.

inglor_cz23 hours ago

What a celestial bonfire. It indeed has a haunting beauty.

anothertroll45623 hours ago

[dead]

anothertroll12323 hours ago

[dead]

ChuckMcM21 hours ago

Will be interesting to hear the postmortem on the second stage. The booster part seemed to work pretty flawlessly with the exception of a non-firing engine on boost back which then did fire during the landing burn.

If the person doing their on-screen graphics is reading this, I wonder if you have considered showing tank LOX/CH4 remaining as a log graph. I believe it decreases logrithmically when being used (well it would if you keep 'thrust' constant) so that would create a linear sweep to the 'fuel level' status.

modeless19 hours ago

I don't believe they throttle the engines up or down much during the second stage burn. Fuel decreases ~linearly and thrust is relatively constant. Acceleration increases as fuel mass decreases.

hinkley18 hours ago

Don’t they throttle back at MaxQ?

modeless18 hours ago

Yes, on the first stage.

+1
hinkley15 hours ago
ChuckMcM19 hours ago

I would be surprised if that was the case, my reasoning to that is that computing where a thing is going, when it's under going with changing acceleration AND changing mass, is pretty complicated. Especially if you already have the capability to throttle the engines and keep 'a' constant.

They might, I'm not saying your wrong, I'm just saying that I cannot imagine how you would justify the added complexity of doing it that way.

modeless18 hours ago

The computations are complicated but not that complicated relative to everything else SpaceX is doing. It's much more important to optimize the propellant mass by using it most efficiently than to simplify some computations. And it's probably most efficient to burn the propellant as fast as possible.

Galxeagle17 hours ago

Any extra time spent during a burn is wasted fuel. Intuitively, any time before the rocket is in orbit, some part of the rocket thrust is resisting the force of gravity or else it would fall back down to earth. The longer that time is, the more thrust (and thus fuel) was spent negating that force. It's the main reason why the Falcon 9 boosters do a 'hoverslam' on return and land at close to full throttle - any extra time during that burn is less fuel efficient.

Better fuel efficiency = more payload to orbit = plenty of justification for the extra complexity.

Admittedly gravity losses are more significant at the beginning when the booster/ship are ascending purely vertically than later in second stage flight which is mostly horizontal, but definitely still a factor.

+1
hinkley15 hours ago
+1
floating-io13 hours ago
kristianp24 hours ago

This is version 2 of Starship, with some upgrades, such as longer starship.

"Upgrades include a redesigned upper-stage propulsion system that can carry 25 per cent more propellant, along with slimmer, repositioned forward flaps to reduce exposure to heat during re-entry.

For the first time, Starship will deploy 10 Starlink simulators" [1].

https://arstechnica.com/space/2025/01/heres-what-nasa-would-...

[1] https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/musks-starship-ready-...

kristianp12 hours ago

I found an article from earlier in the week about the changes for this version of the upper stage: https://arstechnica.com/space/2025/01/a-taller-heavier-smart...

CodeWriter234 hours ago

Coders who require at least 7 iterations to properly implement a data entry form here grousing over a spaceship failure on the 7th iteration.

yreg1 day ago

When this comment gets 44 minutes old it's going to be T-0.

clueless23 hours ago

reminds me of the classic joke: a man walking down a street, stops and asks another person if they know what time it is. The person responds: I'm sorry as I don't have a watch on me, but you see that car parked over there? when it explodes, it should be 5pm

cube222224 hours ago

This comment was very helpful and exactly what I wanted to know opening this discussion, and made me chuckle on top of that, thank you!

dingaling23 hours ago

Thank you, I was trying to convert Central Time to something understandable.

All their systems and logging are running in UTC, why can't they just give launch times accordingly.

yreg23 hours ago

Yeah, I prefer this "when this comment is XY old" format the most when communicating internationally. Closely followed by UTC, of course.

I hate having to convert from some time zone which I don't know by heart; with the additional risk of getting daylight savings or something wrong and missing the event.

echoangle23 hours ago

Catch was successful again, very impressive.

ceejayoz23 hours ago

They may have lost the second stage, though.

echoangle23 hours ago

Yes, very much looks like it.

I wonder how much of the second stage flight is autonomous and if they need to continually need to give it a go to continue, or if it aborts automatically after some time of lost telemetry. But maybe it already exploded anyways.

philipwhiuk7 hours ago

The automated FTS is triggered if it leaves a pre-defined corridor (which is wider than the flight plan - substantially so in some places).

The AFTS has independent, hardened, validated inertial measurement systems.

moeadham23 hours ago

Probably self destructs if anything goes wrong

+1
echoangle23 hours ago
timewizard23 hours ago

The flight control loops are strongly latched. They are constantly checking the state of discretes, control surfaces, and intended guidance. If any critical parameter gets out of range for a period of time or if any group of standard parameters gets out of range the vehicle will simply cease powered flight.

In the Space Shuttle, given that it was human rated, the "Range Safety" system was completely manual. It was controlled by a pair of individuals and they manually made the call to send the ARM/FIRE sequence to the range safety detonators.

baq23 hours ago

Space is hard.

lysace23 hours ago

"we currently don't have comms on the ship"

edit: the spacex stream just confirmed the loss.

ceejayoz23 hours ago

Telemetry showed them lose engines one at a time, which isn’t a great sign.

+2
echoangle23 hours ago
HackerThemAll22 hours ago

That could have been kinda sorta intentional. No big deal.

figassis14 hours ago

What worries me about space innovation is the fact that there is such little margin for error. Materials are being stressed so much while trying to defy the laws of physics that the smallest angle error, the smallest pressure mismatch, smallest timing error, and boom. This did not happen when we were inventing cars, trains and air planes. Now imagine these risks, while you're halfway to mars. Is it possible that we just have no found/invented the right materials or the right fuel/propulsion mechanism to de-risk this, and that is where we should be allocating a lot more resources?

mmustapic14 hours ago

It definitely happened with planes, we have a century of improvements that made them much much safer.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aviation_safety#Statistics https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatigue_(material)#de_Havillan...

floating-io14 hours ago

What makes you think this didn't happen in other industries? See the first iteration of the de Havilland Comet for a great example.

The Space Industry to date has killed many fewer people than planes, trains, or automobiles.

dbspin11 hours ago

> The Space Industry to date has killed many fewer people than planes, trains, or automobiles.

Except as a proportion of passengers. In which case it's killed several of orders of magnitude more.

floating-io9 hours ago

Because people rarely go to space, and it was much more dangerous when the last person died than it is today. The vast majority of flights are unmanned, just like this test was.

If you want to continue playing apples to oranges though, nobody has died on a spaceflight in the last twenty years. How many have died on airplanes in that timeframe?

[correction: there was one additional fatal flight in 2014 with the destruction of SpaceShipTwo. I would argue that one doesn't count, though, as it was more akin to a relatively mundane aircraft accident than anything else.]

nutrientharvest10 hours ago

The requirements of orbital launch are unyielding. If you make a car 50% heavier, it will have worse mileage and handling, but it will still get you where you need to go. If you make a spacecraft 50% heavier, it will never reach orbit.

mschuster9113 hours ago

> This did not happen when we were inventing cars, trains and air planes.

Cars are small, and they still go up in flames routinely all on their own (for older cars, aged fuel lines rupturing is a top cause, for newer cars shit with the turbocharger), it just doesn't make more news than a line in the local advertisement rag because usually all it needs is five minutes work for a firefighter truck.

Trains had quite the deadly period until it was figured out how to deal with steam safely - and yet, in Germany we had the last explosion of a steam train in 1977, killing nine people [1].

[1] https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kesselzerknall_in_Bitterfeld

mjevans23 hours ago

I miss the time before X broke so many things, like official streams being on Twitch where I've already paid for ad free viewing.

Osyris23 hours ago

My big gripe is that X videos don't seem to support Chromecast at all. I used to watch SpaceX launches on my TV :(

agildehaus23 hours ago

Load it in Chrome and cast the tab. Sucks that you have to involve your computer for the duration, but that's the most reliable way to do it IMO.

jryan4921 hours ago

Just watch the everyday astronauts coverage on YouTube! Great commentary, and feed from the official space x stream as well as their own cameras

vatueil18 hours ago

Space.com's YouTube channel always has a mirror of the official SpaceX livestream:

https://www.youtube.com/@VideoFromSpace/streams

Or if you would like additional commentary and extra camera views, there are independent channels such as Everyday Astronaut, NASASpaceFlight, Spaceflight Now, etc.

Cu3PO4223 hours ago

I now use AirPlay to extend a MacBook screen to my TV and play the stream that way. But it's so needlessly complicated compared to before :/

ivewonyoung18 hours ago

> X videos

cough cough

cubefox22 hours ago

There is an Android TV App apparently: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.x.xtv

b823 hours ago

uBlock Origin blocked any ads if there was any and I didn't have any issues (Ungoogled Chrome). I didn't pay for Twitch and TVV LOL Pro works fine for me.

thepasswordis23 hours ago

Couldn't you make a twitch stream of it? X isn't injecting ads into the video, so just open it on X and stream it to twitch.

mardifoufs23 hours ago

I'm glad it's not on Twitch. I don't like it being on X but twitch is worse since it's extremely hard to get any working Adblock on there.

drillsteps56 hours ago

Can someone please please PLEASE tell SpaceX PR/Streaming team that the speed (per SI system) is measured in meters per second, not kilometers per hour? The speed of sound is approx 300 m/s, orbital velocity is approx 8,0000 m/s (depending on altitude), free fall acceleration on Earth is 9.81m/s, 1.63m/s on the Moon, the speed of light is apporx 300,000,000 m/s, people learn these numbers in middle school. It's not 1000 km/h, or 28,000 km/h, it just looks so weird.

Edit: ok, acceleration is meters per second per second, but my point stands.

cbracketdash5 hours ago

They are likely appealing to the common population who mostly think of speed in mi/h or km/h due to car speeds

xhkkffbf6 hours ago

I understand the appeal of using the same combinations everywhere, but I thought the great thing about the metric system was that it was easy to convert. So 8000 m/s is 8 km/s.

drillsteps56 hours ago

The problem is with the "hours" part. Which, not accidentally, is not even part of the SI.

schiffern5 hours ago

In the official BIPM brochure, hours are technically classified as "Non-SI units accepted for use with SI." This puts them in the same category as liters, hectares, tonnes, decibels, etc.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-SI_units_mentioned_in_the_...

+1
drillsteps55 hours ago
jmpeax22 hours ago

I wonder if the second stage failure was related to the metal flap seen here on the very left of the image: https://imgur.com/a/VS8IPdv

mobiledev201419 hours ago

I watched this with my very young daughter and she pointed that out, she will be fascinated if that is the case!

chinathrow1 day ago
thehodge23 hours ago
idlewords21 hours ago

Pretty sure that's the flight termination system in action. It did well!

pkphilip9 hours ago

It is amazing to see the number of fairly significant changes they tested in this launch. I guess that is the advantage of private space flights and rocket launches where the speed of development is must faster than in a place like Nasa or any government run space program.

I am not surprised that stage 2 failed because they were testing with a lot of the thermal tiles removed.

philipwhiuk7 hours ago

It didn't get to the point of testing the thermal protection system.

lysace23 hours ago

Two years ago: I really didn't think they'd make all those engines work at the same time. They did.

simonswords821 day ago

This NASASpaceflight stream is up now: https://www.youtube.com/live/3nM3vGdanpw

consumer45124 hours ago

As is Tim Dodd’s

https://www.youtube.com/live/6Px_b5eSzsA

Aside from coding, this is my favorite use of multiple screens.

lysace23 hours ago

> Aside from coding, this is my favorite use of multiple screens.

Great observation. I also do this. :-)

sneak23 hours ago

...which has nothing to do with NASA the US government organization, or the NSF (FYI). It's just some independent streamers who apparently know you can't get trademark claims against you by the federal government.

ericcumbee22 hours ago

NASA allows them to place cameras as media on nasa property some are even permanent. and are credentialed media for launches. so I am guessing NASA is okay with it.

drillsteps56 hours ago

If you're referring to NSF streams from Starbase (Starship program), all of the cameras are installed on public land. There's no law prohibiting you setting up a Web cam (with autonomous power supply) in the middle of the forest, or on a riverbank, or on a dune 1400 feet from the OLM.

They started doing it when SpaceX was launching their first fuel tanks literally in the middle of nowhere, you can just sit on a side of the road a few hundred feet away and record (or even stream) everything from a basic Webcam. Eventually more and more people liked it and started contributing, then came branded T-Shirts, etc.

Now there's whole cottage industry in Boca with people spending weeks and months there, setting up and streaming from the cameras, they have trailers/control rooms, high quality equipment, daily and weekly updates, 24x7 streams, etc. NSF is a big player, Tim Dodd is another one, there's quite a few smaller players too.

NSF DOES seem to have some sort of agreement with SpaceX on streaming some of SpaceX's livestreams (ie when Ship goes out of visible range and SpaceX is the only place you can get video and of course telemetry). They didn't use to that until shortly after SpaceX streams moved to X (and immediately got replaced on YT by AI generated Elon peddling bitcoins).

m4rtink21 hours ago

Yeah, they have been covering space stuff for decades by now. They have literally dozens of remote cameras by now around Starbase and the Cape, funded by merch sales and community contributions. :)

drillsteps57 hours ago

NSF was started by Chris Bergen, a meteorologist by trade and a space exploration enthusiast, in early 2000s as a hobby forum (good old phBB) for people to chat about space and rocketry. I'm sure he couldn't even dream about becoming so popular so he didn't spend too much time coming up with a name (ie to protect himself against copyright infringement lawsuits). In fact I'm sure he would love to change the name now as they try to cover space programs all over the world (it's too late as people know them as NSF).

echoangle23 hours ago

I’m not sure about the NASA name itself, but apparently the graphic stuff is protected by a special law:

https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-14/chapter-V/part-1221

So you wouldn’t exactly get a copyright claim when abusing the NASA logo but it’s still illegal.

I couldn’t find anything about the NASA word itself though, just some articles reciting guidelines by NASA not to imply an endorsement by NASA. I don’t know how that’s enforced though.

timewizard22 hours ago

You cannot _misuse_ any official government logo or seal. Which effectively means creating a fake document with a real seal and then publishing it. The concern is fraud not sharing content.

You are allowed to basically reproduce the work without any worries whatsoever.

rigrassm23 hours ago

Spoken like someone who is generating their opinion from their channel name alone.

Those "independent streamers" provide live launch streams with multiple feeds using their own equipment and to top it off they have numerous very knowledgeable hosts for all their streams. At this point I suspect they are covering every US based launch from all the major players. Hell, today they broadcasted both the New Glenn and Starship launches less than 24h apart.

But yeah, let's get hung up on an organization name that originated as an Internet forum for discussing all things....... NASA!

m4rtink21 hours ago

Frankly, their coverage of New Glenn was quite a bit better than the official stream. :P

rigrassm21 hours ago

I didn't watch the official stream from Blue Origin (watched that one from my phone in bed so no multistreams that time lol) but it wouldn't surprise me one bit.

Sure, you'll get better telemetry info and the onboard views from the ships that these companies launch in their streams, but the commentary is sub-par at best (they are always sounding so "corporate official" to me) and they just don't provide the best views for watching it live.

I love that these space flight companies have opened up their development process to let the public follow along, I just think they aren't as good at producing live streams as some of these channels that have taken off over the last 5+ years.

cubefox22 hours ago

They should rename themselves NSF, short for NSF Space Flight.

rigrassm21 hours ago

I love that name and would 100% support that change lol

nomilk23 hours ago

Amazing. 2nd ever catch of the booster via the 'chopstick' arms. Looks like the starship itself won't be splashing down west of Perth, instead telemetry has been lost (assuming RUD - "Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly").

londons_explore23 hours ago

Anyone able to do some quick math to guess where the pieces might land based on the velocity+altitude?

Bits might end up in africa on land somewhere...

hexad7423 hours ago

That was so impressive. I was lucky enough to live in Florida and see the rockets go up. Standing on the beach and watching the first Falcon Heavy launch will be something that will always stick with me. Great job SpaceX.

nixpulvis2 hours ago

> as SpaceX seeks to make life multiplanetary.

What a waste of time and resources.

sys327687 hours ago

Speaking of exploding rockets, watch the hypnotic ending of Koyaanisqatsi with haunting music by Philip Glass:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OacVy8_nJi0

According to the comments, the footage in this scene is a Saturn V on a launchpad and then an Atlas-Centaur Missile.

thomasfl6 hours ago

Clever product placement of iPhone and Starlink and excellent storytelling. Space age technology used to connect astronauts to their loved ones on earth. Can’t be done any better.

october814020 hours ago

Congratulations to the 14,000 SpaceX employees for their accomplishments.

victorbojica23 hours ago

What happens if the ship has exploded? Is there any kind of danger?

wongarsu23 hours ago

The flight paths are planned specifically so any potential debris has a high chance of landing in the ocean.

If it actually exploded (either on its own or because the flight-termination system kicked in) most of it should burn up on reentry though.

victorbojica23 hours ago

What happens if it doesn't explode and they just lost control over it? I'm mostly curios of the risks at that altitude.

marssaxman23 hours ago

The launch license requires them to build in a "flight termination system" which makes it explode if they lose control over it.

ceejayoz21 hours ago

That system didn’t work on the first big test flight, when it went spinning end over end. Part of the reason there was an FAA investigation.

Polizeiposaune23 hours ago

There's an autonomous flight termination system which triggers if it strays outside the planned flight corridor; any debris that survives reentry should then land in the advertised safety zone.

wongarsu23 hours ago

If it doesn't explode it might be light enough to survive reentry, after sailing on for a short while. In that case a large chunk of metal will come down either off the coast of South Africa or if continues on in its orbit potentially off the coast of Australia.

[1] has the planned flight path, as well as the impact zones.

1: https://flightclub.io/result/3d?llId=c5566f6e-606e-4250-b8f4...

walrus0123 hours ago

the onboard control system and flight termination system are programmed to explode if it deviates from a specific and allowed path of trajectory/speed/functional engine thrust. The last thing anyone wants is a partially broken starship going into an uncontrolled suborbital velocity that lands on a city in Africa.

inglor_cz23 hours ago

They have a bunch of explosives strapped on the rocket and can give a radio command to blow the ship up. It can even decide to explode itself if the readings go haywire.

It is called the Flight Termination System and it is very common on non-manned flights now.

dr_kiszonka14 hours ago

If that system fails, can the rocket be shot down in time?

walrus0123 hours ago

It could be noted that manually operated flight termination systems have been used even on manned spaceflight, each and every space shuttle flight had a termination system under human ground control.

shkz22 hours ago

I noticed a strange debris at https://www.youtube.com/live/6Px_b5eSzsA?si=1hAiLjTrb7KUVaW7...

thought it was ice from the outside but now i'm curious

mempko3 hours ago

SpaceX started Starship development in 2012. Despite 12 years of work, its best test flight reached space but not orbit, sending a banana to the Indian Ocean.

While NASA's SLS began in 2011 and successfully flew around the Moon in 2022.

Blue Origin's New Glenn also started development in 2012 and reached orbit on it's first flight with an actual payload.

When they say SpaceX is fast, what do they mean exactly?

thom14 hours ago

Really says something when manufacturing and space launch cycle times are faster than some software projects.

sashank_15092 hours ago

Ikr, they’re testing 1 vehicle a month people, I’ve seen software projects tested slower

kopirgan18 hours ago

US scientists and engineers are second to none in the world. But they are distant second to their own marketing guys in innovation.

Rapid unscheduled disassembly!

andrewflnr16 hours ago

RUD is in fact an old joke in rocketry, I believe invented by engineers to poke fun at marketing "innovation".

sabareesh23 hours ago

Seems they lost the ship , it is supposed to be v2 and had several changes

lsh12323 hours ago

Cool video of the upper stage breakup from Turks and Caicos

gunian21 hours ago

Any idea how long it took them to get the Falcon right?

Or is comparing dev timelines for both a moot point because they are different classes of rockets

ggreer20 hours ago

The first Falcon 9 landing happened after 8 attempts at controlled splashdown or landing. Time from the first attempt to the first successful landing was a little over 2 years. In the year after their first successful landing, they succeeded in 5 out of 8 attempts. This wikipedia article has details: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falcon_9_first-stage_landing_t...

Starship has had 7 tests in the past 20 months. The first test barely got off the pad due to engine failures. The stages failed to separate, so it was blown up shortly after liftoff. The second test did separate, but the booster blew up shortly after stage separation and the ship blew up shortly before engine shutdown, raining debris across the Atlantic similar to today. The third test got to space, but the booster landing burn failed and the booster impacted the ocean at close to the speed of sound. The ship couldn't maintain orientation and burned up on reentry. The fourth test succeeded at all goals (soft booster splashdown and successful reentry, though the flap did burn through). The fifth test was a success (booster catch and soft ship splashdown, though again with some flap burnthrough). The sixth test aborted the booster landing due to antennas on the tower being damaged by the rocket exhaust at launch, but did splash down softly offshore. The ship also reentered and splashed down on target.

Today's ship failure is a setback, as it will likely take a few months for the FAA investigation to be completed. That said, SpaceX still seems likely to recover a ship intact this year, and at that point it will only be a matter of time before they can launch an order of magnitude more stuff into orbit than they can with the Falcon 9 fleet (and at much lower cost).

s1artibartfast23 hours ago

WOW, the footage of Starship reentry was amazing

fernandotakai23 hours ago

i still can't believe they can actually catch that first stage. it makes no sense, but works!

skirge8 hours ago

Starship test successfull: - engineers did that Starship explodes: - Musk's failure!

mmaunder1 day ago

Anyone care to give the non spacey folks like me the highlights of this launch?

why_at1 day ago

It's similar to last time if you saw that, the first stage will come back towards the launch site and they will try to catch it with the landing tower chopsticks, while the second stage does a soft landing in the ocean after going halfway around the earth.

As far as new stuff, they are trying to deploy some simulated satellites from the second stage and will try to relight one of the engines.

ericd1 day ago

I also saw mention somewhere that this is V2 of Starship upper stage? Somewhat longer, and I’m sure a bunch of other changes to enable mass simulator deployment.

wongarsu24 hours ago

Yes, about 2m longer. Also some modifications to the heat shield, including testing new types of heat shield tiles. Also non-structural versions of new catch pins to see how they perform on reentry

Edit: also, they are reflying one of the raptor engines that was on the previous flight (Engine 314, because pi).

ericd24 hours ago

Thanks, they also mentioned that they moved the upper flaps to reduce heating on them during reentry.

AnotherGoodName1 day ago

Preparing to launch 4:37pm CT (~45mins after this comment)

First 10mins watching gets you to space with engine shutdown.

38mins after launch engine turns back on. 10mins after that reentry starts. 1:06 after launch is the landing.

I think that covers it.

thisiscrazy2k22 hours ago

Space X has failed after 3 billion US tax payer dollars to take a banana into low earth orbit. Needless to say we aren't going to Mars last year watching a woman in a long dress floating in the cargo bay behind a curtain of glass windows playing a violin for entertaining the dozens of astronaut's which don't have space for food, water, belongings or life support.

JumpCrisscross19 hours ago

> Space X has failed after 3 billion US tax payer dollars to take a banana into low earth orbit

Literally just lofted some satellites.

tsimionescu10 hours ago

*tried to, but lost them all

+1
ceejayoz8 hours ago
qup1 day ago

You mean like later after it happens?

sebzim45001 day ago

It is incredibly to me that Google doesn't seem to give a shit about this. It would be so easy to fix.

notahacker24 hours ago

Feels like one SpaceX could and should deal with by DMCAing the channels. Even if getting people watching their official channel instead isn't that important to them, stopping people rebroadcasting their content whilst faking their brand identity to scam people feels like the most legitimate reason for sending takedowns going...

ceejayoz23 hours ago

They make new ones each time. By the time the stream is over, they’ve already promoted their shitcoins and don’t care what happens to the channel.

+1
jazzyjackson23 hours ago
Stevvo23 hours ago

The channels are usually with stolen credentials. i.e. when you see an Elon Musk stream on your home page, it's because a creator you Subscribe to had their channel taken over and the content replaced with fake Musk streams.

tialaramex21 hours ago

People really under-value the credentials for such things and I think it's part of the same problem as when streamers who aren't used to this life yet forget about privacy considerations and end up with a phone number or worse home address known to fans.

If you have a meaningful Youtube income, you need to spend some of your next Youtube check on say two Security Keys. If you like them, buy some more for everything else, but since Youtube is your income, step one lock Youtube with Security Keys.

Once that's required, errors of judgement possible through limited understanding or sleep deprivation cease to be a problem. Baby didn't sleep properly all week, some idiot screwed up your banking, and now Youtube keeps sending emails. You get another stupid Youtube email or at least you think so and either

1. You give Bad Guys your password and maybe OTP, so they steal the account and maybe in 5-10 days you and your fans can seize back control, meanwhile it's used to run scams

OR

2. Even sleep-deprived, confused and bewildered you will not post your physical Security Keys to Some Russian Guy's PO Box, Somewhere else, 12345. Your account remains in your hands because without that physical object they can't get in.

dr_dshiv23 hours ago

Reminds me of the train wreck of searching for “ChatGPT” or “OpenAI” on the apple App Store — all scam results.

yreg1 day ago

Actually similar to how Twitter used to be. (Of course now it has other problems.)

bbbbbenji23 hours ago

What problems does it have now?

yreg8 hours ago

Integrity, mainly. Elon is not an honest person and he will use any power at his disposal arbitrarily to silence people he dislikes when he feels like it.

The most absurd example of all is the very recent case where Elon pretended to be a pro gamer and got caught. A streamer called Asmongold covered the topic on his stream, which triggered Elon to arbitrarily remove Asmongold's verified checkmark and remove his gaming badge. Considering the low stakes of this matter I find the actions ridiculous and don't trust Elon with having basically admin access to the platform at all.

I've also heard plenty of horror stories about the ruthless way the engineering in X is currently done, often carelessly breaking stuff. However I have to point out that the service is and has been far far more stable than the "haters" have predicted back when Elon took over and fired all those people.

numba8881 day ago

look similar. the same person milking google for ads money? must be another service providing fake 'watches' and 'subscriptions'.

lysace24 hours ago

Youtube key stakeholders' KPIs improve as well the Youtube ad revenue. I don't understand what you're on about. (/s)

echoangle23 hours ago

Where do they get channels with half a million subs? Are those hacked?

s1artibartfast24 hours ago

to be clear, it seems like the feed on some of these are scraped from official ones, but include links to crypto "giveaway" scams.

ge961 day ago

it's funny how good the algorithm is to recommend this to you so you (I) can report it

sneak23 hours ago

All of the downsides of a heavily censored and politically editorialized platform, with none of the anti-fraud upsides.

barbazoo24 hours ago

Are these YT channels just mirroring the official one?

lysace24 hours ago

There is pretty much always at least one "live" "spacex" stream on Youtube. Typically with lots of viewers. This has been going on for years.

Google/Alphabet just sucks and should be dissected.

kklisura23 hours ago

They were mirroring Twitter stream and switched to Elon talking about crypto within 10 seconds of the launch. Don't ask me how I know.

s1artibartfast24 hours ago

at least some do, but they are also inserting links to crypto scams.

sebazzz24 hours ago

Yes they stop the stream at some point and the viewer must pay crypto to continue the stream.

mmaunder1 day ago

That’s hilarious

kklisura23 hours ago

I blame SpaceX for this as they do not have official youtube stream. This is just amateurish.

ceejayoz21 hours ago

They used to, before Musk bought Twitter.

jmward0123 hours ago

The most important payload for this flight was data. The ship was always going to be lost so from a standpoint of testing this was a huge success! I'm excited to see how quickly they resolve whatever happened and get IFT 8 going.

ggddv23 hours ago

[flagged]

spandrew4 hours ago

"rapid unscheduled disassembly"

> This marketing jargon speak for explosion is lulz

_moof22 hours ago

Beefed it the day after New Glenn makes orbit on the first try. Different philosophies, I know, but if I were at SpaceX I would be pretty unhappy right now.

enraged_camel22 hours ago

NG also failed the landing, so not really?

zwily22 hours ago

New Glenn lost its booster yesterday. Space is hard, tests will have failures.

agumonkey23 hours ago

Impressive string of success

mempko22 hours ago

The launch was a failure though.

agumonkey14 hours ago

Sorry, I only watched the chopsticks part

iamronaldo23 hours ago

Wow that was incredible

vvpan20 hours ago

I absolutely cannot relate to the HN excitement over rockets. What is the point? What are we going to do with them? It feels like half religion half misplaced techno-positivism.

(Also a person who actively platforms outspoken neo-nazis runs the company that is launching them)

Prickle20 hours ago

The reason is pretty simple. The technology you are using right now, was created with knowledge that was obtained in orbit.

If you use GPS, you are inherently reliant on satellites, delivered with rockets.

Some of our resource shortages can be covered via resource acquisition in space.

Pushing the space frontier, is far more interesting and important, than mobile phone screen size, or fidelity.

It opens an entire new area to the sciences.

Also big explody tube warms the cockles of my heart.

spprashant20 hours ago

Rockets are good. They give us hope that one day we ll explore the stars. Let people enjoy the small wins.

The_Colonel16 hours ago

Also, the (IMHO false) hope that we can escape the planet after we destroy it. Well, maybe the few richest will be able to do that ...

kristianp17 hours ago

Also the hope that we can go on vacation to the lunar hilton, or orbital O'Neill colony.

sfifs19 hours ago

Many of the techie people on HN undoubtedly dreamed of building and flying rockets at some point in their tweens / teens till the harsh realities of the material world took over. So they are vicariously living childhood dreams... Just like many "normal" people live theirs by following sports teams or celebrities. To each their own :-)

timeon14 hours ago

> half religion half misplaced techno-positivism

It sometimes feels like it: everything blows-up and thread here is like "what a success", Second stage explodes - "beautiful" (while trash is falling into ocean).

jacobjjacob11 hours ago

Yeah there is a huge amount of rationalizing how the debris aren’t a problem. Everyone is certain it will burn up before hitting the ground, and if it doesn’t, it will land somewhere that doesn’t matter… but I don’t think anyone knows that for sure?

Rockets are cool but it’s everyone’s planet, if this continues to make a huge mess, do us regular earth citizens have recourse?

makk22 hours ago

LGTM. Ship it.

agluszak8 hours ago

"rapid unscheduled disassembly"

ls61223 hours ago

It seems like they have the chopsticks catch down pretty well, but the ship exploded over the Atlantic so there's gonna have to be more tests before the ship can think about an RTLS test.

More generally, getting the ship to work reusably seems like it will be a considerably greater challenge than reusing the boosters.

uejfiweun23 hours ago

Unbelievable. Congrats to the SpaceX team, again. Thank you for bringing the future into the present.

mempko22 hours ago

It was a failed launch though. Upper stage blew up.

spaceguillotine15 hours ago

Musk've had Cybertruck QA team on this one.

ekianjo23 hours ago

they did it!

sbuttgereit23 hours ago

Except for that whole second stage and payload part.

Actually I thought there would be less risk with the second stage changes, significant as they were, than the second catch. (Maybe there was less risk, of course, and the dice just didn't roll that way).

thomasjudge18 hours ago

"Rapid unscheduled disassembly"

romaaeterna21 hours ago

@elonmusk Preliminary indication is that we had an oxygen/fuel leak in the cavity above the ship engine firewall that was large enough to build pressure in excess of the vent capacity.

Apart from obviously double-checking for leaks, we will add fire suppression to that volume and probably increase vent area. Nothing so far suggests pushing next launch past next month.

dlimeng20 hours ago

[dead]

mempko22 hours ago

[flagged]

egglemonsoup22 hours ago

Extremely shallow take on what is undoubtedly the rise of America's next great space era

ceejayoz22 hours ago

The entire program is likely cheaper thus far than a single SLS flight.

cubefox22 hours ago

> They burned billions of public funds, literally.

Wrong. Public funds are not paying for Starship development but for the HLS variant development, at significantly lower cost than the HLS lander from Blue Origin. Which likely still doesn't cover the entire funding even for Blue Origin. A lot is paid by those space companies themselves. A NASA developed lander (Altair from the Constellation program), would probably have cost around an order of magnitude more.

renewiltord22 hours ago

I wouldn't worry too much. It costs more than that to add a bus lane in America.

king_magic10 hours ago

Musk is going to end up killing a lot of people unintentionally.

zqna22 hours ago

Can someone tell me what's the point of all this? To export capitalism outside of solar system?

exitb21 hours ago

The point of a fully reusable launch vehicle? Similar to a fully reusable airplane or a car, I suppose.

We have various interests in sending things to space, why not do it cheaply?

distortionfield16 hours ago

Survival of our species, for one. Never the mind short-sighted folks like yourselves clawing us back the entire way.

zqna14 hours ago

It's the opposite of the survival. When locust consumes everything around, it dies out.

Kostic12 hours ago

On a long-enough scale, this planet will die anyways. Let's first try to expand life and unlock the secrets of the Universe, as much as possible.

zqna9 hours ago

At this point in time the humanity has nothing to offer to any other intelligence (if there is any) out there, nor it doesn't have a need itself to go outside of its own planet, and the big mess that it made out of it. It's akin of letting a toddler walk out of the door and roam into a busy street merely for a satisfaction of its curiousity. What is more likely to happen is that the valuable resources that we still have will be gone (it won't take long, as consumption is growing at exponential rate), without ability to recover - a one way ticket to stone age. It's nice to dream and look at the stars, but can we please sort the shit here first?

PaulDavisThe1st22 hours ago

Just to Mars, and maybe the asteroid belt. See [0].

[0] Expanse, The.

gordian-mind21 hours ago

To export the enjoyers of capitalism (a.k.a. humans) outside this planet, to visit the stars.

motohagiography22 hours ago

beautiful although one wonders what they're trying to escape

cruffle_duffle21 hours ago

Every one of these are like right out of a sci-fi novel. It makes me truly excited for our future in a way little else out there does.

Between this, AI (even in its current LLM form), and mounting evidence suggesting the entire solar system is teeming with at least microbial life, we are going to become an interplanetary species far sooner than many “skeptics” imagine.

We are just one more lander / sample mission / whatever away from having solid proof of life elsewhere in the solar system. That is gonna jumpstart all a huge race to get humans out into deep space to check it all out.

People worry about AI stealing their jobs… don’t worry. We need that stuff so humans can focus on the next phase of our history… becoming interplanetary. Your kids will be traveling to space and these (very overhyped, don’t get me wrong) LLM’s will be needed for all kinds of tasks.

It sounds crazy but I maintain it’s true and will happen sooner than you’d think.

tsimionescu10 hours ago

> Your kids will be traveling to space

I can 100% guarantee to you that the children of anyone born today will not travel to space in any significant number. There is nothing in space to travel to until we build extremely complex habitats, and that can't be done with manual human labor, it requires mostly automatic drones and maybe a handful of human controllers living in the ship that brought them there.

And building habitats that any significant amount of people (say, 1000) could actually live in will take a loooong amount of time and a huge amount of resources. And the question of "why would anyone waste time and resources on trying to live in conditions more inhospitable than anything the Earth can ever become, even with a major asteroid crashing into it in the middle of a nuclear war and a global pandemic?" will crop up long before more than one or two of these are finished.

fooker4 hours ago

> I can 100% guarantee to you that the children of anyone born today will not travel to space in any significant number

Someone born today will have children living into the early 2100s. The first flight ever was a little more than a hundred years ago. Using your kind of logic, no one would have predicted most of the technology we take for granted today.

SamBam19 hours ago

> mounting evidence suggesting the entire solar system is teeming with at least microbial life

?

ActorNightly15 hours ago

> It makes me truly excited for our future in a way little else out there does.

Hate to break it to you, but Space X isn't it. You can't have a CEO that is not aligned to the truth and reality to lead a company into something that is beneficial for humanity.

dr_kiszonka14 hours ago

Weyland-Yutani

heyrikin16 hours ago

Hi there

artemonster23 hours ago

I like how chopsticks catch (a very impressive feat) completely distracts everyone from totally fucked timeline and already spent budget on mars mission. Its like any criticism is being drowned in loud cheers. Only time will tell, but I hope I will be wrong on this one

mardifoufs23 hours ago

What's the criticism exactly? Like I don't get your point? Yes they are behind on timelines and on Mars, does that mean that we should post reddit-tier cynical comments every time about that? I'm not saying that you're doing that, it's more that I don't get why this is surprising.

And on the other hand, it's also funny to see how "skeptics" (whatever that means in this case) dismiss or belittle achievements that were claimed to be impossible a few months or years ago (for example, the chopstick landing). It's like a never ending treadmill of

this is impossible->okay it happened, that's cool, but now xyz is impossible.

Plus, it seems normal to me that people care less about some sort of budget details or delays than really cool technical feats.

thisiscrazy2k22 hours ago

[flagged]

jacobgkau21 hours ago

They're the ones who were sent in to return two humans from the ISS after Boeing's ship malfunctioned last year. The explosions are typically from R&D projects; SpaceX is capable and practiced at transporting humans (and cargo) without their ships blowing up, and that's where most of their actual business currently is. (The Dragon is the vehicle they use for manned ISS missions.)

kcb21 hours ago

SpaceX is by far and away the most capable organization on earth at taking all types of payloads to low earth orbit.

ceejayoz20 hours ago

SpaceX takes non-human payloads to low earth orbit every couple days. Over 100 in 2024.

They regularly take human payloads, too. They’re the only American launcher currently able to do so.

bamboozled20 hours ago

I actually get this take, but for me it's the ultimate distraction and a way to legitimize the CEOs rubbish behavior.

"How can he be wrong when he is a genius and can land a rocket in two chopsticks?"

distortionfield16 hours ago

I’m in a slightly different boat. The CEO’s rubbish behavior sucks, but the company shouldn’t be diminished by that. The people behind SpaceX are a modernd day Apollo Program. Absolute marvels of engineering.

cruffle_duffle21 hours ago

They are making the impossible merely late. Which, you know, is still pretty fucking cool.

I’d love to see any other country or competitor catch a stainless steel rocket larger than the Statue of Liberty that was just cruising back to earth at sub orbital velocity. Everybody else is so far behind it’s not even funny.

Spacex is cool as shit. Screw the “skeptics” and haters. Some people have a complete lack of imagination.

mempko2 hours ago

Starship started development in 2012. SLS started development in 2011, New Glenn in 2012.

SLS flew in 2022 around the moon. New Glenn just flew, reaching orbit with an actual payload.

Starship hasn't reached orbit, the best they did was send a banana to the Indian ocean.

Remind me again how SpaceX is the fast company?

jeltz19 hours ago

No, they are making the possible very late.

distortionfield16 hours ago

> very late

when was your fully reusable full-flow staged combustion rocket engine scheduled flight, again?

imtringued11 hours ago

Why does that matter? SpaceX is setting themselves up for failure by insisting that they need to nail re-entry first. Whenever they focused on a test flight for re-entry I'm wondering why they aren't working on more important things like the payload doors or orbital brimming. They will get the re-entry tests for free!

And even if they don't. The upper stage is cheap enough that it can be expended and still be cheaper per flight than Falcon Heavy. So that tells me that the delays are on purpose. Their test flight planning is designed to maximize ego stroking.

numba88823 hours ago

4M viewers. comparable to top politics events.

ship looks to be lost. this was the main part, so it's almost complete failure.

egglemonsoup23 hours ago

these tests are designed to fail — the data collected now will ensure they don't blow up with actual people on them. test seems like a success to me

GuB-4221 hours ago

Still a failure in my book, it blew up before it could deliver its payload so they couldn't do many the tests they intended to do.

It is possible they will have to add one more test launch to their schedule, delaying commercial operations because of that.

It is not a complete failure, but to me, it is more failure than success, even by SpaceX test flight standards.

Compared to the previous flight, that I consider a success, the booster catch was nice, but it is not the first, and they have plenty of tries left to perfect it, so it is not in the critical path.

numba88823 hours ago

they didn't get the telemetry after, what it was, 16 min(?) hope they'll find the reason which will be hard without black boxes like on airplanes. as every engineer knows it works flawlessly only at the end. if ever.

the booster was the same, great, but not surprising.

m4rtink21 hours ago

IIRC they had 30 cameras on board & who knows how many sensors (probably hudreds ?).

So even if an engine bay fire burned the electronics and interrupted all coms (or FTS blew it up) they should already have a lot of data by that point showing how it went wrong.

brian-armstrong22 hours ago

You're assuming the viewer count is accurate? That seems rather naive.

inglor_cz23 hours ago

Let us say 2/3rds of a failure.

SpaceX has a way of making the nearly impossible expected. We have forgotten quite quickly that booster catch is still a very experimental feature. Return to base on this flight wasn't routine yet.

throw595923 hours ago

Almost a complete failure except for second ever caught first stage...

BTW they first tested a redesigned version of Starship today.

numba88822 hours ago

Booster works, we've seen that before. No satellites deployment, no new heat shield test. Separation works. But that's it.

Now the 'funniest' thing, this piece falls back where the ships are waiting. I hope it will miss this time too.

ceejayoz22 hours ago

The ships are on the other side of the planet, near Australia. They’ll be fine.

numba88811 hours ago

Didn't expect it to disintegrate completely. At least they figured out what happened. Well, one step at a time. But that means no orbital flight for next couple of missions.