PaulS
Touchdown! Greaser!
...except for the "rapid unscheduled disassembly" of the first stage after separation while maneuvering to land. I love the line. All in all a great day.
Did they state that the FTS used AI or is that your interpretation? I'll be astonished if that got independent range safety approval.The talking heads at about 12:00 stated the first indications are the second stage Automated Flight Termination System (that is, an AI) triggered a self-destruct. Oops.
I'm sorry but that guys voice is annoying....Both stages experienced RUDs. The first stage separated at 2:49 and about 8 seconds later it experienced a RUD. At 8:04 the second stage engine cutoff and the craft exploded seconds later. You can see the little puff in the video.
The talking heads at about 12:00 stated the first indications are the second stage Automated Flight Termination System (that is, an AI) triggered a self-destruct. Oops.
Yeah...I REALLY do not care for the talking head amateurish commentary style either....but I guess that's what an 'expert' looks like today....Probably some practical joke a programmer put in. Code line 8970090 - "Self Destruct after Staging". Those crazy software guys - what you going to do.
I do prefer the Apollo era Jack King play by play style vs the motivational speaker commentator they have for Starship.
Did they state that the FTS used AI or is that your interpretation? I'll be astonished if that got independent range safety approval.
Nauga,
who doesn't want to blow it
John Insprucker is the Chief Integration Engineer, and is on the wall of honour at the National Air and Space museum. What exactly is your definition of an amateur?Yeah...I REALLY do not care for the talking head amateurish commentary style either....but I guess that's what an 'expert' looks like today....
It does.Doesn't "it came from together" sound better than "it experienced a rapid unscheduled disassembly"?
-Skip
Rapid unscheduled disassembly just has a great ring to it. Hate their voices but love the humor.It does.
But "it done blowed up" is still preferred.
Based on what? The Saturn V designed 60 years ago had a 100% success rate. Space X not so much. This ad was put up yesterday by Space X.Damn, missed the second RUD. Still a success though in my mind.
Based on budget. Apollo program had unlimited budget.Based on what? The Saturn V designed 60 years ago had a 100% success rate. Space X not so much. This ad was put up yesterday by Space X.
Wanted, retired NASA engineers, competitive pay and benefits, bring slide rule!
Wreckage all fell into the Atlantic Ocean. Given the second stage experienced a RUD only eight minutes into the flight at an altitude of 148 km (92 sm, 80 nm), it couldn't have been more than a few hundred miles offshore. The downrange distance was not displayed.any idea how far along the flightpath the 2nd stage made it before RUD?.... and where will/did the wreckage fall?
Didn't a crew get incinerated in a Saturn V? The technological advances over saturn V are astronomical. Space X reusing boosters, launching more than one rocket in a day? Space X is blowing the competition away. Not even close. Think about it, 33 engines firing at once, capable of lifting the most payload ever. Huge goals bring huge risk, they will figure this out, probably within the next year.Based on what? The Saturn V designed 60 years ago had a 100% success rate. Space X not so much. This ad was put up yesterday by Space X.
Wanted, retired NASA engineers, competitive pay and benefits, bring slide rule!
Based on budget. Apollo program had unlimited budget.
Didn't a crew get incinerated in a Saturn V?
Same program, split hairs as much as you want. Sometimes lessons learned come with a price.No
The loss of what would have been Apollo 1 was the CM/SM stack. I’m not even sure it had been mated to the Saturn 1B booster
Same program, split hairs as much as you want. Sometimes lessons learned come with a price.
wow - if you call that splitting hairs... smh... kind of hard to discuss things when we don't have a common language.
It was close to unlimited. It was a very large amount. Space race / Cold War after all. Glad they spent it.Not hardly
Note to mention there are manuals and guidelines on how to built space stuff in the 21st century, not to mention catalogs where appropriate, space-qualified hardware can be simply purchased. All stuff NASA didn't have in the '60s, and, in fact, ended up writing the manuals and guidelines and the specifications for those space-qualified materials.Can’t compare Apollo to Space X. That’s only one NASA program to several rocket programs under Space X. A proper comparison would be NASA in its earlier years to Space X. Mercury was blowing up rockets like it was The Forth of July.
Note to mention there are manuals and guidelines on how to built space stuff in the 21st century, not to mention catalogs where appropriate, space-qualified hardware can be simply purchased. All stuff NASA didn't have in the '60s, and, in fact, ended up writing the manuals and guidelines and the specifications for those space-qualified materials.
A while back there was an explosion with fatalities during testing of one of these "new space" programs. One of my co-workers was livid...the exact problem had been discovered and documented in the '70s, but of course, that was old fuddy-duddy NASA stuff that the new company figured it could ignore. It's like someone building a homebuilt plane in 2003, and claiming it was so easy that the Wright brothers had to have been idiots.
Ron Wanttaja
Not hardly
Based on what? The Saturn V designed 60 years ago had a 100% success rate. Space X not so much. This ad was put up yesterday by Space X.
Wanted, retired NASA engineers, competitive pay and benefits, bring slide rule!
Yeah, last I saw they're up to about 170 consecutive successful landings of Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy boosters. One booster has flown 18 times.This post reminds me of all those giggling during each falcon 9 RUD back when they first tried to land them.
Apollo was 257 billion in 2020 adjusted dollars
According to Musk, SpaceX has spent 10 billion so far on Starship since 2012.
Where do you think Starship would be right now if they had spent literally 25x that over the same period?