65 yr old young old person here 😊 I remember all of it! Mercury Gemini Spacewalks and den Apollo 11 !!! 13 was a nail-biter moon buggies alas by the time Apollo 17 flew it wasn't a big deal. Sure, the space shuttle drew attention at first, then faded until STS-51-L was lost that morning in 86. After that, not until Columbia burnt up did the program get national attention. What I found amazing was that the space X commentators were apparently oblivious to the complete loss of attitude control during re-entry 😮 The vastly different re-entry flight profiles between the Apollo, Shuttle & Starship are like a bullet a 737 and a glider! Let's see that Mechzilla catch and that Starship touchdown!!! 'Murica!!!
@@lucasdunn2717 Oh yeah I was thinking of that little company Tesla, he indeed did start SpaceX with absolutely zero engineering knowledge from him because he had and still has has rudimentary engineering knowledge but hes got plenty of cash and skimps on safety. Lucky for me I dont live near the crashing zones. The worst part of Musk is how he uses people/government then totally f8cks them over, right now hes using his power to lobby trump to CANCEL Rivian's loan from the government, even though hes been lobbying and getting billions from the government for decades, first with NASA/SPACEx and in recent years with Tesla. Anyways, was a fan of ketamine addict before the whole cave/pedo incident but now will celebrate his obituary.
@@STSWB5SG1FAN wrong again dude, did you even read my comment, he is the founder, he is the chief executive officer, he is the chief technology officer, he is the chief engineer and designer, he is the largest shareholder, he has 78% of the companies voting shares, he is the visionary, he attends nearly every launch. He also has 160 iq so to say he isn't "the brains" is ignorant. You know that starship superheavy booster catch? That was his idea, per statements from tom Mueller, Gwen shotwell and other various employees. Whenever something blows up, you blame him, so how come whenever things succeed, it is not him but his engineers. He is the single most deserving individual of credit in the entire company.
Physics, I love me some physics, the technology. I'm an older man. I remembered running home from elementary school to turn the all tube t.v. on. It took a minute to warm up. Soon as the picture came on, an Apollo mission splashed down. Don't recall which mission. But ever since I fell in love with science.
I would take a portable tv that had an am/ fm radio and 5 inch screen that had an ac/ dc car plug adorador and plug into my cigarette lighter of my 1968 VW bug and pull over on my way to a community college and watch apolo take off and landings! They would broadcast on TV I never missed a launch! I too am old 71 female who wanted to go to the moon for real! It was an amazing time in early space. We all knew who John Glenn was and Gus Grissom and the rest of the Apolo guys were! Sally Ride was in our dreams, Krista McAuliffe, our first teacher in space with such a sad beginning and ending in the same second, but I carried that little Sears TV with the 5 inch screen. It was a big box at the time now just think I’m typing this on my cell phone as I sit in my chair at 71 who knew, I still wish I could go to space
@beautylabrador8415 That brought back memories. I remembered it had to be in 72 or 73 as a kid. I was growing up in Ft. Lauderdale. My grandmother on my dad's side was in her 90s, and grandpa long gone. He was a preacher in the Bible belt, Ohio. She wouldn't move off the farm where my father was born. He is 96 and still loving life. Anyways, my grandparents were so religious that t.v. was the devils horns(the antenna). My older sisters were not allowed to wear makeup, no playing cards. Women had to wear a dress covering their knees. The list goes on and on. Now, thinking about it, she was absolutely right. But that's another story. I remember going on a road trip to visit her and to see the old farmhouse. It was sad, falling apart around her. But she wouldn't leave. She would just sit and read the Bible all day. My father's brother still lived in the area and took care of her. But she was stubborn, but she did need the help. She lived off of all the canned vegetables off the farm and would go into town about 2 or 3 times a year just to buy sugar and a few necessities. One night, I was on the porch swing with her just talking. It was a beautiful full moon out. As I looked up, I said "grandma I still can't believe that man has landed on the moon." She laughed and laughed and said," What did they do fly a rocket to the moon drive around with a car." I said yes with a puzzled look. Then she said when are they coming back. And how do they breathe. I couldn't believe it. I realized how cut off from the world she was and didn't know that man did go to the moon. I tried to convince her that we did and beat the Russians. She just laughed and laughed. Told me I had a very good imagination. I told my father this, and he told me not to worry about it. That it's probably better to leave the subject alone. She passed away a few months later on that farm, thinking I was just a kid with a good imagination. R.i.p. all my grandparents and my mom. Have a great day, be safe.
@@dropshotking1212 no he will be crushed when a flerf tells him the physics and mathematics of a flat earth ! But we are safe no one has ever provided that so the flat earth nonsense is just that nonsense
The first mission that I remember was the last Apollo moon landing in 1972. I was 4 and remember the tv, b& w , tubes! , of course, but I was watching the moon buggy drive around. I was outside that evening , or the next day and loved to watch the moon in our back yard. For the first time I thought, wow, they have a car up there! I was a year and a half when Apollo 11 landed July 1969.
Я рад за всех адекватных, Илон который Маск! Ты сделал звездолёт! Это так же круто как поле плазмы вокруг, Звездолёта. Надеюсь, идеи и пример сделанный тобой вне зависимости от принадлежностями, вызовет восторг и восхищение теми возможностями которые дает единение в усилиях и идеях.
Our grade school class had a TV wheeled into the classroom to watch the first men on the moon. We were so proud to be in Houston near NASA. We wanted to eat astronaut food and be in zero gravity. Imagination stirs the spirit. Congratulations to Space X and Mr Musk. 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
reentry my ass. it burned up why tumbeling into erth atmosphere, because spaceship was heavily damaged when during seprtion from the booster. it was a complete failur. again. Spachip coudnt get to space. booster crashed. Space x set back space exploration fpr decades. worst engneering failure ever.
@@mexicarspotter Yet again that's a capsule and the camera was inside. That why this is such a break through.I was impressed with the onboard cameras and starlink the whole time.
Elon and crew pulled it off! The first footage of re-entry from the ship. Instead of trying to send the video footage feed directly to ground control which the plasma field has always blocked, they instead sent the feed directly to Starlink which in turn routed the feed to G.C. A truly historic moment! The plasma field was beautiful. Great work once again SpaceX!!!
After the TDRS satellites were put into orbit in 1988, the shuttles maintain communication with the ground throughout re-entry. Because the Dragon is a capsule, plasma surrounds it during re-entry and still experiences a blackout.
Our motherland protects us from harm, which should inspire us to protect it in return. Let's strive for fairness and integrity, refraining from deceit for the sake of monetary gain.
This is a world First!! Communication in a returning spaceships plasma field has never been accomplished till now. Outstanding. It seemed to be an impossibility. Bravo!!
This is not the same ship, this ship failed upon reentry because the engines melted since they couldn’t correct their orientation during reentry (as shown in video) so the aircraft blew up before it even hit the water
@@Djlamayyou do know it was a test flight right? This is how SpaceX works. They build fast, test often, and improve on those tests before they start actually flying payloads. This flight was considered a massive success as it made it past first stage and through a portion of reentry. They gathered more than enough data to improve upon for the next iteration of the test flight. No one said it was 100% certainly going to make it through reentry.
This is crazy. They got such a good feed and data probably because of having starlink. That capability they built because they have the falcon 9. Talk about building on your own achievements.
Was watching the live, they never had the ship stabilized before they hit that 100 km mark. They may need to add more reaction control before next attempt.
@@kstricl They had it stabilized for a very little time but it did not stabilize quickly unfortunately. I guess since its fully automated maybe just a new code could help.
@@Octuly it still had too much roll going, hence why I said it wasn't stabilized. I don't think it was a software issue, the FC appeared to be attempting to correct the entire time, but the RCS and fins just didn't have enough authority to correct.
@jaredhass9254 That's what testing is for. It lasted a long time in a tumble, that was impressive regardless. The heat tiles did their job when they were in the right position.
There are a lot of internet trolls engagement farming too. It’s hard to tell just by reading someone’s comment who is insisting the earth is flat with all the laughing emojis they like to use (like the one above), that they seriously believe that vs someone who is just trolling. I stopped responding to it because either way it feeds a societal mind virus that is spread by engaging it.
@@jackprier7727 not the entire vehicle. It was rotating during re-entry and parts of the ship without the tiles were taking the brunt of the heating and it held up for a surprising amount of time before it finally broke up
@@TheLaunchPad At one point in the video you can see a small "white" piece breaking off and falling off falling to the right and passing under the folding wing thing.
In an age where technology is advancing at an insane rate, it still takes so much collective intelligence to achieve these launches and reentry. Most don't understand how amazing this feat actually is!
Humankind has launched 483 manned flights into space. Most have returned their occupants safely to Earth. Then there are achievements like the Appollo missions and the establishment of the ISS. Sorry, but this is what abject failure looks like It's a trainwreck. Musk's greatest talent is PR, it's not rocket building. And figuring that out isn't rocket science.
Back in the 80’s Star Trek & Starwars were our only options to enjoy such technologies and dream of things such as the possibility of space travel. Today SpaceX is making it a reality for all to witness live reentry footage. Hope to still be around to see what milestones are accomplished in the near future. Thank you Mr. Musk and all SpaceX team for your continued work towards making humans multi planetary. Very exciting to watch it unfold, amazing!
Stabilization initialized *cheering* no command loss from plasma, starship starts to over rotate then recovery, stabilized, burns for a second *cheering*. That's history in the making that's insane.
I suspect it’s closer than that. I grew up when men WWI veterans came to town on Saturday to gather and talk on the court house lawn. They got to town on horseback or in their farm wagon pulled by a team of horses. Now I see electric cars (folks in the country didn’t even have electricity yet. We were only 9 miles out). I see cars that can drive themselves. I saw man go to the moon. I see craft like this being operated. We’ve come a long way in my 70 years so far.
He’s talking about how long it would take to reach Proxima Centauri using current technology. The fastest spacecraft travel at about 50,000mph, or about 14,000 YEARS per light year. So the nearest star is about 60,000 years away at that speed.
It would have been nice if either the starship or its booster would have made it back intact. Even so progress has been made over each of the previous two flights. Hopefully the fixes will be relatively easy.
@@jimwrasse7115 I harbor lingering fears that once they start trying to re-use starships they will hit a lot of the same problems the shuttle had with the sheer amount of servicing work to turn them around and refurbish them, orbital re-entry is SUCH a hostile environment. On the other hand, even if they just recover the superheavy boosters the unit cost of each starship will be way less than shuttle operations were. they may find it turns out cheaper to not re-use them, just like the upper stage on falcon 9
It was supposed to have engines running, providing active braking like on Falcon 9 . But all vacuum relights seemed to fail on this flight, and they also needed to heat up the ulage gas in the tanks more to increase pressure for RCS and engine feeding .
@@johndododoe1411 No, engines was not supposed to run. Starship uses the atmosphere for decelerating, engines only used only at the very end of landing for the "belly-flop maneuver".
In all seriousness- it may’ve taken a while for a restart of space exploration but the speed of development and the technical advancement - from SpaceX alone is humbling. You know when something’s great when it’s imitated too 👍👍👍🌎🌎 🚀
It never stopped, just different exploration, after the moon landings, there was mars, shuttle, exploration to ever plant in the solar system and launches of deep space telescopes. That are telling us more than a mission to mars although that will be extraordinary step in itself. But the space industry hasn't been sitting still for 50 years. You have to understand the distance to the moon is small compared to the distance to the mars. It's like riding your bike to the next town, any kid can do but going to mars is then like sailing a yacht to another continent across the ocean. Would you let your kid just go do that without a lot of preparation?
I certainly forsee greatly improved maneuvering thrusters in Starship design and a redesign of the PEZ door. That door never closed after opening. Great test flight overall!
This is beyond great! I'm 71yrs old and watched the moon landing live on TV, but this stuff is right out of an Asimov novel! Sci-fi come to life! I wish I could live to see us colonize another world!😂
Love it I really remember in 1969 we went to the MOON, my Sister and my 2 brothers were watching it on a Black & white TV. We were living in Iceland on Navy NATO base for 3 years I was7 years old.
It's really important to know the limitations of equipment to enter the atmosphere.more importantly the failure points of said equipment upon reentry instead of just over building the equipment.spacex is doing some essential testing not just for rockets but for all humanity.thankyou Elon for everything you are doing to further our race.god bless you and everyone at SpaceX.
I LOVE ROCKET's! Hugh School-Rocket Club 74-78 USMC HAWK Missile 83-92 ICBM's 2001-02 People need to know! BIG FAN! ELON MUSK! YOU ARE THE GREATEST! Not saying this because I need a job. I'm Good! GO Space X! ❤
Props to the camera man hanging on to rocket for that amazing footage.
A hero, I heard he cooks stuff on re-entry
Did you just presume the camera persons gender 😂😂😂
He held his breath for a long time😂😂😂😂
@@ChrisPp-c5zabsolutely not. All cameramen are men. With ding dongs
😂😂😂
I'm 62 and fondly remember the Applo days. America was united behind the cause. Miss those days.
The Apple days were so good.
65 yr old young old person here 😊
I remember all of it!
Mercury Gemini Spacewalks and den
Apollo 11 !!!
13 was a nail-biter
moon buggies
alas by the time Apollo 17 flew it wasn't a big deal.
Sure, the space shuttle drew attention at first, then faded until STS-51-L was lost that morning in 86.
After that, not until Columbia burnt up did the program get national attention.
What I found amazing was that the space X commentators were apparently oblivious to the complete loss of attitude control during re-entry 😮
The vastly different re-entry flight profiles between the Apollo, Shuttle & Starship are like
a bullet
a 737 and
a glider!
Let's see that Mechzilla catch
and that Starship touchdown!!!
'Murica!!!
Ahhhh .... Illusions:) sorry y'all but the Apollo missions....were......bs
@stephenmcbride8859 Bazinga!. If it wasn't for Applo, we wouldn't have mylar. It's not your fault you are dumb. Unfortunately stupid can't be fixed.
@@stephenmcbride8859
and George did 911
Congratulations to SpaceX for such monumental achievement.
Why not just fake them rockets, and save some money? ruclips.net/user/shortsDW496v3yU7c
Shoutout to the machinists, fabricators, coaters, inspectors, assemblymen, and crew for building this bad boy, wherever you may be.
Exactly, they are the heroes of SpaceX, Musk is a toxic leech who bought in and bullied his way to the top, just like tesla
@@gamegoof wrong. Musk is the founder, CEO, CTO, CED and largest shareholder, try again, hater.
@@lucasdunn2717 Oh yeah I was thinking of that little company Tesla, he indeed did start SpaceX with absolutely zero engineering knowledge from him because he had and still has has rudimentary engineering knowledge but hes got plenty of cash and skimps on safety. Lucky for me I dont live near the crashing zones. The worst part of Musk is how he uses people/government then totally f8cks them over, right now hes using his power to lobby trump to CANCEL Rivian's loan from the government, even though hes been lobbying and getting billions from the government for decades, first with NASA/SPACEx and in recent years with Tesla. Anyways, was a fan of ketamine addict before the whole cave/pedo incident but now will celebrate his obituary.
@@lucasdunn2717 Musk supplies the money, other people are the brains.
@@STSWB5SG1FAN wrong again dude, did you even read my comment, he is the founder, he is the chief executive officer, he is the chief technology officer, he is the chief engineer and designer, he is the largest shareholder, he has 78% of the companies voting shares, he is the visionary, he attends nearly every launch. He also has 160 iq so to say he isn't "the brains" is ignorant. You know that starship superheavy booster catch? That was his idea, per statements from tom Mueller, Gwen shotwell and other various employees. Whenever something blows up, you blame him, so how come whenever things succeed, it is not him but his engineers. He is the single most deserving individual of credit in the entire company.
Waaay better than the super bowl!!!
So incredible!😮
Super Bowl? More like, more like… super … PLATE!
OHHHHH!!! Oh SNAP!!
Physics, I love me some physics, the technology. I'm an older man. I remembered running home from elementary school to turn the all tube t.v. on. It took a minute to warm up. Soon as the picture came on, an Apollo mission splashed down. Don't recall which mission. But ever since I fell in love with science.
I would take a portable tv that had an am/ fm radio and 5 inch screen that had an ac/ dc car plug adorador and plug into my cigarette lighter of my 1968 VW bug and pull over on my way to a community college and watch apolo take off and landings! They would broadcast on TV I never missed a launch! I too am old 71 female who wanted to go to the moon for real! It was an amazing time in early space. We all knew who John Glenn was and Gus Grissom and the rest of the Apolo guys were! Sally Ride was in our dreams, Krista McAuliffe, our first teacher in space with such a sad beginning and ending in the same second, but I carried that little Sears TV with the 5 inch screen. It was a big box at the time now just think I’m typing this on my cell phone as I sit in my chair at 71 who knew, I still wish I could go to space
@beautylabrador8415
That brought back memories.
I remembered it had to be in 72 or 73 as a kid. I was growing up in Ft. Lauderdale. My grandmother on my dad's side was in her 90s, and grandpa long gone. He was a preacher in the Bible belt, Ohio. She wouldn't move off the farm where my father was born. He is 96 and still loving life. Anyways, my grandparents were so religious that t.v. was the devils horns(the antenna). My older sisters were not allowed to wear makeup, no playing cards. Women had to wear a dress covering their knees. The list goes on and on. Now, thinking about it, she was absolutely right. But that's another story. I remember going on a road trip to visit her and to see the old farmhouse. It was sad, falling apart around her. But she wouldn't leave. She would just sit and read the Bible all day. My father's brother still lived in the area and took care of her. But she was stubborn, but she did need the help. She lived off of all the canned vegetables off the farm and would go into town about 2 or 3 times a year just to buy sugar and a few necessities. One night, I was on the porch swing with her just talking. It was a beautiful full moon out. As I looked up, I said "grandma I still can't believe that man has landed on the moon." She laughed and laughed and said," What did they do fly a rocket to the moon drive around with a car." I said yes with a puzzled look. Then she said when are they coming back. And how do they breathe. I couldn't believe it. I realized how cut off from the world she was and didn't know that man did go to the moon. I tried to convince her that we did and beat the Russians. She just laughed and laughed. Told me I had a very good imagination. I told my father this, and he told me not to worry about it. That it's probably better to leave the subject alone. She passed away a few months later on that farm, thinking I was just a kid with a good imagination.
R.i.p. all my grandparents and my mom.
Have a great day, be safe.
Then he learned how water *LEVEL* works 😂😂😂 *Dreams crushed* 😈
@@dropshotking1212 no he will be crushed when a flerf tells him the physics and mathematics of a flat earth ! But we are safe no one has ever provided that so the flat earth nonsense is just that nonsense
The first mission that I remember was the last Apollo moon landing in 1972. I was 4 and remember the tv, b& w , tubes! , of course, but I was watching the moon buggy drive around. I was outside that evening , or the next day and loved to watch the moon in our back yard. For the first time I thought, wow, they have a car up there! I was a year and a half when Apollo 11 landed July 1969.
To the whole Space X team great job! Please keep up the fantastic work you are all doing! We all love it!
Я рад за всех адекватных, Илон который Маск! Ты сделал звездолёт! Это так же круто как поле плазмы вокруг, Звездолёта. Надеюсь, идеи и пример сделанный тобой вне зависимости от принадлежностями, вызовет восторг и восхищение теми возможностями которые дает единение в усилиях и идеях.
Elon Musk gives so much hope to so many people on Earth! We are explorers by our nature. Desire to explore the unknown is in our veins.
Space is fake
he is a cock, his engineers are excellent
Musk is a businessman. Thank NASA and private sector inventors.
@@jantoleu8392 you are a dupe
Our grade school class had a TV wheeled into the classroom to watch the first men on the moon. We were so proud to be in Houston near NASA. We wanted to eat astronaut food and be in zero gravity. Imagination stirs the spirit. Congratulations to Space X and Mr Musk. 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Congratulations to the SpaceX team for a job well done in lifting such a giant rocket!
take ruzzija to cosmos. all ruzzia.. for ever
bot
reentry my ass. it burned up why tumbeling into erth atmosphere, because spaceship was heavily damaged when during seprtion from the booster.
it was a complete failur. again.
Spachip coudnt get to space. booster crashed.
Space x set back space exploration fpr decades. worst engneering failure ever.
@@eve-llblyat2576another bot omg
@@eve-llblyat2576 awww you poor salty thing, show me on the doll where starship hurt you 😢😢😢
Most people arent aware of how amazing it is to see reentry footwge from the vehicle itself. I belive it is the first footage ever, and LIVE too!!!
Orion capsule did it too, but i doubt high quality live stream like this.
@@mexicarspotter Yet again that's a capsule and the camera was inside. That why this is such a break through.I was impressed with the onboard cameras and starlink the whole time.
Right. Orion footage was meh. Very similar to existing in-door footage from shuttle flights. This Starship footage was breathtaking.
@@Whataboutseconddinner fr
This is thanks to Starlink connection. Pretty awesome.
I don't understand the people who have no interest in stuff like this, I live for this ❤
Cool story bro
Me to. Can,t wait to go to Mars. These moments make me feel glad to be alive.
If you live for this, that sucks.
I question the UFOs.
@@mpoelsma7561mars? Maybe they should try to go to the moon first.
Proof again that the cameraman never dies
it`s mounted! :-)
Elon and crew pulled it off! The first footage of re-entry from the ship. Instead of trying to send the video footage feed directly to ground control which the plasma field has always blocked, they instead sent the feed directly to Starlink which in turn routed the feed to G.C. A truly historic moment! The plasma field was beautiful. Great work once again SpaceX!!!
😂😂😂 Elon has nothing to do with this. You can thank all the billions taxpayer dollars that, Elon the king of welfare Kings took for this.
After the TDRS satellites were put into orbit in 1988, the shuttles maintain communication with the ground throughout re-entry. Because the Dragon is a capsule, plasma surrounds it during re-entry and still experiences a blackout.
ELON HAS NOT DONE A THING BESIDES FUND IT, STOP GIVING HIM CREDIT
@@greywhite2903 Bwahahahaha, that's hilarous!!! LlAR!!!
@@frank6842 LlAR.
Our motherland protects us from harm, which should inspire us to protect it in return. Let's strive for fairness and integrity, refraining from deceit for the sake of monetary gain.
Truer Words Have Never Been Spoken ! I understand exactly what you are saying.
Well done, SpaceX, certainly an interesting time to be alive.
This is a world First!! Communication in a returning spaceships plasma field has never been accomplished till now. Outstanding. It seemed to be an impossibility. Bravo!!
not a first... Russians did it before
@@Pinkielover got a link to a video?
Spacex had a cam inside a Falcon 9 fairing half and showed the plasma as it fell. Spectacular!
Congradulation to the Space X Engineers, Crew, and Elon Musk! What an accomplishment.
I like the enthusiastic cheering of people who did their jobs perfectly and experiencing the pride of their success.
Yeah , that's so real and not dubbed at all.!
And believe this, the haters will tell you how unprofessional these people are for cheering when the rocket blew up on the 2nd flight.
It’s a refreshing sound
I taught tat was a sound recording from an episode of friends!
Way to go, SpaceX... OUTSTANDING!!
I will never forget watching a rocket land on a dock for the first time, it just blew my mind. This company sure is making history.
This is not the same ship, this ship failed upon reentry because the engines melted since they couldn’t correct their orientation during reentry (as shown in video) so the aircraft blew up before it even hit the water
@@radiatuvala1396He wasn’t speaking about this one in particular. He just said a rocket
It's amazing that people still think this is fake when you can go there and see it in person
Every informaation livenä goto speak
It's fake bud
Absolutely fantastic. Congrats to all involved. What a proud day. Stay safe and keep up the good work.
Nicest comment I have seen all day.
You do know it disintegrated on re-entry right?? And the booster crashed at Mach 2 and exploded???
@@Djlamayyou do know it was a test flight right? This is how SpaceX works. They build fast, test often, and improve on those tests before they start actually flying payloads. This flight was considered a massive success as it made it past first stage and through a portion of reentry. They gathered more than enough data to improve upon for the next iteration of the test flight. No one said it was 100% certainly going to make it through reentry.
@@Djlamaydumb 😅
I just p is st in my pants this is so exciting
This is crazy. They got such a good feed and data probably because of having starlink. That capability they built because they have the falcon 9. Talk about building on your own achievements.
So many people came together to make that rocket. Not just Elon
Helping Saving Lives in Ukrane, for FREE! MAY GOD BLESS ELON M!
Gotta love being able to see a reentry while it happens live.
Everything related to space is beautiful, dazzling, and dangerous
Salute to all the people who are involved in this endeavor. 😮
It's all on Elon nobody else.
It's all on Elon nobody else Elon did it all
Elon is a doosher@@joshuadenman9977
The booster landings never get old, now footage of the re-entries are added to that list
Stolen technology you must be so proud
@@andybrugman3619 Stolen from...ULA? Energia?
Epic moment for humanity
SpaceX and Musk doing incredible things!! Great Job to everyone involved!!
Motion picture quality. Amazing to see plasma live and in such quality.
Actually seeing a plasma field is sick
Sick And fake
@@stephenmcbride8859"sick and fake" Said flatearther🤡
Looks like it rolled onto its side, allowing the plasma to cook the non heat shielded area.
Was watching the live, they never had the ship stabilized before they hit that 100 km mark. They may need to add more reaction control before next attempt.
Yup, they didn't have much control while the ship was coasting and in re-entry
@@kstricl They had it stabilized for a very little time but it did not stabilize quickly unfortunately. I guess since its fully automated maybe just a new code could help.
@@Octuly it still had too much roll going, hence why I said it wasn't stabilized. I don't think it was a software issue, the FC appeared to be attempting to correct the entire time, but the RCS and fins just didn't have enough authority to correct.
@@kstricl There was some confusion also with the booster and the fins. It seemed like it was confused where it was at.
Incredible Starship test flight
damn it stole the words
I mean... Shouldn't the heat shield be the thing that's taking the brunt of reentry? That spaceship is in an uncontrollable tumble
Yes like he said test flight first time it was in this position just wait for the next one should be better@@jaredhass9254
@jaredhass9254 That's what testing is for. It lasted a long time in a tumble, that was impressive regardless. The heat tiles did their job when they were in the right position.
@@beeman4266 you know how many times the space shuttle tumbled like that? They got it right on the first try.
An amazing , eXcellent AND eXceptional feat ! ! ! What a time to be alive !!! Thanks Team !!! 😲🚀🚀🚀 Good job Shiva & Kay 😉❤❤❤
For those wondering, heat shield work better if they’re pointed always at the fucking atmosphere. Not rolling around constantly engine first.
This is why I love my field so much!!! So much enthusiasm that you can feel the energy of people from the video!
I work in aviation, but I see these videos and it makes me want to transition over.
Never seen anything like that. Amazing. It boggles my mind that this isn’t getting that much coverage on the major networks.
It is though, the reporting is going something like this: Another fail by SpaceX, they will probably go bankrupt within the next year lol
It blew up, what more do you want people to say?
@@paintspot1509 So what do you consider news, a round trip to Mars? Go back to watching CNN dude, you're boring AF... lol
@@paintspot1509 you must be a blast at parties.
Negativity sells. If they had lots breaking stories following nasa space x orion ect. People would get bored & switch the channel. 🙄
and there are still people who think the Earth is flat
The earth is flat. It just looks round because the lens on the camera is round. 😂😂😂😂😂
@@Torontodude20000 give us the physics and mathematics of a flat earth then 😅
Well it is flat!!! At least where you are standing.
guess we'll be leaving those people behind
There are a lot of internet trolls engagement farming too. It’s hard to tell just by reading someone’s comment who is insisting the earth is flat with all the laughing emojis they like to use (like the one above), that they seriously believe that vs someone who is just trolling. I stopped responding to it because either way it feeds a societal mind virus that is spread by engaging it.
That’s a triple WOW! wow Wow WOW! GREAT JOB ELON!👍🏻🥳
They enter at 17 thousand m.p.h. into our atmosphere.
I'm shocked at how long it took the heat while re-entering on its side.
I was thinking the same thing. Hell at one point it was going tail first into the plasma and held up like a champ!
umm it's covered with space-shuttle tiles-
@@jackprier7727 The belly is covered. The sides are not.
@@jackprier7727 not the entire vehicle. It was rotating during re-entry and parts of the ship without the tiles were taking the brunt of the heating and it held up for a surprising amount of time before it finally broke up
@@countryfucius maybe next time--hope the NASA subsidies hold out-
SWEET! Never thought I would be able to see that in real time!
same!
@@TheLaunchPad At one point in the video you can see a small "white" piece breaking off and falling off falling to the right and passing under the folding wing thing.
@@TheLaunchPad im impressed
Dat Plasma
Such an amazing historical achievement!
They made it like a car parking backwards.
It's the greatest advertising for Starlink ever.
Even when they fail they succeed.
In an age where technology is advancing at an insane rate, it still takes so much collective intelligence to achieve these launches and reentry. Most don't understand how amazing this feat actually is!
Starship has disintegrated every time they’ve sent it up, it’s an epic failure. They did it better in the 1960s.
@@listonheinz9103 The SN15 prototype became the first full-size test spacecraft to take off and land successfully in May 2021.
And yet we sent men to the moon and back with 1960s tech…
@@listonheinz9103false, 2 have landed
Humankind has launched 483 manned flights into space. Most have returned their occupants safely to Earth.
Then there are achievements like the Appollo missions and the establishment of the ISS.
Sorry, but this is what abject failure looks like It's a trainwreck.
Musk's greatest talent is PR, it's not rocket building. And figuring that out isn't rocket science.
Back in the 80’s Star Trek & Starwars were our only options to enjoy such technologies and dream of things such as the possibility of space travel. Today SpaceX is making it a reality for all to witness live reentry footage. Hope to still be around to see what milestones are accomplished in the near future.
Thank you Mr. Musk and all SpaceX team for your continued work towards making humans multi planetary. Very exciting to watch it unfold, amazing!
Amazing! And capturing that footage is absolutely incredible and beyond.
Great work space x team!! Hostory will remember
Amazing.... look back 100 years. 😮
Was so AWESOME!!! Just a bugga it started a bit wobbly that seemed to not stop. HUGE congrats to SpaceX for all they achieved today!
Noise of Summer 💪
Truly truly belly panting joy at the sound of ‘their’ achievements here.
Nice to see something positive
Stabilization initialized *cheering* no command loss from plasma, starship starts to over rotate then recovery, stabilized, burns for a second *cheering*. That's history in the making that's insane.
Totally Gorgeous!
With this amazing rocket technology, Proxima Centauri is only 50,000 years away! Incredible!
I suspect it’s closer than that. I grew up when men WWI veterans came to town on Saturday to gather and talk on the court house lawn. They got to town on horseback or in their farm wagon pulled by a team of horses. Now I see electric cars (folks in the country didn’t even have electricity yet. We were only 9 miles out). I see cars that can drive themselves. I saw man go to the moon. I see craft like this being operated.
We’ve come a long way in my 70 years so far.
I'm 55. Ironically the ability to land on the moon was illustrated by a Russian soldier in a trench during WWI.
🤣
He’s talking about how long it would take to reach Proxima Centauri using current technology. The fastest spacecraft travel at about 50,000mph, or about 14,000 YEARS per light year. So the nearest star is about 60,000 years away at that speed.
Why would anybody use primitive rockets to get to Proxima Centauri 🤦🏼♂️
even the failures look amazing (it broke up during the re-entry)
Failiure? Who said anything about failiure? That was a perfect success
@@awesomepheonix337what? The re-entry litterly failed…
@@filip9564 Don't argue with spaceX rhetoric 🤷
@@EspaceParallele no it didnt count as a failure
It passed its goals except for landing
If there’s anything better than a room full of nerds screaming their lungs out, it’s gotta be what they’re cheering for. Great stuff!
Space X is amazing!
Don't forget NASA. They're a big part of SX, and fund and staff about half of it.
And then it burnt up. Not a complete failure, as this was purely a test flight. A lot was learned by SpaceX.
It would have been nice if either the starship or its booster would have made it back intact. Even so progress has been made over each of the previous two flights. Hopefully the fixes will be relatively easy.
One step closer.
yeah, they're not very good
@@jimwrasse7115 I harbor lingering fears that once they start trying to re-use starships they will hit a lot of the same problems the shuttle had with the sheer amount of servicing work to turn them around and refurbish them, orbital re-entry is SUCH a hostile environment. On the other hand, even if they just recover the superheavy boosters the unit cost of each starship will be way less than shuttle operations were. they may find it turns out cheaper to not re-use them, just like the upper stage on falcon 9
Far from a complete failure. they hit almost all of the mission targets.
Amazing footage. Let's see the engine's light up on # 4 !
Space X makes it LOOK 👀 easy.
It is , NOT!
Man! Thats *COOLio* . Thats a *BIG* rocket too
Absolutely amazing to watch. Elon, and the teams who had a hand in bringing the Starship this far, must feel very proud with their achievements. Wow.
It's easier to fool someone, than to convince them that they've been fooled
False conspiracy theories are often easier to believe than the reality of the matter.
This is where the Earth’s atmosphere is ooooooooooOooooOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOHHHH
Yup...I can hear Kinison 😂
Never thought I would live to see this... Just amazing.. Hats off to the spacex team and Big thx to Elon.
красиво, молодец Лёня. Браво
what a time to be alive
Que emoción debe ser formar parte del equipo de desarrollo del Starship
Listen! I have only one question!. What TF is that camera made of. 😂😂😂
It’s from a Nokia 3310
@@peterdefrankrijker 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Next time the pointy shielded side forward, not the engine bay and reentry might actually work! ;)
It was supposed to have engines running, providing active braking like on Falcon 9 . But all vacuum relights seemed to fail on this flight, and they also needed to heat up the ulage gas in the tanks more to increase pressure for RCS and engine feeding .
@@johndododoe1411 No, engines was not supposed to run. Starship uses the atmosphere for decelerating, engines only used only at the very end of landing for the "belly-flop maneuver".
Seeing that ship live getting bombarded with plasma is so amazing to witness!
This was BY FAR the coolest video IVE EVER SEEN!! I CANT WAIT FOR IFT4!! Congrats Elon and SpaceX on a job VERY WELL DONE!!
It crashed because it wasn't flapping it's wings fast enough.
it's a penguin
That's cool.
Cool even though it’s tumbling to destruction 😊
In all seriousness- it may’ve taken a while for a restart of space exploration but the speed of development and the technical advancement - from SpaceX alone is humbling.
You know when something’s great when it’s imitated too
👍👍👍🌎🌎 🚀
It never stopped, just different exploration, after the moon landings, there was mars, shuttle, exploration to ever plant in the solar system and launches of deep space telescopes. That are telling us more than a mission to mars although that will be extraordinary step in itself. But the space industry hasn't been sitting still for 50 years. You have to understand the distance to the moon is small compared to the distance to the mars. It's like riding your bike to the next town, any kid can do but going to mars is then like sailing a yacht to another continent across the ocean. Would you let your kid just go do that without a lot of preparation?
This is absolutely amazing
I certainly forsee greatly improved maneuvering thrusters in Starship design and a redesign of the PEZ door. That door never closed after opening.
Great test flight overall!
how the cameraman can handle that much heat
Do spacex employees get drunk before each launch? Sounds like an NFL game
seeing something for the first time can get a bit exciting especially for science
I would
NFL except the ball has plasma fields
If you worked on a project as big as this, wouldn't you be exited to see it succeed?
Stalin
Boys, if that doesnt prove the earth is round and space is real.. what a treat i cried watching this and ive been waiting a LONG time for this. 😢
This is beyond great! I'm 71yrs old and watched the moon landing live on TV, but this stuff is right out of an Asimov novel! Sci-fi come to life! I wish I could live to see us colonize another world!😂
Could we please get a dude that doesn't sound like he's hissing on the commentary? 😂😂
That's microphone placement error .
I hope I don’t die before I see a manned mars mission. This is amazing.
Fantastic job Young Man!
Absolutely horrible our current government is against the man and company that accomplished this amazing feat. Congrats to all those involved.
Love it I really remember in 1969 we went to the MOON, my Sister and my 2 brothers were watching it on a Black & white TV. We were living in Iceland on Navy NATO base for 3 years I was7 years old.
Camera man never dies!
It's really important to know the limitations of equipment to enter the atmosphere.more importantly the failure points of said equipment upon reentry instead of just over building the equipment.spacex is doing some essential testing not just for rockets but for all humanity.thankyou Elon for everything you are doing to further our race.god bless you and everyone at SpaceX.
"The little flap that could" made it! Go Space X!
“The biggest flying object ever in space“? Did someone check with the international space station on that? 😂
it has a larger internal volume then the ISS and before it burns its fuel it weighs over twice as much.
So proud of SpaceX. What they didn't tell you is the thousand of hours of trials and errors before a solution was found!
I LOVE ROCKET's!
Hugh School-Rocket Club 74-78
USMC HAWK Missile 83-92
ICBM's 2001-02
People need to know!
BIG FAN! ELON MUSK!
YOU ARE THE GREATEST!
Not saying this because I need a job. I'm Good! GO Space X! ❤
I enjoyed seeing how this atmosphere slows the craft down.
I love how they always cheer so much as if they have no confidence in the work they have done . Like , yeah it works way hay 🎉
This it what nasa needed to do 30 years ago.. to motivate ppl and get people attention bout space
I felt the excitement that they were feeling and I was smiling the whole time. Thank you eat on musk and team.