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  1. #1061
    Explain it to me like I'm five: How is SpaceX blowing up equipment considered in any way a success?

  2. #1062
    Merely a Setback PACOX's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by s_bushido View Post
    Explain it to me like I'm five: How is SpaceX blowing up equipment considered in any way a success?
    If you're talking about Starship, it goes back to the Space Shuttles.


    Prior to the Shuttles, all rockets were one and done and craft. Tiny capsule, rocket goes up, rocket comes down, build another. If you wanted to launch cargo you launched a separate unmanned rocket. The Space Shuttles combined heavily launch capabilities, with utility, with manned flight. Space Shuttles were heavy launchers, they also had a cargo hold that could hold non-standard payloads and/or capture things already in orbit, they also came with the perks of humans on board. The issue with the Space Shuttles were that they were inefficient despite all their capabilities - took too long to launch in between missions, they were ahead of their time as far as capabilities went, it was often (99% of the time) to just used expendable craft to launch payloads. The Shuttles were great when it came to building the ISS but even then engineers could have probably came up with cheaper workarounds.


    Starship is the next iteration of the Shuttle design and concept. A manned orbital workhorse capability of added the ingenuity of a spacious cargo hold and astronauts on board to spaceflight. Not being tied down by regulations NASA has to adhere to helps. What Starship is, aims to be, is a multipurpose reusable heavy launch spaceship. Its most promising/exciting feature is propellant transfer. Propellant transfer greatly expands what kind of payloads you can carry because you aren't expending a bunch of energy just on fuel at launch to get to where you want to go. Instead, planners (rocket scientists) only need to worry about getting their payloads to a low Earth orbit, where they can then load up enough fuel to get to where they want. Starship has a theoretical infinite range (within the solar system) because it has the ability to refuel in space, while not being limited by the small size of capsules. It blowing up is just a sign of progress. NASA sent a new rocket around the Moon on its maiden flight, SLS, but that rocket is based on proven concepts and hardware. SpaceX's Starship is trying to explore new concepts (or ones that havent been touched in 30 years) so its explosions are seen as learning opportunities.

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  3. #1063
    Over 9000! ringpriest's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by s_bushido View Post
    Explain it to me like I'm five: How is SpaceX blowing up equipment considered in any way a success?
    Making a rocket work means lots of different things need to work right. Making everything in a very big rocket work right is extra hard. Let's say SpaceX's new rocket needs a hundred (100) different things to work right every time before it can really do its job and take people and other stuff to space. Part of the way SpaceX gets their rockets to work right is by practice. They try again and again until they get everything to work right every time.

    While the rocket is flying, it sends back information about exactly what is happening with all of its parts. That way SpaceX knows everything that happens on the rocket while it is flying to space and back. They know what things are working right, and what things go wrong. More importantly, they learn how things go wrong. That lets them fix those things so they will work better on the next rocket.

    The first time SpaceX flew one of their new rockets, about 10 things worked right, and it blew up.

    The second time SpaceX flew one of their new rockets, about 25 things worked right, and it blew up a little later.

    This time, the third time that SpaceX flew one of their new rockets, about 60 things worked right, and it blew up much later. This is progress! The rocket went a lot further, and flew a lot longer before blowing up. And a lot more things worked right.

    SpaceX never thought everything would work right the third time they flew the rocket. But they're happy that the rocket flew a lot farther, and that lots of things worked, even if it still blew up at the end.

    SpaceX thinks it might take ten rockets or more blowing up in flight before they figure out how to get everything right. But after this flight, it might only take two or three more rockets blowing up before they get everything right.

    If the rocket had blown up right away, and SpaceX didn't learn anything, then it would have been a failure. This flight was a success because the rocket worked much better than earlier rockets, and SpaceX learned a lot.
    "In today’s America, conservatives who actually want to conserve are as rare as liberals who actually want to liberate. The once-significant language of an earlier era has had the meaning sucked right out of it, the better to serve as camouflage for a kleptocratic feeding frenzy in which both establishment parties participate with equal abandon" (Taking a break from the criminal, incompetent liars at the NSA, to bring you the above political observation, from The Archdruid Report.)

  4. #1064
    Booster for the next Starship flight underwent a static fire yesterday. The highly ambitious goal of a May launch is looking more and more likely.

  5. #1065
    Merely a Setback PACOX's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Nerraw View Post
    Booster for the next Starship flight underwent a static fire yesterday. The highly ambitious goal of a May launch is looking more and more likely.
    I would imagine that they would pick up the pace if the DoD does actually commit to some to Starship. There's no need to rush anymore now that Artemis's entire timeline has been pushed back, though. Thats not a particular slight SpaceX, the timeline wasn't feasible when the first SLS/Artemis 1 went up. You could argue it wasn't feasible before that. But the fact that the last Starship test went above and beyond kind of put some more pep in SpaceX's step. If SpaceX does anything well its fabrication, so we can expect the hardware to be ready even if engineers need time to run through data.


    Not the biggest fan of Musk but if I were him I would race Bezos to see what happens sooner, a New Glenn launch or another Starship orbital run. Me sitting as a rocket fan , I'm just excited. New Glenn should launch this year, its engines were proven on Vulcan. Starship is nearing at least HLS phase, signaling a return to a ship as versatile as the shuttles but without government red tap. The US has 3 spaceports in operation, maybe 4 if Texas catches on. NASA/The Easter Range is allowing multiple rocket launches within hours of each other. We're approaching a new era.

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  6. #1066
    Elon Musk provided a Starship update: https://twitter.com/SpaceX/status/1776669097490776563


    If you're like me and don't want to hear Elon prattle on for 45 minutes, NSF has an excellent overview of the main points made here: https://twitter.com/NASASpaceflight/...76390735163511

    Also A few relevant slides from the presentation: https://twitter.com/NASASpaceflight/...76719258173896

  7. #1067
    I wonder if Elon Musk will learn that it is currently more important to safe this planet than to travel to Mars at some point.

    It will take 50 years to render a big part of this planet inhabitable. Terraforming is a tech we will not learn within the next hundred years. If Musk was smart, he would invest his money into this world, and not Mars.
    Last edited by schmonz; 2024-04-15 at 10:29 PM.

  8. #1068
    Merely a Setback PACOX's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by schmonz View Post
    I wonder if Elon Musk will learn that it is currently more important to safe this planet than to travel to Mars at some point.

    It will take 50 years to render a big part of this planet inhabitable. Terraforming is a tech we will not learn within the next hundred years. If Musk was smart, he would invest his money into this world, and not Mars.
    He is pitching to investors. Landing on Mars is a technological achievement. There's no short term way we could live on Mars. We can theoretically get people to Mars in a year or two, but what's the point if it is just a one way trip and there's scientific merit besides says "yay we did it".


    One reason we're going back to Moon is to learn how to do scientific missions in deep space away from the convenience and safety of low earth orbit. Humanity will be living in space stations before we're living on Mars the way things are panning out.

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  9. #1069
    Herald of the Titans Tuor's Avatar
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  10. #1070
    Quote Originally Posted by PACOX View Post
    He is pitching to investors. Landing on Mars is a technological achievement.
    Stopping global warming is a way bigger achievement. If all he wants is to get into history books this is what he should do, and not construct deadborn plans to make Mars habitable.

    All Elon Musk currently does beside Starlink is creating a lot of space garbage (old satellites, an orbit full of debris), which could render spaceflight impossible at some point, especially in a future when we would have technically advanced. Simply as every ship trying to get out of orbit would be bombarded with a ton of space garbage noone ever will be able to get rid anymore.

    Sometimes i think we live in a simulation, where the power to decide our fate is in the hands of lunatics who are that crazy they would let our home planet die while they want to create a fictious libertarian utopia at mars..

    There is no better satire than reality.
    Last edited by schmonz; 2024-04-19 at 09:52 AM.

  11. #1071
    Quote Originally Posted by schmonz View Post
    Stopping global warming is a way bigger achievement. If all he wants is to get into history books this is what he should do, and not construct deadborn plans to make Mars habitable.
    Did you miss the whole electric car thing, the battery storage, or you specific ignore it.

    Quote Originally Posted by schmonz View Post
    All Elon Musk currently does beside Starlink is creating a lot of space garbage (old satellites, an orbit full of debris), which could render spaceflight impossible at some point,
    I give you point for twisting the truth as hard as you do. Elons Starlink do not create (long-term) debris, but to blame Elon for what other peoples satellites do, come on, you do not have to like him... but this feel pathetic.

  12. #1072
    Merely a Setback PACOX's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Fantomen View Post

    I give you point for twisting the truth as hard as you do. Elons Starlink do not create (long-term) debris, but to blame Elon for what other peoples satellites do, come on, you do not have to like him... but this feel pathetic.
    Excuse people from siding with the FAA and numerous astrophysicist than a commercial entity. The latter has never been wrong or misrepresented facts until its too late, right? Starlink spam isn't a problem in the short term (but even that, its being generous for the sake of allowing people to have internet). Do we wait until Starlink's become a nuisance to regulate them? Until them is an accident that leave space debris in LEO? Wait until other ventures are putting up an equal amount of satellites and make exceptions for SpaceX? Wait until only SpaceX is only the only aerospace company that can cheaply punch through its ring of space trash? Wait until we found out Musk was simply telling half truths like with most of his ventures where he refuses to yield to the advice of his own more knowledgeable employees?


    No one who is serious about the future of aerospace believes Starlink should be able to exists on its current operating trajectory without regulation. SpaceX (Musk) definitely isn't going to regulate itself.

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  13. #1073
    Quote Originally Posted by Fantomen View Post
    Did you miss the whole electric car thing, the battery storage, or you specific ignore it.
    https://www.epa.gov/hw/lithium-ion-b...tions#hazwaste

    Quote Originally Posted by Fantomen View Post
    Elons Starlink do not create (long-term) debris, but to blame Elon for what other peoples satellites do, come on, you do not have to like him... but this feel pathetic.
    Sure he creates tons of debris. His Starlink satellites only run for 5-6.5 years, and his goal is to put up 42,000 satellites up there. It only needs one solar flare to render half of them useless and turn our orbit into a wasteland which prohibits any further use of space.

    Elon Musks efforts create a lot of (toxic) waste. Nothing more. Infact, he destroys our planet way more than any other individual, that is, beside infesting weak brains with fake news on his social media outlet "x" where he radicalized himself towards fascist thoughts. If you want to look for a villain, Musk is the right example.
    Last edited by schmonz; Yesterday at 07:53 AM.

  14. #1074
    Quote Originally Posted by schmonz View Post
    Sure he creates tons of debris. His Starlink satellites only run for 5-6.5 years, and his goal is to put up 42,000 satellites up there. It only needs one solar flare to render half of them useless and turn our orbit into a wasteland which prohibits any further use of space.
    Starlink sats are in such a low orbit that they'll come down on their own in single digit years if they no longer actively maintain their orbit. Why? Because the atmosphere does not magically end at the Karman line.

  15. #1075
    Quote Originally Posted by Nerraw View Post
    Starlink sats are in such a low orbit that they'll come down on their own in single digit years if they no longer actively maintain their orbit. Why? Because the atmosphere does not magically end at the Karman line.
    When these satellites collide with other space debris, it is unpredictable in which direction the remains go. Also, the sheer amount of satellities could lead to the kessler syndrome.

    https://www.space.com/human-space-be...ble-esa-report

  16. #1076
    Merely a Setback PACOX's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Nerraw View Post
    Starlink sats are in such a low orbit that they'll come down on their own in single digit years if they no longer actively maintain their orbit. Why? Because the atmosphere does not magically end at the Karman line.
    The concern is that SpaceX is still putting up ~50 satellites 3–4 times a week. The sats being in LEO means there are in closer proximity to one another, a denser cloud to account for.

    Its not like SpaceX is going to being putting up less Starlink sats or all of the sats will suddenly be gone in 5 years. A little bit of regulation wouldn't burt.

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