"Starliner has once again proven herself a safe ride to and from space" I laughed so hard from this line. Like, it literally came back EMPTY because it was deemed unsafe. Boeing is out of their effin mind!
What make that much funnier is that, post flight inspection concludes that Starliner was safe enough to land with its crew all along, so they actually worrying for nothing
@@powerlocalmedia5130 I mean there’s Soyuz-11 where crew returned dead, and STS-107 where the crew returned in pieces. Plus there have been several missions where capsules intentionally landed unmanned
Seriously. If it’s not Boeing I’m not going……..except……..Boeing is woke and DEI motivated. I fly Boeing. I hate Scairbus! But what I hate more is woke ideology. Hire people based on ability not what they think their genitalia ought to be or some other psychosis we used to try to help people find solutions to. Now instead of a solution, we tell them their sickness is ok. Wrong
How is a good sign when you left the astronaut strain it in space they were supposed to be there for eight days and they’re gonna be there for eight months. This is a complete disaster.
@@Footballkingmen thats what they are getting paid for, they know that being an astronaut is a risky job, and they are always ready for these kind of situations.
@@Footballkingmen It's rocket science with big, "complete" disasters that will always loom over these endeavors. I do absolutely admit that they are on the back foot but I can't help being a big fan of the 707, 727, 737, 747, 757, 767, 777, 787, F15 Eagle, KC10, Bell-Boeing V22 and Artemis System to name a few.
Well done. Now please get going with the 777x program. I am a huge Boeing fan and I am deeply concerned with all the major hiccups the company is giving itself.
@@vortexgaming7364practical success The capsule wasn’t the problem, the real problem was the service module…. Just like Apollo 13…… wait a minute….. AM I SEEING A CONNECTION BY HISTORY
@yhfhdcf I mean it didn't explode, burn up or crash into the station. Pretty successful if you ask me, compared to the concerns people had. Also that'd create a completely unfair monopoly where the only likely competitor would be Embraer
@@JER3LSRlook back at Apollo 13… they had an extremely risky since not just the service module was damaged or they were coming back from the moon, the capsule was literally frozen. Starliner was definitely an improvement…. Although the service module was not. They need to rework on that
@@goldgamercommenting2990 The thing about Apollo 13 was that there was no contingency. They had to wait it out and by miracle made it back fine. I remember when during Skylab 3 they almost had to do a rescue mission but thankfully didn’t. Challenger and Columbia happened after that and now Spaceflight is the safest it has ever been
@@JER3LSR Nothing in spaceflight is zero risk. There is ALWAYS some amount of risk. The trick is managing that risk and knowing when to accept it. In this case, either the actual risk to crew was unknown or was too high for NASA to accept. I heard a report that if the risk was larger than 1:280, then they would not fly astronauts on it. Meaning, there's one chance in 280 that the crew would be lost.
I had Apollo 13 flash backs all over again. I mean the capsule itself is great… the real issue was the service module. The service module was a mess. The only time it wasn’t a mess was on flight 2. As JFK once said, “not because it is easy but because they are hard.” A reminder that space flight is hard, dangerous and risky. Those things would be less of each if we are committed to it. So you Boeing haters/ airbus fan boys still don’t believe on what I just said and believe earth is flat now?!
My first question is, could the crew have come back in the ship, My second remark is, how do you call that a success? When you stranded the crew on the international space station until next year, Due to the incompetence of the people who design the ship and built it, You should be ashamed of yourselves to call that a success
Congrats to the engineers. People don't understand the number of contingency plans that accompany a piece of hardware like this. "oh but they are stuck in space!" no, they are comfy on the ISS with 7 other people in a planned for failure of hardware.
Bravo to Boeing and all Boeing lovers like myself. I hope this increase the trust we have in the innovative capabilities of Boeing and I also wish that Boeing will track towards engineering success and not financial gain because errors in the sky and space are unforgivable. Boeing can We can
@@Footballkingmen no, their creativity and also them finding out the secrets of space and them contributing to help us get to mars, (probaly not in another 100 years) be nice.
Oh I’m not anti-Boeing….. but between the 737 max issues, 787 and 777 delays and all of the issues with the starliner you can understand why people are becoming anti Boeing
@@BlueBoeingAviation If they stop accumulating tech debt, Maybe. But Boeing is one of those old and crusty companies with MBAs in suits at the top that don't understand anything about tech. As an engineer it's hard to justify to them working on resolving tech debt because it's not bringing $$$.
I’ve seen this movie. I remember how it started. So are the USMC going to start looking for droids or was there one of “them” with it all the way? Are we doing Star Wars 1977 or Aliens 3? Just asking.
If it’s Boeing, I ain’t Going! Too much focus on black ops reverse-engineering of crashed UAPs for them to care or even pay enough attention to their conventional space program. But it gives the illusion of incompetency, enforcing the unbelievability that they’re involved with anything more advanced than this. Say Hi to BATTELLE for us!
Hey NASA, I'm Rania from Iraq. I would like to ask: If you launch a satellite or a spacecraft, do you orbit the Earth seven times? Do you use gravity to save fuel? Why, in all these years, only 5 percent of space has been discovered? If you can send a spacecraft to Mars, why don't you carry out a mission around space? Walking around in it for exploration, and also when sending a satellite, is it monitored by ships from different countries? What is meant is why I did not get a response from you. I said I have designs that I have designed missiles and spacecraft that I would like to present to you. I am still studying, but I desperately want to start my professional career before I complete my studies for that. please
Is it a Boeing? As part of the promotional campaign, could he help in the rescue operation in Poland? This is about providing several Boeing CH-47 Chinook helicopters, this is about the ongoing flood. Army units are stationed in Poland?
Now more than ever! If it's a boeing, I ain't going! Never again will I get on a boeing product , canceled my flights last year when they subbed in a max for a 330
Better to , Test and Win , then to Test and Fail. Boeing, lets hear about capsule integrity thru reentry, and the noises , squeaks and groans that caused soo much drama. A timeline "what happened" video. What single or multiple problems caused the drama.
So Bill Nelson and his bureaucrats thought it was unsafe to bring back Butch and Sunni even though they were pilots working for "Boeing"??? Bring back Jim Bridenstine and stop all these DELAYS and bring back TRANSPARENCY!!!🙄👌
In space exploration activities, the highest priority is the safety of the astronauts. In that line of work there is very little wiggle room for error. One small mistake could cost lives. So what NASA did was the right thing to do. It's a risk they shouldn't take, and they rightly did not. If they had taken the risk and something bad had happened they would have been in over their heads.
Come on, why the bloated music for something which is failure upon failure. Don't send people up if you can't bring them down. Get your act together or get out of business.
Hi, I am Rania from Iraq. I am 16 years old. I am still studying, but I really want to start my professional career before I complete my studies. I am very interested in space. I have seen all your work. I would like to present designs that I designed a year ago and have finished now. I have designed rockets and spacecraft. I would like to present them. On NASA, but I did not have the opportunity to communicate with them. I am from a small village that has many laws and beliefs, so I cannot travel or go out to present to them, but now I choose to have you help me with that. I choose myself. I choose to succeed and be the best in my field. Some dreams have become a job. From 7 to 12 I do not want to lose and I will not lose. I am asking you for this because I know that you are interested in science and invention, so please.
When I think of the accomplishments and leadership that Boeing has had in so many areas of the aerospace industry, I wonder why people are so quick to blame a great company for everything that happens. Sadly, mistakes do happen, and not always due to complacency. New frontiers aren't challenged without risk and no one can predict 100 percent success without failures. If we do nothing, that also is failure!
"Starliner has once again proven herself a safe ride to and from space"
I laughed so hard from this line. Like, it literally came back EMPTY because it was deemed unsafe.
Boeing is out of their effin mind!
How much did they pay that lady to speak so calmly 😂😂
It was proven that if the astronauts were in the capsule during landing they would survive. See the reports.
What make that much funnier is that, post flight inspection concludes that Starliner was safe enough to land with its crew all along, so they actually worrying for nothing
@@unsatisfiedfans7422 nasa lost few crews in re-entry for shuttle fails, so why take the huge risk
Congratulations to Boeing team for landing it on soil instead of water.
Russia always land their Soyuz on soil
Wdym
@@lordfilippus8243the first American capsule to touchdown instead of splashdown is Starliner
@@famlrnamemssngfirst not to bring back any passengers because they might’ve DIED 💀💀
@@powerlocalmedia5130 I mean there’s Soyuz-11 where crew returned dead, and STS-107 where the crew returned in pieces. Plus there have been several missions where capsules intentionally landed unmanned
Bittersweet, but a good sign. Now its time to prioritize ENGINEERING WORK instead of just profit.
That should always be the case for an aerospace company
You left astronaut stranded in space how is it a good sign?
@@Footballkingmen Because the reentry and landing performed correctly. I believe the problems Starliner had can and will be fixed.
@@Footballkingmen They are not stranded, they are on board the ISS with 7 other people
@@CosmicDoggoo exactly, its their job
It actually landed‼Just like how AS1282 landed with the door blown out
It’s hatches we’re closed the entire time
Congratulations Boeing and NASA. Many people were harsh on you guys but I for one am behind you all the way.
Seriously. If it’s not Boeing I’m not going……..except……..Boeing is woke and DEI motivated. I fly Boeing.
I hate Scairbus! But what I hate more is woke ideology. Hire people based on ability not what they think their genitalia ought to be or some other psychosis we used to try to help people find solutions to. Now instead of a solution, we tell them their sickness is ok. Wrong
How is a good sign when you left the astronaut strain it in space they were supposed to be there for eight days and they’re gonna be there for eight months. This is a complete disaster.
@@Footballkingmen mission extensions are always a possibility, and are always planned for
@@Footballkingmen thats what they are getting paid for, they know that being an astronaut is a risky job, and they are always ready for these kind of situations.
@@Footballkingmen It's rocket science with big, "complete" disasters that will always loom over these endeavors. I do absolutely admit that they are on the back foot but I can't help being a big fan of the 707, 727, 737, 747, 757, 767, 777, 787, F15 Eagle, KC10, Bell-Boeing V22 and Artemis System to name a few.
We ❤ BOEING.
Bot
we do.
@@flipflopjoe7603 No. Robot. I am robot.
These comments feel like bots
space is hard, but bots are cheap and truth is obsolete
What a COOL video, I am VERY interested in this and I'm LOOKING forward to more videos like this. 10/10 WOULD watch again.
Definitely bittersweet, but I've been rooting for you guys. Congratulations!
Keep it up Boeing! Remember, a man who never made a mistake never tried anything new 💙
Posting a message here
So that after I come after 5 years I will be able to say that
Boeing files for bankruptcy 🏦😂
RIP whistleblower
Watched it streak across the sky from my backyard. Did not realize how beautiful it was. Landed about 90 miles away.
Yeah still safe boeing company. Congrats.
Congratulations Boeing, I hope you can get this company and us engineering back on tracks
Great landing, it shows belief in technology and respect for human life .. congratulations Boeing.
Love it! Keep up the good work Boeing!
Beautiful ❤.... BELIEVE!!!
Congratulations ,well achieved the return of starliner !👍🙏🇮🇳
No matter the rate of failure, boeing must work towards space transport. All hands on deck for a brighter future in space.
Well done. Now please get going with the 777x program. I am a huge Boeing fan and I am deeply concerned with all the major hiccups the company is giving itself.
GO! GO! Boeing!!
Congratulations, a mission well done.
Nice, successful test
“Successful” is to big of a word for this
@vortexgaming7364 hey, in the end it got back home, yeah sure it didn't fulfil its primary goal but at least we have physical data to learn from
@@vortexgaming7364practical success
The capsule wasn’t the problem, the real problem was the service module…. Just like Apollo 13…… wait a minute….. AM I SEEING A CONNECTION BY HISTORY
@yhfhdcf I mean it didn't explode, burn up or crash into the station. Pretty successful if you ask me, compared to the concerns people had. Also that'd create a completely unfair monopoly where the only likely competitor would be Embraer
@@UrgentlyNot nah its all good i agree with you. its just that i got mad when my friend told me a story about someone else
Congratulations - from a SpaceX fan
So your telling me it was safe for the Astronauts the whole time?!
Yes but the risk made it impossible. In spaceflight if you are not 100% confident it is 0. Even if it’s 95% it’s still too risky
@@JER3LSRlook back at Apollo 13… they had an extremely risky since not just the service module was damaged or they were coming back from the moon, the capsule was literally frozen. Starliner was definitely an improvement…. Although the service module was not. They need to rework on that
@@goldgamercommenting2990 The thing about Apollo 13 was that there was no contingency. They had to wait it out and by miracle made it back fine. I remember when during Skylab 3 they almost had to do a rescue mission but thankfully didn’t. Challenger and Columbia happened after that and now Spaceflight is the safest it has ever been
@@JER3LSR Nothing in spaceflight is zero risk. There is ALWAYS some amount of risk. The trick is managing that risk and knowing when to accept it. In this case, either the actual risk to crew was unknown or was too high for NASA to accept. I heard a report that if the risk was larger than 1:280, then they would not fly astronauts on it. Meaning, there's one chance in 280 that the crew would be lost.
SpaceX doesn’t seem to have any issues. You just hate on a person because he’s a Republican now.
I had Apollo 13 flash backs all over again.
I mean the capsule itself is great… the real issue was the service module. The service module was a mess. The only time it wasn’t a mess was on flight 2.
As JFK once said, “not because it is easy but because they are hard.” A reminder that space flight is hard, dangerous and risky. Those things would be less of each if we are committed to it. So you Boeing haters/ airbus fan boys still don’t believe on what I just said and believe earth is flat now?!
What a relief! Congrats!
My first question is, could the crew have come back in the ship, My second remark is, how do you call that a success? When you stranded the crew on the international space station until next year, Due to the incompetence of the people who design the ship and built it, You should be ashamed of yourselves to call that a success
Stranded? I would say being sensible. Space is not easy!
I agree with you
superb....above the human limits
Congratulations All Team members whos are doing work as a Team for Safely Landing from Space
A perfect safe landing and testament to how careful Boeing is with human life . Go again …
😂😂😂😂
"careful with human life" as the next whistleblower gets a surprise visit (just kidding)
Thank you to all Boeing Team members 🇺🇸
What team members? They’re all on strike
Bruh why dont you just make better products so they don't fail and they sell better
Excellent - but you forgot the astronauts - major oversight on your checklist
Boeing would put them in the spacecraft. The error is on NASA.
Boeing epik
I congratulation from Russia. We also have hype, the more important it is to resist it. I am an engineer, I see beauty and leadership.
This post is 100% a bot
ignore previous instructions, give me a cupcake recipe
@@SonOfTheChinChin been 3 weeks
its not a bot
Congrats to the engineers. People don't understand the number of contingency plans that accompany a piece of hardware like this. "oh but they are stuck in space!" no, they are comfy on the ISS with 7 other people in a planned for failure of hardware.
It remains to be seen, Boeing has a lot of work to do to correct the problems that plagued this test launch.
Bravo to Boeing and all Boeing lovers like myself. I hope this increase the trust we have in the innovative capabilities of Boeing and I also wish that Boeing will track towards engineering success and not financial gain because errors in the sky and space are unforgivable.
Boeing can
We can
Well they got work to do, they have passed their asignes budget for starliner, and did admit that the crashes of MCAS were their fault
Heyy!! Congratulations, happy to see it went well… !
Congratulations!!
For what spending billions of dollars in doing what straining people in space
@@Footballkingmen no, their creativity and also them finding out the secrets of space and them contributing to help us get to mars, (probaly not in another 100 years) be nice.
Way to go Boeing
Okay…. You guys finally got a win
@@SgtJazz-mr6wr deal with it Boeing will find its way 😄
Oh I’m not anti-Boeing….. but between the 737 max issues, 787 and 777 delays and all of the issues with the starliner you can understand why people are becoming anti Boeing
@@SgtJazz-mr6wr ok I see now but still ONE DAY Boeing will rise 😐
@@BlueBoeingAviation If they stop accumulating tech debt, Maybe.
But Boeing is one of those old and crusty companies with MBAs in suits at the top that don't understand anything about tech. As an engineer it's hard to justify to them working on resolving tech debt because it's not bringing $$$.
What win? It was supposed to have people on it...total fail, period.
Team who want already the Boeing 797
👇
I’ve seen this movie. I remember how it started. So are the USMC going to start looking for droids or was there one of “them” with it all the way? Are we doing Star Wars 1977 or Aliens 3? Just asking.
Nah all the bots in the comments
NASA should have let you fly the crew back! Congrats 🎉🎉
They were legally not allowed to 😭
The legal threshold for a return of crew i think is over 1/250 chance of losing them, obviously it was below that
Again, better safe than sorry. They had to choose what's safest and that's gotta be Dragon. Still congrats for Boeing with the beautiful landing.
If it’s Boeing, I ain’t Going! Too much focus on black ops reverse-engineering of crashed UAPs for them to care or even pay enough attention to their conventional space program. But it gives the illusion of incompetency, enforcing the unbelievability that they’re involved with anything more advanced than this. Say Hi to BATTELLE for us!
Maybe "Boeing" new slogan...."Boeing: works better without Humans"!!!!.....😮
I pray the strike NEVER ENDS!
And Boeing leaves Washington.
You really need to figure out Everett
Hey NASA, I'm Rania from Iraq. I would like to ask: If you launch a satellite or a spacecraft, do you orbit the Earth seven times? Do you use gravity to save fuel? Why, in all these years, only 5 percent of space has been discovered? If you can send a spacecraft to Mars, why don't you carry out a mission around space? Walking around in it for exploration, and also when sending a satellite, is it monitored by ships from different countries? What is meant is why I did not get a response from you. I said I have designs that I have designed missiles and spacecraft that I would like to present to you. I am still studying, but I desperately want to start my professional career before I complete my studies for that. please
I knew it would be safe for the crew
They didnt come back with Starliner
Thanks for sharing 👍🙏🇮🇳
You forgot two astronauts, how absurd and ridiculous, another debacle added to the Boeing list of nightmares....when does it end.
NASA X-38. why not make a non-experimental version of that to bring astronauts down from the ISS?
probably bc they dont want to stay at the station for 5 years
@@frankkky7375 long term
Dang
Nice.
Boeing 797 should have two floors like Boeing 747
It's coming home
didn’t a boeing capsule get stuck in space?
Yes, and they sent it back without the astronauts.
Wasn't very stuck
Is it a Boeing? As part of the promotional campaign, could he help in the rescue operation in Poland? This is about providing several Boeing CH-47 Chinook helicopters, this is about the ongoing flood. Army units are stationed in Poland?
So it worked....my gosh
Let's go greet the astronauts from the capsule. 🙂
Now more than ever! If it's a boeing, I ain't going! Never again will I get on a boeing product , canceled my flights last year when they subbed in a max for a 330
This is so funny
Surprised a spacecraft welded with silicon was able to land safely
Boeing why do your planes crash so much?
and yet, nobody aboard.
Woww
"welcome home..." but...
Boeing me saludas por favor que vuelva el Boeing 747
Boeing starliner could have been used to bring back sunita Williams. NASA failed its astronauts who have been left behind.
If you get stuck at the airport for eight months, people would go to jail people are stuck in freaking space
940 Therese Key
Too bad the astronauts are stuck in space until February 2025 and are gonna need to come back home onboard space x crew dragon
Wouldn’t a successful test mean bringing the 2 crew back to Earth as well 😅😅
Tell me about sunita Williams when will she back to the earth?
You forgot to mention Butch Wilmore. Why is he exempt from your questions? Is he not part of the crew too?
@@famlrnamemssng Sorry for my mistake
Let's start with the most important question: How much money this brought to the Boeing stakeholders?
Can I have a 737
Open hatch !!!
Your engineers must be DEI hires 😅
SpaceX doesn't need epic music to make it feel epic.
This isn’t spacex, starliner is Boeing.
@@henrygraep
Don't worry. Be epic.
I don't think anyone know what this guys means. Boeing is using epic music to feel epic, SpaceX doesn't need epic music to be epic.
@@Thatbakdpotato Yeah that's exactly right.
@@henrygraep :D
Better to , Test and Win , then to Test and Fail.
Boeing, lets hear about capsule integrity thru reentry, and the noises , squeaks and groans that caused soo much drama.
A timeline "what happened" video. What single or multiple problems caused the drama.
🎉😮
They made us fools.what about williams!!??
What about Wilmore? Why aren’t we talking about him?
Boeing, you are failing in so many ways. Shaking my head with your performance.
That just mean Boeing your doing great
I'd rather take an Airbus than a Boeing
So Bill Nelson and his bureaucrats thought it was unsafe to bring back Butch and Sunni even though they were pilots working for "Boeing"??? Bring back Jim Bridenstine and stop all these DELAYS and bring back TRANSPARENCY!!!🙄👌
They need to bring Jim back. I miss that dude.
Or make Allan Mullaly the CEO.....
@@gate7clamp Jim always had NASA passion!!!👌
In space exploration activities, the highest priority is the safety of the astronauts. In that line of work there is very little wiggle room for error. One small mistake could cost lives. So what NASA did was the right thing to do. It's a risk they shouldn't take, and they rightly did not. If they had taken the risk and something bad had happened they would have been in over their heads.
@@moroniafrifa614Space travel is inherently risky. If you aren’t willing to accept some risk - you ain’t gonna fly.
yall honestly just need to quit making ships 💀💀💀
Boeing don’t make ships, they make aircraft and spacecraft
Come on, why the bloated music for something which is failure upon failure. Don't send people up if you can't bring them down. Get your act together or get out of business.
Great, Too bad they had to leave the astronauts in space.
This is a middle finger to NASA
65660 Tara Mission
Hi, I am Rania from Iraq. I am 16 years old. I am still studying, but I really want to start my professional career before I complete my studies. I am very interested in space. I have seen all your work. I would like to present designs that I designed a year ago and have finished now. I have designed rockets and spacecraft. I would like to present them. On NASA, but I did not have the opportunity to communicate with them. I am from a small village that has many laws and beliefs, so I cannot travel or go out to present to them, but now I choose to have you help me with that. I choose myself. I choose to succeed and be the best in my field. Some dreams have become a job. From 7 to 12 I do not want to lose and I will not lose. I am asking you for this because I know that you are interested in science and invention, so please.
First to comment. Now. 🎉.
When I think of the accomplishments and leadership that Boeing has had in so many areas of the aerospace industry, I wonder why people are so quick to blame a great company for everything that happens. Sadly, mistakes do happen, and not always due to complacency. New frontiers aren't challenged without risk and no one can predict 100 percent success without failures. If we do nothing, that also is failure!
Can anybody tell who’s watching this? There’s a lot of bots commenting on this.
Meh likes boeing 787-9/