@tentringer4065 The build-up to streamlining space travel isn't history? Literally, every country is beginning to go back into space because of the U.S.'s future plans.
@tentringer4065 😑 For Real? the worlds most powerful rocket that’s designed to be 100% reusable, launching off a pad that was completely destroyed 6 months ago, from the first launch.
The announcement of the booster "experienced a rapid disassembly", reminded me of the '80s movie "Short Circuit" made me laugh. That is a beast of a rocket!!
its really fun reading the comments its like the falcon 9 in the beginning stage again when falcon 9 just explodes i wanna see this comments age like fine milk
Even Though i am not an American and though i wish to be one day, this is a huge milestone in the future of space flight and space discovery, and it is making me Proud as a human
@@SalimAsit it is very significant. it's the biggest rocket in the world, that succesfuly made it to space. (and it's designed to be able to fully return back on earth aswell, which in this mission it failed but made great progress)
It was a beautiful launch and the ship did well through many critical test elements of the test launch. Third test will be a charm. They certainly know what went wrong and will correct those problems. Really just an amazing launch. Great work Space X.🤩
I remember when I was a kid and this thing was considered a far future thing that wouldn’t be used for years. Now here I am watching a hot stage from said vehicle.
I'm not sure what you mean. There are other super heavy rockets that have gone much much higher. For starship, it was the highest. Maybe that's what you meant.
how many time people fail to walk as a baby before they can steadily walk?? Failure only exist when people give up on something. But it is a progress if they keep on learning and improving.
dude this technology is 80 years old, you celebrate 2 ships failing as a success lol. If both the booster and the starship survived it would have been what kind of mission? failure. Maybe the 3rd one will be made from thermo nuclear resistant glass. ohh by the way didn't he promise us on mars 3 years ago, he can't even get into orbit on this tube.
@@runnynose8341 the first launch their goal was to get the rocket off the platform, it went MUCH further than that. The second time they managed stage separation and almost reached their target orbit. It’s a massive success! Remember that their first 3 rockets exploded before the 4th was successful. You can’t expect something to work first time 😊
But I can expect pretty common technology from 80 years ago to work first time, don't you? or are you scared when you see a new appliance that you bought from the hardware? or does that company have to have 5 failures b4 they can make a new washing machine?@@lmaway8545
Should change the title to lose the "attempts" as that is not actually true: SpaceX has a successful test launch! Both parts of the two part rocket eventually will be able to be reused when design development is finished, but neither were intended to be recovered for this test launch, and both were destroyed, the first stage soon after its successful launch and separation from the first, and the top part of the rocket worked as hoped after "hot staging", with planned for the first stage to possibly travel to near Hawaii and fall into the sea, but contact was lost with it around eight minutes into its successful test flight, after all engines had been working fine, when it had reached around 24,000 kph. The SpaceX commentator observed the loss of contact was right near the expected end of the second stage's planned "burn", and he speculated that the automatic destruct was somehow triggered by some sort of problem at that point.
Its called a Test Flight for a reason. Its not suppose to guarantee success, its about looking for results. Solve those issues, rinse and repeat@@SalimAsit
@@SalimAsit Exactly. The way those fan-boys cheer every time it farts wrong is so dang juvenile. Of COURSE lessons are learned through failure, that's how progress works for everything. So at least admit to SOMETHING having failed, but you can't can you? I hope when lives are lost that juvenile fan-boys don't cheer and say "it was a success because it will get better for next time" I like SpaceX and follow their progress and close cooperation with NASA and JPL, but fan-boys acting like giddy children who never admit they messed-up? Forget it.
@@mythrin This was not the plan... Stage 2 was not supposed to terminate... Another failure for SpaceX. So how many rockets will they need to tune the system? 20 rockets? And 20 years? Remember Saturn 5 was successful at first flight...
as short as that hot staging ring is, using all six engines to separate caused the boosters RUD because those vacuum engines are only millimeters away from the dome that protects the dome of the booster they may want to try making the hot staging ring taller and/or only using the three sea level raptors to separate the stages As for star ship interesting i believe the engines shut down either because of a lack of fuel the flight termination system may have activated but if that's the case what was that big object that was captured on video entering the earths atmosphere
Everyday Astronaught and NSF channels had it live. Many of the news networks had it live that their websites. Spacex dot com had a live feed from X/twitter. Check Spacex dot com for the next launch.
@@shouryabose5943 You are off quite a bit on your weight number. Its around 1500 tons fully loaded. considering this was just loaded with propellant and no cargo it is around 1350. Older rockets such as the Saturn V, the N1 and even The SLS weight more. Also the SLS is the only recent super heavy that has done a > 50 T payload launch, not to mention successfully launched.
Use spectrum light. Me know how and seen one use a gate worm hole near moon and got to study this drone too. For 20 min. While it was wifi charging and spying on me. Seriously. My first project was hydrogen fuel cells
@@Three_Random_Words nasa has no part in launch approval. FWS and FAA did last time but the FWS was only involved due to changes to the pad. Next steps will be for static fires and mishap investigation
It appears to that the starship isn’t going to have enough fuel to reach orbital velocity of 17500 mph (28163 kph) it was almost out of fuel at 24000kph
It probably will; that amount of fuel looks deceiving, but it is likely enough to accelerate those last 4000kph or so. At that point, the ship is super light compared to at stage sep,, and the lighter you are the less fuel you need to accelerate. There's also room for improvement in the design though if dV is a big concern.
@@Zacharysharkhazard true but it just didn’t seem to be accelerating fast enough at the end to me anyhow. But I fairly sure that those people at SpaceX are on top of their game and way smarter than myself.
This is the kind of historical events I don’t mind living through.
In what way is this an historical event?
@tentringer4065 The build-up to streamlining space travel isn't history? Literally, every country is beginning to go back into space because of the U.S.'s future plans.
@tentringer4065
😑 For Real? the worlds most powerful rocket that’s designed to be 100% reusable, launching off a pad that was completely destroyed 6 months ago, from the first launch.
@@mehnameehjeff6325 it didn't even get into orbit.
@@Xer405 a build up is not the same as an event. This is not an historical event in any way.
the roar of the people at 14:22 coupled with the sight of the ship successfully hotstaging sends chills down my spine
imagine Musk and his mates inside of it, might cheer up the moment
@@runnynose8341 imagine yourself touching grass. What a dream would that be.
on mars? sorry dude, no grass there.@@imarchello
they were hired to do so.
Hahaha in 1969 in was common place, no chills just common
The announcement of the booster "experienced a rapid disassembly", reminded me of the '80s movie "Short Circuit" made me laugh. That is a beast of a rocket!!
I'm so glad you made this comment. 😆 I love the Short Circuit movies, absolute classics.
Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly... Love It
The vehicle has Exploded. Learn!! This is THE WRONG STUFF!
its really fun reading the comments its like the falcon 9 in the beginning stage again when falcon 9 just explodes i wanna see this comments age like fine milk
Even Though i am not an American and though i wish to be one day, this is a huge milestone in the future of space flight and space discovery, and it is making me Proud as a human
Your grammar and spelling is already quite American.
Calm down. It ain’t that significant.
@@SalimAsit it is very significant. it's the biggest rocket in the world, that succesfuly made it to space.
(and it's designed to be able to fully return back on earth aswell, which in this mission it failed but made great progress)
@anypercentdeathless Yeah it was My Keyboard auto correction or whatever it's called I have fixed it now
If you think humans will successfully live on Mars, you have a lot to learn
Been years since I stayed up all night and not drank a single beer. Go SpaceX .
It was a beautiful launch and the ship did well through many critical test elements of the test launch. Third test will be a charm. They certainly know what went wrong and will correct those problems. Really just an amazing launch. Great work Space X.🤩
😂😂😂😂
@@barringtonedwards7008 ?
The next launch we’ll see the first stage land. SpaceX just keeps pushing forward and impressing all.
..... this rocket looks like the old Flash Gordon rocket starring Buster Crabbe
rapid unscheduled disassembly is brilliant 😂
I remember when I was a kid and this thing was considered a far future thing that wouldn’t be used for years. Now here I am watching a hot stage from said vehicle.
November 18 was my birthday and I had no idea this rocket was going to fly on my day!!! This just makes it even more special to me!
Wow, happy (really late) birthday!
That was an AWESOME second test. I believe that is the highest any super heavy has gotten in the history of the planet!
It was. And it´s only going to get better from here.
😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢 the
I'm not sure what you mean. There are other super heavy rockets that have gone much much higher. For starship, it was the highest. Maybe that's what you meant.
@@greggcurrie1399 Probably meant its already a record because no other rocket is even close to starship in terms of its weight and dimensions.
So much hard work - well done! Each step builds toward the next one.
Well done nice
Amazing. Well done space x
how many time people fail to walk as a baby before they can steadily walk?? Failure only exist when people give up on something. But it is a progress if they keep on learning and improving.
What a time to be alive. Go SpaceX!!!
This is something beautiful ever seen from space since for long period... Congratulations SpaceX and can't wait third gold! 😍🔥🚀🇷🇸💪
dude this technology is 80 years old, you celebrate 2 ships failing as a success lol. If both the booster and the starship survived it would have been what kind of mission? failure. Maybe the 3rd one will be made from thermo nuclear resistant glass. ohh by the way didn't he promise us on mars 3 years ago, he can't even get into orbit on this tube.
@@runnynose8341 the first launch their goal was to get the rocket off the platform, it went MUCH further than that. The second time they managed stage separation and almost reached their target orbit. It’s a massive success!
Remember that their first 3 rockets exploded before the 4th was successful. You can’t expect something to work first time 😊
@@lmaway8545 um people have been putting up rockets since the 50s, you do know this, Don't you?
But I can expect pretty common technology from 80 years ago to work first time, don't you? or are you scared when you see a new appliance that you bought from the hardware? or does that company have to have 5 failures b4 they can make a new washing machine?@@lmaway8545
@@runnynose8341 you have no idea what you are talking about.
Should change the title to lose the "attempts" as that is not actually true: SpaceX has a successful test launch!
Both parts of the two part rocket eventually will be able to be reused when design development is finished, but neither were intended to be recovered for this test launch, and both were destroyed, the first stage soon after its successful launch and separation from the first, and the top part of the rocket worked as hoped after "hot staging", with planned for the first stage to possibly travel to near Hawaii and fall into the sea, but contact was lost with it around eight minutes into its successful test flight, after all engines had been working fine, when it had reached around 24,000 kph.
The SpaceX commentator observed the loss of contact was right near the expected end of the second stage's planned "burn", and he speculated that the automatic destruct was somehow triggered by some sort of problem at that point.
Fan boy troll stuff haha. You set expectations very low so that you can’t be accused of failure 🤣
No, this is better. It's accurate and applies to this flight.
@@SalimAsit Lack of brain activity from the Ukrainian haha
Its called a Test Flight for a reason. Its not suppose to guarantee success, its about looking for results. Solve those issues, rinse and repeat@@SalimAsit
@@SalimAsit
Exactly. The way those fan-boys cheer every time it farts wrong is so dang juvenile.
Of COURSE lessons are learned through failure, that's how progress works for everything.
So at least admit to SOMETHING having failed, but you can't can you?
I hope when lives are lost that juvenile fan-boys don't cheer and say "it was a success because it will get better for next time"
I like SpaceX and follow their progress and close cooperation with NASA and JPL, but fan-boys acting like giddy children who never admit they messed-up?
Forget it.
"rapid disassembly"......= it exploded 🤣
Technically it wasn’t really an explosion, but rather the FTS “unzipped” the booster - causing the propellant to disperse
Super heavy booster has just experienceD a RAPID UNSCHEDULED DISASSEMBLY! 😆
space x always improve the next time consistently its great to see
Wow....They did it again.Fantastic
Amazing as always ...🌏...🔥🔥🔥 🚀...👏👏
There was no messing about this time, especially on the pad once the engines lit. That thing took off, like a rocket! Bring on test 3
@@abcxyz2927 let's see your fully reusable rocket then
@@abcxyz2927 sorry I don't speak gibberish
@@abcxyz2927Legacy space can’t afford trial by fire. SpaceX can
Thankfully rainbow jacket man wasn't wearing a 4 foot sombrero !
this team keeps winning
Very cool, thank you for the video. I was hoping it would do great, and it did.
and Starship IFT-3 is next week... maybe Thursday! just hope they fix the hotstaging blast problem.
14:55 She said: It has a Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly.
😅😂 thanks for noticing.
Lies. It hit the ceiling.
firmware
RAPID UNSCHEDULED DISASSEMBLY IM DEAD 💀😂
Sound roar so much from the people. That was the fantastic launch.
Incredible.. congrats Spacex
Amazing, they are so close to making this a reality. Great work spacex team. 😊
Stage 1: Exploded. Stage 2: Exploded. Mission accomplished!
stage 2 was terminated automatically, only stage 1 exploded unintentionally
@@mythrin This was not the plan... Stage 2 was not supposed to terminate... Another failure for SpaceX. So how many rockets will they need to tune the system? 20 rockets? And 20 years? Remember Saturn 5 was successful at first flight...
Rare Wildlife: incinerated
@@paulbizard3493well is Saturn v reusable?
Remind us all of the milestone achievements you have made
Never broke the firmament
Falcon 9 smaked an asteroid in space a couple months ago. Guess you ignored that launch.
Well done Space X
"Starship: It's bangin' "
well done!
I notice you don't get the full story on the news media, how strange.
A rapid unscheduled disassembly 💥😂
A 'rapid unscheduled disassembly' with 33 rapture engines! (and a lot of other stuff) Wow! Still impressive.
Love the terminology, maybe I'll find fancy words when my machines at work break down 😂
Its a adopted saying from NASA.
When can i buy a ticket?
Were there no cameras aboard the starship so we could watch it splashdown in the Pacific?
Hmm. I seriously don’t believe anything is ever meant to break through the firmament.
They already smacked asteroids in space using their other rocket (falcon 9)
😂🤣
how do you think sat nav works
@@Technique-kj2bp I think (or hope) she is joking. 🤣
I like the fact they are breaking to destroy at test level .
History was made here. Its actually so important to have Musk alive in this era doing what he does - creating a future
What happens at 16:30 min with the sound cut?
Hooray for space, humanity and the next steps in becoming a space-faring species!
Absolutely great work SpaceX!
That was so cool. Awsome. 👍👍👍👍👍
"A rapid unscheduled disassembly."
My heartiest wishes for SpaceX.
Shout out to the Hawthorne crew
The future in the works 🎉 Congratulations Space-X Team.
you know it exploded right?
@@heyhonpudsthat’s how progress is made
@@kevinmartinello4967 Progress = continual disasters
Pieces of the booster coming down past the view @15:30?
Fantastic! Great work SpaceX!
Fantastic well done
History has been made today ❤🚀
Further than the Soviets
Yeah! Take that Soviets! Or, at least you could've taken it if you hadn't ceased to exist 32 years ago.
unscheduled disassembly. LOL. nice. You guys will get it. :) Great job.
Merry Christmas everyone!
AMAZINGGGG 🎉🎉🎉🎉
Woah, nice explosion.
Nice to hear that Norm MacDonald is still presenting these
😂
I believe I saw a few heat tiles falling off...😅
They did fall off.
as short as that hot staging ring is, using all six engines to separate caused the boosters RUD because those vacuum engines are only millimeters away from the dome that protects the dome of the booster they may want to try making the hot staging ring taller and/or only using the three sea level raptors to separate the stages As for star ship interesting i believe the engines shut down either because of a lack of fuel the flight termination system may have activated but if that's the case what was that big object that was captured on video entering the earths atmosphere
I don’t think so, engines were exploding before rud, opposite side of the hot staging ring, I think it worked almost perfectly.
Why couldn't I find this live stream anywhere when it happened? I'm not sure where to watch it
Spacex streamed on X, on TH-cam I always watch NasaSpaceflight
It was weird, I couldn't see it on their channel and had to watch through NASA spaceflight channel.🤷♂️
Yeah I hope Spacex is going to stream on TH-cam again
Everyday Astronaught and NSF channels had it live. Many of the news networks had it live that their websites.
Spacex dot com had a live feed from X/twitter. Check Spacex dot com for the next launch.
Why was there ever a LOS? Aren't they using TDRS? Starlink?
RUDs make signal acquisition difficult.
Does this not break the record for the most powerful thing every made?
yes x 2
Unfortunately the Tsar Bomba still holds that record albeit in a different context.
Also at 5000 tons, starship is the heaviest object to take flight
@@shouryabose5943 You are off quite a bit on your weight number. Its around 1500 tons fully loaded. considering this was just loaded with propellant and no cargo it is around 1350. Older rockets such as the Saturn V, the N1 and even The SLS weight more. Also the SLS is the only recent super heavy that has done a > 50 T payload launch, not to mention successfully launched.
@weakish your wrong. Starship weighs almost 11 million lbs. That's 5500 tons. Plus Elon himself said this during his latest interview on JRE.
AMAZING, JUST AMAZING,
UNBELIEVABLY awesome 👌
Use spectrum light. Me know how and seen one use a gate worm hole near moon and got to study this drone too. For 20 min. While it was wifi charging and spying on me. Seriously. My first project was hydrogen fuel cells
❤ Space X ❤
So joyful, as you can see the booster exploded...i mean rapidly dissambled itself unplanned
When it will be the 3rd test?
Edit: I live in the frontier and i want it to see it, this last one i could not.
Thank you for your replies.
Dec - Jan hopefully
or Feb, but no later than April. This latest test was much more successful, so the FAA and NASA will hopefully get out of the way quicker now.
@@Three_Random_Words nasa has no part in launch approval. FWS and FAA did last time but the FWS was only involved due to changes to the pad.
Next steps will be for static fires and mishap investigation
Some time February or maybe early March if delayed
Closing on, on mars
Congratulation; Evolutionary Records for Innovation. Inspiring for Research and Application.
Great job
Nobody has never made it to outer space and they never will. Lol
You are funny, not. That joke is stale.
12:45 u can see when ricket goes from earth to space
The amazing thing about this rocket 🚀 is that the top is circumcized. 😊😂🤣🤣
Nope, it has 2 flaps on the tip.
I see a UAP at 8:00 minutes into flight 19:32 into the video and then it blows up. The Aliens have been sabotaging you SpaceX.
Almost but they will get there
To the Mars , beyond cars and rolling high with all the cause .
It looks like expensive fireworks
Wow
Third time will be the charm 👌
I thought America has successfully landed people on the moon in the 60s....
You do know spacex is a private owned company right?
This rockets is meant to carry far more people and equipment to the moon and land itself back, its got a tough job compared to 60s rockets.
@@warriormonk3062because the American gov is lost for ideas
They did, what does that have to do with this?
Rapid unscheduled disassembly. That is nerd talk for the thing blew up!
🎉🎉🎉excellent ❤
"A rapid, unscheduled disassembly" No, it exploded!
That’s the joke
r/whoosh
No. The booster was unzipped by the FTS, little to none of the propellant actually combusted during/after the breakup
Great! Human race going to explore and live in Space.
Hello guardian❤❤
So does this mean they WON'T get valuable data on re-entry?
The data are streamed back to base in real time, so even if the ship is destroyed, the data is saved
@@Minimalici0us Except it didn't re-enter. Except for that.
@@maxpeck4154 They didn't expect it to make it that far. Yes, it would have been nice, but it will have to wait for the next, or more likely 4th test.
15:30 ... is that UFO?
Likely falling debris from the exploded booster
19:35 you can see it blew up.
A sharp, keen mind here.
Sim, mas pros gados entrou no espaço
It appears to that the starship isn’t going to have enough fuel to reach orbital velocity of 17500 mph (28163 kph) it was almost out of fuel at 24000kph
*it appears to me*
It probably will; that amount of fuel looks deceiving, but it is likely enough to accelerate those last 4000kph or so. At that point, the ship is super light compared to at stage sep,, and the lighter you are the less fuel you need to accelerate. There's also room for improvement in the design though if dV is a big concern.
@@Zacharysharkhazard true but it just didn’t seem to be accelerating fast enough at the end to me anyhow. But I fairly sure that those people at SpaceX are on top of their game and way smarter than myself.
It was not going to orbit
@@ianmayes5572 the plan was for it to make one orbit then re-enter for a splashdown