@@maroonmedia2000 No, the entire launch vehicle is 70m tall. These are just the side boosters, which are a lot shorter (like, 45m-ish, perhaps; possibly less; the info isn't easily findable online; but, maybe 14-15 stories, or less---still huge, obviously).
I had to go back 3 times to see it. Great eye dude. I totally would have missed that entirely if I hadn't read your comment... and then the comments to your comment.
@@ralanham76 what do you mean maybe? They literally show us the booster speed on its way down on the streams. Sonic booms are conical and take time to travel down and outwards.
@@brentbel1348 Take a pencil, and try to balance it on your finger, all the little micromovements you are doing to keep it pointy end up? Its about like that but now you are moving the pencil upwards. Its alot of math, and its very precise
If you haven't heard a rocket in person, it isn't terribly loud (from 5 miles away), but the bass is thunderous and incredible to hear. I just saw starship launch last week.
This is as real as the car flying around in space with no modifications yet tires don’t melt paint doesn’t bubble in the extreme temperatures of space. My dash cracks here on earth and also paint faded
I don't at all get the masses of people that are rooting for SpaceX to fail, how is this anything short of an absolutely astonishing advancement of technology.
I'm pretty sure people are not so much rooting for them to fail as thinking that blind fanboyism misses the problems with some things they're doing. (Worker injuries, unsafe practices, damaging the sky for astronomy, reckless and stupid things, etc) Cheap access to space is great and unlocks a lot of opportunities for humanity, but it's not some existential crisis that we should be sacrificing lives over.
I think you have zero data to back up your claim about worker injuries. How much higher is their injury rate than the aerospace or construction industries? Where are the noteworthy articles about fatalities and permanent injuries. Low earth satellites have a limited lifespan and eventually their orbits decay and they burn. So the sky is not being damaged even if your view of it might be 0.00000001% impacted. Electrifying cities also "damaged the sky" to borrow your phrase, maybe we could address that before hammering away at aerospace advancements. Sorry, but insult Elon if you must.... but these weak endless arguments that are never about NASA's SLS prove that the rationale behind comments like yours are not fair minded.
@@nicholasjohnson778 Reuters published an article, but the link is filtered by TH-cam. "At SpaceX, worker injuries soar in Elon Musk’s rush to Mars", published Nov 10, 2023.
It’s amazing to watch these launches and watch the boosters return to earth. I live in New Smyrna Beach so we are about 30 miles away and we get to watch the rockets launch all of the time especially at night. The Falcon Heavy has a launch coming up so we may go to Cape Canaveral and see it. We saw the recent launch of the Atlas a few weeks ago in Cape Canaveral. We were going to take flowers to my dads grave.
Its absolutely incredible how it essentially just "falls" into place standing straight up. Its like the water bottle challenge, except it's 230 feet tall! 🚀
I've always thought that the typical Hollywood special effect of a spaceship landing is always way too tame and calm. They need to watch this and up their game.
I had tears in my eyes when they landed the boosters the first time. My (now ex) wife was like "what's wrong with you??!! What's the big deal???" She's still clueless. (she's a social worker, so... well...'nuff said)
@@vaprexDivorce her. Any wife who cannot understand or share their husband's passion for something is not worth it. Unless she looks like Pamela Anderson of course.
Cool. I watched a night launch from Vandenberg, I had my headphones on getting the play by play, as it's going up, I saw the first stage do it's landing burn. This is 50s Sci fi in real life. As I watched, cars are gioing by on the freeway. Cool stuff
@@thecyanadon I can understand why someone would think that - but its not really. The efficiency you are referring to is about payload weight to orbit. Which on the face of it is logical, but it starts to become much less efficient when you look intro it. Because, you now have to back burn to a launch pad that has the infrastructure to support your landing and you cant just land (relatively speaking) anywhere, which would be far more efficient - you lose a lot of the gains of the weight savings. You also need a huge investment and the upkeep of the stage zero infrastructure to support landings doesn't make sense. The costs involved with the maintenance of launch and in this case landing infrastructure are astronomical. Rockets by comparison are actually cheap. Launch complex 39 at NASA for instance cost around 500 million to build and it doesn't have the complexity of landing to deal with and that doesn't factor in the refurb costs after every launch. Its also completely unproven that this will work - we know landing legs work and we know how to build them. This is a huge gamble, that i'm not sure is worthwhile.
When I was a Kid watching science fiction movies... and then when I was an adult watching science fiction movies... I wondered how far in the future this sort of thing would become an Actual REALITY. It is truly amazing to see the progress, in spite of all the crazy crap going on in the world, there is hope for humans.
Perfect reply, that's what I love about these guys, they don't have time for BS excuses. And quite frankly if it wasn't for the FAA and their environmentalist activist We would probably already be back On the moon with Space X Rocket systems. Honestly, that was some serious hole starship drilled into the ground on its maiden launch, and then to watch it do somersaults Was mind blowing and a undeniable testament of how strong it is, these folks are not playing around.
Realistically it makes more sense for a flightline. You've got turbine engines and wheels to worry about. With the blast from that relight engine though, anything that was there will be moved. Besides some of that debris is probably just some of the pad getting blown away.
I'm guessing this is a remotely operated thing, but then again I would probably trust those things enough these days to have a glass shield to stand behind just to be there when it comes down :-)
this is flipping amazing. We know over the years of use some are going to fail to land properly but just being able to get half of them to land is a huge resource saver compared to any other time in my lifetime. Congrats to SpaceX
it'll be a hundred years before we see something cooler than that.. seeing them re-enter and land will never get old.. to the guys and gals who made it happen?.. big..no.. huge well done..👏👏..
It’s so hard to remember that these are about 164 feet (50 meters) tall. They make landing them look so easy but they’re the size of a 16 story building and moving at transonic speeds at the time of firing the engine for the landing burn. Insane engineering, can’t wait to see super heavy eventually land.
@@ryanrenolds idk, I found various sources stating that the booster alone was 70 meters. Can’t trust the internet I guess. Thank you for the correction. Still incredibly impressive even with 40 less feet
Because there are 3 main structures on a single booster, 1 The Main body ,2 grid fins, and 3 the legs. The sonic booms come from these! You learn more everyday!
No, sonic booms are created when you start traveling faster than the speed of sound and has to do with air friction/ compression and decompression. These rockets were not going faster than 767 mph on approach to land… not sonic booms.
I’m a photographer / videographer and I work with other incredibly talented videographers (cosmic perspective) and reinvest everything back into gear and opportunities. We’re trying to capture, share and preserve history!
That is just absolutely insane. That somebody could take that from idea to reality is hard to believe. Like, literally, I go back and forth on whether or not I believe that shit's real. It's just crazy.
Watching SpaceX boosters land upright is one of the most incredible things to watch. It still feels like the future and I’m mesmerized every single time.
Looks more sci fi than a plasma powered microwave
i love how it looks super fake compared to actual fake movies😂
Had my doubts as well lol until you watch one take off in person. Doesn’t feel real.
But AI is doing a great job isnt it 😂
Is absolutely real. You can't see right.
I was going to say this looks so underwhelming and unrealistic
Must be the same cameraman who shot Interstellar
😂
This is rookie sh*t compared to Interstellar. The man went through a black hole. Can't get any more hardcore than that.
@@WallEWorld Spoiler alert:
He literally went into a 5d dimension
@@StunXPlayz Not really, hyperspace could be 20d as far as anyone knows.
@@DrakyHRT ok now we’re not even in like sci-fi lol what is with “20D”? 😂
I know the cameraman never dies, but this guy's really pushing his luck.
Cgi🤣
@@Mattlawton-ft6ew lol not sure if you're serious, but its not cgi
@@SgfAlex no im messing 😁👍
😂legit came here looking for this comment.
You mean the robotic arm that holds the gopro
This would be like a 20 story building suddenly landing next to you, awesome!
And chopsticks will be just one skyscraper catching another skyskraper. 😊
They are 70 meters high. Like a 28 story building
@@maroonmedia2000 No, the entire launch vehicle is 70m tall. These are just the side boosters, which are a lot shorter (like, 45m-ish, perhaps; possibly less; the info isn't easily findable online; but, maybe 14-15 stories, or less---still huge, obviously).
@@jamesedwards6173 42.6m for the FT version.
9 story
I love how the other one just aggressively punches a hole in that cloud.
It does too 😂 I had to go back
great eye, I messed that one initially... left a little hole and everything 😮😅!!
My favourite part!
I had to go back 3 times to see it. Great eye dude. I totally would have missed that entirely if I hadn't read your comment... and then the comments to your comment.
Thanks for the heads-up!
Those crackly sounds are so satisfying.
Those are INSANELY loud sonic booms
And it's insane that it's going supersonic just before it lands 😁
@@ralanham76 it's subsonic before the landing burn starts, so the booms could be from higher/earlier
@@milkdrinker7 maybe 🤔.
I've been at KSC during heavy launch and it looks like the boom happens right before the touchdown.
@@ralanham76 what do you mean maybe? They literally show us the booster speed on its way down on the streams. Sonic booms are conical and take time to travel down and outwards.
@@milkdrinker7 that's exactly what I meant. I didn't know they were cones . So maybe is now probably 👍👊
When you think about it. That's one heck of a balancing act. 🚀
That's what I've always wondered, how to get the rocket facing the right way and keep it facing the right way all the way to the ground
@@brentbel1348 Take a pencil, and try to balance it on your finger, all the little micromovements you are doing to keep it pointy end up? Its about like that but now you are moving the pencil upwards. Its alot of math, and its very precise
your gut feeling is spot on what your watrching is fake
@@cormac190 prove it then smartass
@@brentbel1348It's an inverse pendulum in physics terminology.
Love the sound. The crack of engine firing up and the rumble afterwards sounds so cool to me
If you haven't heard a rocket in person, it isn't terribly loud (from 5 miles away), but the bass is thunderous and incredible to hear. I just saw starship launch last week.
I believe the sound is the sonic boom from rapid deceleration.
@johnhunter7244 awesome. No never irl but I'd love to see and hear starship 1 day.
I never tire of watching clips of the boosters landing. It's surreal and incredibly cool! 💜
@Jason Brown did you realize I saw this in person
@Jason Brown let me guess I'm fake too
This is like potato chips. You can't watch it once.
This is as real as the car flying around in space with no modifications yet tires don’t melt paint doesn’t bubble in the extreme temperatures of space. My dash cracks here on earth and also paint faded
@@Gman7007do you realize how cold it is in space? 🤦🏻♂️
I never get tired of watching that. It's almost unbelievable.
@Jason Brown nice joke
Time to wake up
@Jason Brown you spamming this is moronic. More have witnessed these boosters landing than ppl that will ever love you
@@jasonbrown1263many people saw it landing in real life.
But you are just a fake bot😂
@@jasonbrown1263 oh, have fun!
Yes, of course, have fun, there's really nothing wrong about having fun.
Wait until you see what the military use in their top secret craft nowadays then you really will be speechless.
Silent and fast with no rocket's.
One day, this will be the sweetest site man has ever seen when he's being rescued from another planet💪🙏
I don't at all get the masses of people that are rooting for SpaceX to fail, how is this anything short of an absolutely astonishing advancement of technology.
Its because Elon is successful and is not a woke moron.
Politics is brain cancer. Elon could invent a cure to all illness and these cult members would still scream racist or whatever the days insult is.
I'm pretty sure people are not so much rooting for them to fail as thinking that blind fanboyism misses the problems with some things they're doing. (Worker injuries, unsafe practices, damaging the sky for astronomy, reckless and stupid things, etc)
Cheap access to space is great and unlocks a lot of opportunities for humanity, but it's not some existential crisis that we should be sacrificing lives over.
I think you have zero data to back up your claim about worker injuries. How much higher is their injury rate than the aerospace or construction industries? Where are the noteworthy articles about fatalities and permanent injuries.
Low earth satellites have a limited lifespan and eventually their orbits decay and they burn. So the sky is not being damaged even if your view of it might be 0.00000001% impacted.
Electrifying cities also "damaged the sky" to borrow your phrase, maybe we could address that before hammering away at aerospace advancements. Sorry, but insult Elon if you must.... but these weak endless arguments that are never about NASA's SLS prove that the rationale behind comments like yours are not fair minded.
@@nicholasjohnson778 Reuters published an article, but the link is filtered by TH-cam. "At SpaceX, worker injuries soar in Elon Musk’s rush to Mars", published Nov 10, 2023.
Proof that the cameraman never dies:
It was an intern making $16.50 an hour.
You are so funny.
this is a cam for 1 and I identify as a rockship from the year 9593 so stfu
😂😂😂👍
@@angusmullins511 xD
It’s amazing to watch these launches and watch the boosters return to earth. I live in New Smyrna Beach so we are about 30 miles away and we get to watch the rockets launch all of the time especially at night. The Falcon Heavy has a launch coming up so we may go to Cape Canaveral and see it. We saw the recent launch of the Atlas a few weeks ago in Cape Canaveral. We were going to take flowers to my dads grave.
I agree, fireworks look better at night!
its just absurdly awesome to me that they even Tried this!?
And its all automated!?!?
🤯👍🏻🖤👏🏻
I still get goosebumps watching these falcon landings. They look like 2 sentient spirits dropping from the sky like that simultaneously. So beautiful.
Woah buddy
Beautifully said
😅 thus is Reverse filming you don't actually belive this crap
You don't actually believe this
@@user-eq5uu2fr9j stop using adderal
Its absolutely incredible how it essentially just "falls" into place standing straight up. Its like the water bottle challenge, except it's 230 feet tall! 🚀
Absolutely! But one correction, the booster is “only” 145 feet tall. The whole rocket with second stage and fairing is 230 feet 👍
That's really tall, comparable to 7 or 8 stories tall maybe?
As Elon said, like shooting a pencil over the Empire State building and landing it upright.
@@sirmontecristo2808pencil with boosters! But the pencil is incredibly heavy. And the boosters need to be accurate. Incredibly impressive by SpaceX!
@@tihc1 I am paraphrasing what Elon said. Not my analogy, he owns SpaceX. Either way, like you said, an engineering marvel.
Never gets old and even better up close. Thanks for posting! Totally awesome 😂😮😅🎉
I watch this over 1000 times I can’t get enough of it
Im pretty sure Space X has single handedly advanced our rocket tech and capabilities by 100 years in the last 10-15 years. Absolutely incredible.
And thats only because of poor government funding. Space x does great work but this should have been do years ago with proper funding.
@@Jeremy9697 oh I absolutely agree.
@@Jeremy9697SpaceX has way less funding than NASA. Money wasn’t the issue.
@bensemusx ? Your forgetting space x isn't a government organization. They don't run purely on funding. Elon has money also lol
@@bensemusx I disagree about the funding but I know what you're getting at and I agree with your overall sentiment.
What a view. The balance between chaotic and sublime.
The one thing in my life that I find truly exceptional. Knowing the difficulty in achieving this makes it an amazing feat each and every time.
That’s absolutely inspiring and beautiful to watch!
That dual touchdown was literally perfect.
Breathtaking even. Wow
I've always thought that the typical Hollywood special effect of a spaceship landing is always way too tame and calm. They need to watch this and up their game.
I will never get tired of watching this
Just IMAGINE how cool it'll be with Starship!
I keep going back to the video too
I had tears in my eyes when they landed the boosters the first time. My (now ex) wife was like "what's wrong with you??!! What's the big deal???" She's still clueless. (she's a social worker, so... well...'nuff said)
Keep watching it 20 times in a raw and you’ll get tired
@@vaprexDivorce her. Any wife who cannot understand or share their husband's passion for something is not worth it.
Unless she looks like Pamela Anderson of course.
That is so sick, that never gets old. Getting the launch stack back on the pad is so cool and reduces the cost of a launch tremendously.
Cool. I watched a night launch from Vandenberg, I had my headphones on getting the play by play, as it's going up, I saw the first stage do it's landing burn. This is 50s Sci fi in real life. As I watched, cars are gioing by on the freeway. Cool stuff
The aliens are going to be like WTF.
WTF...these apes are really investing in sitting on top of big bombs to get to space. Crazy yokels. :)
More like "heh primitive cavemen we mastered that since the time of the dinosaurs"
More likely, they'd just check the box for "Industrial Spaceflight".
😂😂😂
They’re gonna be like what’s with these space apes and their fascination with flying space dildos
Now that's inversion experienced for real! nothing beats those landing gear stands deploying like it was designed by Tony Stark himself. 😎🍷
WOW! The landings never lose their intensity or awesomeness.
Man, this actually brought a tear to my eye. The future is bright if we would all focus more on this kind of technology.
This could be the coolest thing i have seen in 2023
Wow!... Think about how insane a "chop stick" catch is going to be! 😬...
With something like 5 times bigger
The chop stick thing seems really silly to me..
@@MikeTaylor-tw5wb Yeah, but it is more efficient then landing leggs
@@thecyanadon I can understand why someone would think that - but its not really. The efficiency you are referring to is about payload weight to orbit. Which on the face of it is logical, but it starts to become much less efficient when you look intro it. Because, you now have to back burn to a launch pad that has the infrastructure to support your landing and you cant just land (relatively speaking) anywhere, which would be far more efficient - you lose a lot of the gains of the weight savings. You also need a huge investment and the upkeep of the stage zero infrastructure to support landings doesn't make sense. The costs involved with the maintenance of launch and in this case landing infrastructure are astronomical. Rockets by comparison are actually cheap. Launch complex 39 at NASA for instance cost around 500 million to build and it doesn't have the complexity of landing to deal with and that doesn't factor in the refurb costs after every launch. Its also completely unproven that this will work - we know landing legs work and we know how to build them. This is a huge gamble, that i'm not sure is worthwhile.
@@MikeTaylor-tw5wb Landing legs to support something that does not exist. To make them retractable and that strong is insanely difficult.
Unreal.. I watched this video like 50 times and it still gives me goosebumps
Where we have come to in the past 50 years is awesome. Can’t imagine what space travel will look like in another 50.
Love the sound of the sound barrier being ripped to shreds!
I was on the beach in Florida for the first Falcon Heavy launch and it was incredible watching them come back.
Oh my God, we do not have the technology to land rockets. Straight up like a godzilla movie please
😮??
Me too! Just north on Playa Linda Beach, and it was mind blowing to see how close together they landed. Within seconds of each other!
Me too! Remember the teenage boys throwing a football by the fence before they made us all back up farther down the beach?
That amazes me each and every time.
Great video. I hope you make more, you have a real talent.
I wish you fair winds
"What was it like??"
"It was windy."
"Windy. That's intense."
Props to the cameraman
Remote control 🤦♂️
@@bobmusil1458 r/woosh
@@bobmusil1458 Nope. It's a 360 degree recording for a VR experience. In this case someone recorded it's VR perspective of watching the footage :)
@@TheMordano I don't know what your explanation means, but I'm sure nobody was standing within 1 mile or so of the landing side.
@@bobmusil1458 I started smelling toast while reading that!
This guy got dirt straight to the face and never stopped filming. Well done. 👍
One of the most beautiful things I've ever seen!
It's just like from a science fiction movie!
When I was a Kid watching science fiction movies... and then when I was an adult watching science fiction movies... I wondered how far in the future this sort of thing would become an Actual REALITY.
It is truly amazing to see the progress, in spite of all the crazy crap going on in the world, there is hope for humans.
Me pullin up on an island with an uncontacted tribe thats still in the stone age
Keep in mind, this thing is so tall, you can almost stand perfectly upright underneath the engines when the legs are deployed
thanks for the scale!!!
This is one of my favorite videos in the entire life now.
Most amazing thing I ever saw in my life
I never get tired of watching this.
I've never had a bucket list but if i did, watching this in person would be the whole list.
Go for it if you can. So cool!!!
What a brilliant feat of engineering and in time with each other.
This video alone is a huge motivator to get me through college
the dynamic range of the audio is just amazing.
On an aircraft carrier the deck crew will walk the landing area looking for the smallest potential hazard. SpaceX says "F*** it, we're comin' in!"
Perfect reply, that's what I love about these guys, they don't have time for BS excuses.
And quite frankly if it wasn't for the FAA and their environmentalist activist We would probably already be back On the moon with Space X Rocket systems.
Honestly, that was some serious hole starship drilled into the ground on its maiden launch, and then to watch it do somersaults Was mind blowing and a undeniable testament of how strong it is, these folks are not playing around.
Starship: Why clear the FOD when you can make the FOD?
They do FOD checks on carrier decks because air breathing jet engines love sucking in foreign objects. Obviously there's little need for this here.
@@shannonjaensch3705do you mean the video or an aircraft carrier?
These 2 platforms in the video (for 2 rockets) are on the ground in Florida.
Realistically it makes more sense for a flightline. You've got turbine engines and wheels to worry about. With the blast from that relight engine though, anything that was there will be moved. Besides some of that debris is probably just some of the pad getting blown away.
I'm guessing this is a remotely operated thing, but then again I would probably trust those things enough these days to have a glass shield to stand behind just to be there when it comes down :-)
It’s all cropped in after the fact from a VR camera. This footage is up on the Oculus store on the Cosmic Perspective app! It’s amazing!
I wouldn't trust my lungs and organs not to rupture from the sound pressure.
@@EverydayAstronaut cool
@@EverydayAstronaut Might replace my aging vive just to see this (and have a fresh new headset)
@@Roach_Dogg_JRU should get a neurocaster!! 🐷👍
Awesome SciFy clip turned in realtime❣️
Thats totally cool!
Would love to see and feel that rumble in an IMAX.
That footage is surreal.
@Eastside Azskelad It doesn't look like cgi and its not cgi
@Eastside Azskelad Uhhhh what? Maybe you're a bit confused, you're the one who thinks Falcon 9s are cgi, not me.
@@solitudehero 💀💀💀
@@solitudehero 💀💀🗿🗿💀🤡
@@solitudehero 🤡🤡🦥💀💀💀🗿
this is flipping amazing. We know over the years of use some are going to fail to land properly but just being able to get half of them to land is a huge resource saver compared to any other time in my lifetime. Congrats to SpaceX
they have only lost 11 out of 299.
It's really incredible
Feels like watching some alien movie
The Confidence in SpaceX that cameraman had
remote control
@@firstnamelastname9918 🥲
Zzzzzzzzzz
Bro, there's nobody within at least a mile of that pad. That whole area gets cleared well before launch.
@@noel8604 I guess nobody understands sarcasm
These are the definition of awesome
This alone proves to me why Elon can inspire a team to figure out the most difficult problems. SpaceX!!!
Awesome Landings, incredible.
That’s better than any 4th of July celebration for sure!
What I'm really interested in is the screen protector he's using
No human is allowed near the landing zone, dude... So that's not a phone footage
it'll be a hundred years before we see something cooler than that.. seeing them re-enter and land will never get old.. to the guys and gals who made it happen?.. big..no.. huge well done..👏👏..
Man's rocking some great sound equipment
This is epic!! Those sonic booms are incredible!
words cant describe the awesomeness...
It's so unique it's like "Grace on Fire"
That was absolutely awesome!
This NEVER gets old !!!
That 2nd booster shows up from the cloud is sick as fkk
Sure, But nothing beats those landing gear stands deploying like it was designed by Tony Stark himself. 😎🍷
Never even noticed that until you pointed it out. It actually punches a hole through the cloud...
I still cant believe that team pulled it off. Unfgbelievable.
What's really cool is I live in New Smyrna Beach Florida which is about 30 minutes away from SpaceX.
I am always so impressed by what humans are capable of creating. This applies to the A380 beast of a airplane to the space shuttle.
It’s so hard to remember that these are about 164 feet (50 meters) tall. They make landing them look so easy but they’re the size of a 16 story building and moving at transonic speeds at the time of firing the engine for the landing burn. Insane engineering, can’t wait to see super heavy eventually land.
Bruh the whole falcon 9 is 70m tall 😂
The booster is about 45-50m tall
@@ryanrenolds idk, I found various sources stating that the booster alone was 70 meters. Can’t trust the internet I guess. Thank you for the correction. Still incredibly impressive even with 40 less feet
@@kadenielsen210 I can see how it could be confusing, since it 's called Falcon 9 with and without the first stage.
@@kadenielsen210 "Can't trust the Internet". Understatement of the day, sadly.
Easy to land anything when the video footage is played in reverse
I can’t believe musk made this rocket design and made the cyber truck looks like a trash can 👀😫😱
That is so violently awesome, really is remarkable engineering!
Goosebumps. Every time I see these land.
If you listen closely you can hear the triple sonic boom just before you hear the engine exhaust.
Why is it triple?
Because there are 3 main structures on a single booster, 1 The Main body ,2 grid fins, and 3 the legs. The sonic booms come from these! You learn more everyday!
No, sonic booms are created when you start traveling faster than the speed of sound and has to do with air friction/ compression and decompression. These rockets were not going faster than 767 mph on approach to land… not sonic booms.
@@antismatic Engines, legs retracted, fins. Wider points create a boom.
@@drifterzspaceyt Engines cause the first boom, leg housing second, fins third.
It doesn’t matter how many times I watch them go up and come back, it’s amazing .
That never gets boring 😊
Shucks, I missed out on my skin being simultaneously melted and sand blasted!
How does this channel get better footage than 99% of the other space channel's I've seen?
I’m a photographer / videographer and I work with other incredibly talented videographers (cosmic perspective) and reinvest everything back into gear and opportunities. We’re trying to capture, share and preserve history!
Guy is literally on the tarmac right there 😂
Can't wait for the starship to do the launches and landings the same as falcon 9 😊
no matter how many times i see that it is still Aamzing
One of the greatest accomplishments of mankind so far
That is just absolutely insane. That somebody could take that from idea to reality is hard to believe. Like, literally, I go back and forth on whether or not I believe that shit's real. It's just crazy.
The sad part is with proper funding these should have been achived a while ago. It shouldn't have taken a private company to do this
@@Jeremy9697what proper funding? SpaceX got the Falcon 9 reusable for less than $2 billion. Money isn’t the issue.
Cinfirmed! Cameraman never dies 😂
remote control
He is far than rocket
@@carl7684 I know man it's a remote controlled rig... just keeping the "cameraman" meme alive bro!
@@siriusplayz5871 yes its probably cameraman
Why do I love that crackling sound! (New Years Eve?)
This never gets old
やばいわまじで、かっこよすぎる、、生きてて良かった
The future has landed. 😮
Watching SpaceX boosters land upright is one of the most incredible things to watch. It still feels like the future and I’m mesmerized every single time.
One of our greatest achievements as a species. No joke