SpaceX’s massive Starship rocket exploded minutes after it cleared the launch pad during a flight test Thursday. Elon Musk had said the test posed steep challenges and risks. Photo: SpaceX #Starship #ElonMusk #WSJ
КОМЕНТАРІ: 11 000
@GeorgeDownsWSJРік тому
This launch - and subsequent explosion - of Elon Musk’s Starship is actually just the very beginning of the spacecraft’s long road to carrying humans to different planets. What's next for SpaceX, NASA and the future of human space exploration? Check out my video from today: ukposts.info/have/v-deo/jaZnqa18naFj0qs.html
@IndigoVagrantРік тому
85% government funded rocket.
@tapio_m6861Рік тому
Why is this the *very* beginning and not all the previous rocket tests and flights? What separates this from, say, Saturn V?
@michaelripley4528Рік тому
Elon did it on purpose🤷🏼♂️ He loves DRAMA 😃
@stanislavivanov4505Рік тому
Traveling to different planets, but not with this type of engine and technology.
@michaelripley4528Рік тому
@@tapio_m6861 Its the end 🤷🏼♂️ And Mars is a dead end street for man-not-so-kind 😁
@ReportTheHackersРік тому
The fact that it didn’t explode at ignition is already more than I expected
@yashstreamin2826Рік тому
Yep! me too Very awesome
@joshaustin1Рік тому
😂 you gave up on your standup career far too soon
@alejandroirizarry946Рік тому
Yep....
@andrewleos9803Рік тому
@@eyeteyteras1717 ok
@drac124Рік тому
Not really. That would be for the first rocket ever launched.
@stevenvasselljr.9278Рік тому
The amount of stress that was on the starshift as it was flipping is very impressive
@ph8429Рік тому
crazy that it held together through all those spins
@arnoldrodriguez6300Рік тому
It truly was an amazing sight to watch and see. I don't feel the gen pop understands just hoe mamazing what they're watching actually is...I don't get many opportunities to use this term but man that sure was AWESOME!!
@a-a-ronbrowser1486Рік тому
Good point, I hadn’t even thought of that.
@jeffersonwinfrey2219Рік тому
Nothing about this was impressive
@joaoklein1002Рік тому
A lot of data was collected because of it.
@thetobi5839 місяців тому
I still find it absolutely amazing that the ship held together during all that tumbling and flipping
@CaltaTomas8 місяців тому
Well it was stuck together right?
@fredh80657 місяців тому
lol, yeah and the explosion demonstrated how reliable the self destruction system was.
@Packer129011 місяців тому
Reminds me of something Steve Jobs said about a number of his failures. He said "the fact that some things failed means that some decisions were made. We'll fix them and move on". I always liked that because it means that sometimes you have to take risks and often the worst thing you can do is let fear of failure make you indecisive and idle.
@Saturnares10 місяців тому
@Jaquan Kelsor 3 to 7 decades is better than never. Humanity NEEDS to spread out to other planets. Earth isn't fragile, but our continued living on it is. Asteroids, nuclear war, climate change, zombies, there's many reasons to have a backup plan, and as soon as possible. If ASAP means many, many decades, so be it. Plus, Starship isn't only good for colonizing. Many things you can do with 150+ tons to space, or 150+ tons to, maybe anywhere on Earth in under 45 minutes?
@captainjackpugh605010 місяців тому
@@kelsormjaquan. It will hold mostly only middle class people. You think people who work in space are rich?
@claybentoniteМісяць тому
Failure puts you on the road to success.
@crismcdonough280422 дні тому
You can take risks if you can afford to take risks
@EvanWalkerРік тому
I am mind-blown at the amount of stress that rocket can take from spinning like that over 600kph
@PostUp_TimeРік тому
did they say near end it wasnt spinning?
@kzz0rРік тому
@@PostUp_Time it wasnt spinning around its axis, but it did fly in circle when it lost control, so it did endure some nasty Gs i guess
@dopatoninРік тому
No stress as there's no gravity in space
@loshistudios2446Рік тому
@@dopatonin it wasnt in space lol
@trailblazer3454Рік тому
The only stress is what they're putting that CG processor through! People are soooo dumb!
@rationalactor8695Рік тому
I love how there's as much cheering for the launch as there was for the explosion. We are simple creatures.
@NeonGen2000Рік тому
That's because this was a planned explosion. Other than what the misleading title of this video seems to imply. The test was to launch this vehicle beyond all the usual points of failure. The mission was a success, stage separation and reaching space/orbit were just bonus objectives.
@SpandanChatterjee2904Рік тому
@@NeonGen2000can I read somwhere about what you said here?
@lilpain8883Рік тому
@@SpandanChatterjee2904 Read about the FTS system onboard, it is there to detonate the rocket.
@PickNShipРік тому
That’s because it’s another step in the right direction we got it to a stage that we never have b4 and that’s progress, failure is the path that leads to success!
@eacoincmubiru5894Рік тому
@@NeonGen2000 thanks for the explanation. I was also wondering why there were cheers after the explosion.
@girlinvt11 місяців тому
The fact it's literally the most powerful rocket ever used and the ability to put that much thrust in such a small area with engines so powerful it blew the launch pad apart and left a crater underneath just from the amount of lift force from its engines was mind blowing. Uneven lift due to its engines power causing pad failure was a contributing factor to its loss of control and led to its having to be destroyed. Other than that it looked to be on target for a successful launch, definitely can't wait to see it in the next stage of development. The next thing to redesign is a stronger better reinforcement of the launch pad and how they achieve that goal will likely create newer unthought of advancements as well. Especially if they want to reuse the launch pad and tower, since rebuilding the pad after every launch would be an issue.
@MUSLIMSCOMMITWARCRIMES11 місяців тому
Stop kissing elon bro
@zer523611 місяців тому
@@MUSLIMSCOMMITWARCRIMES other then destroying the lunch pad and blowing up a minute later everything was fine
@themakerstoolbox968811 місяців тому
The launchpad was destroyed because they were to lazy to put in flame routing and a sound suppression system. Probably the same reason why the rocket ended up shaking. This was partly about power but majorly about stupidity.
@WlthrPonka11 місяців тому
@@zer5236 than*
@WlthrPonka11 місяців тому
@@zer5236 can’t spell basic 4 letter words. Exudes smug arrogance when someone is has their literal rocket science wrong.
@1jostaclo7 місяців тому
After ignition it sat 6-8 seconds on the pad before release thus pummeling it's rockets with pad debris. That's why I think it was eventually detonated.
@JimLovell-np4pv7 місяців тому
interesting theory
@GuardianSoulkeeper7 місяців тому
@@JimLovell-np4pvHe's not far wrong, to be fair. There was an intentionally slow startup procedure on the pad, giving the engines a few extra seconds to pulverize the ground.
@ddeboy002Рік тому
They did so well for the first full launch. Congrats SpaceX.
@nopenope9118Рік тому
You should volunteer to man the next launch mission.
@ahoward3819Рік тому
@@nopenope9118 This was more than they hoped for. It s actually amazing for this launch.
@jsusbdndk1362Рік тому
@@eyeteyteras1717 not a disappointment because this was the first test flight. SpaceX’s got 2-3 more of these to work with so they can afford to fail on this one
@GrannyHumper1Рік тому
@@eyeteyteras1717 nasa didnt get every rocket to space either
@markoliimatainen2565Рік тому
It was epic fail and this makes me happy. SpaceZ goes bankrupt soon.🤭
@attilaattila1656Рік тому
I work in the aerospace industry. We at work were ALL cheering as it ascended and we don’t even work for SpaceX. So inspiring. So exciting. Good job SpaceX, I’m sure you got LOADS of data. ONWARD!!!
@peteruhl8181Рік тому
Destroying OUR PLANET for his advantage in Space? Are you guys NUTS?
@blakerivers1409Рік тому
@@peteruhl8181 How did you pack so much stupid into such a short comment?!
@cbskwkdnslwhanznamdm2849Рік тому
Elon’s haters have no life
@cbskwkdnslwhanznamdm2849Рік тому
@@peteruhl8181 you don’t deserve pictures of deep space and much more. Get a life.
@wyattdansbee8001Рік тому
Spending billions of dollars of continuous failed launches. We won’t ever reach other planets with manned missions in our lifetime. It’s a pipe dream. Those billions of dollars should be used to fund… you know… hunger around the planet we live on now
@vincentsierra662411 місяців тому
The fact that this was their first attempt and made it that far makes me believe Elon has a great team and it won’t be long before they successfully produce such a craft.
@tugboat694011 місяців тому
Not first attempt. Not for them or mankind in general. Just elon throwing money at other peoples' ideas as usual.
@Mini-jm2ec11 місяців тому
@@tugboat6940 u weird
@Saturnares10 місяців тому
@@tugboat6940 A more accurate statement would be that Elon is throwing money at his own ideas... which would still be incorrect, because he's also the chief engineer of SpaceX, not just an investor. I'm not saying that everything that went Starship was done by Elon, of course, but he's more than an investor.
@-j-plum629711 місяців тому
It's amazing how long the rocket took to get off the pad. A lot of weight, a lot of power.
@21WallsРік тому
It didn't explode at any of the highest stress points that most rockets fail at, but aborted after failing a maneuver no rocket has done before at this scale. That's impressive. I was waiting for all the 'usual' failure points--failing to ignite, explosion on ignition, tipping after ignition, flipping at pitch over, Max-Q, throttle up malfunction/explosion...Sailed cleanly through those hazards and into the unknown.
@maxwellstainback4421Рік тому
Yea it exploded because it did something no rocket needs to do. Because it was a failure. Boom.
@jauxii6523Рік тому
How did Elon taste?
@Timfishoh2759Рік тому
lol
@thehell88Рік тому
tell me more elon?
@ThanhVu-le7ecРік тому
SpaceX engineers need to learn from Russia. Still long way to go.
@JoeStuffzAltРік тому
From the headline, I was expecting it early. Over 3 minutes in flight and this being the first flight... this is pretty impressive considering the engineering required
@bigduphusaj162Рік тому
Rocket explodes and GenZ say "Success" 😂 ohh man how embarrassing are these kids
@blinks6736Рік тому
@@bigduphusaj162are you on the spectrum?
@mattmatt516Рік тому
@@bigduphusaj162 success is determined by the objectives of a mission. They intended to destroy this rocket at some point during the test flight. SpaceX own objectives had specifically said anything past getting off the Launchpad was a success and giving them valuable data for future iterations. Testing a machine until failure is a basic part of developing new technology
@Superstrike_11Рік тому
@@bigduphusaj162 Stupid people think they're very smart when they call other people stupid.
@Nahmate1337Рік тому
@@bigduphusaj162 You Africans can never understand how things evolve, you can't progress without failure.
@scootaloo11810 місяців тому
4:04 Everyone cheering after rocket hits firmament.
@iqbalbhq68842 місяці тому
😂😂
@Javon-ld4gbМісяць тому
I'm glad im not the only one who seen that...
@joemiranda1404Місяць тому
Because the explosion was expected and a planned test of the self destruction system... The launch was a success. They were testing the launch. After it shot into the sky everything else was a bonus. The explosion was expected because they planned for it to blow up. There was no way this would have been a complete success. There was no man on board to control the starship so not sure what more anyone expected to happen lol.
@IloveJesus777j77Місяць тому
Have faith in Jesus alone to be saved.
@user-vp3yj3sh6o25 днів тому
You’re smart, tell elon he will never get pass that either.
@No1_Inpa_Ticular8 місяців тому
I recognize that flipping maneuver from my KSP trials
@TonyG0724Рік тому
I was amazed how it held itself together for so long after rotating a few times. Very impressive.
@zaretya9091Рік тому
Yeah the structural strength of the rocket was crazy
@mhodge2381Рік тому
@@truthurts123 china can’t produce the biggest rocket ever created
@AB-wf8ekРік тому
@@truthurts123 Ain't that the truth
@davidguevara2273Рік тому
Ikr, most of the time you see them explode once they go parallel, but it managed to hold itself together quite well.
@tillitsdoneРік тому
Kind of surprised fans of space exploration are so gleeful about this. I guarantee NASA doesn't feel that way. They've been collaborating with each other a while now. Ya know, in the spirit of exploration. This event may help NASA down the line.
@fearlessfosdick160Рік тому
It is all about passing milestones. This flight passed two of them when it cleared the pad and when it passed max Q. That is what makes this test very successful. Now that it is known where some of the weaknesses are, future tests will probably pass more milestones until they have a reliable vehicle. For a first test on a prototype vehicle, this test was amazingly successful. The engineers have a lot to be proud of here. Of course, I am old enough to remember Redstones and Atlases blowing up on the pads before we began using them to carry the first astronauts during the Mercury Project.
@keithherron2705Рік тому
Oh dang... I thought it was an utter failure. I was shocked and didn't understand why people were laughing. I was very sad lol. That's good though, I didn't take that into account. I like SpaceX and want to see them succeed
@whysocurious7366Рік тому
It’s just like Twitter.. sometimes you just gotta fail miserably over and over and over to maybe not fail someday.
@Sheepskin501Рік тому
Ok Elon apologist
@mb4lunchРік тому
Well, it's time they quit stealing our tax dollars for this nonsense. Oh and for stupid Wars as well.
@whysocurious7366Рік тому
@@keithherron2705 I like SpaceX too. They might fail more often than NASA, and they might hoard the technology that they develop instead of sharing new technologies like NASA, but at least they use up public subsidies like NASA.. oh wait, socializing risks/expenses & privatizing profits is actually a bad thing.. the third thing was supposed to be good.. oh well.
@Todd.P8 місяців тому
The crowd is cheering that rocketship exploded?! WTH?!
@weekiely12338 місяців тому
Because it was the very first TEST flight. Nobody really expected it to make it past the tower and the fact it flew for so long means that they gained a lot of insights into how the design is currently going and where to make changes to make it better. It’s called iterative design for a reason. The rocket also held up much better than anyone expected. The vehicle had two flight termination bombs detonated on the side and did multiple end over end flips without failing. No other rocket would be able to hold up to that or be expected to. Most people expected it wouldn’t even hold up to the launch. Hence the fact they prefixed the flight by saying “excitement guaranteed”
@hamburgerhamburgerv29 місяців тому
That is the strongest rocket ever. No rocket can survive flipping over like that, and it did.
@AJVillanueva20308 місяців тому
Noooooooooooo!!!!!!!!!!!
@xaviergarciaalves57928 місяців тому
It did better than we thought. Until it didn't
@anonymousguy58907 місяців тому
It didn't survive 😂😂😂
@fredh80657 місяців тому
lol, yeah and the explosion demonstrated how reliable the self destruction system was.
@lifethrownoutofthewindow7 місяців тому
i welcome you to the physics of COLD STEEL
@Charlie1821Рік тому
I was impressed as it flipped over and over without breaking up.
@eatdeliciouskids7965Рік тому
The vehicle was already about 30km up, ao there was very little air resistance left. Awesome stunt anyway!
@rogerb5615Рік тому
Why did it flip so many times? Was that intended?
@profounddamasРік тому
Yeah very advanced tech, flipping without breaking up 😛
@twocyclediesel1280Рік тому
@@profounddamas Try flipping something as big as a skyscraper
@profounddamasРік тому
@@twocyclediesel1280 But why does it need to be as big as a skyscraper? Oh yeah rockets, so 60s.
@TheCeaser904Рік тому
I live in Brownsville so as soon as it went up the whole city shook. What an amazing time to be alive!
@triton62674Рік тому
2 minute papers
@TheFUTURE-uw8xoРік тому
Hello
@diegoleal4943Рік тому
Where did the Debris land
@nikolai1714Рік тому
🇳🇴I’ve been to Brownsville - my father was an exchange student there. Is the economy being affected positively because of the proximity to space X launch pad etc?
@nickmoore5105Рік тому
@@diegoleal4943 in the Gulf of Mexico
@chuckswanson84969 місяців тому
This machine is a monster. To do four flips and ready for more is crazy.
@user-gj3mh4mp1u9 місяців тому
This test was a great achievement. Next step, the next test flight, and more tests until the next great achievement. Good Luck.
@NirotixРік тому
That's the most expensive firework I've ever seen.
@davidn13Рік тому
Wow! That’s gonna cost a lot of money to repair this rocket.
@mililani6037Рік тому
I believe NASA and the Congress working on a plan to send all the homeless to live on the moon
@andrewcokley6868Рік тому
This was a test flight for everyone confused as to why it’s a success. Totally new rocket type with few test flights before. It was a major success it didn’t blow up immediately and it’s error came when the rocket was supposed to separate meaning they know where to focus on the improvements and where to look for errors. This rocket was never intended to land on the moon already. This is test 1 and it went well. Nobody was on board. Update: I don’t care about Elon musk. I find rockets and space flight interesting. You commenting cope harder just says a lot more about you than it does anything else.
@michaelalegria3480Рік тому
Polluting spi one rocket at a time
@GeorgiaPeech79Рік тому
Cope.
@mikeletterst9882Рік тому
hahhaahaahahahah
@ihatethisapp29288Рік тому
Real quick question idk where to ask this I’m not really educated on rockets and space stuff but where there people in the rocket if you know or if that info has been released to the public? I’m sorry if this was confusing
@24tommystРік тому
Smoking that copium lol.
@NicholasNerios8 місяців тому
Shows progress, it's definitely best to work bugs out now before what put a crew aboard.
@lazyassbum11 місяців тому
It was flying in circles. Plus it didn't separate.
@johnherosalvador2708Рік тому
A company that embraces failure is a company that is ahead of the pack, amazing work as always!
@ge2623Рік тому
Like the producers of agent orange or cigarette companies, or the Ford Pinto, Asbestos makers and countless bankrupt airlines... Your statement is a great business model and slogan.
@alexlo7708Рік тому
Whenever you can print money and pour into it.
@themetalhead1463Рік тому
@@ge2623 Comparing this to cigarettes, Asian orange etc. is absurd. Apples vs oranges. “Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.”
@neisjoРік тому
Go to school and learn some science
@s0vhjfe4SA08adc9jsРік тому
Using stockholder funds to pay settlements so that the CEO can impregnate his employees is most certainly not ahead of the pack. I
@gcanyon3114Рік тому
That shot from the back showing the circular glow of the engines is crazy cool!
@pon1Рік тому
Yeah, like something out of science fiction, the future is truly here :)
@StickHitsРік тому
For like ten seconds I thought that was a watermark/logo on the video 😂
@pon1Рік тому
@@StickHits They should use it as a logo actually :D
@marv5078Рік тому
Definitely
@kopronkoРік тому
Amennn.
@BlackRiverGold9 місяців тому
SpaceX people are the happiest no matter what happens and if it explodes they are even happier😃
@frankhernandez652422 дні тому
Cult.
@James-rm7sr8 місяців тому
It was a very impressive launch still even in failure. It clearly appeared that had separation happened everything would have been golden.
@peteblueeyes5 місяців тому
that's like saying: "if the patient hadn't died of a heart attack, he'd still be alive"
@oregonfelder1Рік тому
This is a great success for the team. The entire assembly survived through MaxQ. Lots of valuable data collected to improve the next iteration. With rocket tests, failures are THE path to success.
@tuberculosisterrence567Рік тому
The N1 sure failed a lot and I’m sure not seeing any red flags on the moon
@thesadwolfРік тому
Exactly. There are some cynical A-holes in this world that guffaw at SpaceX "failures" because they have zero clue about the iterative process required to build and launch these rockets.
@cl8804Рік тому
oh, totally cope city out here
@micahturner8297Рік тому
@@cl8804 look out folks….we have an engineering genius in the UKposts comment section..
@purebride8600Рік тому
What a joke. As it starts to curve straight to the ocean, like every other rocket that supposedly went to outer space. Ain’t nobody getting through God Almighty’s dome firmament!
@takozamtbtrailscout7106Рік тому
Wow, first flight of the biggest rocket ever! For it almost not fail is a shocker! Very impressive! Congratulations SpaceX!
@jimmcfarland3446Рік тому
?
@benjaminroe311ifyРік тому
@@jimmcfarland3446 It was a successful launch. They weren't even sure it would make it out of first couple stages of launch with a failure. The full explosion was unfortunate but it actually traveled farther in the trajectory of the test then they might have hoped...
@game-iv4198Рік тому
@@ajs8738they were not planning to launch the rocket to space anyway, this is just a test launch to gather data 😂 the explosion is really expected
@mneech609Рік тому
@@ajs8738 Normies be like: 'It didn't reach Sag A! Utter failure!'
@stlredbirds85Рік тому
@@benjaminroe311ify failed!
@PipMane11 місяців тому
Starship: Explodes People: Applause and cheers
@HarrisonAdAstra11 місяців тому
First off this comment format makes my eyes bleed and second it was a successful failure. IE they want to find problems now instead of later.
People are gonna think that it blowing up meant that it failed. Literally it just making it off the pad means everything. The fact that it also got past max q and all the way to stage separation is a huge success. So much data that they can now use for the next flights.
@enghoeban7027Рік тому
Haaaa
@zwenkwiel816Рік тому
Mission failed successfully!
@Janus1000Рік тому
I know I did until I watched it all.
@Vincent-xe7jrРік тому
Good job nobody was on board 😬tho
@Hari5040Рік тому
cope harder kid
@manh3858 місяців тому
Wish a success in next launch 👏
@0_m97 місяців тому
Same (:
@WonkaNobi137 місяців тому
When i knew the starship was launching i called my mother and so we could both see it live and it was amazing. We all know spacex will get there like there other rockets. I know the first launch with humans on board and we stood in the garden watching when it whould fly over us. We stood there for een half hour just searching the sky, and then it happend. One light soured tru the sky with a speed oww it was so fast. I remembered us hugging while wathing people going in a tiny can fly over us. It was a sight, and at that time just thinking about those people who are brave enough to venture to space with a vehicle that is not tested with people on board.
@kelsonpenn9097Рік тому
Incredible achievement and they got some extra data with the out of control spin as well. SpaceX engineers never cease to amaze me. Great job SpaceX.
@TonyEnglandUKРік тому
*China* - Celebrates 15 astronauts completing the fourth and final spacewalk of their six-month-long mission from the successful TianGong space station. *America* - Celebrates a rocket exploding after four minutes. The USA's days are over.
@leviataenРік тому
lol
@kaelthunderhoof5619Рік тому
@@TonyEnglandUK lol, China's first space walk after decades. US and Russia already done it several times.
@paulwreck6810Рік тому
Its a HOAX
@althepalno1164Рік тому
@@TonyEnglandUK You don't seem to know much about the space industry. Shame.
@kevinneutzling8267Рік тому
Remember this is the test flight of the first prototype. It not exploding on the launchpad is already an achievement. It exploded during separation which is a clear event that can be studied to determine the issue. This will provide very valuable data and is a remarkable accomplishment for a first flight.
@mikeletterst9882Рік тому
ahahhaahahahahahha
@freedomisntfree_44Рік тому
@@mikeletterst9882 weirdo 😂
@joe.oneillРік тому
Okay Elon. This isn't a Space X stockholders meeting.
@Matt-xc6spРік тому
Tesla is is down 8% and falling you Musk fanboys are really something else. If this was the plan it was a bad plan.
@canadaplease7981Рік тому
@@freedomisntfree_44 Why are you unhappy about learning something?
@micahwilliams18267 місяців тому
I love the coordinated effort by the media to spin this as a failure.
@kenmandelin781222 дні тому
That’s one expensive firework!!
@calvinallan2208Рік тому
This wasn't a failure congrats from Germany
@deluxe1of1Рік тому
Considering it was their first test flight it was very impressive. Very excited to see how they develop the starship from here
@randallmarsh1187Рік тому
Not even close! They've had 9 launches with 5 being total failures and 2 being partial failures!
@CrabPeople-Inc.Рік тому
@@randallmarsh1187 No. This is the first flight of starship and the 33 engine booster together.
@unsharded8503Рік тому
@@randallmarsh1187 stop spreading disinformation
@keithbraham6438Рік тому
@@randallmarsh1187 only an idiots call this a "success"
@CrauniverseРік тому
@@randallmarsh1187 even they fail 100 times still it impressive .
@TheBoringEdward8 місяців тому
This entire project will go up in a ball of flames. Literally and metaphorically speaking.
@monkeyboy474611 місяців тому
I wish Elon Musk would adopt regular industry practices when building/launching rockets/launch pads, he reminds me of Bob Truax back in the day. The bright flashes seen at the bottom of the rocket worry me.
@nja3224Рік тому
I’ve seen lots of launches over the years, including Gemini and Apollo missions, and it still manages to bring out the childhood feeling of wonder and awe. They are only going to learn from this, as they did from past space programs. It’s exciting times again, and those born now and in the coming years are going to bare witness to events I can only dream of. Pretty cool.
@DavidStrchldРік тому
It would be nice to see anything surpassing what we did back then, yes we have wonderful new tech and materials to make it easier, but even now this is so far behind what we were doing 50 years ago.
@brianwells4507Рік тому
@@DavidStrchld As a kid living through the and seeing Mercury, Gemini and Apollo launches. Then the Moon landings! It was a feeling beyond a sense of pride! Not just for America but the entire World. At that age I had no doubt I would be able to travel in outer space at the age I am now? Especially at the rate NASA's space technology was advancing? Plus with what is now considered obsolete technology? Most people don't remember how advanced America's Space program really was? It wasn't until the Soviets and American docked at the space station only to realize the Soviets were still using analog tube technology as guidance systems! They hadn't perfected the transistor for solid state technology? It was a great time to be alive!
@christianmagno984Рік тому
No body has been on the moon! Wake up 🐑🐑
@christianmagno984Рік тому
@@DavidStrchld wake up 🐑 no body has been on the moon!
@DavidStrchldРік тому
@@christianmagno984 "The mind is designed to design reality", What is the basic concept of the reality you created to live in in regards to the space program? For me it was a moment of national pride which was ultimately undone by the world praying and hoping for the safe return of the A-13 astronauts, something that changed the path of the cold war from one possibly weaponization of space to international cooperation, with the ISS as the symbol of it, all due to God listening to and acting on the requests and the prayers of the people of the world for their safe return. And on this point no one is going to change my mind, that it was actually impossible for the Apollo astronauts to safely return, but due to the prayers God changed that which allowed the return, God made a way when there was no way, and the engineers discovered it. This is a deeply help discovery of my faith and walk with God, God was always with the space program. But as one era passes another begins and nothing new is under the sun, we are once again given hope for a better future or a period of darkness with our space program. This time instead of nations, we sort of have a mad man heading it, at least in its fledgling stage. But their are other space programs coming up, including the possibility of a lunar orbit space station as a gateway to the moon. Time will tell. So without insulting others (which does no one any good) please by not calling them sheep, please let me know how you perceive the space program?
@jorgerosaly8751Рік тому
That was incredible!!! Seems like there was some kind of issue with detachment but seeing that building getting launched and maintaining was a feat within itself. I can only imagine what we'll see in 5 years
@yanikivanovРік тому
Wow thats where all our bitcoin money exploded...haha... Now i kinda doubt 1969 people landed on mooon....what a bunch of liars...we humans are not made ti live in space. Keep believing guys keep investing in Tesla X...you will become rich
@maxv9464Рік тому
@@yanikivanov We landed on the moon in 1969. Deal with it. Starship is very different from the Saturn V and this says absolutely nothing about the mountains of proof that we went.
@dead_freak_prgaming2290Рік тому
@yanik ivanov what about the space station that you can see with even a cheap telescope? Is that a continuous projection since the 60s? ...
@djkleb7645Рік тому
In 5 years we will be really fighting against the climate change crisis, that is the real fight, not anything related to going to space. The only solution is to save the Earth and after that then maybe going to space, but believe me the next 15 years if nothing is done about climate, we will perish
@rogeriobada4828Рік тому
@@yanikivanov eu tenho mesma visão que vc! Não acho que dúvidar que o homen foi para lua esteja errado, baseado em todas tentativas de apenas lançar um foguete tripulado para ir a lua nos dias atuais! Eu não acredito
@MusicByVano8 місяців тому
The most kerbal launch i ever seen
@veclubby9 місяців тому
A full 8 seconds to get off the launchpad after ignition. I question whether adding water will make any difference.
@KevinNguyen1Рік тому
For people who are confused about the people cheering when the rocket exploded/failed: The test flight was not about getting the rocket to space, it was about gathering important data. Data that you can’t just see with your eyes. They were expecting the rocket to have some sort of malfunction in part of the test flight. They definitely did not expect the launch pad to get damaged that much, but they learned many things from this test flight. Also the explosion was intentional as the flight termination system was triggered, but it exploded much later than expected. Starship failed to separate as the rocket was not at the correct point in flight, not because the physical mechanism failed. The reason that Starship was in the wrong place, was due to the engines unable to gimbal. This was caused most likely by the Hydraulic Power Unit being ripped off earlier in flight. It is possible that the one of the engines that exploded caused all of the engines to be unable to gimbal. The engine exploding could be caused by debris from the pad getting destroyed, but there is no evidence according to SpaceX. Hope that SpaceX can use the data from this failed test to improve their future Starships! If you have any opinions, feel free to share it.
@tonyp.2482Рік тому
Thank you for your explanation! 👍🏻
@ernest1576Рік тому
We all seen the important data it exploded
@AG-ig8ufРік тому
There is much cheaper ways of getting the data at Starships current level of readiness. There were lot of people familiar with launch pad design who said water deluge system and flame diversion trench is a must, yet they blew tons of concrete into surrounding air, raining down on homes miles away, just to see the obvious. Same with stupid tin can design etc etc. Starship has nothing to do with advancing space tech, it is fan service at its worst.
@KevinNguyen1Рік тому
@@AG-ig8uf They thought they did not need the water deluge system based off of the static fire test. They thought the launch pad would survive the test flight then install the water deluge system for the next flight. At least they know that they can't cut corners like that. For Starship not advancing space tech, there are things that you won’t see by just looking at it. For example, SpaceX is planning on making the thrusters gimbal using electricity instead of hydraulics. Thanks for sharing your opinion about the test flight.
@sev-jm4chРік тому
If getting data is the only goal then why didnt they just mimic the strategy of the apollo 11 cause basicaly they reach higher than what this rocket did. BUT THATS IF THE APOLLO 11s avhievement is TRUE..😅
@solotron7390Рік тому
Six engines had underperformed at one point, but bear in mind that Falcon 1 (with only one engine) took four attempts to achieve orbit. Complexity increases exponentially with the the number of components, so this has to be a terrific first flight of Starship. Well done, SpaceX!
@RRedcraftRRРік тому
Not to disagree with a job well done, but its just not true to say complexity increases exponentially when you just replicate a single component in parallel. The whole point is that it doesn't increase complexity and has fewer critical point sof failure.
@AlexLebedРік тому
@@RRedcraftRR but it still should have impart of reliability, no? more moving components after all.
@samozabijakaРік тому
@@AlexLebed any real rocket have thousands of moving parts in multiple sub-assemblies and somehow only spacex routinely gathers data by blowing them up, its kinda sad that after all that time and testing it just spins out of control
@ddk9467Рік тому
The complexity doesn't necessarily increase ecponentially because half of the point of the gimbal engines and sheer number of them is to act as redundancy in the case of some of the engines failing.
@qpmkroРік тому
20% engine failure is not good at all
@gotindrachenhartРік тому
I'm honestly surprised it held together as long as it did during all those rotations! Pretty damned impressive really.
@ndrenckhahn4411Рік тому
Pretty sure it only even exploded when they told it to self destruct. At that point, it's no longer on profile and needs to be taken out before it can stray from the protected air and sea space
@gotindrachenhartРік тому
@@ndrenckhahn4411 yup, pretty impressive!
@JanKowalski-vj9pyРік тому
Perhaps air density at that altitude is was minimal so it could not damage the vehicle. More interesiting is why they haven't even try to jettison Starship and try to stabilize it under own power.
@gursisingh1940Рік тому
I agree. Considering it was travelling at 1200mph thats insane structural integrity
@chanakapradeep4109Рік тому
But, failure
@thecooljohn100Рік тому
Very impressive engines! Loved the view directly under the ship with the circular boosters on full display! And the entire ship keeping itself together for so long after it started to spiral was also impressive! Cool explosions at the end too!
@dougl945Рік тому
It was done 50 years ago successfully… so yeah… whatever
@TheSpeedyLoonyCanoliРік тому
@Doug L Yeah nah bruh i ain’t ever heard of a 120m rocket that weighs 11 million pounds and has 16 million pounds of thrust launching 50 years ago. What nihilistic delusion are you living in fam.
@dnnyshdy5189Рік тому
@@dougl945 There was a major explosion in 86 too
@dendikke3Рік тому
@@Cuppachoccy Hey buddy, do you know what a completely destroyed launchpad and launch base means? Do you know what "being forced to clean up the adjacent nature habitat (literally) by hand" means? Do you know what losing your launch license means? Do you know what a disastrous launch from the moment the engines were turned on means? I can go on. Please look at this objectively and compare it to actual tests that have been done the last 60 years.
@Shadow-In-The-East11 місяців тому
@@dendikke3 Hey I'm out of the loop on the Starship launch clusterf*ck (the way you make it sound) and subsequent aftermath, can you share a source/ link that cites all these things you mention?
@MrGoogleChill7 місяців тому
We will look back at this time in history after countless human flights in the future and laugh at the beginnings of Starship. One day this rocket will cary people with routine regularity such as F9.
@marcusbaker8307 місяців тому
Was Elon Musk trying to re-enact the moon rocket that blew up from launch? Because if he did, he made a awesome job, AT FLUSHING MONEY DOWN THE TOILET
@samuelpearl2042Рік тому
This is considered as huge success in the engineering world for sure .
@daviant8942Рік тому
No it’s not it considered billions of dollars burnt but more power to them, they probably learnt a lot form the testing
@nork7045Рік тому
No? They couldn’t do a stage seperation, and all they learned is that they have to be able to make a stage seperation.
@Porsche4lifeРік тому
@@daviant8942 your thinking is so tiny unfortunately:/
@rushfast1339Рік тому
@@nork7045 The company that routinely launches self landing rockets into space isn't capable of stage separation? Do you people like you even have thoughts in that empty head of yours?
@randylaffy7679Рік тому
Your delusional is scary remember moon landing rockets, and now NASA is saying they lost the tech no it's bad.
@samchen9951Рік тому
For some reason, seeing the entire skyscraper sized building defy gravity and slowly lift off just made me emotional. The people working on these are solving some of the hardest problems in the world, with millions if not billions of dollars at stake, and even one small part can cause a failure of the entire system. These people are so brave to put themselves through an impossible challenge like this, and it’s a testament to mankind’s will and determination to succeed
@benjaminroe311ifyРік тому
@@lucabaki That's pretty shortsighted and inaccurate. But nice try.
@theyellowjacketРік тому
@@lucabaki there is a need of advancement in technology. The phone/computer you are using currently didn't help anybody around the world during its beginning stages, but now it is used everywhere by almost everybody. Similarly, this might not be useful/helpful for most of the people out there, but later might be one of the best human creations.
@seasickrhino8926Рік тому
@@lucabaki and many people thought the same thing about the Apollo program…. yet it’s the reason I can write this comment on my electronic device, eating my food, who’s standard was updated to those from the Apollo Program, in a building using post-Apollo manufacturing technology and can purchase and eat way more food than normal because the satellites built on the technology of the Apollo program can tell me the weather, and can determine when crops should be harvested for maximum yields. So yes, space is expensive. Yet the space program has managed to pretty much revolutionize our lives. And based on the trend, that’s not going to stop.
@cm9241Рік тому
Meanwhile the actual planet we live on is a boiling hellscape with acid oceans.
@jekoki01Рік тому
@@cm9241 And mr.keyboard warrior is doing what exactly to help that?
@milke92548 місяців тому
I just can't believe how hard this is. Best minds, huge budget, latest tech and we still fail many times until one good attempt. Insane.
@zk87388 місяців тому
The explosion was done on purpose. They were testing it so they can put it onto other spacecrafts so if they ever fail they can blow them up in space instead of them coming down onto earth and potentially killing a lot of people
@Rose-fv1pd8 місяців тому
We lost the tech to go to the moon...we need that 60's technology back lol
@frankhernandez652422 дні тому
😂
@RawCuriosity11 місяців тому
3:55 is where it explodes.
@titanstudios6722Рік тому
Totally awesome first launch! I'm surprised that the issues didn't happen when they usually do for new rocket designs, I was expecting the launch stage to fail or some issue with staying pointed in the right direction. Hopefully the fix is something simple and easy, those engineers have already gone through a ton designing an entirely new rocket.
@LeeterthanthouРік тому
It was on purpose it was a launch test
@VoltLover00Рік тому
6 engines didn't light, 1 or 2 were sputtering, the booster never operated correctly
@danielmankinde1706Рік тому
@@VoltLover00 okay? how many engines worked?
@MrReymoclif714Рік тому
Long way to go.
@ezragonzalez8936Рік тому
it's clear that Starship SN11 experienced a pogo oscillation failure (31 -33 ) raptor engines firing at once vs (SLS) Artemis 1 rocket which has a total of four engines. this and its apparent Disposable launch pad will be a huge hurdle for SpaceX as Multi-engine rockets are much more susceptible to pogo oscillation phenomenon than single-engine rockets. it took Nasa many years of R&D and is the reason why SlS Artemis 1 chose to use tried and true rocket "boring" technology Pogo was in fact the main cause of the soviets (30 ) engine N-1 rocket failure Pogo oscillation is a phenomenon that occurs when there is a feedback loop between the combustion process of the rocket engines and the rocket structure. The vibration caused by the combustion process can cause structural oscillations in the rocket, which in turn can feed back into the combustion process, leading to a potentially dangerous cycle of vibrations. In multi-engine rockets, there are more engines that can contribute to the vibration, which increases the likelihood of pogo oscillation occurring. Don't be so Salty Spacex fanboys! its ok! lol Cheers from Park City Utah!
@sirsluginstonРік тому
Congrats SpaceX! Beautiful launch, and the rocket structure itself seems quite sturdy through those flips. Looking forward to the future!
@stevemadak6255Рік тому
LOL it blew up
@Hj61S827Рік тому
@@stevemadak6255 it just needs to be “pointy-er”
@maselitoamazigh1385Рік тому
@@stevemadak6255 no it was a self termination
@sirsluginstonРік тому
@@stevemadak6255 It was terminated by flight control. The launch itself was spectacular, even with 3 failing engines and more to fail throughout the first minute. For the very first launch of this rocket, its mighty impressive. How many rockets have you seen explode on the pad without lifting an inch?
@special.k904Рік тому
@@stevemadak6255 you expecting to get it perfect on your first attempt? That’s a hole in 1? Come on man🫣😂😂😂 you want extra salt with those fries
@ryndrssn6 місяців тому
that's how my routine Kerbal Space Program launch looks like
@shinnightwood197111 місяців тому
SpaceX is so in the frontier of space exploration that even rapid unplanned disassemblies are a cause for celebration, love you guys for trying to make humans interplanetary in my lifetime
@rrdutch4111Рік тому
I’m glad people are starting to recognize these test launches as successes rather than failures. What we need to realize is NASA was rarely as visible with their testing, and did it at multiple times the cost. We should applaud Elon and SpaceX for bringing the public along on this journey of Rocket testing and space flight 👏🙌
@joeryan1160Рік тому
Cause n a s a got bigger fish to fry don't take it personal or anything.
@bobbyme91Рік тому
What happens to that explosion gas??
@SM16BasketballРік тому
@@joeryan1160like what?
@abdimalikelmi729Рік тому
@@davidmorris6278 the development of science and tech is a waste to you? I can grantee you are not below the age of 30
@adrianenache6794Рік тому
@@abdimalikelmi729 what does age have to do with anything? Antibiotics and MRI were invented on Earth, not on Mars.
@tarih9809Рік тому
Musk invested heavily into Metabourne. Metabourne Token will make millionaires, after CEX listing it will blow up. Metaverse VR gaming and crypto have the potential to transform the gaming industry and create new business models. Metabourne Token is awaiting major CEX listings. It's possible to hit 200x this year. The integration of crypto in metaverse VR gaming can create new revenue streams for game developers and publishers, leading to more innovation in the industry. I will retire after this. Mark my words!
@tootattimРік тому
Hopefully not by old age waiting for that to happen because there are bigger problems that will be coming that will turn the hands of mankind forever mark these words my friend....and if not congratulations on your laid-back life your about to live....
@CommenttrolleРік тому
DUDE ARE YOU WATCHING THE ROCKET VIDEO OR STROKING YOUR SELF?
@rbmedia8798Рік тому
The “meta verse” and “crypto currency” are dying and won’t see the end of the decade
@teresamcelroy59239 місяців тому
Watching possible rocket launch tonight. Praying for the astronauts and their family❤
@PCCphoenix11 місяців тому
Liftoff at a very late T+7. The flip maneuver is when it falls apart. At 4:05 the craft disintegrates.
@vulpritproozeРік тому
To normal people, this is merely just one of those same looking rocket launches... but to us space fans, this is a monumental milestone for humanity's goal to finally become spacefaring.
@SciptopiaРік тому
So what exactly is it?
@notmrbeast8250Рік тому
@Sciptopia the biggest reason starship is so exciting is that it is the biggest, most powerful rocket EVER, and is going to be fully reusable
@lalvy100Рік тому
😂
@pyropulseIXXIРік тому
stop over hyping. SLS beat this to a moon orbit and everyone said super heavy would launch years before SLS ever did
@diiriyetvРік тому
Still, it looks the same as those launched in the 1950s. By now, we should have flying saucers.
@MrCTruckРік тому
Pretty impressive for a first flight. Made it like 39km. Nearly halfway to the Harman space line
@MrCubFan415Рік тому
Karman*
@arturgajewskiphotogРік тому
and almost 1/4 to the Mars :D
@olafmesschendorp147Рік тому
@@arturgajewskiphotog eh?
@mif4731Рік тому
@@arturgajewskiphotog odkleiło ci się coś
@randomname4726Рік тому
@Artur Gajewski Seriously? Lol this thing is NEVER getting to Mars.
@empirekruse957411 місяців тому
Beyond incredible! Videos like this are so rare.
@lrbag8269Місяць тому
Why are people in the comments saying they’re impressed at the rocket not immediately exploding while moving sideways? As if sideways movement is even a meaningful design consideration???
@InsideLookingOut1203Місяць тому
Oh but it was my friend, in this case. If you look closely you see the Rocket is being intentionally directed to a SWIRLING VORTEX in the sky. A literal energetic portal. Pretty impressive the rocket held up for as long as it did. The rocket got caught in the vortex’s swirl and was unable to pass through the energetic barrier. LOOK CLOSELY
@8vIРік тому
Rapid unplanned disassembly at its finest! Great work!
@TheErkTubeРік тому
I think it wass a comand they gave the ship, so that would make it RPD¿??
@bigduphusaj162Рік тому
@@TheErkTube 😂 yeah mate good one.
@hangputin3568Рік тому
@@TheErkTube what is meaning of rpd?
@edwardranno7119Рік тому
Funny!!!😊😊
@medvidekmisaРік тому
These ships are detonated mid flight on purpose if they fail, self destruct...its better than exploding on ground
@GuardianTigerРік тому
I was pretty impressed with how many times it flipped without falling apart XD that was amazing to watch nonetheless and the data they gain will help make the next one go further than this one. Let's not forget how many times SpaceX failed with their earlier smaller rockets so this is expected. I can't wait for their next one!
@TheGBaltarРік тому
Pfff, I am not impressed. In KSP, I can do fifty flips and then fly into orbit :P
@wouldntyouliketoknow9891Рік тому
I wonder how many times they can afford to fail with this one? It costs a lot more than a falcon 9.
@lancerosendale1869Рік тому
@wouldnt you like to know they got back ups
@kosmicspawnРік тому
Why do we have failures at all, sure the so called moon landing was in 1969 with a wheelie bin and canisters of fossil fuel to ignite and we can't get a trip into space now, c'mon guys, doing better since 1969, no wonder we haven't figured out how to fix the iPhone's or manage our financial economies.
@a.j.infowars7582Рік тому
❤️
@SaarkayРік тому
The way they applauded after shows their confidence and courage to get it right the next time. It hit me right. ❤
@ELSAHACKРік тому
Oh yea. They would have applauded in every scenario, believe me.
@mrsmile5009Рік тому
@@ELSAHACK that's called morale, if you don't have that you won't get anywhere.
@ELSAHACKРік тому
@@mrsmile5009 absolutely
@bingebinge3722Рік тому
I came to this video after reading all the news titles including the title of this video. I was expecting to see a miserable failure, but instead, I was totally impressed by how smoothly the launch actually went. I got chills and goosebumps all over my body. I witnessed a huge step in the human history. Congrats to all the SpaceX engineers and everybody involved.
@californiaplant-basedeater2761Рік тому
Yeah. Typical clickbaiting pieces of ___. And from the Wall Street Journal.
@mikebuck8846Рік тому
Get hold of yourself Chief, the ship is sinking.....
@maoinc13Рік тому
You should have seen it live 😜
@guywebster8018Рік тому
@@mikebuck8846 what ship? Spacex or starship? Both are doing truly astounding things with reusable rockets in collaboration with nasa so Im genuinely curious what program you think is failing?
@goodlookinouthomie1757Рік тому
Exactly, you noticed too. Most media want to frame this as if Elon has had erectile dysfunction or something. This was a truly impressive demonstration.
@dn7us11 місяців тому
This is what makes America great. True leader of humanity.
@noberto99911 місяців тому
Oh I like that contribution to the clime change ❤️
@gregorylamb4001Рік тому
Even though there were multiple engines out, the rocket performed well up to that time. I was truly amazed that the Starship spun over 720 degrees before it was blown-up. I have never seen a rocket handle that much stress and stay together. Amazing engineering!
@rogerhearn5243Рік тому
And the Titanic performed well until it hit an iceberg. BTW it didn't look as if the rocket handled the stress, it fell apart,
@NaliTikva11 місяців тому
The Titanic wasn't an unmanned test vehicle
@Staydispline11 місяців тому
What amazing was seeing how strong the firmament is 😉
@NaliTikva11 місяців тому
@@Staydispline i really hope that wink at the end means you're joking...
@Staydispline11 місяців тому
@@NaliTikva not joking 🙃
@SurajKumar-ln8ij8 місяців тому
All becoz of underestimating the power of its 33 raptor engines and its impact on launch pad.
@zachhilty68229 місяців тому
The sight of such a massive form exiting the atmosphere is somehow quite eerie.
@elburusabilov1235Рік тому
Metabourne Token is a mooonshoot potential right now after Musk shared his crypto picks.
@perrycoffey5410Рік тому
I have no idea what you just said lol
@williamofdallas11 місяців тому
scam
@SnackPack913Рік тому
You can feel the power and ground shake. This is the most powerful rocket to ever exist and it was extraordinary to watch it launch. SpaceX looks like such a hype place to work I can’t even imagine
@tacotimmer8288Рік тому
Friends who work there. It's a terrible place to work laden with inadequacy at every step. Every person involved knew the rocket would explode, they only gave it an 80% chance to leave the launch pad
@sean63bРік тому
@@tacotimmer8288 That's because engineers are usually smart enough to expect it to blow up the first time. It's incredibly hard to debug giant projects like this since you have such limited opportunities for testing. There's no way to know in advance everything that could go wrong. There's no way it could be any different.
@lulu4882Рік тому
@@sean63b they could have not launched an object into space that they knew wasn't ready to not explode
@Darsh0606Рік тому
@@lulu4882 it was a test, done by a private space agency, it was also the biggest rocket ever launched with almost twice the weight of Saturn V, it's amazing it even lifted off
@ChristopherThomas-zy8vbРік тому
This place sucks to work at. Low pay long hours and terrible management
@Jen-X333Місяць тому
2:16 take that, flat earthers.
@benjamintrench87226 днів тому
Fisheye lens holistic Braungart !
@sophonblock765 місяців тому
somebody is getting fired today, and I don't mean the rocket, pun intended 😅
@rohankurian56415 місяців тому
🤔👊😂🔥✌
@orthrusthetoad5 днів тому
Not likely, as a preliminary test , their results were surprisingly good. Not a fan of Elon, but they will note the results and move on to improve, just like they did in the past with rocket testing.
@Native_loveРік тому
Wow! Beautiful test flight! Test flight #1 for the prototype made it this far! Check! Congratulations!
@fingerprint8479Рік тому
Fireworks part was great!
@jefferywang2493Рік тому
SpaceX engineers are doing great jobs. Congratulations
@danielcaldwell1110Рік тому
LOL
@taylorx2Рік тому
Can't pass through the firmament dome.. The earth is flat
@peteruhl8181Рік тому
Just blower up the biggest rocket in our atmosphere and you calling this a great job? You shouldn't save on your education.
@markhooker8520Рік тому
@@peteruhl8181 I'm an engineer. I did work on the Atlas V. This was a spectacularly successful test. EDIT (explanation): The purpose of the test was to learn as much as possible. If the sensors throughout the vehicle were streaming all the data back to SpaceX (where it can be analyzed), it will have been a successful test. That data will be used to improve the system.
@jefferywang2493Рік тому
@@peteruhl8181 it is one of most complicated engineering projects in the world. Those engineers will figure out quickly in next few months. I can not help them but I can encourage them to do better’s
@pranavgandhar46049 місяців тому
they mock only when other countries rocket fails
@occupy754511 місяців тому
4:10 Mfs applaud anything.
@user-kp5uv9ys5i2 місяці тому
It's not real
@roxxxoРік тому
When you realize that the X in SpaceX stands for Xplosion
@OutofthisrealityРік тому
My friend works for SpaceX. What an exciting time to be alive. Truly.
@broxton57911 місяців тому
The full body vibration and impact on the area was impressive.
@velvetypotato71111 місяців тому
I love how the tilt graphic disappears when we need it most
@ffrreeddyy123456Рік тому
I thought I had a lot of stress to deal with, but that rocket humbles me.
@AlbertJascuezРік тому
😂😂😂I mean the amount of work,and time put in
@Lantern7100Рік тому
😂😂😂😂 I get you! Best comment!
@fvo911Рік тому
Humanity at its finest! Watch it fly with applause and watch it explode with applause ❤😊