Jimjamesak
Already insane, UAA making it worse
This aged well...Elmo is a hood ornament. Space X's achievements have nothing to do with him.
This aged well...Elmo is a hood ornament. Space X's achievements have nothing to do with him.
All of this fast failures are advancing the art, so I'm being told.Elon's vanity project Starship is now zero-for-eight. Exploded over Florida.
Even though Apollo didn't lose a single rocket.
Someday it will fully work as a system. In the meantime, Blue Ghost landed and is operating on the moonTrue. The rocket was undamaged and used.![]()
Apollo 1 - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
SpaceX hasn't had the problems. It's strictly Musk's vanity Flash Gordon spaceship.Someday it will fully work as a system. In the meantime, Blue Ghost landed and is operating on the moon
And that was a ground test, not a launch. SX has been launching rockets long enough that this shouldn’t happen.
At this point, they are the same thing. Anyone left at this point who can't stand up to tell elmo that this design is not currently feasible and they are blowing money are part of the problem.SpaceX hasn't had the problems. It's strictly Musk's vanity Flash Gordon spaceship.
Welp, it appears one of the Raptor engines yeeted itself during the stage separation. Can't have a part failure if the part isn't there to fail.I'm too lazy look it up- let alone I don't want to give any direct attention news to elmo- what did it do wrong?
And would it have been found during ground testing?
Holy hell. Apparently it was two separate engines that lost their cones or the entire engine assemblies.Welp, it appears one of the Raptor engines yeeted itself during the stage separation. Can't have a part failure if the part isn't there to fail.
One comment I saw said "upside, it's Starship's first payload delivery to low-earth orbit."
Based on that, I had to look it up. It sure seems that they could see this failure during ground testing of some kind. Can't really see those tests costing over $50M, though. Somehow people think that these launches cost $100M each.Welp, it appears one of the Raptor engines yeeted itself during the stage separation. Can't have a part failure if the part isn't there to fail.
One comment I saw said "upside, it's Starship's first payload delivery to low-earth orbit."
Yes. Imagine how you figure that out with very simple data acquisition systems. And solve it with many small holes evenly distributing the flow. Without cad. That was where we really looked up to rocket scientists.IIRC that was an instability in the exhaust flow right? Caused a massive amount of vibration or something?
Yeah, these people have morphed into almost godlike figures in my head over the years. It's hard to fathom how brilliant and fastidious they were.Yes. Imagine how you figure that out with very simple data acquisition systems. And solve it with many small holes evenly distributing the flow. Without cad. That was where we really looked up to rocket scientists.
And the reason is that there are many engineers who are retiring now with an entire career assisted with computers knowing how hard of a job they had and they still managed to do it. It should be kind of embarrassing to SX engineers that they have had computers to aid them designing and making these rockets and they still suffer with problems that should have been figured out a long time ago. Especially since they have been launching rockets for many years now- it's not as if they are inventing anything new here.Yeah, these people have morphed into almost godlike figures in my head over the years. It's hard to fathom how brilliant and fastidious they were.
Fail fast is fine for software. Get the beta version of your fish feeding scheduling app out there and let the users find the bugs for free - great business model!Based on that, I had to look it up. It sure seems that they could see this failure during ground testing of some kind. Can't really see those tests costing over $50M, though. Somehow people think that these launches cost $100M each.
When Apollo one happened, NASA took a year to figure it out, and then went to the moon pretty quickly. And that wasn't a rocket failure, it was a failure of some assumptions (where the required pure O2 atmosphere for space was somehow OK for ground testing- which illuminated a number of system problems.
The F-1 engine did have a HUGE flaw in it when originally made, but ground testing found it, further testing understood it, more testing solved it- and none of the Saturn launches failed.
Maybe I'm old fashioned, but I really don't see this new fangled fast failure model to be better than the old version, in any way at all- cost, timing, reliability, etc.
The way the video game industry is tanking that might not be a good idea either.Fail fast is fine for software. Get the beta version of your fish feeding scheduling app out there and let the users find the bugs for free - great business model!
Not so much if every bit of knowledge you gain literally burns up $100M of hardware.
TL/DR: Tech bros should stick to nconsumer apps.