"well, that mostly worked ok...this time, make a few holes in the side and send it up again... it blew up? Thought it might. Collect the data and let Elon know that the strong bits were weaker after we weakened it"
He’s a fantastic leader, engineer and business man. One of the greatest people alive today. Definitely isn’t a Nazi. Definitely didn’t do a Nazi salute, why are you lying about that?
I do know better on this issue. A lot better. Because it’s literally the exact truth as discussed by multiple SpaceX engineers repeatedly for over an hour just before the flight You guys are defending a point which is - quite literally - massively wrong. All you have to do is pull up the SpaceX live stream. Instead you’re getting hysterical
The stereotype that men can't multitask is busted. Os can gargle Elon's balls and type at the same time
`They clearly defined this as a maximum stress test` - so why didn`t it survive the maximum designed stress? `They weakened other areas` - why ?
They are developing new materials technology for the heat shield and other areas. They said they hoped it would survive but expect this one to fail as they are trying new, previously untested materials. There is no way to predict the behaviour of these materials without real flight data. No one has ever made a reusable rocket before and essentially you have to crack some eggs to make an omelette
This has literally been their philosophy/strategy for years now and led to them revolutionising the space industry and quite frankly embarrassing every public aero specs company in how quickly & cheaply they’ve been able to innovate
Tell us what kind of engineer you are ? I don`t believe any of the propaganda from Musk or his cohorts. Question - why would you need a reusable rocket ? - Genuine question.
To test materials, you don`t have to build them into a machine and hope for the best. The behaviour of materials can of course be tested and predicted before a prototype is developed.
It lowers the cost of entry for space by a huge factor. Essentially the first step toward making the human race multi planetary. This is the most difficult problem to solve in space flight currently. No one has been able to get close.
Not true. Not with the level of stress we are talking about. Plus speed is essential. It’s much faster to just test stuff and then rebuild. Again - not sure why you’re arguing here. It’s their entire strategy and is why they’re one of the most successful engineering companies in history. I’m not making this up, all you have to do is a tiny amount of research.
Reading between the lines here, so sorry if I am seeing this wrong… But it seems what these Space X folk are doing, is saying when you’re wrong about something, take the new information on board and learn from it? Mad idea, surely? That’ll never catch on.
I think to some extent everyone is right and everyone is wrong. The idea was for the booster to separate and return to the launch area, which it did. But the upper section was meant to continue into orbit, deploy mock satellites and then test various things related to reentry into the atmosphere before a controlled splashdown. I think the reentry experiments may have been where there were heat shields removed and so on. So no, this test flight wasn't intended to break up when it did. Having said that, SpaceX are doing remarkable things, reusable rockets do have an important range of benefits (they reduce costs, you can launch more often, the environmental impact is reduced because you're not building a new rocket every time you launch) and this outcome was always a possibility so a "Haha. What a loser." type reaction isn't really merited.