I understand it was not intended to be tested,Nice demo of the abort escape system working.
Maybe I missed it (need to look at other landings to compare) but I don't see much retro firing on that landing. It looked pretty hard.I understand it was not intended to be tested,
but very impressive acceleration ,
Love the landing, at just what height do the retros fire ? looked very close to the ground,
I've never heard of a Saturn IV. If you meant Saturn V, it was the most powerful of yester-year (Apollo era). I'm also not sure what you mean by "nothing even close". I'd say the Artemis engines are "close". Unless you are playing by Price Is Right rules - and disqualifying Artemis because it exceeds the Saturn V thrust. I still don't understand what is a shame.It just struck me that you could call the Saturn IV a “retro rocket”.
A shame we have nothing even close to it today.
The IV was a typo.I've never heard of a Saturn IV. If you meant Saturn V, it was the most powerful of yester-year (Apollo era). I'm also not sure what you mean by "nothing even close". I'd say the aremis engines are "close". Unless you are playing by Price Is Right rules - and disqualifying Artemis because it exceeds the Saturn V thrust. I still don't understand what is a shame.
Power (thrust): Saturn V 7.5 million pounds; SLS (Artemis) 8.8 million pounds
What needed to get done on the moon? It's not zero gravity like the ISS. It's further way than the ISS. Any rescue mission would be much more difficult than saving someone from the ISS by having to land, gather victims and and take off for home. I just don't see a shame in not going back to the moon for the past 50 years, and therefore, no need for a Saturn V rocket. Note, the capital "I" is far way from the "V" on a standard QWERTY keyboard. Which keyboard do you use?The IV was a typo.
The shame is that we had a moon-capable launch vehicle and it was not maintained. The shame is the abandonment of the Apollo program instead of the evolution of it.
You certainly have your opinion, and I find it about as useless as your pathetic attempts at left-handed insults.What needed to get done on the moon? It's not zero gravity like the ISS. It's further way than the ISS. Any rescue mission would be much more difficult than saving someone from the ISS by having to land, gather victims and and take off for home. I just don't see a shame in not going back to the moon for the past 50 years, and therefore, no need for a Saturn V rocket. Note, the capital "I" is far way from the "V" on a standard QWERTY keyboard. Which keyboard do you use?
Just shoed space is dangerous and hard and how human systems need to be engineered safe with means that of escape.
Quite possibly.Just shoed space is dangerous and hard and how human systems need to be engineered safe with means that of escape.
I wonder , if this was manned type launch , would an escape tower have saved the crew?
A) It's too bad slavery is still legal, and that those astronauts are forced to fly in those rockets.Its just a matter of time before astronauts are killed by either Musk's or Bezos' obsession with space, with the money those guys have, playing with rockets is not what I's be spending it on.
A) People will die as a result of Musk's or Bezos' rocket obsession, astronauts, public getting hit by debris etc. Musk is a cavalier fool.A) It's too bad slavery is still legal, and that those astronauts are forced to fly in those rockets.
B) It's too bad slavery is still legal, and that Musk and Bezos are forced to spend their Billions on rockets.
C) It's too bad they get to keep their money. It'd be much better spent in your hands.
https://www.space.com/space-explora...se-in-leadup-to-starship-v3-megarocket-launchStarbase "logged injury rates that were almost 6x higher than the average for comparable space vehicle-manufacturing outfits and nearly 3x higher than aerospace manufacturing as a whole in 2024," TechCrunch wrote. "That outsized injury rate has persisted since 2019, when SpaceX began sharing Starbase injury data with the federal regulator [OSHA]."
...of getting in their cars and going to church this morning.People will die as a result...
Folks are dying to get to church.Google said:
How does that fact have any relevance to SpaceX's cavalier safety record?...of getting in their cars and going to church this morning.
Folks are dying to get to church.
It's ridiculous that a petulant billionaire has such power to disrupt and jeopardize United States public air travel safety, it's unbelievable that he's allowed to do this.The official notice, known as a safety alert for operators, was dated Jan. 8, the same day that ProPublica published an investigation showing how pilots scrambled to avoid debris after two SpaceX Starship megarockets exploded over busy airspace last year. The alert was an acknowledgment that travelers were at risk on those days, when the FAA hastily activated no-fly zones to help air traffic controllers steer planes away from falling rocket parts.
The apollo rocket system was an "only just"The IV was a typo.
The shame is that we had a moon-capable launch vehicle and it was not maintained. The shame is the abandonment of the Apollo program instead of the evolution of it.