Is it confirmed they used the Flight Termination System? That thing exploded way more than the previous explodeds...
Totally agree with ya, bud, but we all know what's coming. Elon 'bout to get a political whackin'.Ag_of_08 said:
Tim Dodd(everyday astronaut) saying they may have lost uo to 20k in camera gear.
And the FAA needs to go suck a cactus.... even with a FTS, they planned for it..
I don't think it is, either, I'm just throwing ideas on the wall as to what could have resulted in an activation of the FTS that close to ground.Cactus Jack said:
I don't think the guidance is visual. The problem with the fog is you don't get video footage of what happened.
Holy hell that was awesome!Cactus Jack said:
NASASpaceflight just showed a replay with shrapnel flying all over the facility. One of their cameras took a hit. Debris landing all over the place.
Show me who else is making progress on live rocket development and testing...NavyAg95 said:
Wow. Not a good day for SpaceX. Probably the nail in the coffin for their Human Landing System bid.
I don't know what they really lost? I mean, we like watching it, but they know what the data said the engines were doing and that's really all that matters, not what it looked like. And, they probably have a lot more visual data; they had cameras inside the tanks/on the ship etc., and while some of that glitched out on the livestream I bet they have a very good visual idea of what was happening from that data they can stitch together too from...onboard cameras which are a lot better than the commercial guys on the ground.NavyAg95 said:
Don't know why they insisted on launching in that visibility. Lost a tremendous amount of visual data for the test. Very disappointing.
SpaceX is very tight on their livestreams. Elon's criticized it in the past, in fact. They don't show much when things go wrong.Brad06ag said:
So... did spacex scrub some audio out of the feed?
I thought i heard some talking right after the boom... Now there is a long period of silence before he comes back and says they're going to end the livestream.
Somewhat. Moonship is however not to use the belly flop at all. It's questionable if it would even use a raptor to slow for a moon landing or something else. I don't think for a second this helps their bid though, and in reality I'd handicap their odds at an award (note that congress gave less than half what was requested this year) at under 20 percent.NavyAg95 said:
The SpaceX's bid is predicated on Starship working. NASA will go with the traditional/proven technology approach. Just too much risk for the time frame we are trying to achieve.