It bounced when the engines first lit up
Rapid Unexpected Disassembly*atmtws said:
"Unexpected Rapid Disassembly"....I gotta remember that.
Teams will continue to review data and work toward our next flight test
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) April 20, 2023
ChemAg15 said:
Was starship never supposed to make it to space? Just take off, separate, and then fall?
Yes it was. Unlikely that it would happen on the first test fight, but that was the plan i thinkChemAg15 said:
Was starship never supposed to make it to space? Just take off, separate, and then fall?
The ship was supposed to make it to just below orbital speed before crashing in Hawaii after an hour and a half or so.ChemAg15 said:
Was starship never supposed to make it to space? Just take off, separate, and then fall?
I believe these engines were lost immediately on liftoff. As soon as the booster cleared the pad it started performing an Astra Powerslide.
— Zack Golden (@CSI_Starbase) April 20, 2023
That was a tense moment. Looked like it wasn't going to make it
will25u said:Rapid Unexpected Disassembly*atmtws said:
"Unexpected Rapid Disassembly"....I gotta remember that.
Starship was supposed to get to space and terminal orbital velocity.ChemAg15 said:
Was starship never supposed to make it to space? Just take off, separate, and then fall?
The flip was planned. The booster is supposed to flip and come back after the launch.FireAg said:
That didn't look good at all...vehicle lost control about 2 min in and was finally destroyed by ground command...
Yes, I get that...Starship was also supposed to separate, but didn't...FTAG 2000 said:The flip was planned. The booster is supposed to flip and come back after the launch.FireAg said:
That didn't look good at all...vehicle lost control about 2 min in and was finally destroyed by ground command...
The problem was Starship was still attached.
I wondered the same...it's possible that it was a line-of-sight issue from the commands being sent to actually being transmitted to the vehicle while it was flipping...tk for tu juan said:
That was the feed I was watching, and I was wondering why they were taking so long to terminate the flight. Amazing it held together thru all that additional stress
Yes. This was a test flight, after all.FireAg said:Yes, I get that...Starship was also supposed to separate, but didn't...FTAG 2000 said:The flip was planned. The booster is supposed to flip and come back after the launch.FireAg said:
That didn't look good at all...vehicle lost control about 2 min in and was finally destroyed by ground command...
The problem was Starship was still attached.
They still have a lot of work to do...
Unlike people's remote cameras... pic.twitter.com/iM6J3dsGCN
— Chris Bergin - NSF (@NASASpaceflight) April 20, 2023
will25u said:
It seemed like to me that they had trouble with keeping it oriented correctly from almost right after liftoff. But that is just going off Youtube video. Also, it seemed like it had a slight decrease in upward velocity shortly after it cleared the tower, then took back off again.