It’s their 7th launch and they’re still fighting issues with keeping the fuel where it should be. Elon has successfully created a machine that can kill any number of astronauts in sub-orbit and land to do it all over again. How is anyone not getting this? I’ll never forgive him for taking back intellect on space travel to the 1950’s .
Dynamic load on the plumbing connections, where loads will be dominated by hydrostatic pressure, leading to a failure near the end of a burn when there weren’t any engines starting or stopping to generate transient pressures? Not likely.
And they really aren’t foundering. They’re trying to do something very difficult, which nobody has ever achieved before, and losing the some of the first handful of rockets each time they try to crack a major new milestone is entirely within expectations. They’ve been deliberately weakening parts of the vehicle specifically to push it to the very limit, which doesn’t sound like the strategy of a team which is worried about blowing a few of them up.
Since someone is likely to point out the space shuttle, I’ll point out in return that people at the time were proudly proclaiming that it was the most complex machine ever to fly (by which they meant, “most distinct parts”) as if that were an achievement rather than a monumental failure of engineering. It tried to do what Starship is trying to do, and it failed.
Wasn’t the first shuttle launched 45 years ago? Or is this talking about something else?
I honestly haven’t been paying that much attention since the '90s, but to this casual observer it looks like it has taken 45 years to find a different way to reach low earth orbit.
The space shuttle flew, that wasn’t the problem. It was supposed to be a fast and cheap way to launch things into low earth orbit. They were talking about flying once a week. In reality all the complexity made it very expensive to build and maintain, and very prone to failures.
Starship is also attempting to be cheap and fast. They haven’t achieved that yet, but they’ve come a long way and can pretty convincingly claim to have achieved several of the things they’ll need to do. Only time will tell if they actually accomplish what they’ve set out to do
I’m probably being annoying, but I’m a lapsed space/astronomy nerd. And I’m old.
When I think of cheap and fast, I think of the soyuz program.
It’s just that 30 years ago I heard so much public boosterism about the promise of private space flight and nothing much of substance has seems to have materialized in the subsequent 30 years. Older nerds that I knew (in their 30s or 40s at the time) were pretty skeptical of that '90s narrative. To be fair, most of them worked at Fermilab or Argonne NL rather than NASA. It’s not exactly an insider’s view. It was just nerd gossip overheard by a teenager.
I was born into a world where people had been to the moon a few years earlier. They had launched Voyager, Mariner, and that Venus one. My family ate weekend breakfast at a restaurant called Skylab (it was shaped like it). The shuttle flies. Shuttle explodes. Shuttle flies again. All before I graduated middle high school.
Had to look that last one up. 1988. It seemed like an eternity at the time.
Thirty-five years later?
There certainly was a lot of scepticism early on in SpaceX’s history. They had to fight political pressure just to take part in the commercial launch program, and had to take NASA to court and argue (successfully) that they hadn’t followed their own rules when they rejected SpaceX’s bid.
They seem to have gotten over that now. Presumably it’s difficult for anyone to argue they can’t do the job when they launch more rockets than the whole rest of the world combined, and they (eventually) delivered on the commercial crew program while the “safe” (and much better paid) pick, Boeing, seems to be very publicly failing and considering cutting their losses.
As for Soyuz, I’m not sure how much those rockets and capsules actually cost so I can’t perform a direct comparison. It must be cheaper though, because they stole all the business for commercial launches from Roscosmos and left them with a serious budget problem. They charge about $60 million for a basic Falcon 9 launch, and they’re making huge profit at that price. We won’t really see the real cost of the rocket until someone builds something which can compete with them for business, because they’re really the only player worth mentioning in their weight class for anyone who doesn’t have ulterior motives (such as governments who want to support their own launch industry)
What I can say for sure is they never came even close to the launch rate of Falcon 9. I think it took something like 8 years, off the top of my head, for total Falcon 9 launches to exceed the number of Soyuz launches and the number of launches per year is still increasing.
Goalposts cannot contain him!
I’ve moved no goalposts.
You claimed they were floundering, and I responded with an argument that the rockets exploding isn’t evidence of floundering, it’s an engineering choice to find the limits of their design by pushing a real rocket until it reaches those limits (rather than spending a decade analysing the problem to oblivion).
It’s quite instructive to compare spacex to blue origin in that regard, actually. Both companies are about the same age, but blue origin spent that time designing while spacex spent it flying. The result is that blue origin reached orbit for the first time just this week, after about a decade of effort, but their first launch went pretty well (although not perfectly, since the booster crashed rather than landing the way it was supposed to). Spacex, meanwhile, blew up their first few rockets trying to reach space (I’m referring to the early falcons now, not starship), and blew up quite a few more trying to master landing them again, but they spent most of that decade developing experience in actual flight as a result (not to mention having a sustainable income, and totally dominating the launch industry).
I think it’s difficult to make a good argument that spacex blowing up rockets means that what they’re working on isn’t going to work