Starship Post Launch Analysis | Stage Zero Survived | No Flying Debris This Time | Huge Improvement



Starship Post Launch Views.
SpaceX successfully launched Starship Flight 2 from Starbase Texas.

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18 thoughts on “Starship Post Launch Analysis | Stage Zero Survived | No Flying Debris This Time | Huge Improvement”

  1. I’m still smiling from the launch! Getting all 33 engines to light- for the first time; and they STAYED lit! All the way thru first stage flight. Hot staging clearly worked- tho, truth be told, we may find out later that this first-ever human attempt at a hot-staging from a REUSABLE first stage booster did such a number on the Booster that it might have contributed to the RUD shortly thereafter. However, it was also clear that boostback- where not all the Booster raptors re-lit that were supposed to- is where the problems started down in the aft skirt, so we don’t know yet which problem(s) were dominating for Booster. Ship maintains all 6 engines and flight control for most of second stage before RUDing also a first. And, of course, the pad is still there. I’m still smiling! Well done, SpaceX team and all the folks that supported them! – Dave Huntsman

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  2. This flight was very succesful and SpaceX has learned a tremendous amount. They will now be able to undrestand why both vehicles were eventually lost, but only after each had preforned so well. Next test flight should again be even better as they continue to learn and improve it.

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  3. RUD was not caused by hot stage separation. Seems to have problems with reignition. Looked like fire coming out of one side of a raptor.

    Starship itself will need the raptor3 engines. Booster performed well with the 33 raptor2s. Well thats my impression. See what SpaceX concludes later. Hope to see flight test nr3 before the end of this year. 🚀🏴‍☠️

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  4. The flight exceeded my expectations as did your performance to get this video out so fast. I know you wish you were there, and I did too. I'll be back in the area in December so maybe I'll see IFT3? Maybe you will too??? You deserve it.

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  5. isent there enough junk in space without contributing to the ozone layer why do you think we are getting all this weird weather because all the junk in space is blocking the sun which is causing this put your money in to rejuvinating this planet its the only one humans have dont end up like most of the planets in the solar system all unhabital because civilisation did the same thing on those planets .

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  6. Space X is and will be the total industry ruler.

    The only threat that could possibly stop them, would be any truth behind David Grushes claimes before US Congress, that there is a decade long reverse engeneering program around crashed UFOs. IF there is any truth to this and antigravity is really a thing – this could be a danger to space X on the long run. But other then this, all other rocket companies fall to pieces compared to Space X. THey truely do the impossible.

    Of course antigravitiy would render all rockets useless

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  7. Elon and all of SpaceX, thank you for your dedication and hard work. I grew up in the 60s watching Mercury, Gemini and Apollo. Very disappointed in our government and nasa ever since then. You give me hope that I’ll see another “one step for man…” moment again before my time is up.

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  8. Good job you guys and intelligence report. So many on you tube look at this as a failure and they know nothing about development of new tech, I grew up watching the early space progran when most of the rockets failed shortly after liftoff. My dad was an engineer for Douglas aircraft company. I was amazed to see all the first sage engines performe so well. Thanks for the report!!!

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  9. Concise reporting. Thanks for not blathering on interminably.
    Stage 1 appeared to have a bit of trouble restarting, then irregular exhaust. Perhaps there were problems from firing engines while going backwards at near orbital velocity. Hard to duplicate on the test stand!

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