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Has there been any mention of the flames shooting from the side of the booster landing? Were they coming from the quick disconnect? I have watched several videos and it sure looks that way.
 
Added to the other four launch patches. Not as large or detailed like the others but still a great keepsake.
 

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[shrug] I am not familiar with whatever regulations were involved but someone had a job to do and tried to do it, which apparently made the world's most wealthy person a little irked. Hopefully he's healed up...

Cheers!
 
So the answer is no.
Sounds ludicrous to me. Gotta say though, before we get there, we have to actually know if it was real. What was actually asked to be studied, if anything at all?

If I agree it's ludicrous if true, do you in turn agree it's entirely possible that he's completely full of $h!t? Or at a minimum grossly overstating something with only a small nugget of truth? If you're having some sort of OMG moment about it, please consider that it might be completely unfounded.
 
SpaceX released a Starship Flight 5 video package that is stunning AF on a big 4K screen :ban:



Flight 6 still scheduled for Monday November 18, with the 30-minute launch window opening at 5:00 p.m. ET.
"Objectives include the booster once again returning to the launch site for catch, reigniting a ship Raptor engine while in space, and testing a suite of heatshield experiments and maneuvering changes for ship reentry and descent over the Indian Ocean."

Cheers!
 
These tests are so great. They really display the engineering process that all designers would LOVE to go through, but rarely given a chance.

To restate, to design almost anything, even non-complex things, it's ideal to have the time and budget to go through a bunch of test designs that allow one to test different options and optimize parts of the design without requiring perfection. That's what SpaceX is doing.
 
[shrug] The richest person in the world can spend like that (and the spectacle may be part of the schtick).
The rest of the world probably exploits FEA a lot more and blows up a lot less poopy...

Cheers!
 
I did like the way they were saying that this was an older model StarShip and that they did things to it, and with it during this flight to stress test things. I don't think they were expecting it to land in one piece.
 
Starships will keep being written off anyway until they come up with a way to catch the damn thing ;)
So, yeah, in the mean time they can tweak stuff and see if it helps.
I did notice that the body flap integrity seemed a lot better this time, which is curious considering the "this was an older model Starship" thing...

Cheers!
 
I did like the way they were saying that this was an older model StarShip and that they did things to it, and with it during this flight to stress test things. I don't think they were expecting it to land in one piece.
Yeah, it was cool to see the result of the tile removal on that one flap.
Now they just have to recover enough of it to evaluate the results.
Really fun to watch though.
 
Not sure if you guys saw, but after the booster landed in the ocean, it floated for hours, flames occasionally shooting out of it. Eventually, boats and helicopters approached it. I never learned what happened to that booster. Anyone?
 
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