SpaceX Starship

I'm trying to understand the flip maneuver in order to separate. Why would you flip and point your thrust back towards the earth? Unless the announcer had no idea what they were talking about and just assumed the initial flip was part of the separation procedure instead of everything just going haywire.
 
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I'm trying to understand the flip maneuver in order to separate. Why would you flip and point your thrust back towards the earth? Unless the announcer had no idea what they were talking about and just assumed the initial flip was part of the separation procedure instead of everything just going haywire.
Yeah I don't think that was supposed to happen.

Also it appears they didn't account for any trenching/escape path for all that energy to go and the pad used today appears to be toast with a giant crater under it.

 
I'm trying to understand the flip maneuver in order to separate. Why would you flip and point your thrust back towards the earth? Unless the announcer had no idea what they were talking about and just assumed the initial flip was part of the separation procedure instead of everything just going haywire.
The way I understand it is that they will do a pitch maneuver to give some rotational inertia to "throw" the ship away from the booster, it is also how the starlink satellites deploy. This should happen in very thin atmosphere. Hard to know for sure since we haven't seen it. The booster would then flip all the way over and boost back to the launch pad and be caught by the launch tower.
 
Yeah I don't think that was supposed to happen.

Also it appears they didn't account for any trenching/escape path for all that energy to go and the pad used today appears to be toast with a giant crater under it.


I'm not a rocket scientist, but did they not question where all that energy was going to go? Were they like eh, it's just a little thrust, smoke and fire, what harm could it do?
 
Probably. I'm here for the SpaceX Starship chat though. Don't care for the ignorant political banter.
Probably? So someone has probably called your takes ignorant? It's just a yes or no.

Do you think bringing up Russia wasn't political?
 
I'm not a rocket scientist, but did they not question where all that energy was going to go? Were they like eh, it's just a little thrust, smoke and fire, what harm could it do?
Spacex designs and builds things quick, tests it and iterates on it. The have already been working on a water suppression system but that wasn’t ready for this launch and was removed. Will be interesting to see what they do for next launch.
 
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Spacex designs and builds things quick, tests it and iterates on it. The have already been working on a water suppression system but that wasn’t ready for this launch and was removed. Will be interesting to see what they do for next launch.
It appears a whole new launch facility. Not to mention likely a lot more questions and probing from the FAA, EPA etc prior to and at FRR.
 
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Reactions: Bigman38 and JP4CY
Spacex designs and builds things quick, tests it and iterates on it. The have already been working on a water suppression system but that wasn’t ready for this launch and was removed. Will be interesting to see what they do for next launch.
Don't doubt it. But you would think they'd try building a reusable launch pad that takes those things into consideration. Not only that, but given all the video of the actual firing throwing up massive debris, it's not impossible that blowback could cause a catastrophic isssue (not necessarily in this case).
 

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