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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsElon Now Facing the Possibility That SpaceX Will Never Get Starship Working
SpaceX is nine full-scale test launches into developing its enormous, nearly 400-feet-tall Starship, the most powerful rocket ever built.
Over the last two and a half years, we've seen over half a dozen spectacular explosions. Two launches earlier this year sent massive streaks of debris hurtling over the Turks and Caicos Islands, prompting airspace closures. Its most recent test in May ended in an uncontrolled splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico after helplessly spinning on its axis and suffering fuel leaks.
The stakes are incredibly high for the Elon Musk-led space firm, which has garnered a reputation for its unusually aggressive iterative design philosophy. Its billionaire founder has made Starship the key component of his endeavor to send humans to Mars, and it also happens to be the linchpin of SpaceX's future plans for its Starlink satellite network the major driver of revenue, on which he's staking the company's future which will require the launching of thousands of satellites each year.
But Starship's repeated test launch failures are forcing experts to ask tough questions about the super-heavy launch platform's actual viability, as New York Magazine reports. Will Starship ever get off the ground, do its job, and make it back down in one piece? What about NASA's plans to tap the rocket for its upcoming Moon landing? Could the project have been doomed from the start?
https://www.yahoo.com/news/elon-now-facing-possibility-spacex-171323045.html

Buckeye_Democrat
(15,349 posts)edbermac
(16,247 posts)Im still a huge fan of SpaceX. Maybe if he dumps X and Trump and just focuses on rockets, he might actually succeed with the Starship.
Ms. Toad
(37,403 posts)and the best and brightest can afford not to be abused and don't stick around long.
My nephew, who designed most of the touch screen on the Crew Dragon, didn't stay much beyond that project. He hasn't left the field . . . just working (along with fellow former employees) for a saner company in the same space, so to speak.
WarGamer
(17,608 posts)Not a fan of Musk here...
But a BIG fan of space travel (live long and prosper)
The Starship has been sent up 9 times, this is true...
But it has NEVER had the mission goal of reaching orbit, YET...
In it's FOURTH flight, the Starship successfully navigated it's way back to Earth and successfully touched down in the ocean which was the most possible success...
Some of the early tests were just to see if the mains would work right...
And each mission introduces new challenges to the flight so even the ones that end in BOOM may have accomplished other goals.
I watched man on the moon on a 13" B&W TV... and I'll be damned if I don't watch a man on Mars in glorious 85" 4K before I die.
For us early X'ers and late Boomers, space was the biggest thing going.
Hey Joe
(129 posts)I was infatuated with space as a kid. Growing up in Florida I saw many launches from an early age as well as atmospheric tests that colored the sky. I saw the first space shuttle launch from atop a crane at work.
Hope to see progress towards reaching Mars in my lifetime .
