SpaceX Starship flight 9 Update #news #starship - podcast episode cover

SpaceX Starship flight 9 Update #news #starship

May 27, 202518 min
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Episode description

The Starship system is a fully reusable, two‑stage‑to‑orbit super heavy‑lift launch vehicle under development by SpaceX. The system is composed of a booster stage named Super Heavy and a second stage, also called "Starship"

Transcript

Hi, everybody. Welcome back to Stage 0 News. I'm your host, Will Walden. And on today's episode, we're going to be talking about Spacex's Starship Flight 9, which will be happening Tuesday afternoon at 6:30 PM Central time from the tip of Texas star base, Texas. Now this is an unprecedented flight. The last two flights of the ship ended in disaster. Both of them blew up Flight 7 and Flight 8 blew up mid flight.

Now Flight 9, apparently they fixed the issues that were happening with those last two flights. And we have some information from an engineer at SpaceX that I'd like to share with you about how they got to this point of flying for the ninth flight of Starship. Now, one thing that I have to remind you of is that the only place to officially watch the Starship flight is on the Space XX account. So it's x.com/spacex. That's the only official channel I've gotten.

I don't know, probably dozens, 50 or 60 DMS on X and on YouTube, just comments about where can I watch the launch. There you go, x.com/spacex. So these are some photos that SpaceX posted on the Rex account about the ship and the booster going to the launch site because they're ready to fly this thing. They're on final preparations right now. The FTS will be set up soon. That's the flight termination system. Basically.

It can blow the thing up. If it's mid flight and something happens, they'll blow it up on purpose. But also the final crews are down there making sure that everything fits properly, making sure the ground crew is doing their job, making sure that everything on the ground is functioning. Because it doesn't just take like 5 or 10 people, maybe not even 100 people.

It takes thousands of people in order to fly one of these rockets because it's not only the systems engineers, the software engineers, the people that are building the Rockets themselves, but it's also the people at the office, the people that manage the people. It's the people on the ground that are moving tankers and moving metal back and forth.

It's a hard job. Everybody in the warehouses, everybody in the production facilities, there's thousands of people that come in and out of Starbase. So it takes a lot of work to launch one rocket. So if we get these done in a few months and we get to watch another launch in a few months, that is ridiculous. But it takes thousands of people in order for that to happen. So big shout out to everybody who's working at SpaceX to get

that done. Now, we reported that SpaceX was having some internal issues and that Elon Musk wasn't at SpaceX as much as he needed to be because he was off in Washington doing his DOGE thing. And he tweeted that he'll be back at Starbase before the next launch. So tomorrow morning, Tuesday morning, Elon will be at Starbase. I think it's 1:00 in the afternoon. He'll be at Starbase, and we'll talk about that in a little bit too.

But he's going to lay out sort of the road map for SpaceX to get to Mars because that's the next big mission. Like all these flight tests, these are great, but the next real thing is SpaceX flying Starships to Mars. OK, so that's, that's a huge deal because eventually Elon Musk wants to populate Mars, send the the light of consciousness to another planet just in case something happens to this one. We all know the rhetoric after he's been been spewing it out for the last 10 years.

We know the we know the speech, we know what he's talking about. This is the next big thing. So this flight night is very, very important, OK? And that's the huge thing. There's another thing that's in between that though, which is Starlink on Starship and there are dummy Starlinks on the next Starship flight. So does that mean they'll be

deployed? Maybe there are Starlink dummy satellites inside of this Starship, inside the mechanism that would the Pez dispenser, if you will, that would dispense them into space. But I think what they're going to do with this flight is they're going to test and make sure that Starship can stay aligned and it doesn't blow up mid flight. And if everything seems to be going OK, maybe. I doubt it though. I don't think they're going to let me know in the comments down

below what you think. I think they'll actually eject these Starship or these Starlinks out of Starship because it doesn't seem like that's a smart thing to do at this point. They just have to make sure that Starship survives this flight. That's what I'm thinking. Can Starship survive this flight?

But SpaceX engineers have been working around the clock to make sure that Starship is good to go, and it's better than Starship Flight 7 in Flight 8. So we're going to move on to the next, which is Shana Diaz, who's an engineer at SpaceX. And we're going to talk about this tweet, she said after a long few months in a heroic effort by the ship test team yesterday doing a final verification test at Massey's. That's where they test all the ships and the boosters.

Ship 35 and booster 14 are in final checkouts will be heading to the pad this weekend. So they're already at the pad. This is posted a few days ago, Shana said. I've been pretty quiet here because there have has been a lot of work needed to get ready for a flight test on Tuesday, tomorrow the 27th at 6:30 PM Central time. Big launch for Starship and as always, lots of things in test. First flight proven booster. So this booster is flying again with a stress test and water landing.

We reported on that weeks ago, months ago, like a month ago that there was going to be a water landing and not a chopstick catch. So they also have corrective actions from the last flight of the Raptor front. And then we still have that re entry gauntlet set for the ship once it gets to that portion of the flight. This one's going to be stressful for the whole time, but lots of opportunities to learn. So there's a, there's a two ways of thinking here. You do a test flight the old

fashioned way, right? Old space way, if you will, a test flight is something that will prove the flight for the next rocket and every rocket is perfect and built to perfection and then the next flight that one goes well, you do the the actual mission right. So for Starship, it's a little bit different. It's iterative processing. So you go back to first principles. You build whatever you can with as least amount of parts as possible. Basically make an MVPA minimum

viable product. Hopefully it launches and it works, and this one did. So flight 1 worked great. Then every flight after that, you learn something. You don't expect it to do the complete flight you want it to. You want it to do the best that it can do, but you might get some sort of explosion along the way. That's what's great about SpaceX is that, as Elon says, excitement is guaranteed every time there's a flight.

Something might go wild, the ship might blow up, the booster might go weird, something might fly somewhere that's not supposed to, and something might happen. So excitement is guaranteed for this flight, but it's the iterative process where if Flight 7 and Flight 8 didn't work, what was it that didn't work? What's the data that they gathered in? This last sentence from Shayna is exactly what SpaceX is all

about. They said this one's going to be stressful the whole time, but lots of opportunities to learn. They have the data from 7:00 and 8:00. So hopefully they learned from those two flights and also the the flights before that too. But hopefully they learned before those before Flight 9, what happened in seven and eight fixed it up. And then Flight 9, they're going to be OK and they'll be able to do the full mission. Now, will they release those Starlinks into orbit?

Probably not. They're dummy Starlinks, so there'd be really no reason to launch them into orbit. I still want to know what your what your thoughts are in the comments down below so we can have a conversation about this. Now, this is a primary backup. This is from the FAA Starship flight 9, Boca Chica, Texas. It's actually called Starbase Texas now primary date 5/27/20, 3:30 through 0134.

So basically like the morning until whenever they're done on the 27th and then the backup date is the 28th. So I just want to show you the FAA approval. Here's a no Tam and this is around Piarco, ACC, Trinidad and Tobago. And this is like don't, this is

a no fly zone. Basically, don't go in here, don't get in here with your boats, don't go in here with your ships, don't go in here with anything that's in the air, don't go anywhere near this stuff, but this is from the FAA, so we know the flight path is going to be around here. All right, let's move on to the next one.

So that's a very important thing is that when I look at the data, Speaking of data, SpaceX data, I look it in the back end of YouTube and I've seen 90% of you aren't subscribed. Look at this, 90% of you are not subscribed. You come here, you watch a video and you've watched numerous videos. I see that too. I can see all the data. You've watched 345 videos and didn't subscribe to the channel. And I'm like, well, you like the channel. I wonder why? I don't know. But anyway, let me let me ask

you for a favor. It's going to take one second of your time, one second of your life. I'm going to give you 10 more years of my time O I've been doing this channel for about 5 years now and I LAN on doing it for 10 more. O If you could take a second one second of your day, hit the subscribe button like this

video. If you have a few more seconds write a comment down below and I would greatly appreciate it and I will guarantee you I'll be here for the next 10 years to talk about Starship and everything Elon Musk Now let's get back to the content. There's some weather happening right E5556 weather update for IFT 9. So far the models have not agreed on the cloud conditions. Some show cloudy conditions and below some show clear

conditions. GFS below the models all seem to range around 12 to 15 mile an hour winds with to 20 mile an hour gusts, which is not bad for a launch. So Starship will be able to launch in these conditions and it looks like it's clear, it's just a little bit cloudy and Starship will be able to launch in these conditions.

That's usually usually what happens for Starship because everything has been tested so well from the crew, the ground crew, the ship crew, the booster crew, everybody on site, everything's been tested. So the only thing they really have to worry about is weather. And you can't predict the weather 100% and you can't control the weather. So at this point it looks like the weather forecast is OK and go for Starship Flight 9. This is going to be, it's going

to be an amazing flight. I hope it works out well. And since they're not going to be catching the booster, of course, it's going to be a less dramatic hopefully landing of the booster. But you never know with SpaceX and Starship. It could be even more than last time. Who knows? It could be more dramatic than last time. Now we have another e-mail that was sent to me by SpaceX.

Join Elon on the morning of Starship night flight for discussion with SpaceX employees on Spacex's plans for establishing a permanent human settlement in cities on Mars. It's at 12:00 PM Central time on Tuesday, May 27th. So tune into that. And this is this is interesting. Elon will discuss the development work ahead for SpaceX Starship. And now SpaceX will use the world's most powerful and capable rocket to build a human presence on the Red Planet over the next decade.

Next opportunity to launch from Earth to Mars opens in late 2026. So a year from now, a year and a few months from now, we're going to possibly have a Starship launching to Mars. Now what will they launch to Mars? And they could have possible multiple ships. We're just going to speculate here. Let's speculate. They're going to launch five ships to Mars. They have to refuel all those ships in orbit of Earth.

So they have to have a bunch of tankers ready to fill up the ships on the way to Mars. They have to have all of the systems in place to communicate between the Starship and Earth while it's on its way to Mars. Because we know SpaceX and they're not just going to send it out there blind with no

information. They're going to give us everything that we need so we can track the Starship on its way to Mars. Because it's going to be a journey that anywhere between 6:00 and 9:00 months to get to Mars for this thing. Raptor 3, there was a, there was a study that just came out the other day that said they could cut the time down to three months. I didn't get a chance to look at the whole study, but if they can get this down to three months, that would be ridiculous.

They could fly people to Mars in three months. That'd be incredible. And it's because of the Raptor 3 engines apparently didn't get all the way into it, but I read, I basically read the brief on it. So there's a possibility that they could, let's just say 5 ships, like I said before, one of the ships could be a demo test that goes around Mars and orbits it. One of the ships could be a Lander. See if we can actually land on Mars. Two of the ships could be Landers.

Three of the ships could be Landers. See which one does the best. 4th ship could be ship that goes to Mars, comes back to Earth, does a whole round trip. And a fifth ship could do something similar to that where they could go all the way to Mars, could do a few orbits and then fling themselves back to Earth and see how long it takes. See if the ship can survive that. I mean, they can. They better send as many ships as they can because they need as much data in order to do the

next flights. Because 2026 they need to send as many ships as possible. And I'm guessing Elon will say that they're going to send some cargo to the surface of Mars. They have to, they have to. Why wouldn't they? Why wouldn't they sent the the the first steps for the human civilization on Mars send something that either people can build when we get there or I mean, this is another thing too.

This is far fetched, but it's possible the optimist robots could possibly be the first astronauts that go to Mars. It's not going to be people. The first things that go to another planet are already robots. We have Rovers on other planets, we have Rovers on Mars. So why not have a bipedal robot that looks like a person to gather data about how people will interact with the Mars atmosphere and how they will walk on the surface of Mars?

What it's like, like there's going to be incredible amounts of data. They'll be beamed from the optimist robots to the ship back to Earth. It's going to be incredible. So I believe there's going to be optimist robots in every one of those ships. But you never know. I mean, there it could just be a, a hollow ship. The first one could just be, but there's no reason why they shouldn't send a robot.

That's all I'm thinking. And if they can, they might as well just so they can get as much data as possible. They're basically crash test dummies at that point. So let me know what you think about that too. What do you think they're going to send the first time? We have to get this out there. So share this with all your friends. If you've watched this for this long or listened to this for this long, share this with all your friends because I want to get as much data as we can get.

I want to get as much data as we can get to see what people think before Elon does his talk. So leave a comment down below what you think is going to happen when they launch these to Mars. And now this is the launch road to making the making life like multi planetary. So this is where you'll view it. Spacex's X account. So that's it for today. I hope you learned something today and I hope you subscribe to the channel. Like it, leave a comment down below, share it with your

friends. Very important. Also, I want to say thank you to everybody who has subscribed and has been part of this channel for a long time for the community. I couldn't do this without you. I, like I said before, I've been here for five years and I plan on doing it for another 10. So things are changing a little bit around here. I know that, you know, there's some changes and people are like, where's Will? I'm still here. I'm doing everything actually.

Like this is still me. So I'm still running the channel. I'm still 100% involved. No one else has taken over. It's still me. So this is all my channel still. So I want to say thank you to everybody who's been here since day one and continues to provide the community that is this channel. So thank you. All right, take care of yourselves and each other, and I'll see you in the next one.

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