How starliner was approved to carry astronauts needs to be investigated
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
We think so too...
@reapergnome6666 ай бұрын
@@terranspaceacademycongressional spending would be my speculation. It seems nasa safety has double standards when congressmen need to keep their constituents and donors happy 😢 (purely my personal opinion)
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
I'm sure they have rented many Senators...
@zmblion6 ай бұрын
I agree they haven't had one successful launch yet. I think uncrewed missions should have continued. There is absolutely no way they would have let SpaceX continue with so many failures. If SpaceX has one leak, one shute not open or one thruster go out they would be grounded indefinitely yet Boeing it's all good. They wouldn't have even let them dock when they found the other issues that occurred in space. It's just amazing they let this go on. It's like NASA is begging to lose more crew
@wyattnoise6 ай бұрын
Approved by the same body that approved Dragon so STFU.
@tazerface86596 ай бұрын
Boeing: "Omg there's nothing we can do to save these astronauts!" Technician:"Well how about Crew Dragon?" Boeing: "Simply nothing we can do. How unfortunate..." Technician: "WTF why aren't my brakes worki..."
@frankmcgowan94576 ай бұрын
An excellent argument in favor of manual transmissions... 😉
@louiscypher41866 ай бұрын
@@frankmcgowan9457 Boeing: dude you don't look so well I think you might have heart attack next Tuesday.
@hamsterSNAKE6 ай бұрын
😂
@DesertNurse22976 ай бұрын
This craft was not even checked once. They need to bring it home uncrewed. No reason to chance people's life on that wreck.
@terranspaceacademy5 ай бұрын
Boeing: "Nah, we'll just say they unalived themselves..."
@baahcusegamer45306 ай бұрын
"Deaths in Space and Orbital Rescue" Let's hope there isn't need for a sequel to this vid anytime soon.
@linasvelavicius3306 ай бұрын
One of the many aspects that I've come to appreciate about your presentations is you bring up relevant and on point issues that no other space KZbin's (that I follow) discuss. Great job!!!
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Thank you so much!
@icare71516 ай бұрын
With decades of manufacturing, quality, testing and forensic failure analysis engineering experience, I 1000% agree, crew return on SpaceX, StarLiner return autonomously. Risk too great for reasons stated and other reasons not stated.
@RTD19476 ай бұрын
NASA used the same mentality as they did with Challenger!
@4rrxw7946 ай бұрын
Nevertheless, I think it is time to become more curious and point out who exactly made what decision. Facts are usually quite informative.
@terranspaceacademy5 ай бұрын
Exactly
@geographicaloddity26 ай бұрын
I was so wrong. Several years ago, I thought Musk would have the safety issues and Boeing with their experience would have the better ship. Boeing is not the organization it once was.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
I did too... I thought it very unlikely SpaceX could compete.
@robnobert6 ай бұрын
People are remarkably & especially bad at estimating the competency of people they don't like, even more so when they have new ideas the established players were too scared to try. Hell I catch myself doing the same thing with Blue Origin... assuming they'll be a disaster because I don't like their business practices, I don't like Bezos, etc etc... and I think they have an impractical design. But despite all my rational reasons for doubting BO I must remember all the people who said Musk would fail....for I could easily be them and just not know it yet, while I assume I'm being rational just because I think I'm smart. People do the same thing in healthcare. And politics x10 😐
@robnobert6 ай бұрын
The key to not being suckered into a bad prediction... is to recognize your prediction probably isn't as rational as you think, that you're almost certainly missing key information for various reasons beyond mere ignorance, and that if you think it's the other side who's bought the groupthink... you might be right... but if you were wrong you wouldn't know it. And wisdom is recognizing you could be one of them and probably have been, and probably even ARE the groupthink in some area you think you're not... because that's what it means to be human. And you are a human. Probably.
@maq61446 ай бұрын
Very good article. You said it would take around 2 months to schedule a falcon 9 rescue attempt, but in 2023 there were 91 falcon 9 launches. So the launch cadence is considerably higher, say one every 5 days. If spacex had a dedicated crew dragon capsule in reserve for rescue missions, there could be a protocol in place to comandeer the next available falcon 9 and send it up empty to wherever it was needed. That might give us an emergency response time of about a week.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
It's the Crew Dragon that would take a while to prep. But I bet if challenged SpaceX could get it up in a week.
@gelf19076 ай бұрын
"I mean if we just give Boeing another 4.5 billion they can get StarLiner right. Then we need to give them 10-20 billion to get a working rocket out of ULA. Just as long as evil Musk does not help us, that is what we will do" Secret NASA executive meeting this morning.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Indeed. After all... He's a narcissistic billionaire! Very rare among billionaires I'm sure :-)
@wyattnoise6 ай бұрын
Why is it that the pathetic, divorced losers who always crawl to Elon Musk's defense always look like thumbs with teeth?
@Shadare6 ай бұрын
I'm all for a 2nd option, but it didn't have to be boeing... The dreamchaser was cheaper, further along in development, and would give us the ability to land astronauts at any commercial runway in the world.
@frankmcgowan94576 ай бұрын
@@Shadare Agreed but, I'm pretty sure that Boeing was seen as the reliable option and SpaceX was seen as the gamble with Dreamchaser being seen as too unconventional to be seriously considered.
@Shadare6 ай бұрын
@frankmcgowan9457 that's definitely how they were all seen, and I think the GAO should investigate whether that was purely just ineptitude or willful ignorance rising to fraud. Because anyone who was paying attention could have told them differently.
@jimb40906 ай бұрын
If Im not mistaken, the SRB is not an end burning grain but has a vacant core thus rendering dropping segments very difficult
@nwcaymans6 ай бұрын
Outstanding program. Please keep eep up the great work.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! Lovely place to be by the way :-)
@GrigoriZhukov6 ай бұрын
Boeing thanks to management has delivered a hybrid of a pinto and a cimmaron. I won't explain to the under 50 group those references.
@rogerrinkavage6 ай бұрын
I get onebof those! Haha
@gravelydon70726 ай бұрын
I would say it would be closer to a Pinto and a Yugo.
@GrigoriZhukov6 ай бұрын
@gravelydon7072 no Yugoslavia was great compared to a cimmeron.
@U_Geek6 ай бұрын
The idea of putting the hsr on ship instead of booster and using as legs sounds good at first, however I'm nut sure if it is doable. It has to survive reentry which means it needs heatshielding, which would either complex to only cover the actual metal but would need to cover the inside also since plasma could get in there, or it would need to holid on one side reducing mass flow. Even if you did add heat shielding it wouldn't survive hotstaging. Ship needs deployable legs for landing anywhere but the tower.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
That's a point... retractable?
@darkguardian13146 ай бұрын
It seems like a case of "Go Fever"... ( It refers to the overall attitude of being in a rush or hurry to complete a project or task, often overlooking potential problems or mistakes.) Regarding Boeing, their reputation was earned by the last generation. Few if any of those employees are still with the company and their culture seems to have deteriorated to a rubberstamp get it past the inspector's attitude. I've worked a number of years as a QA/QC inspector and test technician and production is always pushing to ship something and limiting the time for quality to do proper checks. Many times we find issues with PCB that Production knew about but wanted to ship it anyway. When the customer's incoming QC returns it, Production can easily blame the inspectors for not finding it with the limited time available.
@terranspaceacademy5 ай бұрын
That's a very good point. QA/QC may be boring but they are vital.
@RickTheClipper6 ай бұрын
Apart from the fact that Boeing is involved, I remember the Challenger. Engineers warned about the low temperatures, NASA thought it was a minor problem and we know how it ended For now, use DOOMLINER as a transporter, and after 5 error-free flights, consider it a lifeboat, but that's it
@louiscypher41866 ай бұрын
Don't forget Columbia. They knew it was damaged at take off, they could have aborted. NASA instead choose to continue the mission so they could "assess the damage" in orbit.
@RickTheClipper6 ай бұрын
@@louiscypher4186 As far as I remember, it was a different story. The wing got hit during launch. Columbia reached orbital velocity in minutes. Then it was too late. No rescue shuttle. oxygen for some days. They had no alternative. they had to land, The point here is, NASA KNEW that isolation foam tended to fly away from the tank
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
they did indeed.
@DesertNurse22976 ай бұрын
Thank you for the unfiltered information. Keep up the great work.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
You are most welcome and thank you.
@SanctuaryLife6 ай бұрын
Love your work, using the Super Draco's to make the inclination change was gold.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@occhamite6 ай бұрын
Alexei Leonov says in "Two Sides Of The Moon", the book he coauthored with Dave Scott, that the Soyuz 11 crew could easily have been saved. Leonov says he was bumped from the mission by management because he was supposedly "too valuable to risk", and that he did his best to teach the new crew the ropes of the ship, but they were not fully familiar with it, and could have saved themselves if they had been fully trained. Supposedly, if nothing else, a finger could have been placed over the hole through which the cabin atmosphere was leaking, if the men had known what to do.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Could they have gotten to it? It's under a seat and there's not a lot of room to maneuver.
@occhamite6 ай бұрын
@@terranspaceacademy According to Leonov, they could have. Even the embittered wives of the dead crew were appreciative of Alexei, and as one might imagine, profoundly comdemning of the people responsible for the running of the mission.
@65gtotrips6 ай бұрын
Does the ISS have multiple docking ports incase of a docking problem ?
@louiscypher41866 ай бұрын
Yes the ISS has x8 docking ports. Currently x6 are occupied. x3 are occupied by cargo ships, which I believe are equipped with through port functions allowing other ships to dock with them. (Think of it like a double adaptor)
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
That's right...
@tanagra26 ай бұрын
This is a great video. I said this before. Ask any engineer this question. The uncrewed mission was a complete failure, shall we launch again but this time put two astronauts in it?
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Isn't it true? Who would think that was a good idea?
@ForOurGood6 ай бұрын
I think it is looking more and more as a done deal, given the delays we are seeing, they won't be returning on Starliner.. Maybe they are just going through the process to try to put a good face on it (not really possible..) I think given everything we have seen so far, I would be horrified if they returned the astronauts on Starliner, regardless of if it was successful or not... Thanks for the video.
@louiscypher41866 ай бұрын
NASA knew Columbia had been damaged during take off and they could have aborted. They instead chose to wait for the team to get to space to assess the damage, because "they weren't sure how serious it was" Anyone with a lick of commonsense can see that contradicts valuing human lives. Mark my words they will send these astronauts back on Starliner regardless of the risk. Their lives are not a priority, NASA just wants data that includes manned re-entry data.
@terranspaceacademy5 ай бұрын
I'm amazed they are still trying...
@ForOurGood5 ай бұрын
@@terranspaceacademy I liked your "de-orbit the ISS" statement in the latest video. It just might be like that!
@mustang6076 ай бұрын
You definitely can't play the same stupid games in space that we play down here on Earth.
@tobEwobEmusic6 ай бұрын
But they sure seem to be...
@frankmcgowan94576 ай бұрын
Why not? Playing stupid games on Earth frequently gets people just as dead as Playing stupid games in space does. Granted, it is far easier to die in space; just don't play stupid games.
@kenhelmers26036 ай бұрын
LOL "Telling China how to do things wrong..." Cracked UP!
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Thank you Ken! If the Chinese steal the Starliner designs they'll never get to the Moon safely :-)
@wesleyashley996 ай бұрын
I don't think hot staging supports can stay with the starship. Hot staging structure has to protect the top of the booster by deflecting the exhaust at startup of the second stage. This requires more mass than would be sensible to take to orbit. Also the deflecting of exhaust can't happen more than a brief moment during stage separation. Some missions will need legs until catch towers can be built on other planets but the majority of starship flights will need to avoid taking that mass along.
@terranspaceacademy5 ай бұрын
Retractable?
@mustang6076 ай бұрын
If SpaceX attached a hot staging ring to the bottom of starship, so they could carry it to space, how would it survive re-entering Earth's atmosphere enough to land on it?
@mr.ackermann8076 ай бұрын
If it's possible to have the original landing legs upgraded to be more durable, heat tiles or coating, and a locking port for the booster to hold onto. The tiles would really only need to be for the hot staging and, when separated, could swing up into the skirt for the rest.
@66127706 ай бұрын
Forgive me, but at 21:32 I can't get past the RHS craft looking like some demented space-clown vehicle!
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Jugalos in Spaaaace!!!!!
@DH-sw6vg6 ай бұрын
NASA: Ummm... Elon? Can you spin up a Crew Dragon to rescue the Starliner crew? Elon: Of course I can! We're gonna rename it Crüber Dragon. (Heh, heh, heh)
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
:-)
@mr.ackermann8076 ай бұрын
A little off topic, for the chop stick catch or mechazilla, instead of doing a full stage test is it possible to test the booster catch with it only partially filled to simulate return burn and try to catch it then? It would seem to save them fuel, but for the upper stage it would most likely need to launch from another stand for a simulated landing catch too. Do let me know if this sounds stupid as it was a quick thought I had.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
I don't think that's a bad idea at all. Let it come down with the designated velocity and mass and see what happens. If that fails the other option is off the table.
@IZ41X6 ай бұрын
Thought provoking lesson Doc. I hope that our future together overrides political divisiveness.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
I do too my friend!
@ghost3076 ай бұрын
It hasn't trumped politics for the past 250 yeats.
@nolsp72406 ай бұрын
So if they decide to return the astronauts using starliner and the crew land safely, will Starliner be crew-certified?
@louiscypher41866 ай бұрын
Yeap
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Not in my book. They need at least one flight with no mishaps I would think.
@mememaster69-n4x6 ай бұрын
love the new intro it was time
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Thank you...
@john_hind5 ай бұрын
Don't SpaceX Draco and SuperDraco thrusters both use the same hypergolic fuel? If so, surely they use the same supply, or at least have cross-feeds for redundancy? If so, the Crew Dragon would not be fuel limited on delta-V available from the Draco thrusters. It has always puzzled me why SpaceX does not make use of the launch abort propellant in the nominal flight profile, either for boosting the ISS or maybe just to reduce re-entry velocity to lessen heat stress on the capsule. It would surely be safer to burn this propellant than to reenter and land with it still in the tank?
@YellowRambler6 ай бұрын
Maybe from now on all ship or capsule should prove themselves by running cargo missions first, and then if continuously successful advance to transporting humans!
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
It seems like common sense I would think.
@ericalbers39236 ай бұрын
when MBA's run a engineering company, deaths are going to occur. They need to get engineers promoted to all positions on the board of directors and ceo.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Indeed... You must have a big red button to stop things before people get hurt.
@alt54946 ай бұрын
What would be the thruster requirement to safely execute a space jump from the ISS? Would certainly require a advanced suit & high speed drogue chute. Having a option for complete ship failure would be valuable.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
I get about 250m/s deltaV which 15kg of solid propellant with an Isp of 250 if the astronaut and suit had a combined mass of 150kg.
@wally78566 ай бұрын
@@terranspaceacademy How many G's would that put on the astronaut on that burn?
@alt54946 ай бұрын
@@terranspaceacademy Wouldn't a orbital jump require at least 1000 m/s reduction to lower atmospheric heating, & reduce drop time to 6,000m to inside a theoretical oxygen reserve? Although 250 m/s would make playing frogger with starlink satellites rather less terrifying;)
@ghost3076 ай бұрын
Check out Project MOOSE from the 1960s.
@alt54946 ай бұрын
@@ghost307 Moose is a interesting concept, but has a breathtaking number of unrecoverable failure points. The ideal would be decelerating to under 2000m/s by thruster or solar sail. A single sided solar sail that doubled as a massive drogue/glide parachute is a possibility.
@LM-ek2hb6 ай бұрын
I believe the earliest a Dragon capsule could be man-rated available is Oct 2024?
@ghost3076 ай бұрын
Dragon is already regularly flying astronauts to and from the ISS.
@LM-ek2hb6 ай бұрын
@@ghost307 Well, not exactly regularly. Plus my point was that there currently is not a single Dragon capsule to fly that is equipped for human flight and not just cargo. The next one to be ready for human flight isn't scheduled to be ready until October. At best they could probably rush it to...Early September?
@icare71516 ай бұрын
SpaceX has great abilities and absolutely can have Dragon available immediately.
@LM-ek2hb6 ай бұрын
@@icare7151 nope
@Hurricane16686 ай бұрын
This is true. 2 spacecraft are outfitted for Axiom missions. The earliest a NASA 4 seat capsule can be ready is this fall. SpaceX flight suits need to be manufactured
@BFDT-46 ай бұрын
Learn what can be learned from the Starliner and then dump it into the Pacific somewhere.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
I'd say take it apart and see what went wrong...
@WilliamRWarrenJr6 ай бұрын
No: SSTO (Single Stage to Orbit) is *_NOT_* technologically feasible right now.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Actually... RDEs make it feasible and we have those now... So does air breathing horizontal launch and landing.
@rogerrussell95446 ай бұрын
Send Calhoun to the ISS and have HIM ride it down to earth! He needs to face the results of his own policies.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Agreed.
@TheWadetube6 ай бұрын
I feel that space planes must return. Not the giant size of the original shuttle but at least double the size of the dream chaser. Put extra fuel on board. Extra fuel could be put inside the crew compartment and corridors by means of a silicone lined nylon or kevlar fuel bag. This would be used up first to save fuel in the main tanks. It would be like having a booster but on the inside of the ship. It would be in the way during launch, but everyone will be in their seat during launch. The bag will collapse like a raisin and can be folded up into a small compartment and then the crew will have room to move around and unload cargo. I use this same method for the Millenium Falcon design to be able to reach orbit, by having thousands of gallons occupying the inside of the ship, it will be used first, collapse like empty sleeping bags and then rolled up to free up space inside the Falcon. This principle could be used in any space plane to have duel use of interior space, first for fuel and then for work and movement. Plus the bags can be custom shaped and fitted to a given compartment. Good luck.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Britain had a nice one planned... As did Germany.
@TheWadetube6 ай бұрын
@@terranspaceacademy Yes, the Avalon or something. I think it's hard to close off the air duct around the compressors for rocket combustion. My designs incorporate a separate engine, stolen off of the SR71 to reach high altitude and mach 3 and then hit the rocket engines for the final kick into space. What is the altitude of the booster when it separates? A good jet engine is at least 6 times more fuel efficient than a rocket engine. The space plane will plow through the atmosphere on re-entry protecting those jet engines above the wings until the plane levels out around mach 3 again and have a little jet fuel left over to get home on.
@danieldmg6 ай бұрын
Very interesting.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Thank you Daniel.
@darkguardian13146 ай бұрын
The elephant in the room...and I've been saying this for years. Why doesn't the US (International) Space Industries standardize their hardware so SpaceX gear can work on Boeing etc. Everything is a one-off proprietary special design. We have it for other industries like computers, electronics, military, and shipping cargo, etc using ISO standards. Standardization brings down costs of not reinventing the wheel and makes things safer for everyone. Another idea is to require all manned US spacecraft have a spare seat for emergencies. There should be a move by NASA to always have a rescue spacecraft on standby which can be rotated out for missions to keep things fresh. There are glaring issues with ISS and we shouldn't just live with "you ride down with what you rode up in." If the Russian or American side is cut off like the Mir accident, what then.
@louiscypher41866 ай бұрын
Because companies like Boeing have relied on exclusive contracts for decades. If everything is standardised that means more competition.
@darkguardian13146 ай бұрын
@@louiscypher4186 It's just a big scam to get money from the government like the $10,000 hammers. Defense and space have been scamming the US taxpayers for decades. Even the gatekeepers that are supposed to watch for this are bribed and given exec jobs after they leave their government jobs. Why have Mission Control in Houston when it could easily be at the launch site in Florida...politics. Disgusted...
@terranspaceacademy5 ай бұрын
I think they will when rescues become an issue.
@douginorlando62606 ай бұрын
Boeing and NASA are gonna force the Starliner astronauts to play Russian roulette by ordering them to return inside the Starliner
@douginorlando62606 ай бұрын
Only whistle blowers have a more dangerous job at Boeing
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
sadly true...
@clytle3746 ай бұрын
I've wondered if Nasa, or maybe just SpaceX alone, is moving in the background to ready a Dragon launch for rescue. Even if you are on the "Musk is bad" side of argument, it would be self serving to rescue the Starliner crew. There was also a recent dip in Falcon launches, which anecdotally could be from a reprioritizing of manufacturing. The chances of losing both of your return vehicles and not losing the crew seems highly unlikely.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
They won't have to... Just send up some suits on the next cargo run. Then send them back in the Crew Dragon with the others. Plenty of room.
@forcivilizaton50216 ай бұрын
I heard recently that SpaceX is approved with decommissioning the ISS, but with the way things are with Boeing I’m not too sure of that anymore…
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Agree to disagree my friend. Something breaks with robots no one dies. Get the infrastructure and systems up and running.
@whiplash80116 ай бұрын
Let’s get it done. God, darn it no more excuses.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
We Agree!!
@patrickriley62126 ай бұрын
I’m still not understanding why Starliner was chosen before Dream Chaser, which appears to be a direct descendant of the HL 20 craft, let’s throw money into Sierra Space if we are going to throw it around! We can then quickly get a crewed version. It would be awesome to see and have a vehicle that could take off from a runway and fly to space…but this concept has been around for a while and has never gotten off the ground…is it really just a matter of money? The Chinese don’t appear to want to participate in cooperative missions with the US.
@louiscypher41866 ай бұрын
If Sierra Space wants in on the government gravy train they need to start working with the military. Look up all the space companies that get government funding, all military contractors. Even SpaceX took on DoD transport missions.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Politics I think... No other reason. Dream Chaser is the perfect lifeboat.
@hyeung16 ай бұрын
16:10 "ISS to Tiangong Rescue Scenario"? Seriously? The other way around is a lot more likely these days.
@jamskinner6 ай бұрын
Based on what? China vast history of running a space station? Everyone knows China just copies and produces most of its tech.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
True but I get yelled at either way...
@ronwatkins57756 ай бұрын
Bringing back astronauts on Dragon they will need some sort of adapter for the suit life support.
@louiscypher41866 ай бұрын
Just bring them spare suits. It doesn't need to be comfortable just bring the biggest suits they have.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
The Dragon would go up with them. We need generic "rescue suits" anyway. Not everything can be bespoke.
@wc76046 ай бұрын
Boeing is waiting for the Dragon/Falcon accident.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
It might be awhile... Simple, umcomplicated, and strong. Tractor vs Ferrari...
@johnryan21936 ай бұрын
It seems that BOEING has an internal saboteur, no company with Boeings expertise should be suffering so many failures .
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Sadly John, I think it's an inside job.
@65gtotrips6 ай бұрын
I think he got some of the years and months wrong ?
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Probably...
@timothynechville83266 ай бұрын
Wowoow woo. Does anyone else agree with me that it is far more efficient to take off from 17,000 ft above sea level than 10 or 200? It is 16,000+ ft closer way less fuel and smarter.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
I like it
@timothynechville83266 ай бұрын
@@terranspaceacademy got money? I have skills and experience.
@steve50904066 ай бұрын
I've been saying now for at least a year that the StarShip should have the hot staging ring permanently attached to its base, as an emergency landing stand. Also that the falcon capsule could use the draco thrusters available for the emergency launch escape system could be used for something else as double duty, even landing and takeoff from moon.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Great minds Steve! :-)
@raymathews14746 ай бұрын
Boeing's rep isnt worth human lives. bring it back under remote control, the astros can hitch a ride later.
@pointnemo3696 ай бұрын
Something like a human rated X-37B as a life boat.
@thomasboese37936 ай бұрын
Dream Chaser! It will go for its first, uncrewed flight later this year.
@ThatOpalGuy6 ай бұрын
Do nothing, the capsule is FINE>
@jamskinner6 ай бұрын
And what if they die. Then what?
@louiscypher41866 ай бұрын
@@jamskinner They'll rename two high schools.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
As long as you drive and I'm by the door. :-)
@context_eidolon_music6 ай бұрын
Shoulda used more layers of carbon fiber.
@terranspaceacademy5 ай бұрын
Can always use a couple more layers ;-)
@RickL_was_here6 ай бұрын
Boeing needs to direct ALL their focus and energy on building reliable airplanes, enough of this. Dragon isn't ready to make a trip is it? It's like a 5 month turn around so not sure where it's at and if they can even do it.
@louiscypher41866 ай бұрын
The Next dragon launch is scheduled for 2 months from now. So it should be close or even ready now. Additionally they don't need to send a dragon as there's one already docked along with a Soyuz. They just need a resupply with space suits or adaptors that fit Soyuz or Dragon.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
I agree. At one time they had the bandwidth... They clearly do not today.
@nicolamastascusa81736 ай бұрын
14:15 Just a point on pronunciation. 'Shenzhou' is pronounced, 'Shen-Joe', like the current US President. That is all. Great vids mate.
@terranspaceacademy5 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@TheCNYMike6 ай бұрын
Starliner has 70 hours worth of helium aboard, 10 times what would be needed for the trip home. All but one of the malfunctioning RCS thrusters is back online. Using Dragon for a rescue faces logistical and practical challenges making it very risky and complicated. Most likely they will return home on Starliner.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
It's not the helium. It's the number of problems that keep cropping up. Last time the service module separation software was flawed... Is it good now? Won't know till they come home I guess.
@DragonLN6 ай бұрын
We can be anti Boeing without being pro musk.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
Indeed. I'm pro space but not anti-Earth
@viarnay6 ай бұрын
Chinese SS looks modern, tidy and....empty, too empty I think...
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
That's their virtual duplicate... The real one has some good pics but they are sensitive.
@dukenukem0016 ай бұрын
reason is never reasonable !!
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
But what's the reason for reason never being reasonable :-)
@MyKharli6 ай бұрын
lol we don`t rescue people needing food and water and shelter on earth so rescuing people in space is bonkers .
@terranspaceacademy5 ай бұрын
So they should all die? I would disagree with the conclusion but not with the premise. If we send someone into space, we have an obligation to protect them.
@stormsfromcalifornia43796 ай бұрын
i hope it son't be as ass columbia diaster..the thhe woorse thing to do for nasa is not do nothing.im sure there doing all they can if worse comes to worse crrew stays on iss and crew dragon capsule will attempt a rescue i hope it dont come to that
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
We can have a repeat of that for sure.
@wyattnoise6 ай бұрын
@wyattnoise 0 seconds ago Mustang asking the right questions... How is a rocket "fully and rapidly reusable" if the hit staging ring (which weight like 9 tons) is dumped every time? You SpaceX leg humpers are so funny.
@wyattnoise6 ай бұрын
"Hot stage"
@thomasboese37936 ай бұрын
Design changes with the needs of the craft. It was first built without hot staging, and testing (real-world testing) gave birth to a better design for a better flight. The 'current' block of the booster/starship is far, far from being useful in anyway but TESTING! Don't worry, by the time Block-3 flies the craft will look different. Meantime Boeing built one (1) version of the Starliner several times and each one has had the same problems. (Lack of learning in many people's minds.) It's a Ford Pinto all over again. (The Pinto looked nice and had major problems which were never fixed over the years it was built. Other than branding it Bobcat for Mercury, no changes were made. (Well, one, the cost went up and the Bobcat had a bit better seats.)
@jamskinner6 ай бұрын
They won’t dump it every time. It’s temporary.
@charliejohnston19786 ай бұрын
Many of these highly technical problems can not easily be fixed due to poorly qualified female quota-engineers, that do not have the aptitude and focus necessary to solve super complex issues in any complicated program. In 1970, NASA was forced by the US government to start hiring female quota engineers, managers and technicians. This lead to confusion, mistakes, high risks and bad judgments. This compensate level deficiency eventually caused the shut down of the Apollo program, and Apollo 17 was the last craft to visit the moon via that program..
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
That is a very sexist and misogynistic thing to say Charlie. So males can be trained properly but females can't. No one was forced to hire a poor anything. Just give qualified candidates a chance instead of excluding them entirely as we did in the past. The bad judgment was NASA's original refusal to hire qualified women in the first place.
@randycurtiss61476 ай бұрын
At first I thought maybe this guy does his homework. Then he starts talking about Starship and catching the starship with the tower. And I was like okay maybe this is a really old video. This video is 2 days old as I'm writing this. The Starship was never intended to be caught by the chopsticks on the tower and the only time it will ever touch Starship is when it's stacking it. Starship has Landing legs . All of the Starships have Landing legs from the very beginning.
@rogerphelps99396 ай бұрын
You are very out of dae. The standard starship saves on weight by not having landing legs.
@fabmanly10706 ай бұрын
Soooooooooooooo wrong, go away and do some homework.
@randycurtiss61476 ай бұрын
@@rogerphelps9939 At the moment, all Starships have 6 landing legs located on the inside of the skirt. For transport, launch, and flight, they are folded up 180° inwards. Cut and pasted from spacex website. Took 2 seconds to find. You may want to update your Google skills. They have been on every starship since prototype testing began. You can see them.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
They have been talking about catching it on the tower... Recently. But maybe it was never a serious consideration. My point is that I want the landing legs to be the hot staging ring.
@terranspaceacademy6 ай бұрын
That's not saving weight/mass... Make the legs the staging ring.