The Saturn 5 had no launch failures.
They lost allot hardware during testing or trying manufacture them first
This was the S-IVB 503 stage destine for apollo 8 Saturn V

ER9_NdqWAAEcRt2.jpg
 
They lost allot hardware during testing or trying manufacture them first

True but these were all ground failures which provided valuable lessons.

This was the S-IVB 503 stage destine for apollo 8 Saturn V

IIRC that S-IVB stage explosion was the result of the catastrophic failure of one of the helium gas spherical storage tanks exploding due to a faulty weld resulting from the wrong filler material used for the weld (In other words a manufacturing defect due to someone's fuckup on the production-line).
 
The Saturn 5 had no launch failures.
Apollo 6 was a launch vehicle failure
Saturn V was not reusable.
Saturn V had 4 test units built per stage.
there was static firing test stands for each stage
a dynamic test stand was built for the whole vehicle.

spaceX uses a hardware rich flight test program
I bet 9 Starship flight test vehicles are cheaper
 
Cheap you say?

Which would you rather work on--a car engine, or the Sistine Chapel?

Might that be the difference between Falcon and Starship?

Since Byeman's pet hobby is verbally abusing anyone's attempt at brainstorming--I'll ask everyone else but him to answer this for-instance:

Which staging method presents a greater threat to engines of a second stage...a confined environment like Starship's Raptors face--or something more akin to asparagus staging as in ALS?
 
Cheap you say?
They are

Which would you rather work on--a car engine, or the Sistine Chapel?

Might that be the difference between Falcon and Starship?

not an accurate or relevant analogy.
Starship is not a work of art
Since Byeman's pet hobby is verbally abusing anyone's attempt at brainstorming-
Only when there is no brain involve or they are inane
Like Starship changing to parallel staging.
and repeating the same nonsense isn't going to help your case.

Which staging method presents a greater threat to engines of a second stage...a confined environment like Starship's Raptors face--or something more akin to asparagus staging as in ALS?
Not relevant. ALS still had serial staging for an upper stage.
And parallel staging makes the vehicle structure more complex.
A new interstage was revealed Monday
 

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Apollo 6 had problems during its' flight but it wasn't a failure as it still yield useful data so it was as a qualified success (Apollo 8 was originally supposed to have been the third and final unmanned Saturn 5 test-flight before becoming the first manned Saturn 5 flight).
 
Apollo 6 had problems during its' flight but it wasn't a failure as it still yield useful data so it was as a qualified success (Apollo 8 was originally supposed to have been the third and final unmanned Saturn 5 test-flight before becoming the first manned Saturn 5 flight).
SA-502 was a failure, plain and simple. It would have aborted if there was crew onboard and the third stage failed to restart so the vehicle didn't complete its task. Only because the CSM had excess propellant, the "mission" could continue and achieve most of the objectives.
 
SpaceX is under no such scrutiny by Pentagon budget hawks, even as it becomes integral to US Defense agencies. Judging by Musk's own metrics — not just reaching Mars, but building a million-person colony by 2044 — the private company is lagging way behind its childlike ambitions.

In the meantime, it's burning through about $1.5 billion a year on the joint Starbase and Starship program alone, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Though SpaceX is currently profitable thanks almost entirely to Starlink, a subscription-based satellite internet service, the company's future hinges on Starship. Without a viable Starship, the company's $1.6 billion in outstanding debtwill only grow as the launch debris piles up.

When that happens, the Pentagon's contracts will likely ensure that SpaceX is too big to fail — great news for Musk, bad news for US taxpayers, and a curious contradiction in a supposedly free-market system.

 
Comes off too much as narrative manipulation versus honest concern. Also, colonizing Mars is childlike? How arrogant. I used to read Futurism occasionally, but it’s gone downhill rapidly in the quality of its writing. Even the title is a blatant misunderstanding of reality - and I would bet that the author knows little about NASA’s numerous operational losses in the 50s and 60s, let alone more current failures. Reading the article, it’s completely unbalanced and only quotes people who hate SpaceX (anyone who references Will Lockett to support their claims should have their motives questioned). Definitely narrative manipulation, and nothing to be taken seriously, only rejected.
 
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The legendary R&D on Atlas iCBM
the USAF not care if rocket explode during testing
So long as General Dynamics produce Atlas and modified them after every explosion
Until the ICBM was ready for Service

you could say the Atlas ICBM was first hardware rich flight test program in US
 
More from the space Bucket concerning the future of Spaceship and Mars exploration:


Just a few hours ago, SpaceX hosted a presentation on Starship and its role in future missions to Mars. Fortunately, it included quite a bit of new information, both on design upgrades for Super Heavy and Starship, but also future launch goals, Mars plans, and even renders.
We also got more insight on the schedules the company is trying to hit with future Starship catch attempts and general launch progress.
Chapters:
0:00 - Intro
0:27 - Vehicle Changes

As for SA-502 it was a qualified success but if it had been manned and the mission ended in a Mode-IC high-altitude abort then, yes, it would've been a failure.
 
Musk's Mars talk CGI was gorgeous and the whole project is bold and exciting.
Aiming for Mars, grounded in a septic tank.
 
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Also, colonizing Mars is childlike? How arrogant. I used to read Futurism occasionally, but it’s gone downhill rapidly in the quality of its writing.
Agreed. That piece was all about politics....even if Starship never flies again, SpaceX's Falcon will go down in history as perhaps the greatest rocket ever made. You have to give Musk props, however you may feel about his views. On balance, Elon has been more boon than bane.

I forget the internet handle of the guy that talked about triangles.

Oh—just in? Jared is on the way out.

I am going to be sick…
 
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if your goal is concern trolling it’s a great article, but the author is not particularly honest, and assumes whatever he thinks will let him support his predetermined conclusion. His opening paragraphs about no outsiders having access to SpaceX’s financials undercut his entire argument.
 
Musk's problem is that he is destination-centric. China is more about technology development.

Falcon succeeds because it was built upon youthful enthusiasm. Starship fails because it was built on ideology.

Were I a demon capable of possessing humans--I'd give tween girls a break and possess Elon....and go to the HOTOL guys:

"I will never abandon you--your life and work have meaning...even if we can't make this work today, tomorrow..or ever---YOU are not expendable."

That would give the Reaction guys the same morale SpaceX gained with Falcon, but is losing to Starship.

Nations are to be run with laws not men--but aerospace makes leaps with men, not lay-offs.
 
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Musk's problem is that he is destination-centric. China is more about technology development.

Falcon succeeds because it was built upon youthful enthusiasm. Starship fails because it was built on ideology.

Were I a demon capable of possessing humans--I'd give tween girls a break and possess Elon....and go to the HOTOL guys:
Wrong again. Just a bunch of nonsense

Starship is not "destination-centric". The spacecraft is designed to transport both crew and cargo to a variety of destinations, including Earth orbit, the Moon, and Mars. It is a tanker, lander and launch vehicle.

Technology development? New tiles, TPS, Entry trajectories, Raptors, power systems, thrusters, space suits, etc.
Even though unseen at this point, life support systems, surface equipment, etc
Falcon succeeds because it was built upon youthful enthusiasm. Starship fails because it was built on ideology.
Wrong on both points. Falcon succeeds because it is low cost
Starship hasn't failed

Were I a demon capable of possessing humans--I'd give tween girls a break and possess Elon....and go to the HOTOL* guys:
Wrong again.
A. What makes you think Skylon will work?
B. Musk doesn't believe in wings

That would give the Reaction guys the same morale SpaceX gained with Falcon, but is losing to Starship.
SpaceX doesn't not have a morale problem with starship.
Morale is not going to make Skylon work

*HOTOL is not Skylon
 

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