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SpaceX Starship SN7.1 SLOMO Pressure test till destruction | SN7 Pop test in SLO-MO
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Watch the epic starship prototype SN7.1 Pressure test or some says POP test in Slow motion, 4k and 60fps.
Elon musk led SpaceX conducted a pressure test late in the night for their upcoming starship rocket. SN7 performed a pop test or the pressure test to check its capability to handle maximum pressure. although to human rate a rocket NASA has guidelines set at 8.4 bar pressure. Hence anything above that is desirable. We don't really know right now, if it was able to handle the pressure for desirable limits or not. Starship SN7.1 pressure test was conducted in boca chica, texas.
SpaceX is set to intentionally destroy the Starship SN7.1 prototype in a pressurize to failure test. The test will help SpaceX understand the limits of the current design.
SN 7.1 was filled with liquid nitogen slowly. Next we were able to see the frost coming on the SN 7.1 tank which is fully nominal. This was a very long process, but at last we witnessed a beautiful pop of the SpaceX Starship SN 7.1 tank.
I really hope that it passed the test
Credit - LabPadre (with permission)
0:00 - Introduction
0:03 - Sn7.1 pressure test
0:30 - SN7.1 Pop
1:35 - SloMo
Starship is SpaceX’s next-generation super-heavy launch vehicle. Starship can refer to the second stage of the vehicle or the entirety of the launch vehicle. Its first stage, known as Super Heavy, will have 31 Raptor engines and will produce 71.2 MN (16 million lbf) of thrust. That will make it more powerful than the Saturn V moon rocket. Starship and Super Heavy will lift off from a launchpad in either Boca Chica, Texas, Cape Canaveral, Florida, or from a modified oil rig. After main engine cut-off (MECO), Super Heavy will separate from Starship and perform several maneuvers to go back and land on a landing pad near the launch site. Starship will continue on to orbit. Depending on the mission, Starship will either deploy its payload or rendezvous with several “tanker” Starships and refuel before continuing to the Moon or Mars.
Prior to re-entry, Starship will perform a re-entry burn to bleed off some of its velocity. It will then flip around and re-enter horizontally. Just before landing, Starship will flip around for a second time, performing a “belly flop maneuver” to orient itself to a vertical position. It will fire three of its Raptor engines and land in the same way as the Falcon 9 and Super Heavy first stages.
SN5 and SN6 both feature a single Raptor, SpaceX's powerful next-generation engine. The final Starship vehicle will sport six Raptors, stand about 165 feet (50 m) tall and be capable of carrying up to 100 people, Musk has said.
The operational Starship will launch from Earth atop a gigantic rocket called Super Heavy, which will have 31 Raptors of its own. Both vehicles will be fully and rapidly reusable, potentially slashing the cost of spaceflight enough to make crewed trips to and from the moon, Mars and other deep-space destinations economically feasible, Musk has said.
Super Heavy will land back on Earth after each liftoff; Starship will be powerful enough on its own to get itself off Mars and the moon, both of which have much weaker gravitational pulls than our planet does.
#SpaceX #SN7.1 #Starship
Elon musk led SpaceX conducted a pressure test late in the night for their upcoming starship rocket. SN7 performed a pop test or the pressure test to check its capability to handle maximum pressure. although to human rate a rocket NASA has guidelines set at 8.4 bar pressure. Hence anything above that is desirable. We don't really know right now, if it was able to handle the pressure for desirable limits or not. Starship SN7.1 pressure test was conducted in boca chica, texas.
SpaceX is set to intentionally destroy the Starship SN7.1 prototype in a pressurize to failure test. The test will help SpaceX understand the limits of the current design.
SN 7.1 was filled with liquid nitogen slowly. Next we were able to see the frost coming on the SN 7.1 tank which is fully nominal. This was a very long process, but at last we witnessed a beautiful pop of the SpaceX Starship SN 7.1 tank.
I really hope that it passed the test
Credit - LabPadre (with permission)
0:00 - Introduction
0:03 - Sn7.1 pressure test
0:30 - SN7.1 Pop
1:35 - SloMo
Starship is SpaceX’s next-generation super-heavy launch vehicle. Starship can refer to the second stage of the vehicle or the entirety of the launch vehicle. Its first stage, known as Super Heavy, will have 31 Raptor engines and will produce 71.2 MN (16 million lbf) of thrust. That will make it more powerful than the Saturn V moon rocket. Starship and Super Heavy will lift off from a launchpad in either Boca Chica, Texas, Cape Canaveral, Florida, or from a modified oil rig. After main engine cut-off (MECO), Super Heavy will separate from Starship and perform several maneuvers to go back and land on a landing pad near the launch site. Starship will continue on to orbit. Depending on the mission, Starship will either deploy its payload or rendezvous with several “tanker” Starships and refuel before continuing to the Moon or Mars.
Prior to re-entry, Starship will perform a re-entry burn to bleed off some of its velocity. It will then flip around and re-enter horizontally. Just before landing, Starship will flip around for a second time, performing a “belly flop maneuver” to orient itself to a vertical position. It will fire three of its Raptor engines and land in the same way as the Falcon 9 and Super Heavy first stages.
SN5 and SN6 both feature a single Raptor, SpaceX's powerful next-generation engine. The final Starship vehicle will sport six Raptors, stand about 165 feet (50 m) tall and be capable of carrying up to 100 people, Musk has said.
The operational Starship will launch from Earth atop a gigantic rocket called Super Heavy, which will have 31 Raptors of its own. Both vehicles will be fully and rapidly reusable, potentially slashing the cost of spaceflight enough to make crewed trips to and from the moon, Mars and other deep-space destinations economically feasible, Musk has said.
Super Heavy will land back on Earth after each liftoff; Starship will be powerful enough on its own to get itself off Mars and the moon, both of which have much weaker gravitational pulls than our planet does.
#SpaceX #SN7.1 #Starship
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