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posted by CoolHand on Friday September 15 2017, @02:02PM   Printer-friendly
from the things-that-go-boom! dept.

Over at Ars Technica is a story, SpaceX proves it's not afraid to fail by releasing a landing blooper reel:

SpaceX is famously not afraid to fail. "There's a silly notion that failure's not an option at NASA," company founder Elon Musk has said in the past. "Failure is an option here. If things are not failing, you are not innovating enough."

In recent years, others in the aerospace industry have come to see the sense of this ethos, as SpaceX has tinkered with its Falcon 9 rocket to make it a mostly reusable booster, finally achieving reuse of the rocket's first stage earlier this year. To go further in space, at a lower cost, new things must be tried.

Even Gene Kranz, who famously said that failure was not an option as a NASA flight director during the Apollo lunar missions, has recently enthused about SpaceX, saying, "Space involves risk, and I think that's the one thing about Elon Musk and all the various space entrepreneurs: they're willing to risk their future in order to accomplish the objective that they have decided on. I think we as a nation have to learn that, as an important part of this, to step forward and accept risk."

To that end, SpaceX has put its failure on display in a new video showing the company's (often explosive) attempts to first return the Falcon 9 first stage to the ocean, then to an ocean-based drone ship, and more. Along they way the engineers have clearly learned a lot about rockets, propellants, and the pitfalls of trying to return a very large rocket from space.

Note: the apocryphal saying was not from the actual Apollo 13 mission. It was a line from the movie based on the mission. See this section on the Wikipedia entry for Gene Kranz.

With that out of the way, I find it absolutely amazing that just a few short years ago, the concept of a rocket that could land upright was science fiction. Now, it happens so routinely for SpaceX that they feel comfortable releasing a "blooper reel"!

(I'm curious, though, how many millions of dollars does that video show going up in flames?)


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  • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Friday September 15 2017, @02:06PM (2 children)

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Friday September 15 2017, @02:06PM (#568440) Journal

    Don't tell the helicopter parents about this!

    Seriously, you accept the risk, you honor those who are bitten by the risk, and you move on. FFS, people are killed every day in automobiles, and we haven't decided to discard them.

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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by bob_super on Friday September 15 2017, @05:49PM

    by bob_super (1357) on Friday September 15 2017, @05:49PM (#568575)

    Everyone seems to be missing the most important point: Landing the booster back in one piece isn't the primary mission.

    SpaceX was doing their experiments, which initially ended in pretty awesome failures, after delivering the payload to orbit (not all payload made it, but that's also new rocket design for you).

    Task number 1 of parenting is raising a functional human being to adulthood (don't nitpick), which is what you should parallel to "raising sat to transfer orbit". Task 2 of landing boosters despite the fireworks risk is choosing after-school programs which could result in a sprain (not a concussion).
    The taxpayer subsidies were used for the primary mission, hoping that the secondary one would bring costs down. Not to directly subsidize giant fireballs.

  • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 15 2017, @06:00PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 15 2017, @06:00PM (#568586)

    SpaceX released this not to prove it's unafraid of failure. Anyone paying attention knows as much.

    SpaceX released this from a PR perspective, to remind people that success follows failures. Most of these events are year(s) old now, while in the meantime the general populace has come to expect routine spectacular success from SpaceX. Now they're a month and change from launching (or attempting to) a totally new platform, and this is actually a great way to visually set expectations.