RoosterTheReal t1_j7rvdvv wrote
33 engines!!??? I surely hope this disaster will be streamed live somewhere??
jamesbideaux t1_j7ry8qo wrote
nasaspaceflight (not part of nasa) has permanent streams of starbase operations, and cape operations. I am sure lap padre will also livestream it.
Keep in mind that falcon heavy uses 27 engines at the same time (+1 on the upper stage).
RoosterTheReal t1_j7s0ra2 wrote
That’s a lot of engines. I hope it lights up with no problems
Dont_Think_So t1_j7vkk0f wrote
SpaceX has more experience than anyone else in lighting dozens of rocket engines at once. They've never had a Falcon Heavy failure in 5 years of operation.
It's not the number of engines that's the concern, it's the sheer power. This is the most powerful rocket ever made. It produces as much thrust as two Saturn Vs. The danger here is that something on the ground gets damaged by the sheer magnitude of this thing. And failure here is very possible.
[deleted] t1_j7u6qph wrote
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