Recommended Posts

So, summarizing the Musk tweetstorm...

 

Raptor (sea level w/gimbal), RBoost (sea level w/o gimbal), and Raptor Vacuum (RVac) have been evolved/merged into,

 

Raptor 2: 230 tonnes of thrust, either gimbaled or fixed.

Raptor Vacuum (RVac): may or may not have a Raptor 2 core, TBD

 

Super Heavy: 32-33 x Raptor 2, up to 7,600 tonne-force of thrust
Starship: looking at 3 Raptor 2's, up to 6 RVacs

2 hours ago, FloatingFatMan said:

Oh wow... And people still take this guy seriously?  🤦‍♂️

Yes, because retrieving space junk/failed satellites not a new idea - the Shuttle did it in 1984. STS-51A (Discovery) retrieved 2 failed satellites (Palapa B2 and Westar 6). It did this after deploying Anik D2 and Syncom IV-1.

 

The Starship is best viewed as a super-Shuttle; cheaper to launch/operate because of reusability, capable of BEO missions, and with a honkin' huge payload bay & door. 

 

 

Edited by DocM
  • Like 1
39 minutes ago, DocM said:

Yes, because retrieving space junk/failed satellites not a new idea - the Shuttle did it in 1984. STS-51A (Discovery) retrieved 2 failed satellites (Palapa B2 and Westar 6). It did this after deploying Anik D2 and Syncom IV-1.

 

The Starship is best viewed as a super-Shuttle; cheaper to launch/operate because of reusability, capable of BEO missions, and with a honkin' huge payload bay & door. 

Retrieving space junk isn't my problem with his post... Chopping it up into little bits with the front of your ship? THAT is my problem.  Utterly ridiculous nonsense you'd expect from the imagination of a 5 year old, not a grown engineer.

  • Facepalm 1
10 minutes ago, FloatingFatMan said:

Retrieving space junk isn't my problem with his post... Chopping it up into little bits with the front of your ship? THAT is my problem.  Utterly ridiculous nonsense you'd expect from the imagination of a 5 year old, not a grown engineer.

 

The misconception is yours;  the vehicle's development name is Chomper, so "chomping up" debris simply means it opens its alligator jaw door and secures it inside. Easy enough to do with Kevlar or Vectran netting which tightens around it.

1 minute ago, DocM said:

 

The misconception is yours;  the vehicle's development name is Chomper, so "chomping up" debris simply means it opens its alligator jaw door and secures it inside. Easy enough to do with Kevlar or Vectran netting which tightens around it.

Elon's OWN WORDS, buttercup...

 

"Yes, we can fly Starship around space & chomp up debris with the moving fairing door"

 

Emphasis mine.  There's no misconception here, just the stupid words of a conman.

  • Facepalm 1
Just now, FloatingFatMan said:

Elon's OWN WORDS, buttercup...

 

"Yes, we can fly Starship around space & chomp up debris with the moving fairing door"

 

Emphasis mine.  There's no misconception here, just the stupid words of a conman.

 

"Chomp" can mean either bite or chew, in this context it's the former.

 

chomp

verb

\ ˈchämp  , ˈchȯmp \

chomped; chomping; chomps

Definition of chomp

intransitive verb

1: to chew or bite on something

 

Chomper bites, like an alligator.

6 minutes ago, DocM said:

 

"Chomp" can mean either bite or chew, in this context it's the former.

 

chomp

verb

\ ˈchämp  , ˈchȯmp \

chomped; chomping; chomps

Definition of chomp

intransitive verb

1: to chew or bite on something

 

Chomper bites, like an alligator.

However you try to define it to make Musk not appear an idiot, his meaning is clear.  Use the front of the ship to capture pieces of space junk in a biting motion and break them into smaller pieces in the process.  A monumentally stupid idea, but I'm not the slightest bit surprised that you think it's great...

Theres nothing wrong with his tweet. While playing hungry hungry hippos I have never once chomped the balls into smaller pieces. he mentioned nothing about breaking it up, everything floating in space is debris, and we have a tonne of small/medium sized crap up there besides satellites. He could have used swallow but as the door is essentially a mouth chomping is more fitting.

I know you hate elon, but hes closer to fixing the space debris problem right now than anyone else. actions are speaking louder than words.

  • Like 1
13 minutes ago, Louisifer said:

Theres nothing wrong with his tweet. While playing hungry hungry hippos I have never once chomped the balls into smaller pieces. he mentioned nothing about breaking it up, everything floating in space is debris, and we have a tonne of small/medium sized crap up there besides satellites. He could have used swallow but as the door is essentially a mouth chomping is more fitting.

He literally said "chomp up debris" is his tweet... :rolleyes: 

 

Quote

I know you hate elon, but hes closer to fixing the space debris problem right now than anyone else. actions are speaking louder than words.

I don't hate him, I just don't believe the sun shines out his backside and view everything he proposes with an actual PRACTICAL eye that's firmly grounded in reality that can see just how far many of his promises actually are from reality.

 

He's a dreamer, which isn't necessarily a bad thing.  But many of his dreams are just that, dreams.

 

Oh, and he's a bit of a plagiarist, too. ;)

 

 

EDIT: As for the space debris problem, I too used to think it was a big issue, until I decided to actually learn a bit more about it.  Just a little knowledge of orbital mechanics and reading a few scientific papers, and I learned it's much less of a problem than people think.  The vast majority of it will just de-orbit from a combination atmospheric drag and gravity after a few years and most of it will burn up.  What doesn't is far more likely to hit the ocean than any people, in fact, the odds of getting hit by space debris are somewhat lower then me landing a date with Scarlett Johansson! :p

 

Edited by FloatingFatMan
3 minutes ago, FloatingFatMan said:

He literally said "chomp up debris" is his tweet

The hungry hippos still stand, you can chomp up balls all day with their chomping action, if he said grind up or crush then i would see your point.

 

We need dreamers, the billionaires are using up their own money or money of other rich folk, if they fail then all the advances along the way make it easier for the next person to take us to the stars.

  • Like 3
4 minutes ago, FloatingFatMan said:

 

I don't hate him, I just don't believe the sun shines out his backside and view everything he proposes with an actual PRACTICAL eye that's firmly grounded in reality that can see just how far many of his promises actually are from reality.

 

He's a dreamer, which isn't necessarily a bad thing.  But many of his dreams are just that, dreams.

 

Oh, and he's a bit of a plagiarist, too. ;)

 

There's no need to lie...  There's 51 pages of this thread, and many of them have you running your mouth about how much you think Elon is an idiot.  It seems pretty clear that you spend a lot of time overthinking everything thing that he says.  Not sure why you're so threatened about discussing ideas and solutions to problems in space travel...

Just now, Astra.Xtreme said:

There's no need to lie...  There's 51 pages of this thread, and many of them have you running your mouth about how much you think Elon is an idiot.  It seems pretty clear that you spend a lot of time overthinking everything thing that he says.  Not sure why you're so threatened about discussing ideas and solutions to problems in space travel...

Because I have a firm grasp of what's possible, and what's stupid. 

 

Landing rocket boosters was a great idea and I congratulate him on making it both possible and reliable, but his economics don't add up.

Going from one side of the world to the other on a rocket in just an hour sounds great, but it's literally impossible.  You can't even load the fuel in that time, let alone the passengers...

Solar roofs was a great idea, but the reality is that hardly any installations have happened, they don't produce the promised results, and they're more than double the promised cost.

Affordable electric cars was a great idea and I congratulate him on making the industry invest, but his cars are built like garbage and his promises about self-driving have yet to be realised.  Roundabouts are easy, he said.. OK, so why can't your cars go around roundabouts, Elon?

Electric trucks was a great idea, but they carefully didn't mention the weight of the batteries needed to haul an average truck load.  The figures rapidly exceed the maximum allowed weight on roads, making them economically unviable as they just can't haul a big enough load.

Cybertruck looks neat, but it's a deathtrap for anyone not inside the thing.

 

16 minutes ago, FloatingFatMan said:

Because I have a firm grasp of what's possible, and what's stupid. 

 

Landing rocket boosters was a great idea and I congratulate him on making it both possible and reliable, but his economics don't add up.

Going from one side of the world to the other on a rocket in just an hour sounds great, but it's literally impossible.  You can't even load the fuel in that time, let alone the passengers...

Solar roofs was a great idea, but the reality is that hardly any installations have happened, they don't produce the promised results, and they're more than double the promised cost.

Affordable electric cars was a great idea and I congratulate him on making the industry invest, but his cars are built like garbage and his promises about self-driving have yet to be realised.  Roundabouts are easy, he said.. OK, so why can't your cars go around roundabouts, Elon?

Electric trucks was a great idea, but they carefully didn't mention the weight of the batteries needed to haul an average truck load.  The figures rapidly exceed the maximum allowed weight on roads, making them economically unviable as they just can't haul a big enough load.

Cybertruck looks neat, but it's a deathtrap for anyone not inside the thing.

 

This is exactly the problem...  You're so convinced about yourself that you don't even bother to look at the facts.  How long does it take to load fuel on a Falcon 9 rocket?  How long does it take to board people onto a passenger jet?  Do you really think those things take an hour?
Regardless, the hour timescale is about flight time, not total time from placing said rocket on launch pad to removing it from the landing pad.  Again, you look way too far into these things and get it completely wrong.

Not sure what you don't get about auto pilot being beta?  Ever heard of the levels of autonomy?  Educate yourself on it...  Nowhere has it been stated that Tesla's are at the level of full autonomy.
We're seeing the first electrics trucks soon and they will get better over time.   Just as electric cars have.  Now sure why you think the Cybertruck is any more dangerous than a semi or other large truck.  Again, reaching for such distant straws...

3 minutes ago, Astra.Xtreme said:

This is exactly the problem...  You're so convinced about yourself that you don't even bother to look at the facts.  How long does it take to load fuel on a Falcon 9 rocket?  How long does it take to board people onto a passenger jet?  Do you really think those things take an hour?
Regardless, the hour timescale is about flight time, not total time from placing said rocket on launch pad to removing it from the landing pad.  Again, you look way too far into these things and get it completely wrong.

Not sure what you don't get about auto pilot being beta?  Ever heard of the levels of autonomy?  Educate yourself on it...  Nowhere has it been stated that Tesla's are at the level of full autonomy.
We're seeing the first electrics trucks soon and they will get better over time.   Just as electric cars have.  Now sure why you think the Cybertruck is any more dangerous than a semi or other large truck.  Again, reaching for such distant straws...

It's precisely because I HAVE educated myself that I stopped drinking the Muskoil.  As for the Cybertruck... If you can't see that anyone getting hit by that monstrosity is going to turned into paté, then I can't help you. Vehicles are designed with crumple zones for a reason.  You can't build a crumple zone out of reinforced plate steel.  

14 minutes ago, FloatingFatMan said:

It's precisely because I HAVE educated myself that I stopped drinking the Muskoil.  As for the Cybertruck... If you can't see that anyone getting hit by that monstrosity is going to turned into paté, then I can't help you. Vehicles are designed with crumple zones for a reason.  You can't build a crumple zone out of reinforced plate steel.  

Trucks generally do not have crumple zones https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crash_incompatibility#:~:text=For example%2C some SUVs and,requirements like the NCAP test. and crumple zones are mainly to protect  the occupant of the vehicle, not the bystander. Laws of physics dictate that crumple zone or not, being hit at speeds upward of 39mph start to become fatal.

1 hour ago, FloatingFatMan said:

However you try to define it to make Musk not appear an idiot, his meaning is clear.  Use the front of the ship to capture pieces of space junk in a biting motion and break them into smaller pieces in the process.  A monumentally stupid idea, but I'm not the slightest bit surprised that you think it's great...

 

It's not clear at all unless you choose to parse it that way and no other.  

52 minutes ago, FloatingFatMan said:

Because I have a firm grasp of what's possible, and what's stupid. 

 

Facts not in evidence 🤪

 

Quote

Landing rocket boosters was a great idea and I congratulate him on making it both possible and reliable, but his economics don't add up.

 

SpaceX has laid out the economics with specifics as to the percentage of costs attributable to the booster, upper stage, fairing, recovery ops and refurbishment. They can refly a booster & fairing at nearly half price and still make a profit.

 

Quote

Going from one side of the world to the other on a rocket in just an hour sounds great, but it's literally impossible.  You can't even load the fuel in that time, let alone the passengers...

 

The quoted times are flight times. How long does it take to gas up and load an A380? Similar size compared to the Starship vehicle.

 

Starship and Super Heavy will load in parallel, and since the version 1.0 ground support equipment is being built your judgement is premature. All that's known is those pipes are humongous.

 

Quote

Solar roofs was a great idea, but the reality is that hardly any installations have happened, they don't produce the promised results, and they're more than double the promised cost.

Like their cars, production will go through  a period of ramping. Tesla has produced about 3 million cars since 2008, but will produce over 1 million in just 2022.  

 

Price: yes, Solar Roof appears to cost 2x as much as traditional solar panels - but that's taking a narrow view. It's also a totally new premium roofing system, so add the two and it's a better deal. This also makes it ideal for new installations.

 

Quote

Affordable electric cars was a great idea and I congratulate him on making the industry invest, but his cars are built like garbage

 

Not according to auto industry analyst Sandy Munro and others. Panel gaps are gone, a victim of casting the rear underbody in one piece instead of doing a weldup. See Giga Press. They've also upgraded the paint system, etc.

 

Quote

and his promises about self-driving have yet to be realised.  Roundabouts are easy, he said.. OK, so why can't your cars go around roundabouts, Elon?

 

That's why FSD is still in beta. Call back after release.

 

Quote

Electric trucks was a great idea, but they carefully didn't mention the weight of the batteries needed to haul an average truck load.  The figures rapidly exceed the maximum allowed weight on roads, making them economically unviable as they just can't haul a big enough load.

 

With the new 4680 cells the batteries could easily be lighter than a Class 8  truck's driveline, fuel tanks, axels, drive shaft, etc. which get erased. They're road legal, in tests running loads in the US, and with a 500 mile range they can cover 80% of US large truck routes which are regional.  

 

Quote

Cybertruck looks neat, but it's a deathtrap for anyone not inside the thing.

 

Your perception ≠ reality, and the plain fact is most US pickups and SUVs are built like battering rams. Let's see what NHTSA says. 

 

3 minutes ago, Steven P. said:

Trucks generally do not have crumple zones https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crash_incompatibility#:~:text=For example%2C some SUVs and,requirements like the NCAP test. and crumple zones are mainly to protect  the occupant of the vehicle, not the bystander. Laws of physics dictate that crumple zone or not, being hit at speeds upward of 39mph start to become fatal.

Respectfully,  a pedestrians head bouncing off the hood of a regular pickup at 10mph is probably not going to smash like a coconut. A head bouncing off a Cybertruck's hood at 10mph is very likely going to shatter like a coconut hit with a sledgehammer.

 

I don't know about safety regs in the US, but many EU regulatory bodies have already commented the Cybertruck would be very unlikely to be allowed on their roads without some major redesign.  

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Posts

    • Apple finally brings the slider for Liquid Glass and many other changes by Aditya Tiwari Apple kicked off the official live stream of the WWDC 2026 annual developer event. The company began its latest wave of announcements with changes to the controversial Liquid Glass design language, which debuted last year across Apple's entire software ecosystem. A lot of people didn't like Liquid Glass when it first arrived on iPhone and other devices last year. The devices were plagued with transparency issues and whatnot. While Apple improved things over the year, it has now added a new Liquid Glass slider that lets you switch the transparency from clear to opaque. In other words, you can choose the amount of Liquid Glass you want to see on your iPhone instead of an on/off switch, which would only give you two choices. The sidebars now expand to the edge of the window. When you scroll the UI sideways, the refraction continues beneath the sidebar rather than being cut off at the boundary. Moreover, sidebar icons keep their color. Apple has changed the way Liquid Glass is rendered across the system. There is a separation between different layers, which makes buttons in the toolbar stand out from the background. Apple said it "deeply appreciates" the feedback it received from users and has made adjustments to Liquid Glass. New customizations allow Liquid Glass to improve contrast and enable a more vibrant appearance. The new icons have sharper edges, which addresses an old complaint that iOS 26 icons look blurry at smaller sizes. The upgraded Liquid Glass, Apple said, is building on last year's design upgrades by "integrating additional layers of Liquid Glass directly into the artwork itself." Apple's upgraded design language is available on iOS 27, which is arriving this year with no changes to the list of supported iPhones.
    • FWIW, I've been using Helium on Linux and Windows since the first time it was mentioned here. Actually, maybe a day or 3 before, as I searched for it when I saw it mentioned on the MX Linux forums. Haven't had a single issue on either OS. Not bad for a beta.
    • See up until a few years ago y'all could get away with simply denying your war crimes, pretending it never happened. Unfortunately for you, it's the 2020s and Israel's genocide has been livestreamed in real time. You have to be dumber than a rock to think anyone still believes your propaganda. See the cat is already out of the bag. The world already knows who you are so do yourself a favor and just drop the facade. Bet it gets real tiring keep track of all the lies. Take some inspiration from Israeli ministers who boast on live TV they like massacring civilians. Every zionist accusation is after all a confession.
    • He's just reporting what Microsoft posted. https://msmessagecenter.com/MC1381119 It just means that Windows Defender updates will no longer be bundled into the monthly Cumulative Windows security update and will now be a separate download. They'll still be on Microsoft update of course but now they can be released faster.
    • Apple announces iOS 27 with no changes to the list of supported iPhones by Taras Buria At WWDC 2026 in Cupertino, Apple announced iOS 27, the next mobile operating system for compatible iPhones. The update focuses on tweaking and improving last year's iOS 26, particularly in areas like app launch time, Liquid Glass design, and more. Additionally, Apple has reworked Apple Maps with a significantly enhanced Flyover view for a much more realistic view. Apple also promises better performance, smarter search, new Health features, new parental controls, and more. The most important part is that iOS 27 is compatible with all iPhones that can run iOS 26. That means that even the seven-year-old iPhone 11 can run iOS 27 (supposedly better than iOS 26). iOS 27 will be available this Fall, with the first developer betas expected later today. You can follow the live stream here.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Very Popular
      Captain_Eric earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • One Month Later
      amusc earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Proficient
      Eric Biran went up a rank
      Proficient
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      506
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      238
    3. 3
      ATLien_0
      80
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      78
    5. 5
      +Edouard
      73
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!