SpaceX Pushes Back Crucial Starship Test Launch

(wsj.com)

14 points | by bookmtn a day ago ago

11 comments

  • ilt a day ago
  • Jamesbeam 17 hours ago

    Congratulations Elon, 2026 is the 20 years anniversary of broken promises. What an achievement.

    https://www.wired.com/story/theres-a-very-simple-pattern-to-...

    "We should be able to do 90 percent of space flying [autonomously] within three years.” - Elon M. probably 2026

  • londons_explore a day ago

    Starship velocity seems to have really slowed - over a decade in and no commercial revenue yet.

    I wonder if it's a lack of talent? Lack of investment?

    • Zigurd 14 hours ago

      It's the cyber truck of space.

      It's what happens when Elon jumps into the k-hole and convinces himself that because he owns a company that successfully did a thing, his genius will make those companies do an even better thing. He's wrong. And he can stay wrong for years and decades even.

      Starship is too big for orbital payloads, and too heavy to go beyond orbit. Yes and only if it actually achieve target payload capacity, it takes 15 refueling missions to refuel to do anything other than an orbital mission. If it doesn't achieve target payload capacity, it's cooked.

    • 7e 2 hours ago

      The talent that was originally driving SpaceX is gone. And I don’t mean Elon’s brain. I mean the real engineers designing the rockets.

    • jaybrendansmith 12 hours ago

      Doing something 10x as big is 100x as difficult. And the last 10% takes 50% of the work. With that in mind, Starship is right on schedule. Something will be operational by 2030.

    • infinitewars 19 hours ago

      Motivation has declined with realization that it's not about Mars, but normal military industrial complex drudgery..

      https://ioc.exchange/@muskfiles

      • londons_explore 7 hours ago

        The "million people on mars in my lifetime" dream is dead.

        Might happen, but certainly not in his lifetime unless we discover an asteroid headed directly towards earth...

    • weregiraffe 21 hours ago

      It's a harder problem.

  • a day ago
    [deleted]