Когда-то Америка была великой, а щас в Китае выплавляют стали в 10 раз больше, электричества в 3 раза, угля 4 миллиарда тон ( 2 кубических километра!). Если начнётся война между США и КНР, то Китай сделает с Америкой то же, что США, в своё время сделали с Японией, он надругается над ней! Трамп знает это, и поэтому начал "экономическую " войну с Китаем, а не горячую . Трамп, походу, одекватный.
@mfromaustralia19 күн бұрын
Having music ruins this clip
@PuffleFuzzАй бұрын
2:00 Jeb, did you check your staging?
@cesara.borges9698Ай бұрын
😁😁😁 So Hillarious... The "pop" scene😂😂😂!!!...
@Oldag75Ай бұрын
THE very first humans to actually leave the Earth!
@TheCasualSirenEnthusiast2 ай бұрын
The last one had me rolling
@thomastarwater29893 ай бұрын
Just offhand, I’d say the mission controller who pressed the button for each failed launch headed for the nearest barroom and got completely smashed and trashed on hard liquor. The poor man spent the rest of his years in an alcoholic ward.
@matthealy9075 ай бұрын
Lance just tripping balls.
@chrisstairs22375 ай бұрын
Apollo 8 was the real deal.
@mikecapistrano35267 ай бұрын
It was the Chinese who paid the biggest price for their space failures...in 1997 their Long March rocket came crashing to earth just seconds after launch, tragically it blew up in a village near the launch site, killing perhaps over 500 people, even though the Chinese state media reported just 57 casualties. The Chinese government blamed the rocket's failure on "an unexpected gust of wind."
@kitharrison87997 ай бұрын
This is going to sound grim but Christa McAuliffe most probably saw this in a theatre in 1983 before applying for the 1985 Teacher in Space mission aboard Challenger in 1986.
@ugowar7 ай бұрын
OK, but what do these initial woes with rockets at the dawn of the space age have to do with something that happened more than 20 years later and after the Shuttle was already pretty established?
@foxmccloud70554 ай бұрын
What makes you think that Christa actually watched "The Right Stuff" before she sent in her application for the "Teacher In Space Project?"
@kylecerretti34177 ай бұрын
@ 3:00 “get ready for a little jolt, fellas!”
@marquinhosantonio39998 ай бұрын
2023
@takashitamagawa58818 ай бұрын
Rest in peace, Commander Frank Borman. The United States of America will never forget your leadership of the epic flight of Apollo 8.
@stainlesssteelfox111 ай бұрын
It seems odd to watch a SpaceX launch without a first stage booster landing.
@GarandLuvr11 ай бұрын
Back to the ol' drawing board! 🙄🤗🤔
@southcop371411 ай бұрын
Awesome , one of the best scenes
@denisk4989 Жыл бұрын
Is it possible to estimate the thrust by the time the rocket reaches the edge of the launch pad? The engine is probably too inefficient. Black gases come out of it. Apparently some of the fuel burns in the general torch.
@ugowar Жыл бұрын
The black gasses were from the gas generator of the engine that powered the turbopump that pumped the propellants into the combustion chamber. The reason they were so black and sooty is because they were deliberately run fuel-rich, otherwhise the pump stage of the engine would get too hot and simply melt. All of the (partially burned , but really sooty due to incomplete combustion) fuel that was left over after driving the turbines was ducted into the nozzle expansion to provide some cooling as it was VASTLY cooler than the main combustion chamber products were. Any more of your questions I can answer?
@denisk4989 Жыл бұрын
@@ugowar Why don't we see the same black smoke at the launch of the Saturn IB
@jameswilkinson259 Жыл бұрын
What a beast of a machine.
@ugowar Жыл бұрын
Indeed.
@swatijain6466 Жыл бұрын
0:33
@matteopiccioni196 Жыл бұрын
Wonderful, which code/ software has been used here?
@oimatewhatyouonabout8526 Жыл бұрын
"vapor in feedlines, shut down"
@johnkennedy3867 Жыл бұрын
I've watched alot of these videos for the Apollo launches and at 57 years of age I still get goosebumps
@johnhud2536 Жыл бұрын
Real men didn’t cheer when the rocket failed.
@robertlehnert4148 Жыл бұрын
4/20/2023 Space X had another "kinetic dissembly". Ad aspera, per aspera....
@StephenLuke Жыл бұрын
The launch of Apollo 6 took place on the day of Martin Luther King Jr’s assassination along with the King assassination riots.
@goldgamercommenting2990 Жыл бұрын
2:04 that sound
@projekt7527 Жыл бұрын
Die Musike ist ja voll daneben
@ugowar Жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@svcino9549 Жыл бұрын
The ignition of the three RS-68's was not staggered for the first Delta IV Heavy launch! This lead to a 25 meter by 40 meter fireball on the launch pad, scorching the entire LH2 tank on all three CBCs.
@keeganyocum3300 Жыл бұрын
0:31
@benjamindeforest9363 Жыл бұрын
Best video of Apollo 8 launch I have ever seen...
@ritatorre7964 Жыл бұрын
Bravissimi ❤️ quen
@ritatorre7964 Жыл бұрын
Queen bravissimi ❤️ belle canzoni ciao 😍
@dalethelander3781 Жыл бұрын
Be nice if we saw the rocket and not the flame trail.
@alessandrobussolari4823 Жыл бұрын
Giant Saturn five 👍💪
@robertsimmons6910 Жыл бұрын
my dream was to work for nasa
@FNHaole Жыл бұрын
The premature ejaculation featured at the end of this depressing sequence of failures…Apt punctuation!
@smartiepancake Жыл бұрын
is it really true that, second for second those things burned more energy than the UK did?
@eddiekulp1241 Жыл бұрын
It's 54 years since this launch and still no rocket has even equaled the Saturn V
@hegemonycricket95492 жыл бұрын
Just another day in Kerbal Space Program.
@nickalkire11872 жыл бұрын
2:04 Pop…like a champagne bottle!!
@michaelreidperry32562 жыл бұрын
The Saturn V launch is the most dramatic launch of NASA space vehicles, if I’m asked.
@arturo2790092 жыл бұрын
2:30 bro.... 🥴👌
@elizabeth86752 жыл бұрын
thanks you helped me a lot Xd no hablo ingles
@unassistedsuicide22432 жыл бұрын
Let’s nuke the moon before the Russians. MAGA!
@arthurlunar78352 жыл бұрын
are you alive?
@joelm19552 жыл бұрын
NASA had a bigger ship than Saturn V. That one would have produced 12 million pounds of thrust! Probably too expensive to build.
@josephreeves40442 жыл бұрын
I actually went to the kennedy space center very recently and saw this rocket in person it is so much bigger than it seems its a sight to remember
@HailAnts2 жыл бұрын
This was supposed to be a test of the LM/CSM in low Earth orbit, but the LM wasn’t ready yet. Also NASA had reports from the CIA that the Russian’s big N1 rocket was getting ready to launch, maybe to send cosmonauts around the Moon. So they changed the mission to a lunar orbital one, without a LM, just in case. The Russians weren’t ready to fly the N1 yet, and Apollo 9 did the Earth orbit LM test mission..
@timmaloney99762 жыл бұрын
This movie is a testament to the American capability of blowing stuff up.
Пікірлер
Когда-то Америка была великой, а щас в Китае выплавляют стали в 10 раз больше, электричества в 3 раза, угля 4 миллиарда тон ( 2 кубических километра!). Если начнётся война между США и КНР, то Китай сделает с Америкой то же, что США, в своё время сделали с Японией, он надругается над ней! Трамп знает это, и поэтому начал "экономическую " войну с Китаем, а не горячую . Трамп, походу, одекватный.
Having music ruins this clip
2:00 Jeb, did you check your staging?
😁😁😁 So Hillarious... The "pop" scene😂😂😂!!!...
THE very first humans to actually leave the Earth!
The last one had me rolling
Just offhand, I’d say the mission controller who pressed the button for each failed launch headed for the nearest barroom and got completely smashed and trashed on hard liquor. The poor man spent the rest of his years in an alcoholic ward.
Lance just tripping balls.
Apollo 8 was the real deal.
It was the Chinese who paid the biggest price for their space failures...in 1997 their Long March rocket came crashing to earth just seconds after launch, tragically it blew up in a village near the launch site, killing perhaps over 500 people, even though the Chinese state media reported just 57 casualties. The Chinese government blamed the rocket's failure on "an unexpected gust of wind."
This is going to sound grim but Christa McAuliffe most probably saw this in a theatre in 1983 before applying for the 1985 Teacher in Space mission aboard Challenger in 1986.
OK, but what do these initial woes with rockets at the dawn of the space age have to do with something that happened more than 20 years later and after the Shuttle was already pretty established?
What makes you think that Christa actually watched "The Right Stuff" before she sent in her application for the "Teacher In Space Project?"
@ 3:00 “get ready for a little jolt, fellas!”
2023
Rest in peace, Commander Frank Borman. The United States of America will never forget your leadership of the epic flight of Apollo 8.
It seems odd to watch a SpaceX launch without a first stage booster landing.
Back to the ol' drawing board! 🙄🤗🤔
Awesome , one of the best scenes
Is it possible to estimate the thrust by the time the rocket reaches the edge of the launch pad? The engine is probably too inefficient. Black gases come out of it. Apparently some of the fuel burns in the general torch.
The black gasses were from the gas generator of the engine that powered the turbopump that pumped the propellants into the combustion chamber. The reason they were so black and sooty is because they were deliberately run fuel-rich, otherwhise the pump stage of the engine would get too hot and simply melt. All of the (partially burned , but really sooty due to incomplete combustion) fuel that was left over after driving the turbines was ducted into the nozzle expansion to provide some cooling as it was VASTLY cooler than the main combustion chamber products were. Any more of your questions I can answer?
@@ugowar Why don't we see the same black smoke at the launch of the Saturn IB
What a beast of a machine.
Indeed.
0:33
Wonderful, which code/ software has been used here?
"vapor in feedlines, shut down"
I've watched alot of these videos for the Apollo launches and at 57 years of age I still get goosebumps
Real men didn’t cheer when the rocket failed.
4/20/2023 Space X had another "kinetic dissembly". Ad aspera, per aspera....
The launch of Apollo 6 took place on the day of Martin Luther King Jr’s assassination along with the King assassination riots.
2:04 that sound
Die Musike ist ja voll daneben
Thank you.
The ignition of the three RS-68's was not staggered for the first Delta IV Heavy launch! This lead to a 25 meter by 40 meter fireball on the launch pad, scorching the entire LH2 tank on all three CBCs.
0:31
Best video of Apollo 8 launch I have ever seen...
Bravissimi ❤️ quen
Queen bravissimi ❤️ belle canzoni ciao 😍
Be nice if we saw the rocket and not the flame trail.
Giant Saturn five 👍💪
my dream was to work for nasa
The premature ejaculation featured at the end of this depressing sequence of failures…Apt punctuation!
is it really true that, second for second those things burned more energy than the UK did?
It's 54 years since this launch and still no rocket has even equaled the Saturn V
Just another day in Kerbal Space Program.
2:04 Pop…like a champagne bottle!!
The Saturn V launch is the most dramatic launch of NASA space vehicles, if I’m asked.
2:30 bro.... 🥴👌
thanks you helped me a lot Xd no hablo ingles
Let’s nuke the moon before the Russians. MAGA!
are you alive?
NASA had a bigger ship than Saturn V. That one would have produced 12 million pounds of thrust! Probably too expensive to build.
I actually went to the kennedy space center very recently and saw this rocket in person it is so much bigger than it seems its a sight to remember
This was supposed to be a test of the LM/CSM in low Earth orbit, but the LM wasn’t ready yet. Also NASA had reports from the CIA that the Russian’s big N1 rocket was getting ready to launch, maybe to send cosmonauts around the Moon. So they changed the mission to a lunar orbital one, without a LM, just in case. The Russians weren’t ready to fly the N1 yet, and Apollo 9 did the Earth orbit LM test mission..
This movie is a testament to the American capability of blowing stuff up.
and keeping at it until it doesn't.