What SpaceX just did in Florida totally Humiliated Nasa!

#techmap #techmaps #elonmusk #starshipspacex ======= What SpaceX just did in Florida totally Humiliated nasa! 1) SOURCES OF IMAGES AND VIDEOS 3D_Daniel: Greg Scott: Farryfaz: Kimi Talvitie: @kimitalvitie/videos @Considercosmos: Cosmic Perspective: @CosmicPerspective LabPadre Space: Everyday Astronaut: ======= There are about two dozen launch sites along Florida’s coast that have been abandoned for years. And the future of this area looked bleak when nasa’s Space Shuttle program ended in 2011. But times have changed when SpaceX comes there. Most recently, Elon Musk’s company has even shocked the entire rocket industry with insane working speed in Florida, from its rapid pace of building, expanding, launching, and so on. How exactly they do this? Discuss everything about this in today’s episode of tech map: But before we begin, our team extends a warm welcome! Don’t forget to subscribe to the channel and enable notifications to stay up-to-date with the latest news from SpaceX and the world of space. With that in mind, let’s jump straight into today’s episode! When talking about SpaceX, we cannot help but talk about Starship, the most powerful rocket ever built in the world. Luckily for Florida, although SpaceX is developing Starship at Starbase the company still foresees Florida as a home for Starship operations. In fact, SpaceX plans to transform parts of nasa’s Kennedy Space Center to become an operational base for the company’s super-powerful Starship launcher, while keeping a sprawling complex in South Texas as a research and development location for the heavy-lift rocket program. At pad 39A, once home to nasa’s Saturn 5 moon rocket and space shuttle launches, SpaceX launches astronaut crews to the International Space Station and Falcon Heavy rockets, made by combining three Falcon rocket cores together to generate some 5.1 million pounds of thrust, more than any other operational launcher in the world. What SpaceX just did in Florida totally Humiliated Nasa!
Back to Top