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Space X Launch

Started by Bill B, June 24, 2024, 04:15:04 AM

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Bill B

Elon Musk, love him or hate him, you have to give him credit for his space program. Tonight (June 23) was another of his Space X lauches from Vandenberg Space Force base in central California.   The wife an I drove to the rim of the San Bernardino mountains where we live to watch the launch.  Lasted maybe 5 minutes but cool to see.  Even spotted the booster coming down west of Ensenada. Bill
It may not be very productive,
but it's sure going to be interesting!

Reeltyme

Awe inspiring for sure Bill. Kind of makes you feel a bit small in the world. Saw one go up here in Florida over on the space coast, incredible to watch and brought out a real sense of pride for our country. Thanks for sharing.
Randy McConnell
Reeltyme

Swami805

I watched it from bechers bay at Santa rose island relatively close to vandenberg. We didn't realize what it was a first. Pretty impressive, the sonic boom was pretty loud
Do what you can with that you have where you are

Gfish

Great picture Bill.
I have some stock shares in Tesla. You never know what E.M. Is gonna do, or why, but it sure seems to affect the share price.
Fishing tackle is an art form and all fish caught on the right tackle are"Gfish"!

Dominick

Great job getting the astronauts to the space station, but how are they going to get them back. Dominick
Leave the gun.  Take the cannolis.

There are two things I don't like about fishing.  Getting up early in the morning and boats.  The rest of it is fun.

JasonGotaProblem

That's cool. I grew up in Brevard county FL 20 miles south of Cape Canaveral. I got to see a ton of rocket and shuttle launches. Some from really close up. No matter how many you see, it never gets old.
Any machine is a smoke machine if you use it wrong enough.

foakes

I have a tremendous amount of awe and respect for Elon Musk.

Not his personal life, or work ethic, or demands upon others.

That aspect is way out of balance, IMO.

Here is a guy who came from South Africa to the US —-

Invented and operated Pay-Pal, Solar-City, Tesla, SpaceX, Horizontal Boring capabilities, global internet, modern battery technology, and much more.

Governments, individuals, investors, and others may ridicule him —- but they all end up using his companies and services.

Over 5.8 million Teslas have been manufactured. 

My observation and concern is that he will burn out too soon...

He is a genius, but that self-made type of brilliance and forward thinking is dependent on only one guy —- Elon.  That is unbalanced and putting too much trust into one guy.

However, I always am looking to see what he comes up with next!

As a kid in the late 50's and earliest 60's —- we lived in Orcutt, Santa Maria, and Arroyo Grande.  All close to Vandenburg AFB. I saw dozens of rocket launches both day and night, felt the tremendous power and vibrations, and also witnessed a few launches that ended up in self-destructions as things went off plan.

Best, Fred





The Official, Un-Authorized Service and Restoration Center for quality vintage spinning reels.

D-A-M Quick, Penn, Mitchell, and ABU/Zebco Cardinals

--


If your feeling down and don't know what to do
     Just hold on til tomorrow
Let go of the past
     Wrap your dreams around you
Live every day like it's your last

sciaenops

Quote from: Swami805 on June 24, 2024, 01:16:22 PMI watched it from bechers bay at Santa rose island relatively close to vandenberg. We didn't realize what it was a first. Pretty impressive, the sonic boom was pretty loud

Yeah that was special.

Crab Pot

Elon may be called to send one of his rockets up to recover the two Boeing Astronauts at the International Space Station.

Seems the engineers at Boeing have a reentry concern and may fly the return module back remotely just in case.

The Boeing crew should have returned on the 10th or 11th after a June 5th launch.

What else could go wrong for Boeing at this point? It's going to be really embarrassing for them and the share holders if Space X is called on to rescue the Boeing Astronauts. 

Safety first though.

Steve
Buy it nice or buy it twice.

Maxed Out

Couple years ago late August about 11pm starlink went directly over my house. It was an amazing sight to see
We Must Never Forget Our Veterans....God Bless Them All !!

MarkT

Quote from: foakes on June 24, 2024, 04:16:56 PMI have a tremendous amount of awe and respect for Elon Musk.

Not his personal life, or work ethic, or demands upon others.

That aspect is way out of balance, IMO.

Here is a guy who came from South Africa to the US —-

Invented and operated Pay-Pal, Solar-City, Tesla, SpaceX, Horizontal Boring capabilities, global internet, modern battery technology, and much more.

Governments, individuals, investors, and others may ridicule him —- but they all end up using his companies and services.

Over 5.8 million Teslas have been manufactured. 

My observation and concern is that he will burn out too soon...

He is a genius, but that self-made type of brilliance and forward thinking is dependent on only one guy —- Elon.  That is unbalanced and putting too much trust into one guy.

However, I always am looking to see what he comes up with next!

As a kid in the late 50's and earliest 60's —- we lived in Orcutt, Santa Maria, and Arroyo Grande.  All close to Vandenburg AFB. I saw dozens of rocket launches both day and night, felt the tremendous power and vibrations, and also witnessed a few launches that ended up in self-destructions as things went off plan.

Best, Fred







Musk didn't start up Tesla!
When I was your age Pluto was a planet!

foakes

#11
Musk didn't start up Tesla!

——————————————————————————-

True, Mark —- but he has been the driving force behind Tesla after the two original partners —- Tarpenning & Eberhard left to pursue other interests.  Maybe not an amicable parting —- but that is business, I suppose.

I saw several hundred Teslas on our 22 day trip back East.

It seems that Musk is very volatile and unpredictable as a large business owner.  Both in his personal life and his business life decisions.

That is why it may be a short-lived ride without Musk.

Solid, established companies and corporations have succession plans in place so that no one individual or person, when not on the scene anymore —- will cause a company to eventually shut down when one person is gone.

Two of the largest and most successful auto manufacturers  — Toyota & Honda, have 5 and 10 year plans in place —- as well as 25, 50, and 100 year long range goals established.  This is the Japanese way of doing business.  The success of their brand is dependent on the quality of their leadership teams.  Not just one person.

Elon is like a candle burning bright —- but a wind is coming.

Just my opinions.

Best, Fred

The Official, Un-Authorized Service and Restoration Center for quality vintage spinning reels.

D-A-M Quick, Penn, Mitchell, and ABU/Zebco Cardinals

--


If your feeling down and don't know what to do
     Just hold on til tomorrow
Let go of the past
     Wrap your dreams around you
Live every day like it's your last

JasonGotaProblem

The thing is he didn't invent or start any of the things Fred listed. He saw potential in things others had started and either bought or invested heavily in them. He also wasn't self made by any means his dad owns diamond mines in Africa.

In his defense, he doesn't go around saying he invented these things or that he's self made. But he dang sure doesn't seem to mind people thinking so, and doesn't make any effort to correct them.

He's an interesting character for sure. It's safe to say he's a genius. And eccentric. And Fred is right he'll probably drive himself into an early grave.
Any machine is a smoke machine if you use it wrong enough.

jurelometer

#13
There is a common character here the valley, practically a stereotype.  A somewhat bright and extremely ambitious guy (it's almost always a guy) lands at the right place at the right time, starts a company, gets bought out, doesn't cash out, lucks out, and ends up buried in money.  He is  surrounded by sycophants and other lucky winners, and becomes convinced  that his success is solely the product of his "genius".

But deep down he knows that he is mostly just lucky and begins to suffer from imposter syndrome. The resulting toxic narcissist vs imposter drama plays out in a series of public spectacles.

They start new endeavors to relive the rush and the glory - like  a gambling addiction. They drive their subordinates mercilessly, often resulting in useful product advances (Hello, Apple!).  Most of these jerks grow up just enough to maintain, a few flame out spectacularly.

I don't want to be too judgmental, many of us would probably turn out the same in similar circumstances, but I find it hard to look admiringly  on such destructive, self-centered (expletive deleted). 

Musk is one of the more extreme examples.

Musk has hired a bunch of experts in AI, and is trying to get approval to do human experiments to surgically implant devices to integrate the brain with AI processing.  The company name is Neuralink.  The only question here is which bad way is it going to go.

-J

Keta

Lots of bad ways for AI to go and as far as I see no good ways.
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I have all of the answers, yup, no, maybe.

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