Elon Musk Podcast
SpaceX Starship Flight 13 is launching 20 next-generation Starlink satellites that are designed to burn up in the atmosphere shortly after deployment. Advanced hardware with laser interconnects and complex deployment mechanisms, built to operate for minutes and then turn to ash. It sounds like an engineering paradox. It isn't. This episode explains why.We break down the full Starship Flight 13 flight profile and what SpaceX is actually testing. This mission continues the Version 3 architecture that debuted on Flight 12, and the fixes SpaceX made after that flight tell you everything about where the program actually stands.What went wrong on Flight 12: at stage separation, slight differences in engine startup timing caused the Super Heavy booster to flip roughly 90 degrees off axis. Then during the boostback burn, 5 of the 33 Raptor engines failed to relight, ending the burn early. The booster survived, but barely. Also covered in this Starship Flight 13 breakdown:Why 20 Starlink satellites are being deployed just to be destroyed, and what data they capture firstThe heat shield tiles painted white on purpose to create visible flaws for camera calibrationWhy Starship is intentionally flying at higher dynamic pressure (max Q) than any previous flight, and what breaking the vehicle would proveThe in-space Raptor relight, and why restarting an engine in zero gravity is a fluid dynamics nightmareThe landing flip and the three-engine to two-engine to one-engine descent sequenceWhat the Indian Ocean splashdown means for the programThe through-line is an engineering philosophy that values extreme stress testing over cautious preservation. SpaceX is building this system by intentionally finding out exactly where it breaks. If this is the stress they apply to an uncrewed test vehicle, the safety margins they're building for crewed flights are the real story.Subscribe for more Starship coverage, SpaceX flight breakdowns, and AI and technology news.
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