Toeknee
Awesome. Congrats...
mpthompson
If anyone who watched B Sci-Fi movies from the 50's were to see this video, they would say: "What's the big deal? Isn't that how rockets are supposed land?"
Glad to see technology catching up with science fiction fantasy. Great going SpaceX. I can't wait to what this leads to.
Bob Shock
The guys at SpaceX are my heroes! Woot! Woot!
Slowburn
It is really impressive that they can land like that and I am more than willing to ride on a Dragon flight but I still haven't figured out why they want to land like that.
BeachWizard
It all comes down to money. Landing a ship at the launch site reduces / eliminates the recovery costs.
Neo Forward
Pay attention to the cast shadows of the rocket and the tower nearby. The shadows are too dark. Also, play the video back and forth in slow motion and try to follow the rocket and shadow path.
Matthew Jacobs
Correct me if I'm mistaken but the concept here is for this to be the recoverable first stage on a multistage rocket. Having a reusable first stage dramatically cuts the cost of getting a payload into orbit does it not?
History Nut
Shades of the DCX! I am glad that someone is keeping this technology alive and relearning how it is done. Hopefully this will eventually lead to a SSTO design like was developed in the past and dumped due to corporate politics.
Dieter
Neo, I agree. I'd like to think there's a little retouch work going on. The descent at near touchdown and touchdown itself indicate shadows appearing too crisp and lacking depth in the rocket exhaust. Or.....Maybe I'm just upset that I don't have a hexakopter to experiment with. Regardless, I think it's fantastic that the private sector, Space X in particular is moving forward! IMHO the program would be regulated to death in a government agency.
Gianfranco Fronzi
Great work . But can't we design a single earth to space flying ship that doesn't need the thrust of rockets ? Something that uses the atmosphere , such as a jet , until it gets close to stall , then rockets take over the rest of the mission , then returning like the shuttle . Gianfranco Fronzi