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How Stoke Space's Unique Rocket Works // Exclusive Tour & Interview 

Everyday Astronaut
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What if I told you, there’s a company you likely haven’t heard of who's developing a fully and rapidly reusable rocket… and this isn’t a power point rocket, they’re already building it, and have been testing it at a pace that’s frankly ridiculous.
And they’re using the aerospike effect in a genius way to make for a fully reusable upper stage. Join me as I show you around Stoke Space’s headquarters and test facility and reveal their never before seen rocket.
I’ll explain in great detail how it works from their actively regeneratively cooled heat shield, to its unique offset geometry for precision reentry and landing, but also how its unique engine is integrated into the heat shield.
And read our Article about Stoke Space here - everydayastronaut.com/stoke-s...
00:00 - Intro
01:40 - Overview of Rocket
03:20 - Tour Starts / Thrust Section
07:00 - Upper Stage
09:05 - How the Heat Shield Works / Expander Cycle
15:10 - Why Stainless Steel
18:07 - Heat Shield
25:00 - How to Steer on Re-Entry
26:55 - Machine Shop
31:32 - Test Stand / Engine Tour
38:02 - Engine Test!
39:17 - Post Test Engine Tour
40:30 - Aerospike Discussion
44:22 - How to Start a Rocket Engine
48:05 - How to Control Using Thrust Differential
51:20 - Main [Booster] Engine Design
55:06 - Outro
--------------------------
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9 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 2,3 тыс.   
@donjones4719
@donjones4719 Год назад
Why were you selected for Dear Moon? THIS! You communicate with great enthusiasm. When our minds were blown by the heat shield being part of the engine, and at the actual engine firing, you said "Whoa" for all of us. This is your 3rd CEO interview and they all love nerding out with you - because you followed their thoughts every step of the way. What other interviewer would spot the skew and be able to segue to what it means. I can't believe the tonnage of info he shared with us. There is so much to love about their designs; synergy and elegance at every turn.
@rasaecnai
@rasaecnai Год назад
Correct me if I am wrong, but isnt this Tim's 4th CEO interview? - Elon Musk (SpaceX) - Peter Beck (RocketLabs) - Tom Markusic (Firefly) - This guy
@jacobfuller-lewis5528
@jacobfuller-lewis5528 Год назад
@@rasaecnai plus nasa administrator
@CHMichael
@CHMichael Год назад
And every once in a while he spots or solves a problem ( SpaceX)
@nilsdock
@nilsdock Год назад
well Jeff Besos, Tory Bruno and Richard Branson would be nice to see. a blue origin factory tour would be the most interesting.
@SolarWebsite
@SolarWebsite Год назад
​@@nilsdock Jeff Bezos is probably never going to happen, because the guy is so secretive. The other, yeah, I can totally see those happening at some point when they see the excellent interviews like this.
@cmilkau
@cmilkau Год назад
Did anyone else notice that the *company* reached out to *Tim*, not the other way around? I'm so happy they did that! Hey space companies out there, if you want to bring your tech down to earth for everyone to understand, Tim's your first choice!
@AlexFoster2291
@AlexFoster2291 Год назад
They likely need funding, and so publicity
@thomashiggins9320
@thomashiggins9320 Год назад
@@AlexFoster2291 If I had a few million sitting around (LoL!), I might invest.
@RasakBlood
@RasakBlood Год назад
Its a smart pr move. Helps you find talent and funding.
@ZaphodHarkonnen
@ZaphodHarkonnen Год назад
@@AlexFoster2291 Yup. Looks like they’re at the point to bring on big money to really accelerate. This is a great way of doing it from both a big investor and general PR point of view. An independent voice who’s willing to put out an honest view that also echoes what the company is saying.
@patreekotime4578
@patreekotime4578 Год назад
Smarter to do this than just release the typical press release. Too many science journalists dont understand what they are reporting and just reprint the press release. Seeing Tim's mind blown is dramatically much more effective at explaining how impressive thier efforts are than a press release would be.
@rexjohnson1905
@rexjohnson1905 Год назад
This guy has the most polite way of getting around explaining proprietary information. I wish this company great success!
@gutek5930
@gutek5930 Год назад
and for some reason he looks 20 and 50 at the same time
@pmilland
@pmilland Год назад
😊es55dcf❤a🎉4z44z
@pmilland
@pmilland Год назад
Qf5
@pmilland
@pmilland Год назад
Se5etd8x
@brandenjones716
@brandenjones716 Год назад
​@@gutek5930IKR, lol I thought I was seeing two different people at different points, like from the side he looks completely different than from the front lol,
@CeladonHairExtraordinaire
@CeladonHairExtraordinaire Год назад
I love how it sounds like they've taken all their learnings from their respective companies, thrown them into a forge, and blacksmithed the solution to their particular use case. It's so bloody unique I love it.
@katjamullerfilm
@katjamullerfilm Год назад
Yes!
@EricNistler
@EricNistler Год назад
The look on Andy's face as he's walking around the shop, all the details being considered, all the weight on his shoulders, and even knowing all the things that have to go right you can see how enthusiastic and hopeful he is at what is to come. The future belongs to the bold.
@laurin4405
@laurin4405 Год назад
👍Totally enjoyed seeing Andy's Enthusiasm, and Excitement as he showed us "His Baby"... Will be watching him, hoping for Many Successes for him and his Team👀
@jantonkens9820
@jantonkens9820 Год назад
@@laurin4405 fully agree. Andy seems to really have fun with doing what he does. And it helps he's cute and easy on the eyes as well... Smart, nerdy and cute: what more could you wish for 😜👍🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍🌈🦆
@sebione3576
@sebione3576 Год назад
But *I* want the future 😢
@laurin4405
@laurin4405 Год назад
@@sebione3576
@bencarley6896
@bencarley6896 Год назад
@@laurin4405 the "my baby" attitude is exactly what I got, that smile he was wearing half the video just screamed "So uh, I did a thing"
@tangotango6681
@tangotango6681 Год назад
Amazing story. Andy Lapsa, the CEO and founder, seems to be a pragmatic genius. Can you do a “prequel” story explaining how Andy gets to where he is now from developing his original idea, selecting and forming a team, securing funding, and establishing the construction process. Thanks.
@TheRacquetLion
@TheRacquetLion Год назад
He used to work in blue origin and also has a team of many former spacex engineers
@josesuro3981
@josesuro3981 Год назад
Brilliant guy - I'm impressed, and that doesn't come easy for me.
@PhilfreezeCH
@PhilfreezeCH Год назад
I love the guy, absolutely no bullshiting or trying to sound profound, just square peg into square hole.
@RedRyan
@RedRyan Год назад
I'll be interviewing for a job here and about 3 weeks when I finish my degree. I love my career developer who was able to get me the interview
@jannichi6431
@jannichi6431 Год назад
@@RedRyan ☘️🚀
@enque01
@enque01 Год назад
Wat! This Stoke company comes straight outta nowhere, and I immediately become a fan! All the design decisions were just delicious. I loved hearing how each and every thing was also being another thing.
@joshjones6072
@joshjones6072 6 месяцев назад
Seriously!
@niri2506
@niri2506 4 месяца назад
Yes. First spaceflight company since SpaceX that really gets me excited.
@user-mq2mp6do6p
@user-mq2mp6do6p 4 месяца назад
The designs were yummy
@CBikeLondon
@CBikeLondon Год назад
Thanks for making these kinds of videos that are extremely informative, but inevitably attracting less views. They're a real source of inspiration and source of knowledge for a lot of people, especially students. Not to mention the very good PR for Stoke in this case, who no doubt will be helped by this in future rounds of funding and hopefully succeed.
@hawkbartril3016
@hawkbartril3016 Год назад
That's why I came here to this page because it wasn't something I'd heard much about. Curiosity iced the cat.
@Neilukuk
@Neilukuk Год назад
848,060 views and 1k-2k isn't bad. It was nice of you to donate, You help with funding this channel and I appreciate it.
@CBikeLondon
@CBikeLondon Год назад
@@Neilukuk Yes, when I donated it was under 200k, seems to have picked up, which is great. I'm also a patreon supporter.
@Jona69
@Jona69 Год назад
I love how ambitious they are. Fully reusable, full flow for the first stage. Brilliant upper stage.
@ishner
@ishner Год назад
This is the second stage friend. SpaceX has first stage locked down. This goes on top of that piece
@bradley3549
@bradley3549 Год назад
@@ishner In this video the CEO specifically says they are building their own first stage and not putting this on top of somebody else's.
@IDNeon357
@IDNeon357 Год назад
They aren't ambitious, they are fraudulent,.
@Jona69
@Jona69 Год назад
@@IDNeon357 Do you have a source?
@rogerroth7782
@rogerroth7782 Год назад
Love the ambition. Conservative and not.
@flechette3782
@flechette3782 Год назад
Space Renaissance: This is the private company space race we have been hoping and waiting for for decades. It is turning out to be a competition of all sorts of cool, 1950's style rocketry. These new rockets look like something out of an old sci-fi novel. Fantastic times ahead!
@Dennio83
@Dennio83 Год назад
thank god it's not a race this time, coz that would mean there's a finish line. No, it's finally becoming a full fledged industry. but i do share your enthusiasm: Fantastic times ahead indeed!
@seantaggart7382
@seantaggart7382 Год назад
​@@Dennio83 indeed But the finish line is basically who can make the Coolest rocket we all want! And the winner IS EVERYONE
@skunkbucket9408
@skunkbucket9408 Год назад
I appreciate how Tim is willing to keep asking questions until he fully understands, instead of just nodding and pretending that he does. It's like the relief we all felt in class when some other student asked the same question we had but were too afraid to ask. Well done as always, Tim!
@XIIchiron78
@XIIchiron78 Год назад
I think the reason that this hasn't been done before is the differential thrust idea that makes it all possible. It was mentioned very casually but that's really really difficult! Both because of the consistency, precision, and reactivity you need to be able to drive the engines with, but also just the ability to throttle that deeply in the first place. There's so many little innovations in materials and computing science that make this even plausible compared to the last big period of experimentation. If they can figure out that one thing the design is pure genius. The way they've solved big issues by just avoiding them entirely instead is so creative! For example, as you mentioned they don't even need to solve the spooling delay problem with the pump - they can just offset any drop in thrust on one engine with an increase in the opposite one, keeping the flow rate constant. That by itself is already incredible.
@squirrelrobotics
@squirrelrobotics Год назад
The look of pure satisfaction and pride on Andy's face during that test firing is amazing.
@antontkach
@antontkach Год назад
He literally looks like a soyboy meme
@peteclegg1578
@peteclegg1578 Год назад
Ya I thought the same.
@hawkbartril3016
@hawkbartril3016 Год назад
If he's the architect of the project or most of it, then no wonder he is happy with his achievement. Thinking outside the box is an under-utilized skill in modern times, when we should be seeing increasing numbers. It must be the rocks in my head. Owul ouch, mum
@MichaelCox
@MichaelCox Год назад
It's really cool how Stoke's CEO talks like he's seen Tim's videos and knows what Tim and people who have seen his other videos know about rocket engines. Makes for a lot of lightbulb moments when watching this one :)
@donjones4719
@donjones4719 Год назад
Yup, there's no doubt Andy has seen Tim's other interviews. He was all set and ready to go to nerd out with Tim.
@andrewdoesyt7787
@andrewdoesyt7787 Год назад
Idk, I feel like this guy was a little duller than Peter beck from rocket lab and Bill Weber from firefly. Just my feelings though
@LG-ct8tw
@LG-ct8tw Год назад
@@andrewdoesyt7787 I put him up there, level with Beck, way better than mumbling Musk as far as listening to.
@temujanradari1105
@temujanradari1105 Год назад
They had definitely done their research before they reached out to Tim! Great way of building good will in the space community towards your company - way cheaper than hiring a PR person!
@jaakkokorhonen
@jaakkokorhonen Год назад
I still don't understand what he means when he says "non-trivial".
@RickyDownhillRDH
@RickyDownhillRDH Год назад
What a great start up. I really hope they can make a go of it. Loved the looks on their faces during the test fire. Andy's face shows pride and confidence, Tim's is like a kid opening the worlds best Christmas present! 😂
@enkilugal3282
@enkilugal3282 Год назад
These people are our National Hero's. Not the basketball, baseball, football...etc. types splattered on the news. I am so impressed by the intelligence of the people involved here. Thank you for sharing this video.
@charleslord2433
@charleslord2433 Год назад
In the 60's we had great journalists like Jules Bergman to help explain the complexities of space travel. Today, we have Tim Dodd. Thanks for being here!!!
@arnoldsherrill2585
@arnoldsherrill2585 Год назад
Stoke space, as a company is taking the hard lessons learned by SpaceX, and other companies using new technology, and refining both the manufacturing and flight/ground test program to suit their needs, and mission design. Congratulations Tim, on this video and so many others that is why you got selected for dear Moon project you did it the old-fashioned way..... you earned it, every step of the way!
@PrimordialEconomics
@PrimordialEconomics Год назад
This company is many years behind SpaceX, and is funded by that piece of human garbage Bill Gates. The same Bill Gates that claims to be concerned about sustainable energy yet shorts Tesla stock.
@IDNeon357
@IDNeon357 Год назад
You're pathetic, Stoke Space is fraudulent, they can't do what they claim is possible, it's been tested completely since the 1950s.
@ryanhamstra49
@ryanhamstra49 Год назад
I love seeing how companies are pushing boundaries again. Like he mentioned, in the 50’s and 60’s anything that seemed like it had a chance of working, they tried it. Then for 50 years we kinda decided that what we had was good enough and just spent the time refining ‘normal’ rockets. But the past 5-10 years we seem to see a real resurrection of creativity, that is also being taken seriously. The heat shield here is ingenious. Starships flip and burn is a creative, if dangerous and difficult, solution to having a massive ship reentering. Blue origins idea to land on a ship, even if they haven’t yet and everyone knows Spacex for it now, is a Duh! Solution to getting the most out of a booster.
@ronblack7870
@ronblack7870 Год назад
it's all because commercial space with private funding . it stagnated because it was govt funded so there was no incentive to innovate and much incentive not too. can't have a failure when politicians are involved.
@simecoic4332
@simecoic4332 Год назад
Yeah. It is shame that today rocket engineers can't fabricate F1 working engine. Despite all blueprints availability. Turbine Gas generator passed the test and that was the only good working part of the F1 engine they produce. Sad.
@snorttroll4379
@snorttroll4379 11 месяцев назад
Just land land in water drop landing gear. Simplifies the design
@williamgrissom9022
@williamgrissom9022 8 месяцев назад
Yes, the rocket industry became very bureaucratic and rigid after the 1960's. It was the opposite of what the public thinks of "rocket science" being cutting-edge and open-minded. By the 1980's, it was "old industry" and the tech fell behind what you would find in a cookie factory. NASA projects imposed a paint-by-numbers method where everything had to be defined ahead of time, with detailed schedules. Anything which couldn't be quantified ahead of time wasn't allowed. It required private companies with private investment to get back to the innovation and exploration allowed in the 1950's. The exception at NASA was JPL with their Mars landing designs and rovers.
@YolkaholicProductions
@YolkaholicProductions 8 месяцев назад
@@ronblack7870 Not to mention NASA's budget, or at least their overall importance to the American public, taking a nosedive
@xermionthesecond4396
@xermionthesecond4396 Год назад
I've been following Stoke for a very long time and it's nice to see them featured in one of my favorite aerospace channels! All the best to you and Stoke.
@GatewaySpace
@GatewaySpace Год назад
Wow, I really don't think many people can handle such interviews as well as Tim does. Many thanks for another great look into an aerospace company that is definitely worth keeping an eye on.
@rocketman1969
@rocketman1969 Год назад
a
@jannichi6431
@jannichi6431 Год назад
Speaking of eyes, Fire of Austin may have been too ambitious. Good luck to all innovators ☘️🌌👍
@My_initials_are_O.G.cuz_I_am
Can't wait to see them fly. One could say I'm... ... Stoked.
Год назад
Boo! Your pun is bad and you should feel bad.
@My_initials_are_O.G.cuz_I_am
@ You know... All you did was make me very tempted to pun "Sue me." with "Suomi", given your Finnish name.
@theheresiarch3740
@theheresiarch3740 Год назад
This punster must be stopped, he's crossing languages now
@Awrethien
@Awrethien Год назад
Thats so wrong.. your right, but its still wrong lol.
@ZaphodHarkonnen
@ZaphodHarkonnen Год назад
Take my upvote :FuturamaFry:
@bref5532
@bref5532 Год назад
I love that we live in an age where we can see all this happening in front of our eyes. Thanks to you Tim and all the CEOs who constantly share their enthusiasm and life's work in such an interesting way.
@KenOtwell
@KenOtwell Год назад
This is the first time I've actually realized that Starship is really a pathfinder and not the end-all of rocket design. Sweet!
@angadsingh9314
@angadsingh9314 Год назад
same. I am so hyped.
@yuvrajbanerjee8578
@yuvrajbanerjee8578 7 месяцев назад
Yeah, I forgot that other companies like spacex could exist and really push the boundaries. It seems like all of the attention has been on spacex, so I'm glad we're seeing other future minded companies being shown.
@davecrupel2817
@davecrupel2817 4 месяца назад
All designs should be seen as "pathfinders" in this regard. Never an end-product. Things can always be improved. :)
@rocketman1969
@rocketman1969 Год назад
Stoke Space has to be one of my favorite aerospace companies; their innovation is on the same level as SpaceX today, or NASA during Apollo and Shuttle. Thanks Tim for bringing this information out to the masses in an understandable and enjoyable format. We really appreciate your interviews as they give us looks into the industry which would otherwise not be possible. Thank you so much.
@BaalsMistress
@BaalsMistress Год назад
I'd never heard of them before this video. Definately watching for them now.
@xjArieswar
@xjArieswar Год назад
@@BaalsMistress De-finite-ly
@BaalsMistress
@BaalsMistress Год назад
@@xjArieswar Nope, you're wrong. There are no hyphens in definately.
@georgeb.3292
@georgeb.3292 Год назад
at the same level as SpaceX today or NASA back in Apollo? That seems like a bit of strech... but surely is a company to watch
@BaalsMistress
@BaalsMistress Год назад
@@georgeb.3292 The CEO reminds me of Elon Musk back in the Falcon 1 days. In terms of enthusiasm and approach. There is no question that they have an interesting and innovative product. The question for me is can they get it to commercial viability before running out of funding. If yes, then we have a second company that looks set to drive human spaceflight capabilities forwards at pace and that can only be great news.
@tobycatVA
@tobycatVA Год назад
Tim has earned everything that comes his way. He has become a self taught expert on rocketry able to engage with these visionaries as a peer is amazing.
@DeathValleyDazed
@DeathValleyDazed Год назад
Tim noticed the bearings in the mounting spindles. Who else would have noticed, let alone care. Andy then explained their purpose. Learning moment for most viewers like me. 💡
@williamgrissom9022
@williamgrissom9022 8 месяцев назад
@@DeathValleyDazed Termed "Heim joints". They are common for rigid strut mounts where flexible orientation is needed. Auto hobbyists use them for custom AC compressor mounts. Also used where pivoting motion is needed, like custom steering links.
@bradnarraway9141
@bradnarraway9141 Год назад
Only just got around to watching this, but the amount of access that Andy gave you and the clarity with which he talked about all the concepts really gives you confidence in his idea, at the very least! Ironically I'm more confident at this stage in his plans for the 2nd stage than for the booster, but that might just be because I saw so much of the hardware for the 2nd stage in this video. I'm excited to follow along on their journey (which I'm sure will include some breathtaking successes and some spectacular failures!) and see if they can achieve all the goals they've set out for themselves. And thank you Tim and Ryan, of course, for bringing all this content to us, and for making it easy enough that even us non-engineers can understand 😊
@johnweerasinghe4139
@johnweerasinghe4139 3 дня назад
Love Andy's knowledge of the subject. Much more genuine than some CEOs that don't really appear to know the subject thoroughly. Thank you, Tim.
@eneking2022
@eneking2022 Год назад
This video exemplifies why Tim was picked for Dear Moon. His enthusiastic humility is infectious. It felt like we were standing there with them as we walked through site. No one else is close to bringing that feeling of intimacy, of sharing the moment with them instead of just watching him do it. I suspect it will be the same when we follow him to the Moon and back. The closest I will come to making the trip so THANK YOU Tim.
@gregzsidisin
@gregzsidisin Год назад
This was hands-down my favorite Tim Dodd video. Not only was the subject incredibly fascinating, but Tim is becoming a better interviewer. His enthusiasm leads him to ask great questions, without it getting in the way of the interview so often. The one question I had watching this is: If the second stage heat shield has a geometric offset, does that mean that the aerospike thrust vector has a resulting offset that must be compensated for? Likely through a baseline differential in the thrust chambers, side-to-side? Great job, Tim.
@oystercatcher943
@oystercatcher943 Год назад
Good question. I would guess that when going up the aerodynamics of the offset heatshield at the back don't matter much, but I would think it would matter a bit. It might be so small that you don't need to worry about it and the existing control feedback loop just compensates to steer straight
@qwertyferix
@qwertyferix Год назад
I was wondering this, too.
@johnbenson3024
@johnbenson3024 Год назад
I feel like the answer to that has to be yes and controlled through their thrust controls. But if their constantly running some engines hotter that may result in unequal load on the craft… such an unintuitive solution, love this vehicle! It’s like a wonderful explosive puzzle lol
@cheitanya
@cheitanya Год назад
Pretty sure is not geometry offset is a weight offset only and might need compensation but not aerodinâmic.
@crowaust
@crowaust Год назад
@@johnbenson3024 The engines wouldn't need to run hotter if you play with the spacing of the thrust chambers :)
@AllenLeland
@AllenLeland Год назад
This was a really really cool video, and I think it is awesome that Tim is able to have Rocket Companies reaching out to him now! I think it is awesome because of how well Tim can do the interviews. I feel he is doing really well at bridging the gap between the rocket expert and the normal space enthusiasts :)
@mannenmetsnorren
@mannenmetsnorren Год назад
I like the way Andy talks about it as if it just manufacturing a fridge or something 🙂He's so excited to present their idea and progress to the world, I definitely will follow this closely, thanks Tim for the impressive documentary again!
@bwjclego
@bwjclego Год назад
I love that Tim's ever growing understanding of rocket science just keeps feeding into these tours and interviews to make them better and better. Without that deep knowledge these interviews wouldn't even be half as good. I am stoked to see Stoke's progress.
@Kordi197
@Kordi197 Год назад
I'm soooo excited to see Hopper fly. This launch system sounds so amazing.
@MichaelCox
@MichaelCox Год назад
So this one's Hopper and the SpaceX one was Hoppy, right? Gotta be clear here
@pyrobreather1
@pyrobreather1 Год назад
SpaceX is Starhopper or Hoppy, so I guess this is just Hopper
@donjones4719
@donjones4719 Год назад
It was nice to hear Andy refer to SpaceX by name and use the term hopper. Some companies flinch from mentioning another company, they don't want to be seen as an imitator. Kinda silly but it's prevalent.
@R4wF4ce
@R4wF4ce Год назад
First off, wow, this company is amazing. I love that I get to be alive in another golden age of space flight and exploration. Second, it's always a bit hard to commit to an hour long video that is chalk full of technical jargon that requires full focus to grasp.... but at the same time, I'm always glad to do it when the moment is right. Your content is amazing, truly inspiring to a new generation of space obsessed people. It's been so fun to learn alongside you these past years.
@hjpev6469
@hjpev6469 Год назад
The idea of using fuel to cool the heat shield is so neat. It actually reminds me a bit of SpaceX’s plan to have Starship “sweat” fuel on re-entry. If anything Stokes has a better design because they don’t have to worry about clogged pores in the heatshield (which I believe was the flaw that killed the sweaty starship proposal)
@joshjones6072
@joshjones6072 6 месяцев назад
I was thinking that too. Imagine if Starship used that idea for active cooling. How cool would that be?
@The-Real-Laepi
@The-Real-Laepi Год назад
I find it really refreshing, that you’re also showing off new startups and they’re amazing work. Sure, it’s most certainly inspired by Starship and F9, but it’s also the most unique Rocket I’ve seen in a long time, which makes it really amazing. Good luck to everyone at Stoke Space! Really hope this thing succeeds.
@raptor2265
@raptor2265 Год назад
You do realize that not every vertically-landing, reusable rocket is a copy of Falcon 9, right? If anything, you could say it's a copy of the McDonell Douglass DC-X - the first rocket to take off, hover, and land vertically. There's only so many ways that you can design a rocket, due to the constraints of physics. It's like saying that Airbus is a copy of Boeing - just not quite the case.
@eneking2022
@eneking2022 Год назад
Same reason all cars look almost the same now.. defined by the wind tunnel. If ya took the badges off most people couldn’t tell you the maker.
@The-Real-Laepi
@The-Real-Laepi Год назад
@@raptor2265 of course not, but they explicitly mentioned Starship as being one of the main things Stoke Space we’re looking at.
@kenfryer2090
@kenfryer2090 Год назад
@@The-Real-Laepi starship is a copy of Flash Gordon a ridiculous design forced into production by an idiot and a narcissistic bastard
@UncleManuel
@UncleManuel Год назад
I just friggin love it when Tim totally can nerd out with the CEO and gets his mind blown by all the little & large genius bits. 😁😎🤟 And years of watching Tim, Scott and playing KSP have prepared me for understanding the majority of what these guys were talking about... ✌️
@NoBaconForYou
@NoBaconForYou Год назад
Video games are so amazing. Such a blessing and a curse lol
@fusspot57
@fusspot57 Год назад
This so exciting! I'm 65 years old and was in utter awe of the Apollo missions when I was a kid. Things are getting really interesting now with the wonders of SpaceX ...and now this! Please God, please don't let me die before seeing all these wonderful things in use in Space. What a time to be alive!
@Kyzyl_Tuva
@Kyzyl_Tuva Год назад
Wow! Super impressive overview of what Stoke is doing. I love it. Thank you Tim.
@boombazzled
@boombazzled Год назад
Andy is so exited about showing his cool new rocket, he truly is the best ceo of an aerospace company. He looks like he actually cares, stoke space is not just his toy or his pet, it is his child and he cares for it that way. Stoke space could really grow to become one of the biggest aerospace companies, and I am excited to witness it!🚀
@ALTruckerDad
@ALTruckerDad Год назад
This is what many people don't get about competition. Everyone learns from everyone, and improvements come quickly.
@GregWilson635
@GregWilson635 Год назад
I generally don't watch hour long videos .... but that was sooo cool, I couldn't stop watching. Definitely going to keep an eye on Stoke Space.
@OrangeDurito
@OrangeDurito Год назад
Excellent video Tim! This video is full of gems - on one hand, it’s the ingenious designs and cool technical details of how exactly they are tackling the big challenges of upper stage re-entry, on the other it’s all those interesting nuggets of information about design decisions and tradeoff quintessential to aerospace industr. Then you have a cool level-headed calm CEO who knows his stuff and talks about the rocket so articulately and as always, your fantastic infectious enthusiasm - tie all of this together and you get an awesome video which is a savory delight to any rocketry fan. Thank you so much for doing what you do!
@colinbrazier8511
@colinbrazier8511 Год назад
I am now a major Stoke fan. How can I follow their progress? So adventurous, so many new ideas. Thank you to Andy and Tim for this education. Jus WOW!
@PrimordialEconomics
@PrimordialEconomics Год назад
All you need to know is SpaceX will likely already have started a colony on Mars before this team is able to work out full reusability.
@JonMartinYXD
@JonMartinYXD Год назад
@@PrimordialEconomics Please don't bring Elon Musk fanboy-ism into the space launch market. Yes SpaceX has done some great stuff - and pretty much put Roscosmos out of the commercial launch business - but Musk's Mars colony ambitions are nonsensical, and with Starship we are seeing the same problems that have plagued Tesla: Musk overpromises and underdelivers. The first convoy of Starships to Mars was supposed to leave Earth orbit by the end of 2022.
@reinoud6377
@reinoud6377 Год назад
well I first have to see SpaceX launch Starship in the first place and it isn't looking that promising
@skyrope9446
@skyrope9446 Год назад
@@PrimordialEconomics I honestly dont even see why this matters. Its awesome to see small companies tackle the enourmous task of building a fully reusable rocket. SpaceX was also a really small company and people were probably saying the same thing about spacex's goals two decades ago.
@305dreamhonda
@305dreamhonda Год назад
@@JonMartinYXDsure bash Musk and his companies, but look at what they have accomplished and now we are seeing ripple affects from companies like Stoke. Stoke is following and leading too, great things could happen. They may be late but they do the impossible. Proving naysayers like you wrong everyday.
@gordonicus4637
@gordonicus4637 Год назад
What a cool guy Andy is! Clearly he has a brilliant team around him as well... I wish them all success and can't wait to follow the progress of this amazing concept!
@brown2889
@brown2889 Год назад
I agree. These guys are brilliant! Exciting.
@tubefish666
@tubefish666 Год назад
Tim, the master of that EPIC aerospike video, getting invited by a company doing aerospike engines. Congratulations, well deserved. Stoke Space are coming into this market with pretty interesting ideas. Wishing Tim and Stoke many happy starts and landings!
@bman5988
@bman5988 Год назад
This is all very exciting. As soon as Tim watches the visualization in the video I understood exactly how this thing is going to work and it’s so simple and elegant and then seems so obvious. That’s how really good ideas work, it seems like it should always have been done that way. Can’t wait to see this sucker fly!
@DmitriVanderbilt
@DmitriVanderbilt Год назад
First the 5 hour podcast with Lex and now this (and the upcoming rocket start up video), it's practically Christmas for your fans and subscribers. Congrats on dearmoon, and keep up the great work Tim and Team 😁
@OliverTheSpaceNerd
@OliverTheSpaceNerd Год назад
Yes indeed! It’s an awesome time!
@AdamBoothUK
@AdamBoothUK Год назад
Nice to see a leader that isn’t a “quirky” genius but instead just seems quietly competent and very engaged. Hope they manage to pull something amazing together.
@biplaneflights
@biplaneflights Год назад
Stoke Space's upper stage is pure genius in so many ways. Using liquid hydrogen to cool a heat shield makes so much sense in a reusable vehicle. With one simple design, you solve multiple problems. Just brilliant. Thank you for sharing your exciting journey.
@philipgiacalone5605
@philipgiacalone5605 Год назад
Tim Dodd is a highly valuable national treasure. Thanks for introducing us to the truly impressive innovation happening at Stoke Space. Look forward to following their progress. Another terrific video, Tim.
@Versatilty
@Versatilty Год назад
It may not be the sexiest looking ship but she's now officially the one I am most excited to see. Thank you Tim for giving us this insight into a really unique and unheard of project.
@Mr2winners
@Mr2winners Год назад
The shape shure is gone be ehhhhmm interesting
@PrimordialEconomics
@PrimordialEconomics Год назад
There will be humans already on Mars by the time this team works out full reusability. Unless Bill Gates has Elon epsteined before he can achieve it. This company is funded by Bill Gates.
@drmosfet
@drmosfet Год назад
You referred to it as a her and the bottom is bigger than her top, so what song 🎵 come to mind.
@mobayguy
@mobayguy Год назад
I was a young child when I watched men walk on the moon. How incredible it is to see today's young visionaries doing amazing things that only NASA could have done in the past. We're really moving forward now and faster. Stoke gives a good feeling - Smart, Focused, Capable and not self engrossed. I think Andy and his team are going to really exceed expectations. Best of everything to them.
@serronserron1320
@serronserron1320 Год назад
And hopefully we will see it again sooner rather than later
@toreyweaver9708
@toreyweaver9708 Год назад
I really like that CEO. I think these guys are going to go places. He has a very non-alien Elon musk vibe about him. Great coverage, Tim! Always stoked to see cool video drops like this.
@carpandrei7493
@carpandrei7493 Год назад
Sometimes I watch videos like this just to get soaked on the sheer enthusiasm of these people having an idea and going for it. I love their mindset: build , test, redesign, repeat until it works. This makes engineering even greater! It's a gain a great time to become an engineer or a craftsman. Tim, you are awesome for providing us with such high quality documentaries! Well done Tim, well done! And I wish great success to Stoke Space! They have an awesome vehicle in the making!
@seantiz
@seantiz Год назад
Another great company that values innovation and iteration. Best of luck team Stoke.
@dmedme9268
@dmedme9268 Год назад
Because of you, your channel and crew; it is LITERALLY having a positive impact on the space industry! People are getting to see startups, people are investing in startups, because they are seeing things that are, quite frankly, being shown, and viewed on THIS channel! That is just so awesome to me and something you just don’t really see.. (well, we might see it, but not in a positive context for anything …so not that I need to tell you and your guys to keep up the amazing work; but definitely keep up the amazing work!! It is so exciting to see the start ups and companies come to you and your crew and people investing in the start ups because of what they see on this channel. And I feel like I’m just scratching the surface with this comment! Incredible, incredible stuff!!
@parsonsenergy
@parsonsenergy Год назад
Thank you soooo much Tim. As an SSTO advocate I believe Stoke's hybrid Aerospike is yet another step toward an SSTO solution. There is yet another thermodynamic solution on the horizon which will transend these current solutions by a magnitude of order all within our lifetime... Keep up your great work..
@craigsinnott296
@craigsinnott296 Год назад
I love that he appears to apply common sense to every design challenge, love that he is sharing his process.
@moekitsune
@moekitsune Год назад
These guys are incredibly underrated, I love their upper stage concept!
@Mmoooossee
@Mmoooossee Год назад
Awesome. I just finished the 5 plus hour interview with lex. Keep it up. Happy to support by being a member for 2 years 2 months 1 day. To be exact.
@EverydayAstronaut
@EverydayAstronaut Год назад
Wow!!! Thank you so much!!! You help make this all possible!
@Mmoooossee
@Mmoooossee Год назад
@@EverydayAstronaut absolutely my pleasure. You make learning fun again. I appreciate the like and the reply. I edited the days I was a member and lost your like. Not sure what happened but either way. Thanks for all you do. Can’t wait to see starship launch. I’ll be watching your coverage.
@Muskar2
@Muskar2 Год назад
@@Mmoooossee It's a defensive feature by RU-vid to make sure people don't edit bad things into a creator-favorited comment
@Mmoooossee
@Mmoooossee Год назад
@@Muskar2 yea I figured. It makes total sense. People could write nasty things and a creator would have it’s like on it not knowing what they liked. Thanks for clarification. I Got my like back. Thanks Tim
@stefanomorandi7150
@stefanomorandi7150 Год назад
this upper stage is truly unique! awesome looking ring of nozzles, actively cooled shield which also gives an evaporative cushion for reentry... i cant recall something similar being done before
@miltonmiller
@miltonmiller Год назад
Very few interviewers are knowledgeable enough to ask the interesting questions like Tim does. V-e-r-y f-e-w.
@darkdraconis
@darkdraconis Год назад
Never seen so little negativity in a community, bloody hell even the new comment section is wholesome af Great job at building this community Tim!
@matthewarend7197
@matthewarend7197 Год назад
Holy cow! This is amazing stuff. These guys seem to be taking the “best part is no part” philosophy that Elon always espouses to a whole other level. It’s all so pragmatic and intuitive. Loved this interview and I can’t wait to see how these guys develop this idea.
@LovesCuteokole
@LovesCuteokole 10 месяцев назад
Capturing energy from re-entry heating to power the expander cycle engine for the re-entry burn could the most under rated statement made in this video.
@genius1a
@genius1a Год назад
I see a huge difference between BO and Stokes: Everything here looks like a site where actual work is done. Actual people around, and a nice group shot at the end, with all the staff on site. For the conversation: Two nerds talking right to the important spots - thanks so much for the insert explanations - I really appreciate that service to get it compatible to my basic understanding of rocketry. They are clearly in the make of groundbraking technology - what a great team effort and what a great chief engineer!
@Yutani_Crayven
@Yutani_Crayven Год назад
Man, seeing stuff like this just makes me so happy. There are so many people working on so many amazing things in so many amazing companies. And they all make a compelling case, and they all innovate, and I'm rooting for all of them. This is truly the new space age. Let's hope that it'll last. I wish all the success in the world to every single one of them. Godspeed!
@spillcoleman
@spillcoleman Год назад
Happened to come across this company when looking around at places I might end up working someday…cool to see you covering it in a full video
@traveloguebySandeep
@traveloguebySandeep 9 месяцев назад
No words to write my enthusiasm here. All the things they are working on.. adapted and refined in the best possible way. The idea of an actively cooled head shield combined with the idea of Aerospike... It's really a groundbreaking idea.. all the best guys.. a request for Tim.. please make another video.. we need to know their progress from you.. it's very nice to hear you discussing tech with these geniuses..
@7cle
@7cle Год назад
These guys love talking to you. You learnt their stuff and know enough to respond and interact in such a way that makes anyone watching want to be part of the adventure and invest in the business.
@ardag1439
@ardag1439 Год назад
Holy bloody side of the moon in tarnation, that heat shield cooling is clever as hell!
@khyron6
@khyron6 Год назад
That is a real cool heatsheild. I never thought of using the heatshield as part of the engine. Go baby go.
@Knighfe
@Knighfe Год назад
These are my favorite videos. I love getting videos that are this in-depth
@gunjangupta6690
@gunjangupta6690 Год назад
Unbelievably innovative - I have to use those words for them. So many practical innovations that make sense AFTER you hear about it from Stoke Space, but are not obvious until you hear about it. So cool!
@LG-ct8tw
@LG-ct8tw Год назад
Andy Lapsa a rocket geek in his domain, enjoying knocking the socks off of another space geek and ours in the process. I really really enjoyed it. Wish Stoke Space all the success. And thank you Tim.
@firefly4f4
@firefly4f4 Год назад
"No, we're going to go all the way; we're going to go full flow." My jaw dropped.
@oeliamoya9796
@oeliamoya9796 6 месяцев назад
What a knowledgeable CEO. You can see his love of this project from his constant smiling. That is his dream job
@bradisaacson4656
@bradisaacson4656 Год назад
I understood like 10% of this presentation. Especially the "this instead of that" stuff. What I loved was the pure joy in the fulfillment of the unique design elements coming together in the final realization of the dream:. A very unique space flight vehicle. Awesome!
@Andstronaut
@Andstronaut Год назад
There's a reason why Tim is ALWAYS invited to cool places like this. He's just a great content creator for all of us! Thanks Tim for the amazing content you brought down to earth
@ferventheat
@ferventheat Год назад
From the very expensive, sloth-like progress of the shuttle days, space launches have come a long way. The golden age of exploration. Thanks for the low down on the awesome team Stoke.
@EatMyYeeties
@EatMyYeeties Год назад
Man! I tried to get an intership with them back in October and got denied unfortunately. But after listening to them in person come to my school, I was so sold on it! Their engineering process is so much more freeform than your standard company. They design, build, fail, repeat and basically everything is highly iterative. It's super cool!
@PrimordialEconomics
@PrimordialEconomics Год назад
SpaceX still has a much higher production rate and thus faster iteration... these guys are unproven. Still cool to see others trying though. Not really competition with SpaceX in my opinion.
@Activ3x11
@Activ3x11 Год назад
There is no one that is competition for SpaceX atm but yet again the mission is to be a space fairing civilization so it good all around!! Love that people are innovating again.
@mbdulka
@mbdulka Год назад
Keep trying!
@IDNeon357
@IDNeon357 Год назад
Stoke Space is fraudulent. What they claim they are doing will never work.
@patreekotime4578
@patreekotime4578 Год назад
@@PrimordialEconomics Good thing your opinion is just that. We need as many companies exploring new techniques as possible. SpaceX cant do it all alone.
@danlehman1895
@danlehman1895 Год назад
There's something so cool about a style of journalism where the journalist isn't a total expert, but knows enough to ask the kinds of questions ordinary people want to know the answers to and can understand. Tim is personally invested in the knowledge gain, and it makes the whole interaction with the expert rewarding for everyone.
@TheOptimuspringles
@TheOptimuspringles Год назад
Andy and Tim having a genuine interest in each others points and insights, and thier back n forth is great to see. So glad you were picked for DearMoon Tim, you truly deserve it for all of the knowledge you bring to us normals. 👍🌒
@Carhill
@Carhill Год назад
Phenomenal interview Tim! I am so grateful that not only are these smaller endeavours getting a chance to share what they are working on, but it's being done in such a way that they can discuss the tiny intricacies of not only the launch vehicle but the entire operation. To hear how design decisions are impacted by so many factors, then delving into them is next level. You don't get this in documentaries, unless they are discussing some technology from the far-flung past, and they **maybe** managed to find an engineer who worked on the project, and even then, seldom go into so much detail. Amazing stuff.
@andrewadius142
@andrewadius142 Год назад
Mind Blowing 2nd stage design! Awesome new and exciting aero space company! 🚀
@cg21
@cg21 Год назад
Tim, it's wonderful to see just how enthusiastic you are when it comes to rockets - and how knowledgeable!
@kingkea3451
@kingkea3451 Год назад
Awesome design and absolutely fascinating to hear the CEO talking about it (and it's awesome to see his eyes light up while he does) - this is the sort of stuff that is inspiring me to pursue a career in the aerospace industry. One more year of my degree and I'll be able to enter exactly that!
@dustinweatherby5518
@dustinweatherby5518 Год назад
Wow Tim this is one of the most interesting interviews/tours you've don'e so far! I can't wait to see where this company ends up in the future. Their first design is so ambitious and exciting that I can only imagine that they are on the road to greatness! Fantastic work yet again Tim, I wish you much health and happiness!
@LarsAndersenFrihed
@LarsAndersenFrihed Год назад
This content is second to none.
@jwortman1984
@jwortman1984 Год назад
This is an incredible video packed with so many groundbreaking ideas. It’s amazing to see the opening up of “new space” by pulling back the curtain for the public. It’s amazing to get this kind of access (not to mention translation by Tim!). What a beautiful concept and design. Can’t wait to see the next update.
@MrGoesBoom
@MrGoesBoom Год назад
This is one of the things I love about your channel, you've not only got enough enthusiasm for space for all of us, but you get out there and show us all this cool stuff and do a great job of both breaking it down and asking the questions about stuff we really want to know...not the multitude of crap mainstream media always seems to care about. Probably why these businesses love having you out there EDIT: Also I love what these guys are doing...so many new space providers popping up and trying new or different things. It's a great time to be interested in space!
@TheMrCougarful
@TheMrCougarful Год назад
Great interview. It's great to see them sharing their tech, rather hiding everything unnecessarily. Moving the ball down the field.
@jarrodvsinclair
@jarrodvsinclair Год назад
DUDE! I love how you didnt give away everything at the start. Amazing video
@JMGrimm
@JMGrimm Год назад
Wow! Thanks so much to taking a risk and checking this out! Really cool to see this truly revolutionary approach. Loved this!
@DaveInPA2010
@DaveInPA2010 Год назад
Fantastic Tim, and Stoke too! Tim’s look of sheer joy and delight when the engine fired up was priceless!
@rockapedra1130
@rockapedra1130 Год назад
This is exactly what we want to see! Many different innovative design companies competing with different designs and a quick build, test and redesign cycle. This thing looks great!
@davidbowerman6433
@davidbowerman6433 Год назад
Now that is a truly revolutionary design! I have seen some "out of the box" thinking before, but this is next level. I hope they get it airborne. Simplify, simplify, simplify... The first time I have seen an Aerospike that looks light enough to work. Not to mention the ingenious heat shield using the fuel both inside and outside to form a barrier to the plasma.
@humblejo130
@humblejo130 Год назад
Did I just find a new channel to fall in love with???
@mukamuka0
@mukamuka0 Год назад
This is genius! I don't know how scalable this is to larger size but this is cool!
@davidvomlehn4495
@davidvomlehn4495 Год назад
You're on target with scaling issues, but that shouldn't be a big problem for a while. NASA has done research on significantly larger heat shields
@trikrein
@trikrein Год назад
Doesn’t necessarily to scale up much if at all. Not all launch solutions need to be able to handle all payloads. As is this will be able to handle the majority of current customer needs. And will be highly cost competitive with full reusability.
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