Scott Manley did the math on that in one of his videos and even if the planets weren't on rails, you'd need about several billion (maybe trillion?) engines, and an infinite amount of fuel, if I remember correctly, and you still wouldn't even budge Gilly from it's orbit after several years of burning.
"Bill" "What, Bob?" "The sun is dying out at a rapid pace, and there is a strong chance of it-" "So we'll refuel it." "What...?" "We'll refuel the Sun, Bob. We'll refuel it." *Pans over to the Komodo KLS-26*
@@InitiateDee How about using an interdimensional rift to transport the heat into another dimension? Should be able to get below absolute zero that way I think.
@@tylerkey7283 or just reduce the gimbal so it controls itself while keeping it in place because that is what causes the shaking in the first place, to much gimbal
the most mass i ever put into orbit at once was a 5 ton space probe and it was not a ssto and it was a insanly useless inefecient rocket with about 500 stages
At least his only sticks out on the top, I made one that was 2 megatons, yes i used tweakscale, it was about 3 times as tall as the vab, it was almost twice as wide and long as the vab, it had about 93 mammoth engines and was a ssto, the only bigger crafts I know of are in rss.
Liftoff thrust: 1.5GN Engine angle: 5 degrees off vertical Cosine losses: 130MN (3 Saturn V's) Just think of all the things we could've done with that thrust ;_;
You gotta love the internet. I was just wondering how much thrust was actually lost with them all angled like that because I seem to lose a lot of thrust just angling engines a tiny bit, and what do you know, you scroll down a little bit and someone actually did the math xD. I know it could just be internet math, but I'm going to pretend it's real anyway so I can sleep.
All that thrust inwards should have smashed the entire structure together, but through the power of KSP, the rocket bodies are virtually indestructible to themselves (to an extent)
10,103,775 fuel on launch! AND BURNING 53,556 fuel A SECOND!! And it is as tall as the 11th Tallest Building In The World, the International Commerce Centre, Hong Kong - 484 meters
Alien race wants their Optical Light CPU back... if you dont know the optical light cpu uses light to run the entire thing not silicone so its millions of times faster then the fastest supercomputer
Critics note that real-world logic systems require "logic-level restoration, cascadability, fan-out and input-output isolation", all of which are currently provided by electronic transistors at low cost, low power, and high speed.
that's what surprised me. indicator just went yellow... a freaking THREE THOUSANDS PARTS ROCKET IS TAKING OFF! And just yellow. If I tried this, the only thing that wold be yellow would be my computer's chips, while melting... XD But by looking at the end of the vid, you can see it's one frame per second or so. that's quite strange
My old 4 core 3,8Ghz Xeon would have died trying this one ;) But my new 8 core 4,7Ghz Xeon seems to handle monstrosities similar to this just fine combined with my Auros GTX1080ti and 32GB ECC RAM (ECC in the futile hope that it would be less crashes) .
@@funnyryguy3025 Good CPU is a must have, my old 3,8Ghz 4 core Xeon struggled hard when you had many parts. My new computer with 32GB RAM, Xeon 2288G 4,7Ghz 8 core CPU handles crazy many parts just fine without frames dropping close to 0 like with my old CPU. I also have an Auros GTX1080ti GPU.
@@eyezak_m people die from aids. That's a common joke. People die from poorly formed governments. Also a common joke. Or how about cancer? Also a common joke. All 3 of these killed more people then 9/11. Well I agree the original statement was hardly even a joke I do think that comedy is meant to mock tragedy.
Shaun Richardson would be good at RU-vid Sins. *Ding* Oh $#!+ that's a person not a character. I do not kno da wae. *Ding* Da wae is a dead meme. *Ding*
Holyshit! I've been wanting to play this game ever since I seen it and yet every time I see another video I'm blown away and it makes me just want to get the game even more... Kudos! Hands-down some badass designing here...
Assuming 10/11ths of the mass (thus 99 kt) is fuel, and it is a kerosene-LOX mix, upon complete combustion, it would release about 284 kilotons TNT equivalent. Even if only a tenth of the fuel combusts, that would already be easily enough to level the entire KSC complex.
Saturn V would actually have done that. Nobody except the crew was allowed within 3 miles during launch. N1, the Soviet moon rocket, crashed back onto its pad, creating one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in history.
Biggest thing I ever got to stay up was a capsule with one Kerbal and one small rocket/tank. It's actually still up there, as I miscalculated the return fuel and failed to touch atmo. Don't know the mass but it wouldn't be the license plate on this thing. Well done sir.
I have no words to describe this video. At point 8 I died. "Now there are two of them, it's getting out of hand!" I didn't see that coming lol. Subscribed, keep it up!
This one rocket put more payload into orbit than at least 100 of my missions combined. Your massive rocket also wasted more parts than at least 300 of my missions. In any case very impressive and that frame rate showcase at the end... my god. Well earned sub and like even if I'm late.
Wow ! And i thought my framrate was terrible at 7 fps. How can you even control this beast while just looking at a picture ? Anyway, really impressive as always, and thats also just as impressive :D
Razzer Inform i think if you overclock your cpu , remove all mods and set graphics to minimums you can practice with launching it before recording the video
6:28 -- I don't think even Bill Keenan's uncanny knack for explosion resistance would have helped here. Oh, Starfleet called; they want their bio-neural gel packets back. In all seriousness, how in the name of sanity did you manage to record such a huge rocket?