Thanks to Mary, Jack, & the whole NSF crew for their excellent continued work! Great meeting y'all in person the times I've been down working in the new construction areas!
I don't know since when there is narration but I'm glad because I stopped watching these a while ago and this is all I needed to get back to watching them 😊
@@NASASpaceflightwell it's a nice type of update, I really enjoy the relaxing pace of the narration, feels more personal, like watching a Bob Ross video about rockets haha
Great update guys! I was down at the olm yesterday when they lifted the booster that was pretty freaking awesome we're all just down there talking and there it goes up up and away. I got some pretty good footage for being an amateur at this and that was the first time I'd seen up the booster skirt😅
We love and appreciate every single person at NSF, especially those in the field, working tirelessly to make it all possible. Thank you thank you thank you!
I’ve been watching since SN5 (newbie) and watching the NSF team develop and grow has been almost as interesting as the SpaceX progression. Mary, @bocachicagal, and Jack have been working hard, with increasing support from new team members, through good times and various trials and tribulations. Thanks for all the hard work to provide great coverage to those of us who are scattered around the world.
This format of commentary coupled with some really great photography is really great. THANKS! This is my favorite channel on Starbase reporting. I would like to see more coverage on all the new construction going on around all the various sections of Starbase.
Thank you for the interesting commentary and for keeping us up to date. I'm hoping to be there for Flight 6, so I'm trying to keep up with all the info I can before hand.
The shots are great. I love the static fire and thanks for pointing out the blue flame. The falling crew 8 vehicle ❤. After the lifted the booster. I fel that I could almost read the writing on the engine covers. Real cool shot.
Murals are typically printed on vinyl sheets. It makes it easy to rum through printing machines and also for rolling up for transport, hoisting, applying, etc.
Always a nice way to tour from the safety of my own living room. Thanks Mary, Jack and the rest. very cool shots that also remind us of how big Starship is.
@@NASASpaceflight i think this also happens with hd video too perhaps the video could be unlisted for 30 minutes until the audio option loads? i know that works for the hd video problem, and it could stop people getting confused on the option being missing (at the cost of having to wait 30min extra ofc)
After seeing that actuator and watching the time lapses of work at Starhopper, I'm starting to suspect they're going to use it to test landing leg variants.
I had the singular pleasure of meeting the NSF team at the launch site. Words cannot express my gratitude for their sacrifice and dedication. We love the fascination you inspire in us. I’m sure that the future citizens of Mars will be eternally grateful for your service. 🫡
Is there a water system or other protection system on the SHIP quick disconnect? Look at the 6-minute Mark, roughly. A couple seconds after the first engine starts you can see some mist of some sort drifting down from the ship quick disconnect!
Anyway you can put the current time of how long things are taking at the bottom of the screen or at the top during the time-lapse for these videos? I like to get an idea how long things take.
Re: Mural…. Everything @ Spacex has a ‘milk type’ use by date. ie. ‘GATEWAY TO MARS’ wall Huge THX to Jack, Mary & all photographers. All the space community absolutely appreciates what you go through to keep the world updated!!!
Instead of the mural they should of did a series of video projectors mounted along that wall and projected a massive mars scene that changes over weeklong timespans. Like every week shows a theoretical year of progress on mars.