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Don't miss seeing the animation toward the end of the video.


The first instance of that landing would be quite something to witness!


I would drive any distance to see a vstol landing of an suborbital or orbital vehicle. Talk about game changing.


Agreed. If you'd like to cheat and get a sneak preview of what it could be like, at least the last leg, go dig up the Armadillo Aerospace videos of their capsule VTOL launch/land successes. As a thumbnail argument, if we've seen Armadillo do just the VTOL launch/land part, and we've seen SpaceX do the rocket launch & parachute splashdown part, it's not hard to imagine the engineering equivalent of smooshing those two solution spaces together into a single entity which can accomplish both.

I will be as giddy as a lunch table of teen girls at recess when I see SpaceX pull this off.


Armadillo, Blue Origin, and Masten (and the DC-XA before them) have all been working on rocket powered VTVL flights and have done sub-scale test flights. It's a technology that just plain makes sense, especially now that computers are so cheap and so fast. Perhaps in 20 or 30 years it will be so common and routine that a lot of people will think it's a natural part of spaceflight and wonder how it could possibly be done any other way.


Yeah, it'll be incredible to see that kind of precision with just retro rockets, imagine travelling down in that with no wings and no parachute!


Agreed - the 6 minute mark is great. You can see the engine return to earth.




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