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BEST NEWS!!! We have a final draft for your review for "Rocket Engine Cycles // How to power rocket engines!" This is your first exclusive look at some of the new Elon interview footage. Please keep all of this here, no screen shots, screen recordings or the like. Please comment directly in frame.io if you see any errors or glitches and it will timestamp your comment at the correct place! If you have any other general concerns or want to leave a comment, please just write it here!! Thank you!!! ENJOY!


https://app.frame.io/r/f2cfa713-b8ba-4201-b98e-a33e9fd1ee46

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Comments

Anonymous

Awesome video! I thought clips from the new elon interview would be in it? Loved the video and can’t wait for the new elon interview!

Anonymous

Oh dang sorry I missed it! My brain must’ve been distracted trying to think through those awesome diagrams 😂

Anonymous

The animations are spectacular. I found myself pausing on each one to follow through with the descriptions and they always added to understanding. Nice work!

Anonymous

Excellent video as always

Anonymous

It's amazing and impressive how much your production quality has improved over the years. Thanks Tim!

Anonymous

Frame.io stopped working on my phone. At 3:00 - PRINCIPLES not PRINCIPALS. Mnemonic: "PrincipLE = "Law of Engineering", PrincipAL = "ALmighty".

Anonymous

Tim, Great video. Thanks for all you do.

Anonymous

The "why don’t rocket engines melt" does not work. error message says the video is not supported.??

Anonymous

The problem with hydrogen is that it acts as a Lewis acid, so it wants to accept electrons. That means it eats metals, and even glass. Hydrogen is also so small that it will leak through any seal. Hydrogen is all but impossible to pressurize. It can be stored in tanks in liquid form, and as long as it is liquid it is minimally corrosive. On top of that, there are pretty high boil-off losses, and LH2 temp is 20-30 Kelvin. Liquid methane (methalox) is liquid at 91-112 K. This is why methalox is preferred over LH2. It's roughly the temperature of liquid oxygen. LOX. Hydrogen and metals. https://www.azom.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=104

Anonymous

I'm going to somewhat eat my words on hydrogen gas pressurization. It is being done, and the technical problems are being worked out. So maybe hydrogen could be used. 670 bar = around 10,000 psi. Technology improves. https://www.energy.gov/eere/fuelcells/high-pressure-hydrogen-tank-testing

Anonymous

This is an amazingly well organized and produced video that should be used as an educational video for budding rocket engineers. I agree with Daniel Miner. Your production quality is professional quality suitable for commercial use and sale.

Anonymous

What an awesome video! Not that I expected anything less though :) I am preparing a lecture for our local astronomy club on the exact same topic. My animations are just a tad less impressive :P

Timothy-Douglas Alvey

“Couldn’t find the address” with Safari and the .io App wanted my Apple Password and would not accept a fingerprint (No thanks). You’ve probably pulled this one down by now, but it’s one I missed and hoped this shortcut could save me from surfing.