Starship Flight Test 11: Everything That Happened in 11 Minutes
Starship Flight Test 11: Everything That Happened in 11 Minutes
In an unprecedented display of engineering prowess, SpaceX’s Starship Flight Test 11 launched into the skies, captivating viewers with an exhilarating narrative that unfolded over a mere 11 minutes. The countdown culminated in liftoff, with all 33 Raptor engines of the Super Heavy booster igniting, propelling the massive spacecraft over the Gulf of Mexico.
As the rocket ascended, it skillfully navigated through critical milestones, including the pivotal moment known as Max Q and a complex hot staging maneuver. This innovative approach allowed the Starship to separate from the booster while the latter executed a boost back burn to head toward a planned splashdown.
Throughout the journey, telemetry confirmed optimal engine performance, culminating in a successful engine cutoff for the Starship at 8 minutes and 58 seconds, integrating it into a suborbital trajectory. The mission not only highlighted the impressive capabilities of the Raptor engines but also set the stage for Starship’s future missions, including the deployment of eight advanced Starlink satellites, significantly enhancing global internet connectivity.
With all objectives met and thrilling visuals of the landing burn, Flight Test 11 marked another pivotal moment in SpaceX’s ongoing journey to reshape space travel. The excitement reverberates through the crowd, showcasing a blend of triumph and anticipation for what’s next in the universe of space exploration.
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Video “Starship Flight Test 11: Everything That Happened in 11 Minutes” was uploaded on 10/14/2025 to Youtube Channel CNET



































Wow
7:47:00 and 6:30:00 WTH😮
the video quality is wild. not too long ago in our human history were we unable to see the earth's atmosphere and space in such quality at such a distance.
Starling simulators is the same as we saw on starship 10. I am looking for something much more important. 1. Heat shields hold upon re-entry. 2. Successfull landing or catch of booster and starship. 3. Starship exiting the Van Allen Belts and reentering. Taking much longer than the other ships.
Why it’s still landing the water is beyond me. We won’t be landing in the water on the moon or in mars. Wasted money, wasted technical lessons by not either catching booster or landing it. Same with starship.
All those SpaceX employees cheering always makes me cringe.
Any of them could be fired on the spot for no reason if Elon felt like it. All who are the wrong side of 40 will be moved on either way.
e vocês pensando que isso era possível em 1961 🤣
That's it! POLLUTE the Ocean with crap.
Wonderful watching mission congratulations crew and Elon
I just googled the cost of one engine 250.000 dollars , no wonder they want to save them (answer from chat gp)
The audience has "The Price is Right" feel.
This helped me understand better.
Hi some one should do a video of a side by side comparison of starship with its 33 raptor engines to the space shuttle program launches that would be interesting
Thanks you Space X.
Bro went from landing reusable rockets to exploding them in the middle of the ocean…
Taxpayer money well spent guys😂
Garbage
Phenomenal! Great work. American engineers still have what it takes…
🎉🎉🎉🎉👏👏👏👏👏
Impressive !!👏
If rlon musk just focused on this instead of politics, who knows what progress could be made
Fantastic!!!!!!!!!
Where does the detached booster go?
does that constitute crash landed in the ocean? Re-usable?
It would be great to see some more shots from the ship return, and how it is handled the plasma
LANDING WAS INDEED A REPEAT OF THE INDIA OCEAN LANDING WHERE IT BLEW UP FRRAME PER FRAME EXACT MAYCH – THIS DOES NOT HAPPEN IN REALITY !!! + YOU COMPLETELY LEFT OUT THE FINISH OF DEPLOYMENT AND RE-ENTRY – WHAT ARE HIDDING ???
>Booster didn’t land back at the chopstick pad
>Starship can still barely take payloads to suborbital trajectory, and has yet to achieve full orbital trajectory
>Starship also isn’t trusted enough to land back on ground.
It’s really weird when people cheer after the rockets blow up. They should be cheering if the rockets stay in tact.
Why they no longer catch the booster??!
Did they give up on landing these things or are they going to just crash them in the ocean from now on.
Bloody Amazing! 🤩
Just blows up again… I'm not impressed
I’m all for aspirational thinking but maybe they should rebrand the facility as “Gateway to LEO” until they actually send an empty ship that far up. Smh
I love SpaceX but them Screaming USA for no reason is very cringe