Skip to main content

Get the Reddit app

Scan this QR code to download the app now
Or check it out in the app stores

SpaceX














SpaceX (@SpaceX) on X: “Starship re-entering Earth's atmosphere. Views through the plasma”
r/spacex

Welcome to r/SpaceX, the premier SpaceX discussion community and the largest fan-run board on the American aerospace company SpaceX. We recommend using r/SpaceX with Old Reddit. This board is not an official outlet for SpaceX information."


Members Online


SpaceX launch rate causing Wikipedia drama
r/SpaceXLounge

Welcome to r/SpaceXLounge, the sister subreddit to r/SpaceX, and a place for relaxed and laid-back discussion. We recommend Old Reddit with r/SpaceXLounge. This subreddit is not an official outlet for SpaceX information.


Members Online
SpaceX launch rate causing Wikipedia drama

The Wikipedia page "List Of Falcon 9 And Falcon Heavy Launches" has a lot of interesting information on Falcon 9 launches: Launchpad, payload mass, booster serial number, landing outcome etc. But this makes the page very large and it was split into two articles back in October 2021. At the time there were 126 launches and the first decade of 77 launches was split off into "List Of Falcon 9 And Falcon Heavy Launches (2010~2019)" leaving 49 launches in the main article.

Today there are 235 launches in the main article and it's starting to have issues loading that much content. It's roughly twice the size it was the last time it was split and it's only going to grow more going forward, so it's not really a question of if it should be split again but when it should be split again. There's an ongoing debate behind-the-scenes of Wikipedia with different contributors arguing over how it should be split but also bafflingly some people insisting it shouldn't be split at all.

Usually the Wikipedia articles for rockets with dozens and dozens of launches (Like Atlas or Thor/Delta) are split per decade. But Falcon 9 has launched more times in 2023 than the entire first decade, the page "List Of Falcon 9 And Falcon Heavy Launches (2020~2029)" would be 235 launches from day one and there's still five years of launches to come. Falcon 9 just launches too fast to split the list per decade.

Luckily there's another rocket that has had hundreds upon hundreds of launches, the R7/Soyuz rocket family which has launches split by *half-*decade. So in theory the Falcon 9 list could be split out into "List Of Falcon 9 And Falcon Heavy Launches (2020~2024)". If the current launch rate remains stable there'll be well over 300 launches, around the same as the largest R7 pages but the Falcon 9 list has a LOT more information so the page would be a lot larger. And the next half-decade is likely to be even larger if Falcon 9 launch frequency accelerates.

So what's the solution? Split the pages per two-year slice? 2023~2024 will be >200 launches, 2025~2026 might be too big. Maybe we should ignore that issue until it comes up in 2026, or maybe we should go to one-year slices now rather than reshuffling the pages several times? If you've spent any time behind-the-scenes on Wikipedia you'll know there's the same number of opinions as there are people involved in the discussion, sometimes MORE opinions than there are people arguing somehow.

But the most baffling part of the discussion are the people arguing not to bother splitting the page at all. "Maybe we could only list the most important launches?" is a bold stance that actually aligns with Elon's vision of making spaceflight routine, we don't bother listing every airliner takeoff worldwide so perhaps we don't need to record every single Starlink launch? But that raises the question of how to decide a cutoff for what launches are worth recording. One person suggested just trimming the fat on the "Future Launches" section which has some speculative future launches without much information. But that's missing the fact the "Past Launches" section will inevitably grow, even without a "Future Launches" section at all the page is going to get too big as long as SpaceX keeps launching Falcon 9s.

And a final spanner in the works is that someone suggests adding even more data to the table, the details of which pad/droneship the landing used. This would be valuable information to document but it would make the page size even larger.

I think it's funny SpaceX is launching so many rockets it's causing arguments on how best to organise the information on Wikipedia.







SpaceX is in full compliance with all of its U.S. government contracts. SpaceX notified the Select Committee last week that it is misinformed, but the Committee chose to contact media before seeking additional information. [Regarding US military use of Starshield in Taiwan]
r/spacex

Welcome to r/SpaceX, the premier SpaceX discussion community and the largest fan-run board on the American aerospace company SpaceX. We recommend using r/SpaceX with Old Reddit. This board is not an official outlet for SpaceX information."


Members Online
SpaceX is in full compliance with all of its U.S. government contracts. SpaceX notified the Select Committee last week that it is misinformed, but the Committee chose to contact media before seeking additional information. [Regarding US military use of Starshield in Taiwan]



SpaceX just achieved peak download speed of 17Mb/s from satellite direct to unmodified Samsung Android phone
r/spacex

Welcome to r/SpaceX, the premier SpaceX discussion community and the largest fan-run board on the American aerospace company SpaceX. We recommend using r/SpaceX with Old Reddit. This board is not an official outlet for SpaceX information."


Members Online

  • Welcome to r/SpaceX, the premier SpaceX discussion community and the largest fan-run board on the American aerospace company SpaceX. We recommend using r/SpaceX with Old Reddit. This board is not an official outlet for SpaceX information." members
  • Welcome to r/SpaceXLounge, the sister subreddit to r/SpaceX, and a place for relaxed and laid-back discussion. We recommend Old Reddit with r/SpaceXLounge. This subreddit is not an official outlet for SpaceX information. members
  • We are not SpaceX, we are Space-X. We are a group that is trying to get rid of Outerspace. We hate space. Join us. We want to fill in outerspace or something. members
  • Share & discuss informative content on: * Astrophysics * Cosmology * Space Exploration * Planetary Science * Astrobiology members
  • News on SpaceX's Starship and Superheavy architecture currently in development! This is a fan run site. members
  • r/Starlink is for news, media, and discussions related to Starlink, the SpaceX satellite internet constellation. This is a fan-run Subreddit. For official news and to sign up for service, visit starlink.com members
  • Following Elon and his companies members
  • Subreddit dedicated to the news and discussions about the creation and use of technology and its surrounding issues. members
  • members
  • A subreddit devoted to the field of Future(s) Studies and evidence-based speculation about the development of humanity, technology, and civilization. -------- You can also find us in the fediverse at - https://futurology.today members
  • a subreddit all about space travel (NASA, Roscosmos, SpaceX, ULA, Boeing, Rocket Lab, etc.). To infinity and beyond! members
  • The most amazing place on reddit! A subreddit for sharing, discussing, hoarding and wow'ing about Dogecoins. The much wow innovative crypto-currency. members
  • /r/Starlink_Support is for questions about the Starlink satellite constellation. General Starlink news, media, and discussions should be posted to /r/Starlink. All other SpaceX content should be posted to /r/SpaceXLounge. Visit Starlink.com to sign up. Reminder: This is a fan-run subreddit. It is not an official Starlink website. For official Starlink news and information, please visit Starlink.com members
  • A subreddit for articles, images, videos and discussion about spaceflight. members
  • A place for photographs, pictures, and other images. members
  • Rockets going wild! members
  • The Kerbal Space Program subreddit. For all your gaming related, space exploration needs. http://kerbalspaceprogram.com members
  • The place for news articles about current events in the United States and the rest of the world. Discuss it all here. members
  • r/NASA is for anything related to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration; the latest news, events, current and future missions, and more. members
  • A place for major news from around the world, excluding US-internal news. members
  • Reddit's main subreddit for videos. Please read the sidebar below for our rules. members
  • The Mars Society is the world's largest and most influential space advocacy organization dedicated to the human exploration and settlement of the planet Mars. Established by Dr. Robert Zubrin and others in 1998, the group works to educate the public, the media and the government on the benefits of exploring Mars and creating a permanent human presence on the Red Planet. members
  • the home of Tesla discussion for those who haven't drank the Elon-Ade members
  • Welcome to the official subreddit for Spaceflight Simulator, a game about exploring our local space with rockets you build! members
  • Loseit Challenge Team SpaceX members
  • The original and largest Tesla community on Reddit! An unofficial forum of owners and enthusiasts. See r/TeslaLounge for relaxed posting, and user experiences! Tesla Inc. is an energy + technology company originally from California and currently headquartered in Austin, Texas. Their mission is to accelerate the world's transition to sustainable energy. They produce vertically integrated electric vehicles, batteries, solar, and AI software and hardware solutions. members
  • Interesting Tech News members
  • Memes! A way of describing cultural information being shared. An element of a culture or system of behavior that may be considered to be passed from one individual to another by nongenetic means, especially imitation. members
  • The goal of /r/tech is to provide a space dedicated to the intelligent discussion of innovations and changes to technology in our ever changing world. We focus on high quality news articles about technology and informative and thought provoking self posts. members
  • The proud subreddit of Orlando, Florida. members