It helps us MASSIVELY! Thank you! ❤️
www.patreon.com/c/whataboutit
9/9
It helps us MASSIVELY! Thank you! ❤️
www.patreon.com/c/whataboutit
9/9
Every part of the system is being redesigned for speed, reliability, and rollout efficiency.
This isn’t just for Earth orbit. This is how you build a fleet for Mars
8/9
Every part of the system is being redesigned for speed, reliability, and rollout efficiency.
This isn’t just for Earth orbit. This is how you build a fleet for Mars
8/9
How Do You Build a Mars Fleet?
SpaceX doesn’t want to build rockets by hand.
They want Giga production, 3 Starships per day.
Over 1,000 per year.
That’s not a typo.
7/9
How Do You Build a Mars Fleet?
SpaceX doesn’t want to build rockets by hand.
They want Giga production, 3 Starships per day.
Over 1,000 per year.
That’s not a typo.
7/9
500 Starships, 150 tons each.
150,000 tons of cargo to Mars in one window.
Construction gear, roads, habitats, launchpads, food, life support!
Everything needed to build a city.
6/9
500 Starships, 150 tons each.
150,000 tons of cargo to Mars in one window.
Construction gear, roads, habitats, launchpads, food, life support!
Everything needed to build a city.
6/9
100 Starships, each carrying 150 tons:
Power generators, robots, habitats.
15,000 tons of cargo in a single launch window.
More than everything humanity has ever landed on Mars, combined.
It's not about planting a flag.
It’s about staying.
5/9
100 Starships, each carrying 150 tons:
Power generators, robots, habitats.
15,000 tons of cargo in a single launch window.
More than everything humanity has ever landed on Mars, combined.
It's not about planting a flag.
It’s about staying.
5/9
SpaceX wants to scale the Mars program.
20 ships per launch window.
Each carrying 75 tons of early equipment: power, bots, supplies.
No humans yet—just groundwork.
These flights are about prepping the red planet for what’s coming next.
4/9
SpaceX wants to scale the Mars program.
20 ships per launch window.
Each carrying 75 tons of early equipment: power, bots, supplies.
No humans yet—just groundwork.
These flights are about prepping the red planet for what’s coming next.
4/9
SpaceX is optimizing every bolt, grid fin, and engine to push mass, not just milestones. Because on Mars, it’s the cargo that counts.
3/9
SpaceX is optimizing every bolt, grid fin, and engine to push mass, not just milestones. Because on Mars, it’s the cargo that counts.
3/9
It’s built for volume.
Each flight is designed to deploy up to 150 tons of cargo, and eventually even 200 tons with Block 3.
2/9
It’s built for volume.
Each flight is designed to deploy up to 150 tons of cargo, and eventually even 200 tons with Block 3.
2/9
This launch represents SpaceX's 67th mission of 2025 and the 501st overall, continuing the company's efforts to expand the Starlink satellite constellation.
This launch represents SpaceX's 67th mission of 2025 and the 501st overall, continuing the company's efforts to expand the Starlink satellite constellation.
Weather conditions for the launch are currently forecasted to be 78°F with cloudy skies.
Weather conditions for the launch are currently forecasted to be 78°F with cloudy skies.
Here are the 23 states currently above or near the auroral view line, ranked from most to least likely to see the show tonight:
Here are the 23 states currently above or near the auroral view line, ranked from most to least likely to see the show tonight:
According to the NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center and the UK Met Office, G1 to G4 storm levels (moderate to severe) are expected through June 2. That means vibrant green and pink auroras may be visible across 23 U.S. states.
According to the NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center and the UK Met Office, G1 to G4 storm levels (moderate to severe) are expected through June 2. That means vibrant green and pink auroras may be visible across 23 U.S. states.