The Soviet's 70 Year Old Abandoned Moon Base Plan

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  • Опубліковано 13 тра 2024
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    The Soviet's 70 Year Old Abandoned Moon Base
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 453

  • @TheSpaceRaceYT
    @TheSpaceRaceYT  5 місяців тому +8

    Get your own privacy report by signing up for Delete Me at joindeleteme.com/SPACERACE20 and use our promo code SPACERACE20 to receive 20 percent off any of their consumer plans.

    • @mailgaga4330
      @mailgaga4330 5 місяців тому

      As great as your content is I just cant't watch your vids anymore. Your transitions hurt my brain. Really. For me they are highly disturbing. No idea why I can't process them. I wish you wouldn't chose these flickering transitions

    • @amotriuc
      @amotriuc 5 місяців тому

      If you are making historical video be more precise on your wording. Ex: Soviet Union was not just Russians. So, when you say Russian did this or that and not Soviet Union you exclude 50% of Soviet Union population. As well I as well I think you do exaggerate how far ahead was Soviet Union in the space race. Soviet Union was ahead of US due to building the first big rocket before US due to priority (they had big nuclear bombs they needed big rockets) and they fully banked that advantage. This was not true anymore for the moon landing race. I would not call this huge advantage.

    • @-danR
      @-danR 5 місяців тому

      @@amotriuc
      Russian ≈ Soviet was, and remains, a very common writing convention, even in more formal writing. And more to topic:
      "When talking about the *Russian space program* , there is a misconception in the West that it was centralized."
      (--Scientific American, July 2009. The Moon Landing through Soviet Eyes:
      A Q&A with Sergei Khrushchev, son of former premier Nikita Khrushchev.
      By Saswato R. Das)
      This is very pertinent, given that fact that Segei was the son of _Ukrainian_ Premier of the USSR, Nikita.

    • @-danR
      @-danR 5 місяців тому

      Allow me another nitpick:
      "...would be powered by a nuclear fission reactor..." 8:30
      You're picturing a nuclear _fusion_ reactor there.
      Albeit it's a nice touch for the topic inasmuch as the tokamak design was first conceptualized by Igor Tamm and Andrei Sakharov

    • @amotriuc
      @amotriuc 5 місяців тому

      @@-danRif you just talk to someone randomly using Russian ≈ Soviet is completely fine, but I don't think this is rigorous enough if you try to do describe history. You should not leave space for misinterpretation.

  • @RazvanYON
    @RazvanYON 5 місяців тому +248

    Ive been saying this for months, if apollo continued and nasa still got funded as it was back then, we would already have a mars colony and a moon city!!

    • @Clone683
      @Clone683 5 місяців тому +57

      People in the 60s thought we'd have been to outer planets by now. They'd be very disappointed

    • @RazvanYON
      @RazvanYON 5 місяців тому +47

      ​@@Clone683yeah, just because countries thought winning a stupid war was more important than our future as an interplanetary species

    • @Patrick-sj9ol
      @Patrick-sj9ol 5 місяців тому +14

      We are the greatest problem solvers yet humanity is fighting merely its own problems. It is not obvious that we will ever reach out to other planets, it needs a special Zeitgeist to be able to, not just technological progress. Hopefully this time around it will not just be about who plants the next flag.

    • @fl00fydragon
      @fl00fydragon 5 місяців тому +15

      Unfortunately the US would rather do tax cuts for the corporate feudal lords so they can have an extra yacht per year, thus requiring the defunding of programs deemed as "non essential", rather than push humanity forwards to a better future.

    • @freeze1337.
      @freeze1337. 5 місяців тому +1

      ​@@RazvanYON its true

  • @dylangtech
    @dylangtech 5 місяців тому +72

    The description of the N1's intended use shows how clever NASA was with their redocking approach. Saturn V and the Apollo modules had fewer stages and fewer steps. That means more efficiency and fewer risk factors to account for

    • @terrystevens5261
      @terrystevens5261 5 місяців тому +8

      The Germans are known for their efficiency.

    • @hihihihihello
      @hihihihihello 4 місяці тому

      Cringe

    • @mi1400
      @mi1400 28 днів тому

      But as vid say US landed so many times it got bored ... why didnt US build some station on moon ... maybe even smaller/simpler but just to close the chapter what russians were wet-dreaming!?!

    • @gregmatin5187
      @gregmatin5187 21 день тому

      It's all a scam! No one has been to the moon! There are no satellites. It's all a scam! Wake up people!

  • @Clone683
    @Clone683 5 місяців тому +63

    It really sucks the Space Race just kinda stopped after Apollo

    • @AmauryJacquot
      @AmauryJacquot 5 місяців тому +9

      well, the powers that be decided to do the vietnam war instead... we all know how that went...

    • @thatonecommie8351
      @thatonecommie8351 5 місяців тому +4

      After the moon landing, both sides began cooperating more than competing. Just a few years later, a Soyuz and an Apollo CSM would dock marking the world's first international docking in space. Almost 20 years later, both sides would begin Shuttle-Mir, where the US space shuttle docked with the Russian Mir station, and shortly after the ISS would start going up. Both sides began helping eachother out to better spaceflight as a whole, rather than constantly trying to be first for something new and rushing and inevitably losing lives.

    • @russellharrell2747
      @russellharrell2747 5 місяців тому +3

      Human space flight isn’t that great. We’ve done amazing things with unmanned missions to every planet in the solar system and many minor planets including the dwarf planets Pluto and Ceres. Our space telescopes have changed our view of the universe, and we’ve discovered thousands of Exoplanets thanks to Kepler. Sure I’d love for humans to go out there as far as we can go, but it’s not necessary to push before we have the proper infrastructure and robust vehicles.

    • @Isaac-eh6uu
      @Isaac-eh6uu 5 місяців тому +4

      ​@@russellharrell2747yeah that much is understood but ultimately worth while projects were completely abandoned. The people who worked on them are long gone and we regressed when it comes to manned flights. We should have pushed more. You get the most progress through trial and error. Just doing a little bit does way more then nothing.

    • @hihihihihello
      @hihihihihello 4 місяці тому

      Moon landings are fake people wake up

  • @Z4m0ht
    @Z4m0ht 5 місяців тому +11

    Those transitions hurt. Everything else is amazing, but they make me wanna flip the table.

  • @groonix3856
    @groonix3856 5 місяців тому +15

    You showed a picture of a nuclear fusion reactor but said the soviets planned to build a fission reactor.

  • @sfsstuff
    @sfsstuff 5 місяців тому +27

    i always thought that the soviets just had a handful of unmanned probes to the moon, never knew more than this

    • @fjallavindur
      @fjallavindur 5 місяців тому +5

      They were the first in space until the Apollo mission. The first man in space, the first landing of probes on the Moon, Venus and Mars and much more.

    • @sfsstuff
      @sfsstuff 5 місяців тому +1

      @@fjallavindur yea, I was just talking about their lunar program, but most of their mars missions failed I think

    • @Vorpal_Wit
      @Vorpal_Wit 5 місяців тому +3

      @@sfsstuff The vast mojority of all missions to Mars have failed. Its notoriously hard.

    • @user-vo8zx2uj1p
      @user-vo8zx2uj1p 5 місяців тому +1

      @@Vorpal_Wit and then there's china, first try, one launch with 1 probe 1 rover and 1 orbiter, complete success, really impressive.

    • @535phobos
      @535phobos 5 місяців тому +1

      ​@@user-vo8zx2uj1pThey are standing on the shoulders of giants.
      Still, impressive to do it first try.

  • @erikjrussell
    @erikjrussell 5 місяців тому +18

    Great video @TheSpaceRaceYT -interesting and educational. But I’m kind of surprised you got through it all without mentioning For All Mankind (Apple TV+), which showed what could have happened if the Soviets got to the moon first, even focusing on the Zvezda moon base. Anyone interested in what *could* have been would get an interesting glimpse at it in that show.

    • @chammockutube
      @chammockutube 5 місяців тому +6

      Exactly my thoughts! For All Mankind is awesome!!!

    • @billygoat520
      @billygoat520 5 місяців тому +1

      This video is mostly nonsense. The Russians who do not live in urban areas have carpeting to their bathroom but it is 100 meters from their bedroom and a cold walk at that.

  • @rexringtail471
    @rexringtail471 5 місяців тому +7

    Space Race: "Not with a bang"
    Also Space Race: "It was the largest non-nuclear explosion in human history"

  • @bigianh
    @bigianh 5 місяців тому +9

    Korolev had numerous health problems stemming from his time in the Gulags the operation he underwent was an exploratory operation that discovered a large tumour on his colon the surgeon attempted to remove it but Korolev didn't survive. Korolev was a high profile patient even though he was not famous in his own lifetime so his Surgeon was the Russian Surgeon General Boris Petrovski

    • @gargoyle7863
      @gargoyle7863 5 місяців тому

      Penalty for having health issues because of gulag: gulag!

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 4 місяці тому

      In Mother Russia you must watch when in Gulag you don't suffer from unauthorized docking procedure when in bathing room, it can unfortunately lead to future problems.

    • @bigianh
      @bigianh 4 місяці тому +1

      @@dukecraig2402 Bathing room? This was the Soviet Gulags a bath room would have been luxury generally you were lucky if you got to sleep somewhere that had a roof. Korolev lost 5 stones and all of his teeth during his stay in the Gulag and was never the same again. On the other hand he's the only person who was sent to the Gulags that subsequently received the "Order of Lenin" and he won that twice

  • @TrainTruck
    @TrainTruck 5 місяців тому +23

    Every time I see these videos talking about who was first in space and what side was planning to do, it just haves me always thinking about what would happen if they just ended up working together instead of just by them self.
    But to be honest even if Coralv lived and help change how N1 preformed, it'll probably still be him and Glo's to be head budding over who's is better and may lead to another rocket to challenge N1. But it'll also be a question how long they would be able to stay there and what would they actually use that place for?

    • @johnmcglynn4102
      @johnmcglynn4102 5 місяців тому

      If they were both working together both countries would not have been competing and governmental inertia plus the political difficulties of planning together would have slowed the effort to get to the moon by decades. Take a look at NASA's Constellation program vs. Space X Starliner, and then add the difficulty of the communication between the US and Russia that would have been necessary to pull off a moon landing. Endiless discussion and consensus building.

    • @kaiserwhence2468
      @kaiserwhence2468 5 місяців тому +4

      That scenario has been made into a series called For all Mankind

    • @unnamedchannel1237
      @unnamedchannel1237 5 місяців тому +2

      That's the thing, nothing would happen. The reason both sides were progressing so quickly as they were racing against each other. You would think that everybody working together would be more efficient but it reduces innovation
      .

    • @rdelrosso1973
      @rdelrosso1973 5 місяців тому +1

      @@kaiserwhence2468
      I watched "For All Mankind" on Apple TV
      In that Alternative History series, the Soviets land on the Moon first, in June 1969, beating us by about 30 days!
      We and the USSR are NOT "working together". We still have separate programs.

    • @embededfabrication4482
      @embededfabrication4482 5 місяців тому +2

      Nothing, it's a waste of time going there, current spacefaring tech is a joke, all the efforts should go towards fusion

  • @averagejoe8255
    @averagejoe8255 5 місяців тому +6

    I really enjoyed this episode. Thank you.

  • @rogerrinkavage
    @rogerrinkavage 5 місяців тому +1

    Love it, this remains one of my favorite channels! 💜

  • @planckstudios
    @planckstudios 5 місяців тому +1

    Whoa. I thought it was a mistake but it kept happening. that out-of-focus-fast-jumble-transition is like poking your viewers in the eyes. Omg you keep doing it.

  • @Peachcreekmedia
    @Peachcreekmedia 5 місяців тому +9

    The N1 seems very similar in critical path to Starship.

    • @stainlesssteelfox1
      @stainlesssteelfox1 5 місяців тому +4

      There are some parallels, yes. Where the Saturn V stages were built and underwent extensive individual testing before being shipped to the launch site for integration, the N1, like Starship Suoerheavy was built at the launch site, with only the engines being shipped in as completed units. This was partly because there was no way to transport a 17m diameter rocket stage over any great distance, as Russia's rail network was inadequate to the task, and no aircraft even close. Barges couldn't be used.
      Also, both the N1 and Starship used a large number of smaller engines to achieve massive thrust, rather than a few large engines like the Saturn V. This allows large numbers to be built in production line fashion, and ease of installation, at the cost of increased flow complexity in the exhaust, plumbing needed and controlling the engines together.
      However, there are major differences which hopefully mean that SpaceX will succeed where the USSR failed.
      First, testing. Only two in six of the NK-15 engines were tested and not the ones actually being used as they used one shot pyrotechnics to open valves, which meant they could not be turned off after activation. Likewise, the stages of the N1 could not be test fired individually or as a stack before launch. By comparison, every Raptor engine is tested, and both Superheavy and Starship stages are tested before use. As far as we know, while the Raptor V1 may have had problems, no V2 has failed due to malfunction. They've failed due to other factors.
      Second, improved computer technology. This is big, the KORD (KOntrol Raketnykh Dvigateley) computer that was designed to control the N1's many engines, while cutting edge, was not up to the task of handling fault situations like a turbo-pump exploding. No 1960's computer could have simulated the complex flow mechanics, so the only way to test the programming was to launch. By comparison, modern computer systems are far more sophisticated, from simulations to monitoring and telemetring every component and managing insanely complex systems.
      Three, quality control and iteration. SpaceX is always looking to improve the Starship design, testing, upgrading, and testing again. Fifty years of improving quality control processes may also play a part. By comparison, the Soviet system was fundamentally authoritarian. Finding a fault would be tantamount to saying your boss/fellow worker has made a mistake, which gets you no friends in a society based on collective action. Add to that the difficulty of testing in the first place and you can see how something like the N1 would have trouble. The design was brilliant, the execution less so, especially under Mishkin.
      But even so, the first two launches of Starship have both failed, you cry out, eager to puncture my thesis. But look at how they failed. The first launch suffered problems due to FOD from the launch pad just not being able to take it. Even so it got further along it's mission path than any N1, including passing Max Q. Remaining engines and computers held up despite failures.
      The second launch had a flawless first stage launch and stage separation. It blew up only after the flip manouvre to return to launch site, something that had never been tested. Some complex interaction, possibly shock hammer or fuel slosh starved the engines and then caused damage. The second stage flew almost all the way to orbit, but was pottentially damaged during the hot staging manoevvre, another thing that hadn't been tested, as it was apparently losing oxygen.
      The last and most important difference is support. SpaceX is committed to making Starship work, and has the funding and infrstructure to keep going, even if they do blow up a dozen more vehicles in the process. By comparison, after the Apollo missions succeeded, the N1 was a vehicle without a purpose. They had two more units ready that could have continued testing, but it was abandoned instead.

    • @tilmerkan3882
      @tilmerkan3882 5 місяців тому +1

      Five stages vs two. Focus on reusability and refueling instead of one big shot... there are zero similaritys except the number of engines.

    • @artexloop8692
      @artexloop8692 5 місяців тому +1

      ​@@stainlesssteelfox1ain't nobody reading your essay lil bro

    • @hihihihihello
      @hihihihihello 4 місяці тому

      Cringe

  • @EorscA
    @EorscA 5 місяців тому

    Followed the channel for a while.... One of your best video's to date. 😊

  • @TheCiardellas
    @TheCiardellas 19 днів тому

    Thanks for the history lesson
    Didn’t know much about this

  • @rgberry69
    @rgberry69 5 місяців тому +2

    Thank you. This is a brilliant video.

  • @HrtBkr
    @HrtBkr 5 місяців тому +2

    Wow i never knew that! great video!

  • @maultasche668
    @maultasche668 5 місяців тому +6

    Creating the biggest non nuclear explosion is an really unexpected achievement
    And it could have been much worse, because block b and c did by an incredible chance not explode

    • @sjsomething4936
      @sjsomething4936 5 місяців тому

      The Soviet Union was known for making very impressively large things, seems to have been an obsession of their leaders. Often impressively big messes, but in this case it was an explosion *AND* a mess.

    • @danielescobar7618
      @danielescobar7618 4 місяці тому

      It beats the black Tom explosion in Jersey city in WW1? This was a shipping/train yard sabotage by a famous German spy that leveled the dredgepile and industrial park next to the port which is now known as liberty State Park

  • @johnmcglynn4102
    @johnmcglynn4102 5 місяців тому

    Thanks. I was unaware of N1 launches 3 and 4.

  • @PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm
    @PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm 5 місяців тому +5

    "Your channel is something very very special. Top 3 on UA-cam for this type of programming in my opinion. It boggles my mind almost as much as the information you provide in the shows, how you only have half a million subscriber’s. I feel like I’m getting in early on a community with the potential to reach 10 million subscribers or more. Just fantastic ground breaking work you’re doing here my friend. I’m honored to be a part of it. I will be making donations to the channel going forward. Thank you for what you’re doing from Canada.
    🙏💫🇨🇦🍻"

    • @TheSpaceRaceYT
      @TheSpaceRaceYT  5 місяців тому +3

      Wow, thank you! This really means a lot and glad to hear you're enjoying the videos we put so much time and effort into :)

    • @billygoat520
      @billygoat520 5 місяців тому

      How much were you paid to say that.

    • @indiangamerz3788
      @indiangamerz3788 4 місяці тому +1

      ​@@TheSpaceRaceYTlove and respect to you from India as well man,amazing man,it would have been marvelous for both us and soviets to build bases on mars and moon ,by now you guys would have had moon coties or bades with millions of population there,but as mations were wasting resources in unnecessary wars which didnt make any sense

    • @indiangamerz3788
      @indiangamerz3788 4 місяці тому

      *cities or bases

    • @indiangamerz3788
      @indiangamerz3788 4 місяці тому

      And 2nd comment is thats why there was a setback in terms of technology

  • @Ender-vh2gb
    @Ender-vh2gb 5 місяців тому

    Love your videos! Would be great for AUD pricing options on the site so I could get some merch.

  • @yeetskeet7234
    @yeetskeet7234 4 місяці тому

    Literally THE DEFINITION of going out with a bang

  • @ape_on_rhino8467
    @ape_on_rhino8467 5 місяців тому +1

    Oh we have pretty good idea what would happen if Soviets got to the moon first. It's called For All Mankind and it's absolute banger of a TV serie

  • @grumpy2.0
    @grumpy2.0 5 місяців тому

    Wow I see a lot of inspiration for the spacex booster

  • @GreyDeathVaccine
    @GreyDeathVaccine 5 місяців тому +1

    8:32 speaks about nuclear fission, presents fushion reactor LOL

  • @MichalCilekAI
    @MichalCilekAI Місяць тому

    Great video, thanks a lot.

  • @kennypool
    @kennypool 5 місяців тому +10

    Don't forget the Soviet Luna remote controlled rover .

    •  5 місяців тому +1

      Lunokhod 1 and 2.

    • @kennypool
      @kennypool 5 місяців тому

      @ How can someone do a "documentary" and not have all the facts.

    • @bobmusil1458
      @bobmusil1458 5 місяців тому

      @@kennypool Because it’s not relevant to the space race. It happened after the US had landed with astronauts on the Moon for several times.

    • @kennypool
      @kennypool 5 місяців тому +1

      @@bobmusil1458 get some sleep, your very cranky

    • @terrystevens5261
      @terrystevens5261 5 місяців тому

      Lunokhod was mentioned in the video.@@kennypool

  • @fast-toast
    @fast-toast 2 місяці тому

    3:54 i like your use of KSP.

  • @FrankRuiz66
    @FrankRuiz66 5 місяців тому +3

    Korolev didn't want to work around hypergolic fuels due to the fact that they are extremely poisonous if memory serves me correctly.

  • @m7791
    @m7791 5 місяців тому +6

    I wouldn’t trust a Russian school bus let alone a moon base.

    • @rdelrosso1973
      @rdelrosso1973 5 місяців тому

      And Russian TV sets in the 1960s would also blow up!

    • @terrystevens5261
      @terrystevens5261 5 місяців тому +1

      Nasa have been using Russian rocket engines for more than 20 years though.

    • @gagarinone
      @gagarinone 4 місяці тому

      It's funny that Soviet rocket engines are still used to launch US military satellites.
      Jeff Bezo has yet to get the replacement to work reliably.

  • @hrdowns9464
    @hrdowns9464 5 місяців тому

    Great story!👏🏼👏🏽

  • @sonnyburnett8725
    @sonnyburnett8725 4 місяці тому +1

    Great video, however beyond fixing the N-1 issues the Soviets would never have been able to land multiple Lunar landing modules within the same hundred mile area at the time this was happening. I actually wish the N-1 had been successful because it possibly could have caused Congress to approve the final three Apollo flights and maybe we could have performed an American/Soviet flight on one of those. Talk about history.

  • @ashleyobrien4937
    @ashleyobrien4937 5 місяців тому +3

    8:33 That's not a nuclear fission reactor ! It's a Tokamac...Fusion experiment...

  • @markb8468
    @markb8468 5 місяців тому

    Subscribed!

  • @tonyug113
    @tonyug113 5 місяців тому +3

    And watching Elons Starship stuff , the N1 story kinds gives you chills..

  • @parthamittra9058
    @parthamittra9058 5 місяців тому +1

    interesting 'what if'' but it was Serge Korolev's death in 1966 which sealed the fate of this mission. Getting the N1's 32 rockets to fire together and fly straight was something the Soviets could not master (Hence the two disastrous launches). Korolev might have found a way but ti was not to be.

  • @SlyNation
    @SlyNation 18 днів тому

    These questions are probably the exact reason why we have the show 'For All Mankind'.

  • @ti994apc
    @ti994apc 5 місяців тому +3

    Had Russian gone with the UR-700 and not tried to build the N-1, they might have won.

    • @fjallavindur
      @fjallavindur 5 місяців тому +1

      They might have won with N1 if they managed to rotate central ring of the engines like Starship and not turn off engines. But the problem was still a cpu to control whole process, they didn't have it back then. Yeah if they sticked with RD-270 engines for UR-700 rocket, maybe they flew to the Moon

  • @johankellgren3943
    @johankellgren3943 5 місяців тому

    No ,that was from a company intranet. Something started to show a livefeed from the moon.

  • @lordgarion514
    @lordgarion514 5 місяців тому +1

    It was never going to succeed.
    Not only could they not afford to test all the engines all together at one time, but they couldn't even test every engine on its own.

    • @davevann9795
      @davevann9795 5 місяців тому +1

      The N1 main engine design was for single-fire engines. After test firing, the N1 main engines would all need to be replaced.

  • @NeedsLessWedge
    @NeedsLessWedge 5 місяців тому +2

    Thanks for insight into some history.
    Looks all too familiar to todays age, all things old are made new.

  • @rdelrosso1973
    @rdelrosso1973 5 місяців тому

    At the 14:50 mark -- the LARGEST non-nuclear explosion in history! That's pretty Awesome.
    But as for the "70 Years" reference --
    -That means the Soviets began planning the Moon Base in 1953 ?
    Or 4 years before Sputnik?
    That's hard to believe!

  • @royparrish2515
    @royparrish2515 4 місяці тому

    it's a good thing that that N-1 Massive Explosion wasn't mistaken as a Nuclear Attack from the US

  • @stefang5639
    @stefang5639 22 дні тому

    Just using the normal crew department without using the complete internal space of the rocket would give us already almost the same amount of pressurized space as the ISS. I think as a start this would be already a great station.

  • @DONALDSON51
    @DONALDSON51 5 місяців тому +1

    TV show 'For all Mankind' on Apple TV explores this 'what if' alternative history of the space race. First 2 series are worth a watch. Series 3 was awaful and have to see what they do with series 4 which is out now

    • @robsalvv5853
      @robsalvv5853 5 місяців тому

      Agree first two are worth a watch. Haven’t seen 3rd series yet… doesn’t sound promising based on your feedback?! lol

    • @somerandomdude1552
      @somerandomdude1552 5 місяців тому +1

      I liked the 3rd season, though it does veer more into sci fi than the earlier 2

  • @InhumanCondition-gh2qj
    @InhumanCondition-gh2qj 4 місяці тому

    Was good soviet plan comarade! Excpet we had to stand in line for 3 hours to get oxygen, many people suffocated waiting. The toilet paper line was only 1 hour long.

  • @jsandersnyny
    @jsandersnyny 5 місяців тому +1

    A little naive. It wasn't just the booster. There were a thousand technological advances needed to successfully rendezvous and dock in lunar orbit and then accurately and safely land on and take off from the lunar surface, and the Soviets had developed neither the equipment not the training or experience to do so. NASA had patiently and systematically developed all of these through Gemini and Apollo, and it was a stretch even for them. Just thinking about the computers alone-the Soviets had nothing remotely like MIT's onboard Apollo navigation computer-gives me shivers. The Soviets' effort was a desperate, last-ditch kind of stunt from start to finish and would never have gotten close to succeeding, though they might have managed to kill a bunch of cosmonauts in the process. But oh well.

    • @MichaelWinter-ss6lx
      @MichaelWinter-ss6lx 5 місяців тому +1

      You sound a little over biased. The Russians did have their bord computers, with so called pen-valves or pen-tubes. I find them more reliable, and I would love to build some amplifiers with these.
      Though the N1 didn't work, the Russian space program is continueasly functioning since 1957. If any problems arrise, cosmonauts can hand-steer their Sojus craft. Something the west has seen only on the Shuttle and I'm not sure if to the same degree. Their landing is somewhat exciting....
      Also, when I like saying Apollo was only a tin can, I rather not think about inside a Sojus.
      🚀🏴‍☠️🎸

    • @kristiankoski3908
      @kristiankoski3908 5 місяців тому

      They didn't get to the Moon but Soviet space program by no means stopped after N1 failure. They got the first space station in orbit and they made it to Venus. Especially the Venera program is amazing.

  • @robotmonkeys
    @robotmonkeys 5 місяців тому

    The irony of showing a tokamak when saying, “fission reactor”

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman 3 місяці тому

    @TheSpaceRaceYT >>> Great video...👍

  • @usun_current5786
    @usun_current5786 19 днів тому

    Just imagine if Korolev didn't die early and Soviets would have succeeded with N1 rocket, the race would continue for decades longer and we would have got lunar bases at least.

  • @SMGJohn
    @SMGJohn 5 місяців тому

    If there did a full thrust test on the N1, they would figured out the issue on day one.
    Taking shortcuts are really bad and the Soviet Moon program is a great example of that.
    N1 moon rocket was a great design, plumbing for the engines, not so much but nothing that could not be fixed.

    • @davevann9795
      @davevann9795 5 місяців тому +1

      Unfortunately the N1 main engines used pyrotechnic valves, so the engines could only be fired once. They test-fired 1 in 6 of the engines off the production line, but those tested engines were then scrapped.

  • @andreasboesch9922
    @andreasboesch9922 Місяць тому

    Great informative video. To know a possible outcome if the Soviets had landed on the moon first, watch For All Mankind.

  • @DouglasLippi
    @DouglasLippi 5 місяців тому

    1:52 lol you can say this about every failed project ever. "It would have been awesome if only it didn't suck so bad."

  • @Jccj93486
    @Jccj93486 28 днів тому

    The N1 had more thrust but…it fucking blew up every time.. thus.. the saturn V was the most powerful rocket during the space race.

  • @randybentley2633
    @randybentley2633 5 місяців тому

    The same would have happened under Korolev. The Soviets didnt do full engine combustion run of the N1 on a test stand, so they would do iterative development by launching and seeing what happens.

    • @amotriuc
      @amotriuc 5 місяців тому +1

      Agree, they were behind at that time, US starred development of the F1 engine before the moon program started. Soviets didn't have anything equivalent in the works and had to take serios shortcuts to catch up.

    • @davevann9795
      @davevann9795 5 місяців тому +2

      The N1 could not be test-fired without replacing ALL of the engines afterward. The main engines were designed so they could only be fired once. Decades later, the leftover unused N1 main engines were sold to a US company, that had some launch failures because of engine failures.

    • @55stryker
      @55stryker 2 місяці тому

      @@amotriuc So far behind that the U.S. is still using Soviet engines.

    • @amotriuc
      @amotriuc 2 місяці тому +1

      @@55stryker The engines that US uses from Russia are not the exactly the same as the ones from N1 rocker. The ones used in N1 rocket were not properly finished yet. Korolev did complain about it himself.

  • @zeltron-qk2iu
    @zeltron-qk2iu 5 місяців тому +1

    In the soviets did achieve 100t heavy lift launcher but ofcourse it was too late

  • @craiggodfrey2789
    @craiggodfrey2789 20 днів тому

    Probably want to calm ALL the adverts down before ... i just cant be bothered with site anymore! otherwise ive enjoyed the layout and information

  • @jamie8732
    @jamie8732 4 місяці тому +1

    It a lot cheaper and easier to make a movie.

  • @rayceeya8659
    @rayceeya8659 5 місяців тому

    THe N1 was an unmitigated disaster. 30 engines?!? Saturn had FIVE and even then they couldn't make all five run perfectly every time. 30 was ludicrous. They built four and all four went kaboom. In recent news, Starship uses 30+ engines and how's that going? Oh yeah they just blew up their own launchpad too. You don't have to be a rocket scientist to see the problem.

  • @CommentConqueror
    @CommentConqueror 5 місяців тому

    Sounds a lot like starships future

  • @charlesringram6616
    @charlesringram6616 4 місяці тому

    What happened to the Venus landing for the Russian Rover?

  • @shockcat5988
    @shockcat5988 5 місяців тому

    It looks like starship almost

  • @gagarinone
    @gagarinone 4 місяці тому

    If the Soviet chief engineer of their space program, Sergei Korolev, had not, strangely enough, died in a simple stomach operation in january 1966, the Soviets might also have been first in the field, ahead of the US.
    Sergei Korolev, just like Wernher von Braun in the USA, had a vision that we humans would establish ourselves in space. Both were unique individuals, were brilliant engineers and had the unusual ability to get many different people to work together on the same goal.
    Sadly, Wernher von Braun also passed away to early, a few years later, from kidney cancer in June 1977.
    With both visionaries dead, the air went out of both the Soviet and American space programs.
    What the world needs today are visionaries like Sergei Korolev and Wernher von Braun.

    • @IraRabinowitz
      @IraRabinowitz Місяць тому

      Wernher von Braun, a Nazi SS member, had slave labor in the Dora-Mittelbau concentration camp build the V1 and V2 rockets. Under Operation Paperclip, the US looked the other way and recruited him and thousands of other Nazi scientists for their expertise.

  • @ethanlal4517
    @ethanlal4517 5 місяців тому +1

    U forgot the first dog in space.

  • @kevinreardon2558
    @kevinreardon2558 5 місяців тому

    When I first read the title, I thought the Soviets were planning for the future and building an abandoned moon base so it would never have to be occupied.

  • @thomascooley2749
    @thomascooley2749 5 місяців тому

    The n1 never worked it never completed a first stage burn
    It made for good fireworks tho

  • @alexanderkidonakis9185
    @alexanderkidonakis9185 2 місяці тому +1

    Was it bad luck or sabotage

  • @tekmepikcha6830
    @tekmepikcha6830 5 місяців тому +3

    Your opening statement was very ambiguous if not incorrect. If the space race was to see who reached the moon first then yes the Americans won BUT if the space race was to see who reached space first then the Soviets were the clear winners.

    • @cornpowa
      @cornpowa 5 місяців тому +3

      That depends on how you define "reached." Yeah, the soviets put the first man in space, but No-No Germany was the first to get a man-made object into space. Sure it was suborbital, but they still reached space in 1944.

    • @tekmepikcha6830
      @tekmepikcha6830 5 місяців тому +1

      @@cornpowa I agree. That's good info.

    • @bobmusil1458
      @bobmusil1458 5 місяців тому +1

      The US did everything that the Soviet Union did.
      The Soviet union could not do what the Us did.
      So the US won.

    • @MichaelWinter-ss6lx
      @MichaelWinter-ss6lx 5 місяців тому

      @cornpowa,
      Perhaps a bit earlier ? V2 went in series production in 1944. First successfull launch was 1942.
      In 1944 they were already working on a spy rocket called V2b, the first space shuttle prototype. 2 flights until 1945.
      Also, work was underway on a 1st stage booster for V2, the A9/A10 rocket. That was supposed to prevent America entering the war.
      🚀🏴‍☠️🎸

    • @gagarinone
      @gagarinone 4 місяці тому

      @@MichaelWinter-ss6lx Thanks for that interesting information

  • @ziyad_aljassasi
    @ziyad_aljassasi 5 місяців тому +1

    Hi❤

  • @portcybertryx222
    @portcybertryx222 5 місяців тому

    For all mankind timeline would probably have been true today if nasa had the same consistent funding

  • @billygoat520
    @billygoat520 5 місяців тому

    Right, and if my aunt had balls she would have been my uncle. The USSR was also the first nation to lose people in their space program and how many will never be known. The Russians were also years behind in computer technology, they still are. Belize can draw up plans and say this is what we would like to do on the moon.

  • @EvenStar303
    @EvenStar303 5 місяців тому

    How would they bury those Moon-Base modules with dirt?
    Did they bring an excavator?
    What is the excavator running on, since there is no oxygen atmosphere on the Moon?
    Or did they bring a shovel?

    • @iamcase1245
      @iamcase1245 11 днів тому

      The excavator would've likely run on electricity coming from batteries.

    • @EvenStar303
      @EvenStar303 11 днів тому

      ​@@iamcase1245Most definitely.

  • @danielescobar7618
    @danielescobar7618 4 місяці тому

    Needing surgery was a very risky thing at that time because both lenin and stalin purged a lot of the most experienced and educated doctors. There was noone to teach or oversee practices at this time. Supposedly both of them could have been saved but there was no one around to do it. Around this time they had students in neutral countries' universities all over

  • @willadeefriesland5107
    @willadeefriesland5107 5 місяців тому

    Makes you wonder if Elon took notes from the Soviet's failures...
    The wrong notes...

  • @peterlongprong7521
    @peterlongprong7521 5 місяців тому +1

    Russian rocket engine designers: "should we come up with a new blueprint?"
    "nah, we'll just keep doing the same thing over and over, and over again, and hope it works out"

    • @SMGJohn
      @SMGJohn 5 місяців тому +1

      And who has the most reliable Rockets in the world because of that?

    • @terrystevens5261
      @terrystevens5261 5 місяців тому +2

      Ironic really, when you consider Nasa used Russian rockets extensively.

  • @danielescobar7618
    @danielescobar7618 4 місяці тому

    Burying your modules with regolith was an extremely bad idea in hindsight. Nobody accounted for how impossibly abrasive it is. More than industrial abrasives we can mine and manufacture here. It never has any natrual weathering or grinding down action like anything on earth, even during mining, our indusrial diamonds and aluminum oxide are blunted. The moon regilith during the act of burying, and compaction would be cutting and grinding constantly on the outside

  • @lepompier132
    @lepompier132 5 місяців тому

    How come the first fatal accident on the Launch pad of the N1 that used hypergolic fuel is not mentionned? One of the first time I learned about the N1 after the fall of the USSR I saw the documentary of the N1 exploding on the launch pad as they worked on it. Many died on that day. After that accident they started to use RP1 and Lox. Why in 2023 do people desperatly change or remove some facts on events of history?

  • @MrGoesBoom
    @MrGoesBoom 5 місяців тому

    Back in the day when the budget was plentiful and ambition was past the Karmen Line..plenty of really well thought out plans, little to no political or social will to carry them out once people actually got to the moon. Hopefully this time around things will be different ( for all that commercialization of everything has reduced so many things to trying to squeeze every last cent outta people, it seems like it's the only way we're gonna get things done in space at the moment )

    • @gagarinone
      @gagarinone 4 місяці тому

      It seems that humanity needs an external enemy that can unite us towards a common goal.
      As in the science fiction television series "Space: Above and Beyond".

  • @ionelsaiu6377
    @ionelsaiu6377 2 місяці тому

    they didn t lost anything,they lunch the first man into space,first satelite,first orbital station,they master the most efficient rocket enginee Rd class

  • @mathiaslist6705
    @mathiaslist6705 5 місяців тому

    probably that was all to intrigues and internal fightings that the N1 failed and politics that by that time already ignored things and just wanted to push it through. Then for decades people draw wrong conclusions out of the failure. I'd say politic was just pushing to much and qualification or concerns of the engineers were not an issue.

  • @SevenDeMagnus
    @SevenDeMagnus 2 місяці тому

    Cool

  • @markabele8794
    @markabele8794 5 місяців тому

    A very interesting "what if" scenario about how are space race could have gone. It's possible we have gone to Mars at some point.

    • @rdelrosso1973
      @rdelrosso1973 5 місяців тому +1

      I think there is an error in your last sentence.

    • @markabele8794
      @markabele8794 5 місяців тому

      @@rdelrosso1973 You're right. I should have proofread what I wrote before posting.

  • @kastenolsen9577
    @kastenolsen9577 3 місяці тому

    A good book on how to frugally colonize our solar system is Second Exodus Colony. Located at the Internet Archives. Read and learn. Free to pass along.😊😊😊

  • @rapidthrash1964
    @rapidthrash1964 5 місяців тому +2

    Honestly, despite only two launches so far, Space X’s starship is still more successful than all the N1 launches

    •  5 місяців тому

      No.

    • @thomaslanders2073
      @thomaslanders2073 5 місяців тому

      Not really. SpaceX engineers and scientists need to cheer and clap less while working hard more 😅

    • @Thethyck4445
      @Thethyck4445 5 місяців тому +3

      ​@@thomaslanders2073no the Starship managed to get into space the N1 never managed to get it to space and Starship never had a major ground explosion yet.

    • @blengi
      @blengi 5 місяців тому +2

      true and has much more power, much greater potential tonnage to LEO, full reusability, more efficient and much cheaper engines etc and they already have experience with the most successful, reliable, cheapest per kilo rocket booster in history falcon 9 to make it all come together

    • @fjallavindur
      @fjallavindur 5 місяців тому +5

      ​@@Thethyck4445 ofc, 50 years ago soviets didn't have cpu to control 30 N1 engines, SpaceX have these technologies rn

  • @mamaloh8165
    @mamaloh8165 5 місяців тому

    70 years, that would have been in 1953................................. come on!

  • @OKTHUNDERROCK
    @OKTHUNDERROCK 4 місяці тому

    If the moon has 1/6th the gravity of the earths gravity, would it not take a rocket 1/6th the size of apollo to get off the moon to return home?

  • @damanimcclain2065
    @damanimcclain2065 5 місяців тому

    So it’s two dead tortoises on the moon! got it🥴

    • @nathanlillie5262
      @nathanlillie5262 5 місяців тому

      No, the tortoises are still there in the secret communist turtle moon base plotting their return. I think there is a movie plot there somewhere.

  • @mightympm3516
    @mightympm3516 5 місяців тому

    its the "FoR rEaL" for me.... for real.

  • @richardbailey3343
    @richardbailey3343 5 місяців тому

    So do you think korolev dying was really the end of thhe cccp space program?.

  • @CD3WD-Project
    @CD3WD-Project 5 місяців тому +3

    I find it sad that we never went farther with space stuff. Yet I find it even funnier that yet 50 years on we can't even make it back to the moon.

    •  5 місяців тому

      You need to get your meds balanced sleepy.

  • @orbsphere-
    @orbsphere- 5 місяців тому

    If you had been a betting man in the 1960's? Sounds more like AI talk which neither an AI or you, if human, were probably even around back then 1:25 If Russians were so close in space race why didn't they zoom out in front after Apollo got grounded? They had little regard for life trying to be competitive and any moon base would have been a ghost town in short period of time.

  • @JMPCARREPAIRS
    @JMPCARREPAIRS 4 місяці тому +1

    NOBODY should build anything significant on the moon especially not a base , what if the added weight change of rotational balance is affected? Answer it throws off the balance between the earth and moon and could have catastrophic effects to life here on Earth. Just think about it.

  • @user-hf8dk8ld3i
    @user-hf8dk8ld3i 5 місяців тому

    God i found that on Google earth-On the moon south or north pole.

  • @millionerbbb
    @millionerbbb 5 місяців тому +3

    Yeah, soviets had a lot of fantasies like that Moon base. But they never had enough resources to make it real. They made N1 test flights without any on ground tests because of funds shortage.

    • @davevann9795
      @davevann9795 5 місяців тому +1

      No N1 test fires because the N1 main engines were designed to only be fired once. The engines used pyrotechnic valves, which means tiny explosives operated those valves. After a test firing, the N1 main engines would need to be scrapped and replaced.

  • @janpaulsiebert727
    @janpaulsiebert727 5 місяців тому

    I managed to last 3mins 23 secs into this vid, but the deranged flashing graphics got the better...oh dear...

  • @MrArgus11111
    @MrArgus11111 5 місяців тому

    It is not entirely possible that we would see Russians or anybody for that matter living on the moon today. The Soviet lunar landing program was desired solely by the Soviet space program itself. The Soviet government under Kruschev and even later saw the spiraling expenses for their program and knew the insane costs that would result from any "base" or other operation on the lunar surface. The money didn't exist even if they were to scrap most of their military programs, something impossible in a government that was so heavily tilted towards military expenditure. Your thesis statement is absolutely incorrect in view of Soviet history.

  • @OzCrusader
    @OzCrusader 3 місяці тому

    What if? For anyone who has been living under a rock for the last 3 years, that’s what “For All Mankind” is all about 👍

    • @sinabarzyar5766
      @sinabarzyar5766 3 місяці тому +1

      Best show ever made about space flight fr fr

  • @plasmaman9592
    @plasmaman9592 4 місяці тому

    If anyone wants your name and address, all they have to do is copy your videos and post them on their own channel. And when you submit dmca take down letter. You have to include your full name address and other contact information and that gets shared with them. I have a friend who I was trying to help with the problem and the lawyer said that information is required to be able to financially go after someone who falsely files dmca take downs. Some people might do it just for the challenge of getting your names. Ince you say you don't want your name out there. So I'd be careful about that. That's just my opinion.
    And who knows maybe everyone on the internet is a good person and wouldn't do that, just to take on the challenge.