Those pictures are amazing.Arthur Dent wrote: ↑April 27 23, 8:45 amI’m way outside my area here, but I read that it is not compressive stress that’s the issue with the pad concrete. Apparently, the massive amount of gas pressure will make its way through pores and cracks all the way through to the earth, and then produce a huge lifting pressure underneath. The heat loading helps cracks form and more cracks mean more pressure gets through, and you get a run away positive feedback. Though not exactly the kind of concrete physics that goes into your average building design, this is apparently well known, and their engineers were almost certainly aware that this was likely to happen. Musk claims that they they decided it was ok based on the short half throttle static fire test, which sounds exactly like the type management [expletive] I’ve encountered before.
Regarding the fuel tanks close to the pad, that does seem crazy. I would have thought that a the rocket detonating on the pad or only lifting off a short distance before coming crashing back down on the pad would be a more likely failure mode than the one they had. Maybe the theory is that this type of failure would be so bad, that the bit of extra fuel in the tanks is a “who care” afterthought?
Some close up photos of the debris cloud:
Hadn't even thought about gasses getting into the pores. Running a static half load test does sound like some gonzo engineering [expletive].
Kind of an inside joke from a company I used to work at where one of the older guys didn't do much engineering and relied on younger people to do all the grunt work including technical design. Time to time, the actual design didn't match what he wanted so the design became a complete fabrication of this guys mind. Nothing that would risk much damage to anything but also not exactly what was required. Our saying when this happened was 'Jerry checked it' and out it went. I need a meme with a pic of that debris flying through the air with Elon checked it over it. If I knew how to post photos anymore, I'd do it.

