if, just saying, someone had a huge fucking laser and wanted something to plink away at, and happened to look up at night, most anywhere on the planet, ran the numbers and figured the odds, and well elo's stuff does blow up regularly
There are a lot of better ways to present your point; for example:
How many batteries supplied with Elon Musk’s companies’ products have encountered an unplanned combustion event after light or no damage?
Does SpaceX use in-house or third-party batteries in their satellites?
Is their explosion rate of 2(?) per N, where N is the number of unexploded SpaceX satellites, plausibly still within the statistical ranges defined by non-SpaceX satellites given the data available to us?
Did the satellite deflect before it exploded or are the shard trajectories consistent with a zero-impact scenario?
Filing “fragment creation event” alongside “rapid unintended disassembly”.
A “fragment creation event” that was “likely caused by an internal energetic source”.
https://xcancel.com/LeoLabs_Space/status/2038680177408880719
Fortunately,
> Due to the low altitude of the event, fragments from this anomaly will likely de-orbit within a few weeks.
[dead]
Second? When was the first?
Is this an instance of weaponization of the LEO? No statement from SpaceX?
> When was the first?
17 December 2025, per the thread.
Tubes must have gotten clogged
Do they have pressurized gas/liquid onboard that could explode or is this most likely a collision?
They have argon gas for the ion thrusters that adjust the orbits.
If it were a collision, it would be far more noteworthy and likely in the title
if, just saying, someone had a huge fucking laser and wanted something to plink away at, and happened to look up at night, most anywhere on the planet, ran the numbers and figured the odds, and well elo's stuff does blow up regularly
> and well elo's stuff does blow up regularly
[citations needed]
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvim4rsNHkQ
Really? How many Starlink satellites have blown up? How many F9 second stages?
There are a lot of better ways to present your point; for example:
How many batteries supplied with Elon Musk’s companies’ products have encountered an unplanned combustion event after light or no damage?
Does SpaceX use in-house or third-party batteries in their satellites?
Is their explosion rate of 2(?) per N, where N is the number of unexploded SpaceX satellites, plausibly still within the statistical ranges defined by non-SpaceX satellites given the data available to us?
Did the satellite deflect before it exploded or are the shard trajectories consistent with a zero-impact scenario?
etc.