SpaceX's New Starship Flight 13 Trajectory Change To reach orbit the first time will make History...

SpaceX's New Starship Flight 13 Trajectory Change To reach orbit the first time will make History...

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ALPHA TECH
41 Video Views·Jul 1, 2026  #alphatech #techalpha #spacex

SpaceX's New Starship Flight 13 Trajectory Change To reach orbit the first time will make History...
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#techalpha
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0:00 Surprise Hawaii Filing
0:37 Evidence Of Orbit
3:41 Flight 13 Scenarios
7:50 Starliner Fails Boeing
10:26 ISS Structural Decay
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SpaceX's New Starship Flight 13 Trajectory Change To reach orbit the first time will make History...
Could Starship Flight 13 become SpaceX's first orbital mission? New regulatory filings suggest something much bigger may be happening behind the scenes. A quiet NOAA application points to a splashdown near Hawaii—something that's impossible on a normal suborbital flight. Combined with earlier FCC documents, the evidence suggests SpaceX could be preparing for its first full orbit around Earth.
In this video, we break down the latest Starship Flight 13 news, explain what the Hawaii splashdown really means, and explore how this mission could unlock the next phase of SpaceX's Moon and Mars ambitions. We also examine Boeing's continuing Starliner delays and why the aging International Space Station is becoming an increasingly urgent challenge for NASA.
SpaceX's New Starship Flight 13 Trajectory Change To reach orbit the first time will make History...
In this video:
🚀 Why Flight 13 may attempt SpaceX's first orbital Starship mission
🚀 The NOAA filing that points to a Hawaii splashdown
🚀 FCC evidence suggesting Ship 40 is classified as an orbital vehicle
🚀 How Flight 13 could transition from suborbital to orbital during flight
🚀 Why the recent Raptor relight tests are so important
🚀 What orbital Starship means for Starlink V3, Artemis, and orbital refueling
🚀 Boeing Starliner's latest setbacks and delayed return
🚀 Why the ISS is entering its most challenging final years
If Starship successfully reaches orbit, it won't just be another SpaceX milestone—it could mark the beginning of routine orbital operations needed for Starlink V3 deployment, NASA's Artemis lunar program, orbital refueling, and future Mars missions.
Do you think Flight 13 will finally complete a full orbit around Earth, or will SpaceX choose another suborbital test before taking that step? Share your thoughts in the comments!
SpaceX's New Starship Flight 13 Trajectory Change To reach orbit the first time will make History...
“We have done an inspace Raptor lighting so we feel pretty comfortable, but we want another suborbital shot on the next flight and then I hope we at least attempt an orbital injection on Flight 14”
Well, Gwynne Shotwell declared this last month. However, SpaceX just quietly filed a regulatory document requesting permission to splash Starship down near Hawaii — on the very next flight. And you know: Hawaii doesn't work for a suborbital trajectory. The only way Starship lands near Hawaii is if it completes a full orbit around the Earth. So what does this mean? Let's find out.

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