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RfC: Should we list IFT mission outcome alongside launch outcome?[edit]

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


Hi everyone, this RfC is to retrieve consensus regarding the addition of mission outcome to the Orbital/Intergated launch wikitable, as well as adding the associated chart in the same section.

Context: IFT-3 has ben the subject of confusion and debate here in Wikipedia. The confusion between Launch outcome and Mission outcome has led editors to think of the two as one, despite those being different things. This article also doesn't show the launch outcome alongside mission outcome, meaning editors and readers alike might see the green "success" entry in the launch column/chart and believe the mission succeded, not reading the other text to learn that the mission wasn't a full success. This factor will lead to confusion among Wikipedia editors, and confused editors can't properly write a wiki.

The question: Should we list the mission outcome as clearly as we list the launch outcome?

If you wish to dispute this RfC, please raise your concerns over at the appropriate WP:DRN and WP:PUMP noticeboards. You may also bring this discussion up at WP:DfD and WP:AN, and if all discussions go wrong or end up with no real result, you can contact the Wikipedia Arbitration Committee. But bear in mind, contacting the Arbitration Committee is a last resort option that should not be done for minor reasons, so only contact them if the discussions go very wrong. Thanks, 179.251.80.181 (talk) 22:59, 20 April 2024 (UTC)[]

Support[edit]

  • I support having both entries, even if only by adding a redirection. Persons who are familiar with the field are too inclined to underestimate the difficulties that naive users have with technical distinctions. But the pedia is primarily for the uninformed user, not the maven. Even the maven is likely to want to deal with one item at a time without being distracted by a lot of stuff bundled in with other material. And adequate entries help with context in discussions and other applications. JonRichfield (talk) 04:33, 21 April 2024 (UTC)[]

The primary point of contention here is that "launch success" and "mission success" are different standards and different pages apply them slightly differently.
— Soni (RfC closer)

Yes, the mission was not a complete success.
— Redacted II

Additionally, the entire mission doesn't matter at all for launch success.
— Redacted II

Mission success is on mission pages (for example for spacecraft).
— Ergzay

IFT-3 was a successful Starship launch, even though the overall mission was not fully successful.
— mfb

...although the IFT-3 mission was not fully successful, it was a successful launch of Starship.
— User3749

I did not fully understand that we were going with mission success vs launch success, launch was definitely successful.
— Cocobb8

Attempts here to redefine the success criteria from "launch success" to "mission success" are moving the goalposts.
— Foonix0

The launch phase was successful. But the overall mission was a failure (due to both vehicles being lost early). I suggest adding a column called "Mission status" to clarify this.
— 57.140.16.18

We could perhaps note launch succes and mission partial succes then?
— Fehér Zsigmond-03

Launch: Full Success Mission: Partial Success
— Largely Legible Layman

Redraiderengineer (talk) 22:55, 21 May 2024 (UTC)[]
Find a single article that lists mission success in a chart like the proposal (which was an edit request that was denied countless times).
There aren't any. There is no precedent for such an addition nor any reason.
Due representation means "represent fairly". Fair representation applies to everything. And this is included on nothing.
This RfC was closed for a reason (and being an experienced editor is not required, as stated in the IFT-3 RfC closing). I'll be reclosing it. Redacted II (talk) 00:53, 22 May 2024 (UTC)[]
  • Support There is a clear difference between launch and mission that has been pointed out. Foonix0 points to moving the goalposts in quotation, and it is easy to see that other users clearly agreed in a significant difference to support themselves in the other RfC. Reliable sources were dismissed as supporting a mission failure and not launch failure.
Users created a unique carve out and now are using that carve out to dismiss a POV that is supported by reliable sources like Reuters. It is circular reasoning to argue "Starship or this launch is different than others" on one article's RfC and then claim information can't be added about that launch because it would be different than the other articles. This is WP:OTHERSTUFFDOESNTEXIST and doesn't override the "non-negotiable" nature of Neutral POV.
Neutral POV doesn't mean only the preferred POV. DerVolkssport11 (talk) 07:11, 22 May 2024 (UTC)[]
Neutral POV means treating Starship like Atlas V, SLS, and every other launch vehicle.
Mission success isn't listed for those vehicles, and therefore it violates NPOV to include it. Redacted II (talk) 11:15, 22 May 2024 (UTC)[]
Responding with arguments and then closing is disruptive and pushing your POV since you are an involved user. DerVolkssport11 (talk) 12:22, 22 May 2024 (UTC)[]
The RfC was closed, and then an involved IP unclosed it. Reclosing an already closed RfC is not disruptive: unclosing it, however, is. Redacted II (talk) 12:31, 22 May 2024 (UTC)[]
You added arguments and do not get to have it both ways.
I added this to the request for closure list. they can make the decision. DerVolkssport11 (talk) 12:49, 22 May 2024 (UTC)[]
"You added arguments"
I believe I am allowed to correct incorrect statements, while also saying that it should be reclosed.
"I added this to the request for closure list. they can make the decision"
I'll go comment there. Redacted II (talk) 12:52, 22 May 2024 (UTC)[]
Of course everyone is allowed to add their arguments but yours are not The Truth. Disagreeing with my statements does not make them incorrect.
You do not get to be involved in the discussion and then promptly shut it down. DerVolkssport11 (talk) 18:21, 22 May 2024 (UTC)[]

Oppose[edit]

The encyclopedia is for the uninformed user, which is exactly why the outcome of the launch is described in the table, and not just as "success/partial failure/failure". Because if we just did that, 95% of our editors would be confused.
Having both the descript and the "success/partial failure/failure" seems good at first glance, but it has two major issues. The first is that the average reader will just see "Launch Success, Mission Partial Failure", and just stop reading, thus decreasing their understanding. The second is "How do we define mission success?". Do we go with "SpaceX achieved their goals", or "SpaceX succeeded at every part of the mission, as described on their descript of the launch". Too many debates have been had on this, and none of these debates have ended satisfactorily for either side. In at least one case, users have been temporarily banned for their behavior. As someone who has been in every single one of these debates since IFT-1, lets not have another.
Finally, editors on Starship pages have recently gone to RfC's when they don't get their way. Look at the IFT-3 RfC, for example. There was a clear consensus for success, and then an RfC was started at the last minute. RfC's aren't always the answer, sometimes you have to just accept Redacted II (talk) 20:19, 21 April 2024 (UTC)[]
Additionally, no other list of launches for any other vehicle lists mission success. So why do that for Starship? Redacted II (talk) 21:34, 21 April 2024 (UTC)[]

Neutral[edit]

  • Is success/failure a judgement call on the part of editors, or is this scoring based on a cited reference? For example, I don't see any of the refs for IFT-2 declaring the launch a failure; the only non-SpaceX ref [1] states, "Unlike the maiden flight, Starship stuck to the plan, with a clean liftoff and all 33 Raptor 2s running without issue as the vehicle flew out of South Texas."
More directly relevant to this RfC, do any reliable sources clearly state success/failure outcomes for mission as distinct from launch? If not, it would appear to be a violation of e.g. WP:SYNTH (as may existing columns). Carleas (talk) 15:38, 22 April 2024 (UTC)[]
COMMENT: Agree with Carleas; we should be guided by sources, and sources explicitly calling it one thing or another; and of course, not just on headlines inserted by editors to get clicks. N2e (talk) 01:14, 25 April 2024 (UTC)[]
Success v.s failure for launches is determined by insertion into the correct orbit, and condition of payload post-launch.
The arrangement of how mission success will be determined (if it is added) is unknown. All previous discussions on the topic have not ended well, and usually resulted in multiple edit wars. Redacted II (talk) 15:42, 22 April 2024 (UTC)[]

Discussion[edit]

"The encyclopedia is for the uninformed user, which is exactly why the outcome of the launch is described in the table, and not just as "success/partial failure/failure". Because if we just did that, 95% of our editors would be confused." We can still just describe it on the table while adding the extra column. I don't see why editors would be confused. "The first [issue with this] is that the average reader will just see "Launch Success, Mission Partial Failure", and just stop reading, thus decreasing their understanding." Not necessarily. Some people who want to know more will just read the table's description, or access the article. Face it: People just want summaries, they don't read much, they scan. To quote JonRichfield above, Wikipedia is primarily for the uninformed users, not the mavens, and even the mavens are likely to want to deal with one item at a time without being distracted by a lot of stuff bundled in with other material. "The second is "How do we define mission success?". Do we go with "SpaceX achieved their goals", or "SpaceX succeeded at every part of the mission, as described on their descript of the launch"[?]." Policy's a bit unclear about this, but i would lean toward the latter. After all, if there is a mishap investigation on IFT-3, then it wasn't a full success. This argument might work better for the "Discussion" section below, though. 179.251.80.181 (talk) 04:19, 23 April 2024 (UTC)[]

Agreed on moving this to discussion. I'll do that soon.
But every other Wikipedia is designed to be read, not scanned. So, if you want to change that, this single article isn't the place for that (I don't know where such a discussion would even go).
As for why having the mission counter and descript will not improve the Wikipedia, the average reader will stop reading. After all, they have all the information they want. Redacted II (talk) 11:12, 23 April 2024 (UTC)[]
I understand. However, the objective here is to prevent confusion among WP editors and readers. Confused readers will misinterpret facts and spread the misinteprtetations, while confused editors will make poor judgements and poor decisions, which hinders the objective of every WP contributor: To build a free encyclopedia. When the rules say no, when the precedent says no, heck, when they say nothing at all, sometimes, the best answer, if it means improving Wikipedia, is to ignore them. 187.46.139.138 (talk) 14:13, 26 April 2024 (UTC)[]
"However, the objective here is to prevent confusion among WP editors and readers" But the change proposed by the creator of the RfC (after I rejected their edit request twice) would increase confusion. Redacted II (talk) 14:49, 26 April 2024 (UTC)[]
"But the change proposed by the creator of the RfC (after I rejected their edit request twice) would increase confusion."
How would it do that? Please, explain. 187.46.139.138 (talk) 00:26, 27 April 2024 (UTC)[]
To quote myself:
"The encyclopedia is for the uninformed user, which is exactly why the outcome of the launch is described in the table, and not just as "success/partial failure/failure". Because if we just did that, 95% of our editors would be confused.
Having both the descript and the "success/partial failure/failure" seems good at first glance, but it has two major issues. The first is that the average reader will just see "Launch Success, Mission Partial Failure", and just stop reading, thus decreasing their understanding. The second is "How do we define mission success?". Do we go with "SpaceX achieved their goals", or "SpaceX succeeded at every part of the mission, as described on their descript of the launch". Too many debates have been had on this, and none of these debates have ended satisfactorily for either side. In at least one case, users have been temporarily banned for their behavior. As someone who has been in every single one of these debates since IFT-1, lets not have another." Redacted II (talk) 00:45, 27 April 2024 (UTC)[]
COMMENT: Exactly. There is no "mission" on these test flights, and to date (and announced for IFT4, there is no payload whatsover. It is original research for editors to be doing all this handicapping and success/failure calling on various parts of a test flight. Engineers run tests; they want to collect data on the integrated article being tested for as much of a flight as possible; but that is not at all the same thing as an operational mission with an objective and orbital destination or trajectory.
Yeah, there's nothing clearly defined, but IFT-1 and IFT-2 failed to launch (pretty clear Mission Failure), and the reentry failure (they were going for splashdown), no raptor relight, and uncertain payload door test results (among other stuff), as well as the mishap investigation makes me lean towards partial failure for IFT-3, regardless of what SpaceX said on this and the other two flights.
If you wanna discuss mission outcome, you might wanna use the "Discussion" section below. 179.251.80.181 (talk) 04:00, 23 April 2024 (UTC)[]
COMMENT: without sources for your statement " IFT-1 and IFT-2 failed to launch (pretty clear Mission Failure)", that is merely an editor opinion. Wikipedia should not be doling out original research to our readers. N2e (talk) 01:14, 25 April 2024 (UTC)[]
"that is merely an editor opinion."
What? How is this editor opinion? This is just simple logic: If the launch fails, then the mission fails. Simple as that.
I want you to explain everything. Explain how this is "doling out original research", how launch failure doesn't equate to mission failure, and what sources do i need to cite to "prove my point". 187.46.139.138 (talk) 14:27, 26 April 2024 (UTC)[]
"What? How is this editor opinion?" Because you don't have any sources
"how launch failure doesn't equate to mission failure" Because the mission for IFT-1 was to clear the tower. IFT-2 was stage separation. The mission was successful for both of those flights, but both launches were failures.
"what sources do i need to cite to "prove my point"" That's your job Redacted II (talk) 14:44, 26 April 2024 (UTC)[]
So... IFT-1 and -2 are partial failures, then? Those weren't full successes, there were mishap investigations and all of that.
Besides, SpaceX is known to scale back its objectives when it comes to Starship. Remember when IFT-1 was called an Orbital Flight Test? We should take what SpaceX says with a grain of salt, especially in regards to Starship, you know WP:SECONDARY and all that. 187.46.139.138 (talk) 00:25, 27 April 2024 (UTC)[]
Moving this to discussion.
"Besides, SpaceX is known to scale back its objectives when it comes to Starship" Iterative development, only applied to hardware instead of software. They aren't "scaling back" the objectives.
Also, if the launch was 100% nominal, it would have reached Orbit, so Orbital Flight Test was an accurate descript. But that's irrelevant. Redacted II (talk) 00:44, 27 April 2024 (UTC)[]

Requesting a formal closure based on policy can help avoid an edit war. Currently, three editors support (including the discussion/comments made by 179.251.80.181 that initiated this RfC) and three oppose, so this isn't a case where a straw poll demonstrates clear consensus. Redraiderengineer (talk) 23:21, 21 May 2024 (UTC)[]

"Requesting a formal closure based on policy can help avoid an edit war"
Policy clearly supports oppose. Redacted II (talk) 00:54, 22 May 2024 (UTC)[]

This RfC is chaos. Closures, reopenings, endless argumenting.

But, if you want something for your arguments: There is precedent i could find on Wikipedia regarding mission outcome: The probe/interplanetary mission lists. They distinguish between launch failure and mission failure (or "Spacecraft Failure"), even for missions where no one's inside the spacecraft. 187.46.129.213 (talk) 06:16, 24 May 2024 (UTC)[]

The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Given that this article only covers Starship Flight Tests, and not the operational flights that will follow, there should be a List of Starship Launches article.

I've already made a draft here.

Note: the Draft covers flights of Starship, and not Starship, so Hopper, SN5, SN6, SN8, SN9, SN10, SN11, and SN15 are intentionally excluded. Redacted II (talk) 00:42, 9 June 2024 (UTC)[]

Can you add the orbital refueling demo flight and the HLS demo flight to one of these? Thistheyear2023 (talk) 05:27, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[]
IIRC, the draft already has both of those flights (technically, all 18 of those flights).
I'm not sure if this falls under the scope of this article, as while it is a test flight, its of V2 vehicles. Redacted II (talk) 12:05, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[]
I see that in the Draft. Any future flights that carry a payload should be considered operational and not a test. But will be interesting to see what happens. I think at some point they’ll take a bit of a hiatus here until Pad B is done Thistheyear2023 (talk) 18:37, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[]
Why don't we just start a consensus to rename this article to List of Starship Launches instead of a new article and merge the contents of the draft here afterwards? We could start a consensus now (I'll add the topic of if agreed on), especially since they are still Starship launches, and when Starship goes operational this article will become obsolete if not changed The Page Maker 2.1 (talk) 01:16, 27 June 2024 (UTC)[]
Hopper-SN15 weren't Starship launches, they were Starship launches.
Merging the two articles would leave those flights with nowhere to go. Redacted II (talk) 01:19, 27 June 2024 (UTC)[]
[comment deleted]
I do consider your opinion and now suggest that once your draft is accepted, we would rename this article to "List of Starship (spacecraft) Launches," then remove the orbital flights and not add any more flights to this article as they will be allocated to your now-approved draft The Page Maker 2.1 (talk) 01:35, 27 June 2024 (UTC)[]
That works! (Also, just a recommendation, if you want to edit your message, directly edit it, instead of posting again) Redacted II (talk) 01:38, 27 June 2024 (UTC)[]
To forward, I would start a consensus about this The Page Maker 2.1 (talk) 03:36, 27 June 2024 (UTC)[]

I have the strong feeling that on this talk page there is an overdose, if not misuse, of certain tools to prevent discussion or hide unwanded topics. This includes using an archive where there are really not so many topics that there is a need for it, and closing/shifting even recent topics there to get them out of the way and out of further discussion. And even more extensive use of semi-protection. Note: P:PP" Talk pages are not usually protected, and are semi-protected only for a limited duration in the most severe cases of disruption." I don't see where this is the case. Please consider to limit this in future, or we will have to look for help preventing further misuse. 47.64.131.12 (talk) 08:29, 20 June 2024 (UTC)[]

Semi-protection is added by Admins when a page is being disrupted repeatedly (like this one has).
The closed edit requests were because they had moved on to a different topic on the talk page.
The closed RfC was settled. Thats how RfC's work
Archiving is a tool to reduce talk-page size, preventing a page from being clogged by dead discussions. Its not being misused.
This talk page isn't semi-protected (otherwise, you would have had to make an account to post that comment).
And who is "we"? Redacted II (talk) 16:55, 21 June 2024 (UTC)[]

I just made edits that may be proven high-risk, so I made this topic to see if anyone would like to discuss. My main concern is the classification for the flight 2 launch of PARTIAL FAILURE instead of FAILURE. I consider the launch to be up to the booster staging and starship burn cutoff, which is confusing since even after the booster jettisoned, starship is still going, which I still consider the launch. In flight 2, the booster was successfully jettisoned, meaning that it was already on it's landing phase, and thus that part of launch was a success, but the starship exploded during it's orbital insertion, which was still part of the launch sequence. Therefore I consider flight 2 to be a PARTIAL FAILURE.

I also removed the references for the orbital flight vehicles since there were already none for the suborbital ones, and neither or the list of Falcon launches.

All being said, I'd like to ask if anyone has concerns? The Page Maker 2.1 (talk) 22:09, 24 June 2024 (UTC)[]

There is a strong consensus for IFT-2 to be regarded as a failure.
I have partially reverted that edit. Redacted II (talk) 22:33, 24 June 2024 (UTC)[]
I see you've only reverted the outcome to "loss during flight" and left the IFT-2 outcome to be partial failure? I guess that's a compromise? I guess I would thank you for that contribution which helped me to conclude as a compromise The Page Maker 2.1 (talk) 22:58, 24 June 2024 (UTC)[]
No... I must have made a mistake. It should say failure for IFT-1 and IFT-2 Redacted II (talk) 23:47, 24 June 2024 (UTC)[]

As SpaceX has been more than a year into the orbital campaign, which is the next step to Starship's operational campaign, I have considered the fact that we are about to abandon the test campaign. However, we still have a significance of Hopper to SN15 to the point that they may be somewhere in an article.

To add, a user has made a draft of Starship's (not the spacecraft but the entire vehicle) launches, which I find consistent with the Falcon launches list, so I very strongly agree with. See the draft here.

When that draft becomes approved, I propose two things for this article.

  1. Rename this article to "List of Starship (spacecraft) Test Launches
  2. Remove the flights after SN15
  3. Not add further flights, as they will be added to the now-approved draft

Therefore, I request everyone's opinions on this action.

Support[edit]

Strongly Support: I strongly support this because this proposed draft will not only be in consistency with the Falcon launches list, but also the fact that we will end up archiving this article (of course not for editing purposes, but in the manner that no more flights are added). If we don't, this article will become misnamed when Starship goes commercial, but renaming this entire article to "List of Starship Launches" will create internal conflict because Hopper to SN15 were just the upper stage, but when we mention "Starship" as in "Starship goes commercial," we mean the entire rocket. Therefore, I find that the best way to deal with this is to move all the orbital launches to the draft article once it is approved and rename this article to "List of Starship (spacecraft) Test Launches" The Page Maker 2.1 (talk) 03:56, 27 June 2024 (UTC)[]

Oppose[edit]