Best part is no part

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SpaceX
@SpaceX

They’ll also be used for vehicle lift and catch, made possible by a new catch point addition and a lower positioning on the booster to align with the tower catch arms. Moving lower reduces the heat they receive from Starship’s engines at hot-staging and places the fin shaft,

📈 Market Reaction:

ETH

Before post: $4,719.30

Time after posted
Price & Change
1 min
$4,714.46
-4.840 (-0.10%)
5 min
$4,717.79
-1.510 (-0.03%)
10 min
$4,727.91
+8.61 (+0.18%)

DOGE

Before post: $0.24

Time after posted
Price & Change
1 min
$0.243110
-0.0₃329 (-0.14%)
5 min
$0.243090
-0.0₃349 (-0.14%)
10 min
$0.243320
-0.0₃119 (-0.05%)

GORK

Before post: $0.01

Time after posted
Price & Change
1 min
$0.009826
-0.0₃108 (-1.10%)
5 min
$0.009820
-0.0₃114 (-1.16%)
10 min
$0.009840
-0.0₄949 (-0.96%)

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🤖 AI Thoughts:

Elon Musk's SpaceX technical jargon triggered more confusion than market movement, proving crypto traders aren't rocket scientists. ETH wobbled like a rookie astronaut: down 0.10% in 1 minute, then recovered to +0.18% after 10 minutes, suggesting traders initially panicked before realizing this wasn't a Dogecoin tweet. DOGE barely flinched, with microscopic 0.14% dips, while the obscure GORK took a 1.16% nosedive—perhaps because its developers forgot to install metaphorical catch arms. Volatility stayed tame compared to Musk's usual market-moving antics, where a single meme can launch tokens into orbit or crash them like a Falcon 9 landing attempt. The real mystery here isn't SpaceX's engineering—it's why anyone thought booster fin alignment would move crypto markets. Somewhere, a Doge holder is still waiting for the moon.