Texas residents sue Elon Musk's SpaceX saying massive sonic booms have damaged their homes
Source: The Independent
Saturday 02 May 2026 22:27 EDT
Dozens of homeowners are suing Elon Musks SpaceX, alleging that sonic booms from rocket testing damaged their Texas homes. The lawsuit was filed last week in federal court by 80 South Texas residents. They accused SpaceX of gross negligence and trespassing from sonic booms that happened during 11 rocket tests between April 2023 and October 2025, according to the Texas Tribune.
Because SpaceX tests involved rockets that launched and returned, sometimes the homes faced prolonged periods of damaging noise, according to the suit.
A sonic boom is a wave created by an object moving faster than the speed of sound. According to the U.S. Air Force, some strong sonic booms can cause damage such as shattered glass. SpaceX did not respond to the Tribune about the lawsuit. The Independent has also reached out to SpaceX.
The residents say that during a Starship rocket launch in 2023, the force from the 33-engine booster destroyed the launch pad and sent debris as far as three-quarters of a mile away.
Read more: https://www.the-independent.com/news/world/americas/spacex-texas-sonic-boom-lawsuit-elon-musk-b2969596.html
Kid Berwyn
(24,884 posts)Oh yeah, irony.
Or getting Musk to pay damages, goldy.
Hugin
(37,946 posts)I learned something that I had always been curious about. The tons of water shown being pumped into the launch pad as say a Saturn V was ignited and began its ascent.
It turns out that it is for sound and vibration dampening. The engines cause so much that it could cause the vehicle to tear itself apart before it even got off the ground. Even with the dampening it would be lethal for a human to be within a significant distance from the launch.
Im sure Smuck has done away with any such measures in his cost cutting. The mystery of rapid in flight disassembling may have an explanation though.
Hmmph! A reusable rocket using a non-reusable launchpad.
Polybius
(22,052 posts)I wonder how UFO's can do it without sonic booms.
Hugin
(37,946 posts)Whoever she is.
Americanme
(527 posts)No rules for Elon's big business, no sirens for floods, no interstate electric grid. Turns out a little regulation may be a good thing.
JI7
(93,825 posts)flashing sign on some building and had to take it down.
Multichromatic
(185 posts)Miguelito Loveless
(5,849 posts)Musk owns the Texas state government.
SergeStorms
(20,755 posts)what he's doing to their local/regional environment.
Oh, it's Texas. Environmental issues are for libtards.............until they aren't.
Queso Delicioso
(207 posts)So, you know, have the day you voted for. Vote smarter next time.
RussBLib
(10,705 posts)This story was published by The Brownsville Herald, one of the few papers left in the Rio Grande Valley (RGV), where I live. We moved to South Padre Island (SPI) in 2016 and Musk moved into Boca within a year of us arriving. I thought the idea of rockets launching from where we could see them was pretty cool, until they started launching.
We have had a bait-and-switch here, as the story shows below. What Musk is launching now from Boca Chica are rockets that are 10x more powerful than his Falcon rockets, which was supposed to be what was happening on Boca. But Musk decided to upgrade the area to launch his (super duper heavy) Starship, the "most powerful rockets ever launched". And the regulators shrugged their shoulders and said, "cool."
While living on SPI, we could have joined this lawsuit. We had multiple cracks develop in our ceiling but decided to patch them up and sell the fucking house before it disintegrated around us. Musk currently has permission to launch 25 times per year from Boca, but he wants to scale up to three rockets per day once they get rolling. Daily. Three rockets up, three returning boosters, at least 3 mega-sonic booms per day. SPI would be unlivable. Let me tell you, these sonic booms created by Musk and Starship are not your grandparents sonic booms. These are make your heart skip a beat and knock you down loud. I am very glad to see the locals have had enough.
By Montserrat Pagan - May 1, 2026
More than 50 plaintiffs on Thursday filed a federal lawsuit against SpaceX alleging that sonic booms from the companys test launches at Boca Chica Beach are damaging their homes. The lawsuit was filed by 58 households in Port Isabel, South Padre Island and Laguna Vista.
snip
The lawsuit says the Boca Chica Beach location was intended to be a commercial space port for existing Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rockets.
In 2018, however, SpaceX dedicated the site exclusively to the development and launch of its next-generation Starship vehicle. To accommodate this program, SpaceX acquired hundreds of acres of coastal land, transforming a quiet beach community into a sprawling industrial spaceport and manufacturing complex, the petition said. Starbase is now the exclusive testing, launching, and landing site for the largest rockets in human history.
At the spaceports launch pads, there are massive integration and catch towers that are the tallest launch towers in the world, the petition said. SpaceX deliberately constructed this colossal, skyscraper-sized infrastructure mere miles from coastal residential communities, the document stated.
snip
The petition details the colossal size of the launch sites infrastructure, with the Starship spacecraft and its Super Heavy Booster standing as tall as a 30 story building when prepared for flight. The Super Heavy Booster relies on 33 Raptor 2 engines to lift onto the launch mount, according to the document.
They burn liquid oxygen and methane propellants which collectively generates 16.7 million pounds of thrust, the lawsuit states. The engines power creates a violent aeroacoustic phenomena. By comparison, Starship generates nearly twice the thrust as NASAs SLS (Space Launch System) and nearly ten times the thrust of SpaceXs own Falcon 9 rocket, the lawsuit continued.
the rest is here
https://russblib.blogspot.com
slightlv
(7,890 posts)my heart breaks for SPI. I was down there ALL the time when I lived in San Antonio. First date with then hubby was at SPI. First time I ever saw the "ocean" was there. It's always held such a special place in my heart... and now, with the water running short and Musk killing everything the oil doesn't, it's no wonder we, the People, can't have nice things.