A few of the Raptor engines failed just after liftoff, and a couple more failed near a minute into the flight. IMO, this could likely be the result of the shock-waves...
Yes, that's still the best hypothesis. Lots of acoustic loading; no attenuation. I can see the rationale in not waiting for the water deluge system. If you estimate a certain acceptable fallout from reflected shock, and the goal is simply to collect flight test data, then having the data earlier outweighs the marginal improvement in reliability that the deluge system would have provided without measurably improving the quality of the flight data. I was surprised at how long they ran the engines in hold-down. That likely increased the shock damage. I'm interested in seeing what spikes or surges may have happened in the propellant feed system. This always happens at startup, but having so many engines pulling fuel leads to what I would suspect is a fun fluid flow problem.
This is actually a big improvement over the N-1 design, which similarly used a large array of small motors. The Raptor appears to be remarkably fail safe. The usual problem is that rocket engines frequently fail in a mechanical catastrophe, which damages surrounding equipment and can lead to a cascade failure. An overall vehicle design in which each individual motor can contain the effects of its own failure unlocks a lot of possibilities.
What I found astonishing was the structural integrity. This thing bloody well cartwheeled (at least four times as far as I could see) and did not disintegrate or even come apart at the inter-stage.
Indeed, I too expected a structural breakup far sooner than the range-safety abort. That's a
very large airframe.
I guess that could be a result of skinning it with stainless instead of aluminum - AIUI the stressed skin is a big part of a rocket body's structural robustness.
Undoubtedly, but the interstage connections are the typical weak point. I want to look more carefully at the last few seconds of flight. It may have been largely in free-body motion in a practical vacuum, which would lessen the stress. Most of the breakups we encounter are in powered flight in an atmosphere.