SpaceX scrubs launch of upgraded Starship, to retry today

REUTERS

Islamabad: SpaceX on Thursday scrubbed the launch of its 12th Starship rocket from Texas and said it will attempt the ​high-stakes test flight again on Friday, as Elon Musk’s space company nears a record-breaking ‌public listing.

Starship V3, uncrewed and featuring dozens of upgrades tailored for rapid Starlink satellite launches and NASA moon missions, was to be a key test for the vehicle following months of testing delays.

It is ​also poised to affect investor confidence ahead of what might be the biggest ​initial public offering in history, where SpaceX is targeting a valuation of $1.75 trillion.

SpaceX ⁠had spent months redesigning Starship after a streak of failures last year, culminating in ​the V3 design that was meant to launch on Thursday.

It called off Thursday’s launch seconds ​before its planned liftoff, after multiple pauses to the countdown triggered by fuel temperature and pressure readings. Musk said on X that the hydraulic pin on one of the launch tower’s giant mechanical arms ​did not retract as designed.

“If that can be fixed tonight, there will be another ​launch attempt tomorrow,” Musk said of the faulty arm.

SpaceX said it is preparing to launch Starship during ‌a 90-minute ⁠launch window which opens at 5:30pm Central Time (2230 GMT) on Friday.

The fully reusable Starship, which SpaceX has spent more than $15 billion developing, is key to Musk’s goals of cutting launch costs, expanding his Starlink satellite business and pursuing ambitions ranging from deep-space exploration ​to orbital data centers – ​all factored into ⁠his IPO valuation.

Before the launch attempt on Thursday, Musk sought to temper expectations in case of failure, saying, “There is a large pipeline of ​V3 ships and boosters in the factory.” He said a failure ​would not ⁠affect the cadence of future Starship test launches “by more than a month or so.”

SpaceX’s engineering culture, considered more risk-tolerant than many of the aerospace industry’s more established players, is built on ⁠a ​flight-testing strategy that pushes newly developed spacecraft to the ​point of failure, then fine-tunes improvements through frequent repetition.

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