The first high-altitude test flight of SpaceX’s futuristic Starship was aborted at the last second in Texas on Tuesday.
SpaceX came close to launching a prototype of the rocketship that company chief Elon Musk is designing to carry people to Mars.
The goal was to shoot Starship to an altitude of eight miles — the highest yet — then bring it back to a vertical landing.
But an automatic engine abort occurred with just 1.3 seconds remaining in the countdown. SpaceX announced on its web broadcast it was done for the day, and there was no word on when it might try again.
Out on the pad in South Texas pic.twitter.com/RcYOXXpTc2
Advertisement— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) December 7, 2020
SpaceX already has conducted five Starship test flights, but these earlier, simpler models have gone no higher than 490 feet. The stainless steel version on the launch pad on Tuesday was the first to feature a nose cone, body flaps and three Raptor engines.
SpaceX has taken over Boca Chica in the far south-eastern corner of Texas, near the Mexican border, to build and test its Starships. The company intends to use Starships — the upper stage atop Super Heavy boosters — to deliver massive satellites into orbit around Earth, and send people and cargo to the moon and Mars.