SpaceX fires 11 engines of Starship Super Heavy booster ahead of test flight (video)
SpaceX fires 11 engines of Starship Super Heavy booster ahead of test flight (video)
By Mike Wall
published 1 day ago
SpaceX is prepping Booster 7 for an orbital test flight.
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SpaceX continues to prep its Starship Mars rocket for its first-ever orbital test flight, which could be coming soon.
During a “static fire” test today (Nov. 29) at its South Texas facility, SpaceX ignited multiple Raptor engines on Booster 7, a prototype of Starship‘s first-stage Super Heavy rocket.
The static fire occurred at 2:42 p.m. EST (1942 GMT) and lasted for 13 seconds. Video captured by NASASpaceFlight(opens in new tab) and Rocket Ranch Boca Chica(opens in new tab) showed the test to be a powerful one, suggesting it involved a healthy proportion of Booster 7’s 33 Raptors. That turned out to be the case; shortly after the test, SpaceX confirmed via Twitter(opens in new tab) that Booster 7 lit up 11 of its engines.
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Related: SpaceX’s Starship Super Heavy booster test-fires record 14 engines (video)
Wednesday’s test was the first static fire for Booster 7 since Nov. 14, when the huge vehicle lit up 14 Raptors.
Shortly after that trial, SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk said that the company planned to perform just one or two more static fires(opens in new tab) with Booster 7 before launching an orbital test flight — the first ever for the Starship program.
That orbital mission will likely employ Booster 7 and Ship 24, a prototype of Starship’s 165-foot-tall (50 meters) upper stage. The upper stage is powered by six Raptors; Ship 24 has already ignited all of its engines, during a Sept. 8 static fire.
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SpaceX Super Heavy Booster transported back to Starship factory in amazing time-lapse
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A successful orbital flight will make Starship the most powerful rocket ever to fly. That title is currently held by NASA’s Space Launch System megarocket, which debuted on Nov. 16, kicking off the agency’s Artemis 1 mission.
SpaceX is developing Starship to take people and cargo to the moon and Mars. NASA is already a customer; the agency selected the huge vehicle to make at least two crewed moon landings for its Artemis program, which aims to