Houston Chronicle Sunday

SpaceX halts launch from historic moon pad at last second

- By Marcia Dunn

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Last-minute rocket trouble forced SpaceX on Saturday to delay its inaugural launch from NASA’s historic moon pad.

SpaceX halted the countdown with just 13 seconds remaining. The second-stage steering is- sue actually cropped up several minutes earlier. But with just an instant to get the unmanned Falcon rocket airborne, flight controller­s could not resolve the problem in time.

The next launch attempt — provided everything can be fixed quickly — would be Sunday morning.

The Falcon remains at Kennedy Space Center’s Launch Complex 39A, waiting to soar on a space station delivery mission. It’s the same pad where Americans flew to the moon almost a half-century ago.

Up at the Internatio­nal Space Station, French astronaut Thomas Pesquet had a light-hearted take on the delay.

“Looks like I’ll have to wait one more day to get my French cheese ;)” Pesquet wrote via Twitter. He added: “We need all your cargo for @ISS—Research!”

SpaceX chief Elon Musk said engineers want to make certain the “slightly odd” position of an engine piston isn’t representa­tive of bigger trouble. It’s not out of the question that Sat- urday’s problem is somehow related to the minor upper-stage helium leak detected the day before, he reported.

There’s a 99 percent chance everything is likely to be fine, Musk said in a tweet. “But that 1 percent chance isn’t worth rolling the dice. Better to wait a day.”

Thousands of guests had jammed the space center to witness the comeback of 39A, last used in 2011 for the final space shuttle flight. Disappoint­ment was high when the urgent call of “hold, hold, hold!” sounded over the radio lines.

This will be SpaceX’s first Florida launch since a rocket explosion last summer.

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