Los Angeles Times

SpaceX scrubs rocket launch

Hawthorne company cites possible problem with the second stage of its Falcon 9.

- By Samantha Masunaga samantha.masunaga@latimes.com

SpaceX scrubbed its launch of a space station supply mission seconds before liftoff Saturday morning, citing a possible problem with the second stage of its Falcon 9 rocket.

The Hawthorne space company said it would try to launch again Sunday at 6:38 a.m. Pacific time from Launch Complex 39A at the Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral, Fla.

A hold was called about 13 seconds before the launch. John Federspiel, a lead mechanical design engineer, said on the company’s launch webcast that the call was made “out of an abundance of caution” so the company could look into an issue with the “thrust vector control system” on the rocket’s second stage.

SpaceX said on Twitter shortly afterward that it was “standing down to take a closer look at positionin­g of the second-stage engine nozzle.”

The company’s chief executive, Elon Musk, gave some more detail in another tweet. “All systems go, except the movement trace of an upper-stage engine steering hydraulic piston was slightly odd. Standing down to investigat­e,” he wrote.

“If this is the only issue, flight would be fine, but need to make sure that it isn’t symptomati­c of a more significan­t upstream root cause,” Musk tweeted later.

Saturday’s issue was not “obviously related” to the “very tiny” helium leak he had tweeted about on Friday. But, he said on Twitter, it was “also not out of the question.”

Musk said the possible problem was “99% likely to be fine,” but that “1% chance isn’t worth rolling the dice.”

This will be SpaceX’s second launch since one of its Falcon 9 rockets exploded on a Florida launch pad in September.

SpaceX is set to launch almost 5,500 pounds of science experiment­s, supplies and research equipment for NASA to the Internatio­nal Space Station.

This will be the first launch from Pad 39A since the last space shuttle mission in 2011. The historic launch pad played a role in both the Apollo and space shuttle programs.

After launch, SpaceX will attempt to land its firststage rocket booster on land. The Dragon capsule will deploy from the second stage about 10 minutes after launch and is expected to reach the space station two days later.

Last month, SpaceX launched 10 satellites from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California for satellite operator Iridium Communicat­ions Inc. It landed that first-stage rocket on a floating platform in the Pacific Ocean.

 ??  ?? SPACEX’S Falcon 9 rocket on Pad 39A. The company said it would try to launch again Sunday morning.
SPACEX’S Falcon 9 rocket on Pad 39A. The company said it would try to launch again Sunday morning.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States