East Bay Times

The first 3D printed rocket fails shortly after launch

Vehicle would have been first to use liquid methane

- By Oliver Whang

Terran 1, a rocket designed and built by the company Relativity Space, suffered a failure shortly after lifting off from a launchpad in Cape Canaveral, Florida, late Wednesday night. A demonstrat­ion mission, the rocket was not carrying people or a customer payload, and no one was hurt.

The vehicle was powered by nine 3D printed engines, and would have been the first rocket launched into orbit using liquid methane as its fuel. During a webcast of Wednesday's flight, the rocket rose on a column of white flame that flared blue as it shot into space.

But about four minutes into the flight, shortly after the rocket's first stage had dropped away, Clay Walker, the launch director for Relativity Space, said on the company's webcast that a “T-plus anomaly with stage two” had occurred, meaning there was a problem with the second stage of the rocket, which was to carry its payload to orbit.

The hosts of the company's webcast said additional details about the problem would be announced at a later time.

Following the success of Elon Musk's SpaceX, investors have poured money into new spacefligh­t companies. A number of these businesses have interplane­tary ambitions, including Relativity Space, which announced last year that it would team up with another company called Impulse Space to send a private space mission to Mars, aiming to beat Musk's company to the red planet.

But many nascent spacefligh­t companies experience difficulti­es in their early attempts to get to orbit. In January, a Virgin Orbit spacecraft failed an hour into its flight; the company has since furloughed employees. Another company, ABL Space Systems, lost its first rocket just after liftoff from a base in Alaska. And even establishe­d rocket builders lose new rockets on their first flight. This month, a new rocket built for Japan's space agency by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, which has produced rockets for decades, failed minutes into its first flight and lost the satellite it was to deploy.

Wednesday's Relativity flight did not lose a customer's satellite. Its only cargo was a wheel-shaped object, the first thing ever made by Relativity's 3D printers, which was to demonstrat­e the rocket's ability to carry a payload to orbit.

The flight, which the company nicknamed “Good Luck, Have Fun” or GLHF, was the company's third launch attempt in the past two weeks. The previous two were canceled for a range of technical issues shortly before liftoff.

During Wednesday's launch, the company noted some of the milestones achieved by the rocket. It was the first time a 3D printed rocket had reached “maxq,” the point when the vehicle experience­s the strongest stresses, and also stage separation, when the booster used for liftoff drops from the vehicle's second stage.

Relativity Space is among a number of new companies manufactur­ing and testing small-lift launch vehicles: rockets that can carry

smaller payloads of around 2 tons or less, typically with a destinatio­n of lowEarth orbit.

At 110 feet tall, Terran 1 fell into this “small launch” category, and is planned as a precursor for a much larger, reusable launcher, Terran R, which the company hopes to begin testing soon.

To make these rockets, Relativity Space has developed massive 3D printers in Long Beach that use robotic arms to craft engines and other parts out of metal alloys that can withstand the heat and pressure of ignited rocket fuel.

Traditiona­l manufactur­ing processes often slow rocket building. But 3D printers, which turn code into physical objects, allow engineers to move more quickly from design to testing. Instead of having to create a totally new part, engineers can just instruct the printers to increase the size of existing parts, or modify them in other ways.

 ?? MALCOLM DENEMARK — FLORIDA TODAY VIA AP ?? Relativity Space's Terran 1 rocket launches from Launch Complex 16at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Fla., late Wednesday. The rocket is made almost entirely of 3D-printed parts. The rocket failed four minutes into its flight.
MALCOLM DENEMARK — FLORIDA TODAY VIA AP Relativity Space's Terran 1 rocket launches from Launch Complex 16at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Fla., late Wednesday. The rocket is made almost entirely of 3D-printed parts. The rocket failed four minutes into its flight.

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