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SpaceX intends to captures Starship's Super Heavy booster with mechanical arms known as "chopsticks." See an animation of a ...
SpaceX conducted a static-fire test with one of its Super Heavy boosters today (June 6), part of the prep work for the next test flight of the Starship megarocket.
SpaceX said one of its Starships “experienced a major anomaly,” sitting on a test pad in Starbase, Texas on Wednesday night.
SpaceX is still looking into what happened on Flight 9, an investigation overseen by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration ...
But SpaceX won't attempt to return the Super Heavy booster to the launch pad to catch it with its "chopsticks." SpaceX's massive Starship launch vehicle, which is due to play a key role in future ...
A SpaceX Starship prototype upper stage exploded during testing at the company’s Starbase facility near Boca Chica, Texas.
The Super Heavy booster was able to return to the launch site after separation from the upper stage and be successfully caught by the tower's "chopstick" arms, but as for the ship itself ...
Major anomaly” poses another setback for the massive rocket, which failed to complete its mission on its last three launches.
A SpaceX rocket being tested on the company’s launchpad has exploded in a massive fireball after a “major anomaly”.
Both times, the upper stage of the rocket was lost. But the Super Heavy Booster was caught with the launch tower's mechanical "chopstick" arms—an impressive feat of engineering. To date ...