“We had to work through a little bit of challenge with moisture intrusion during transport from McGregor to the Kennedy Space Center,” said Steve Stich, the manager of NASA’s Commercial Crew Program.
He added, during a briefing on Aug. 7, that the booster needed to go through the additional testing due to the “water intrusion,” saying it will improve confidence to have SpaceX “get a little shakedown of that booster” with a Starlink mission before it flies the four members of the Crew-9 mission.
Interesting how the mentality towards booster reuse has reversed in the past few years. NASA used to request brand new boosters for crewed missions, and now they prefer flight-proven boosters.
Interesting how the mentality towards booster reuse has reversed in the past few years. NASA used to request brand new boosters for crewed missions, and now they prefer flight-proven boosters.