The timing of the Flight 8 failure was similar to Flight 7 in January, which also featured several engine shutdowns and a loss of communications about eight and a half minutes after liftoff. However, SpaceX says the two failures had different causes.

“While the failure manifested at a similar point in the flight timeline as Starship’s seventh flight test, it is worth noting that the failures are distinctly different,” the company stated.

In the case of Flight 8, SpaceX said one of the center Raptor engines in Starship suffered a hardware failure, details of which the company did not disclose. That failure enabled “inadvertent propellant mixing and ignition” that caused the loss of the Raptor. Immediately thereafter, the other two center Raptor engines shut down, along with one of the three outer vacuum-optimized engines with larger nozzles. The vehicle then lost control authority.

The company said it made changes to the Raptors in the Starship upper stage, with “additional preload” on key joints and a new nitrogen purge system as well as improvements to the propellant drain system. A future version of Raptor in development will also have reliability improvements to address the problem seen on Flight 8.

On Flight 7 in January, SpaceX, said the vehicle suffered a harmonic response several times stronger than expected, creating additional stress on the vehicle’s propulsion system. That caused leaks that triggered a fire in the engine bay.

“The mitigations put in place after Starship’s seventh flight test to address harmonic response and flammability of the ship’s attic section worked as designed prior to the failure on Flight 8,” SpaceX said.

  • Tar_Alcaran
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    13 hours ago

    Sorry, no, I got it the other way around:

    Kathryn Lueders, the program manager for NASA’s Commercial Crew Program granted SpaceX the HLS contract (after personally telling ONLY SpaceX about the secret maximum bid price, and not the others), because somehow SpaceX suddenly and mysteriously lowered its bid to just below the maximum price. Also, the contract had several requirements around FRR’s waived, but Lueders ONLY informed SpaceX. This is legal somehow.

    In 2021, Lueders granted SpaceX the HLS contract. In November 2022, Lueders added another 1.1 billion for the “option B” (Artemis 4 and on).

    On May 15th 2023, Lueders anounced she’d leave NASA, and start as general manager for Starship, directly below Shotwell.

    On May 31st 2023, under new leadership, Nasa awarded a second contract to Blue Origin for a second moon lander.