That tower is in bad shape pic.twitter.com/BNv0fpU8h0
— Zizka Paladin (@PaladinZizka) May 29, 2026
That tower is in bad shape pic.twitter.com/BNv0fpU8h0
— Zizka Paladin (@PaladinZizka) May 29, 2026
plain_o_llama said:
There was some speculation the satellite payloads for the impending launch may have been stored nearby and lost.
Kenneth_2003 said:plain_o_llama said:
There was some speculation the satellite payloads for the impending launch may have been stored nearby and lost.
Yikes. Two cargos in a row is bad.
At what point could insurance back away from or simply become prohibitive for customers.
And that's just to replace the cargo. That doesn't count business impacts for the time to rebuild and get a new launch.
normaleagle05 said:
I think it's less about hard safety limits and more about overall risk management. If you lose the rocket on the pad like this and have to rebuild the pad you can replace everything that was in the building in less time than the overall recovery project.
It's not clear to me where the payload was, other than not on the pad. I'm pretty sure their other booster is in the building, but it can be repaired/replaced quicker than the pad can be rebuilt.
Blue Origin having their launch pad double as a static fire stand and then also putting their integration facility with all their spare rockets in it like half a klick away is astounding. It's possible the company's entire immediate future just went up in smoke.
— RAH-66 COMANCHE (@rah_66_comanche) May 29, 2026
nortex97 said:
I don't think that was correct.
Also some speculation blue origin mk1 lander could go in a falcon heavy. That would be a bit poetic/ironic I guess.
Hearing that Blue Origin’s other New Glenn first stage booster, Never Tell Me The Odds, has been damaged. It was inside the nearby HIF facility.
— Eric Berger (@SciGuySpace) May 29, 2026
normaleagle05 said:
You have to snug right up to the risks at some point, everything else is a cost. I guess everything looks close when you unleash a few kilotons of energy.
normaleagle05 said:
"inhabited building"
"equipment operator"
These are the main difference right here. Not the only difference, but the main part. They evacuate people from a huge radius around a test **** that, but there is a lot of risk tolerance toward equipment and structures.
hph6203 said:
Obviously a massive difference in energy, but the first stage of the first Falcon 9 launch was crashed into a building during its transport from Texas to Florida.
The blast bent those steel beams on the tower inwards: https://t.co/tusftSv25h pic.twitter.com/VAw1o3L8WW
— Scott Manley (@DJSnM) May 29, 2026
The U.S. Space Force has just announced that it has awarded @SpaceX a $4.16 billion contract to build a constellation of satellites that can track airplanes, cruise missiles, and airborne threats globally from orbit.
— Sawyer Merritt (@SawyerMerritt) May 29, 2026
It’s for the “Space-Based Airborne Moving Target Indicator… pic.twitter.com/ppsjFrGiJm
Quote:
This explosion was "seen" several days ago.....
Sea Speed said:The blast bent those steel beams on the tower inwards: https://t.co/tusftSv25h pic.twitter.com/VAw1o3L8WW
— Scott Manley (@DJSnM) May 29, 2026
Kenneth_2003 said:
Watching Scott Manley's video from earlier...
Big setback for Amazon and their Internet constellation... They have a tightening deadline to get a minimum number of units on orbit or they lose their FCC licenses and will have to rebid those. Minimal spare launch capacity among other commercial providers. SpaceX only has one pad in operation and only one barge in Florida.
F9
Vulcan -- grounded, and potential issues with BE4 Engines now
Arian 6 --always very slow turnaround
AST space Mobile -- also more shopping launches
No other launch vehicle can carry the Mark1 lunar lander and the rover due to both weight and fairing sizes.
HLS lander Moon landing and LEO test for Artemis III
txags92 said:Kenneth_2003 said:
Watching Scott Manley's video from earlier...
Big setback for Amazon and their Internet constellation... They have a tightening deadline to get a minimum number of units on orbit or they lose their FCC licenses and will have to rebid those. Minimal spare launch capacity among other commercial providers. SpaceX only has one pad in operation and only one barge in Florida.
F9
Vulcan -- grounded, and potential issues with BE4 Engines now
Arian 6 --always very slow turnaround
AST space Mobile -- also more shopping launches
No other launch vehicle can carry the Mark1 lunar lander and the rover due to both weight and fairing sizes.
HLS lander Moon landing and LEO test for Artemis III
Falcon Heavy can launch it to TLI, but doesnt have the capability to top off its fuel tank in orbit. But there is some question about whether the top off would be needed since the Falcon Heavy can launch directly to TLI orbit in an expendable core and 2nd stage configuration, while NG would go to orbit then boost to TLI. That delay is supposedly the reason they need to top off.
The other question is how much effort Spacex wants to put into helping launch a competitors vehicle.
Kenneth_2003 said:txags92 said:Kenneth_2003 said:
Watching Scott Manley's video from earlier...
Big setback for Amazon and their Internet constellation... They have a tightening deadline to get a minimum number of units on orbit or they lose their FCC licenses and will have to rebid those. Minimal spare launch capacity among other commercial providers. SpaceX only has one pad in operation and only one barge in Florida.
F9
Vulcan -- grounded, and potential issues with BE4 Engines now
Arian 6 --always very slow turnaround
AST space Mobile -- also more shopping launches
No other launch vehicle can carry the Mark1 lunar lander and the rover due to both weight and fairing sizes.
HLS lander Moon landing and LEO test for Artemis III
Falcon Heavy can launch it to TLI, but doesnt have the capability to top off its fuel tank in orbit. But there is some question about whether the top off would be needed since the Falcon Heavy can launch directly to TLI orbit in an expendable core and 2nd stage configuration, while NG would go to orbit then boost to TLI. That delay is supposedly the reason they need to top off.
The other question is how much effort Spacex wants to put into helping launch a competitors vehicle.
It won't fit inside SpaceX fairings. Therefore it can't fly FH without second stage modifications.
SpaceX will launch for BO. They've done it before. The question is will SpaceX modify a vehicle they're looking to 100% retire.
txags92 said:Kenneth_2003 said:txags92 said:Kenneth_2003 said:
Watching Scott Manley's video from earlier...
Big setback for Amazon and their Internet constellation... They have a tightening deadline to get a minimum number of units on orbit or they lose their FCC licenses and will have to rebid those. Minimal spare launch capacity among other commercial providers. SpaceX only has one pad in operation and only one barge in Florida.
F9
Vulcan -- grounded, and potential issues with BE4 Engines now
Arian 6 --always very slow turnaround
AST space Mobile -- also more shopping launches
No other launch vehicle can carry the Mark1 lunar lander and the rover due to both weight and fairing sizes.
HLS lander Moon landing and LEO test for Artemis III
Falcon Heavy can launch it to TLI, but doesnt have the capability to top off its fuel tank in orbit. But there is some question about whether the top off would be needed since the Falcon Heavy can launch directly to TLI orbit in an expendable core and 2nd stage configuration, while NG would go to orbit then boost to TLI. That delay is supposedly the reason they need to top off.
The other question is how much effort Spacex wants to put into helping launch a competitors vehicle.
It won't fit inside SpaceX fairings. Therefore it can't fly FH without second stage modifications.
SpaceX will launch for BO. They've done it before. The question is will SpaceX modify a vehicle they're looking to 100% retire.
Mk 1 lander is 3.08m and FH fairing is 5.2m. It will fit. But not sure they want to modify it to handle the top off if needed.
I just noticed the flare stack getting blown out lol https://t.co/xVeceA0V6b pic.twitter.com/e5ZqAxIegb
— random (@r3a9an_k_) May 29, 2026
txags92 said:
The other question is how much effort Spacex wants to put into helping launch a competitors vehicle.
TexAgs91 said:txags92 said:
The other question is how much effort Spacex wants to put into helping launch a competitors vehicle.
For Artemis III, if they're trying to see which HLS option is ready for Artemis IV, and SpaceX has to fly MK2 up to dock with Orion, doesn't that answer the question for Artemis III?