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SpaceX - Starship - Suborbital Test Flight 8 - OLP-A - Starbase Texas - March 6, 2025

Some minutes after the hot staging, the Starship lost its ACS (Altitude Control System) and became unstable. The tower successfully caught the Super Heavy Booster. Launch Date: March 6, 2025 Launch Status: The launch window will open at 5:30 p.m. CT, 6:30 p.m. ET, 2330 UTC - March 7, 00:30 CET. Launch Provider: SpaceX Launcher System: Starship-Super Heavy (Prototype) - (Vehicles: Starship 34 & Booster 15) Mission: Starship Test Flight 8 - Suborbital test flight Flight: #1 Launch Location: Orbital Launch Pad A (OLP-A), Starbase, Texas, USA The eighth flight test of Starship is preparing to launch as soon as Thursday, March 6. The launch window will open at 5:30 p.m. CT, 6:30 p.m. ET, 2330 UTC - March 7, 00:30 CET. After completing the investigation into the loss of Starship early on its seventh flight test, several hardware and operational changes have been made to increase reliability of the upper stage. The upcoming flight will fly the same suborbital trajectory as previous missions and will target objectives not reached on the previous test, including Starship’s first payload deployment and multiple reentry experiments geared towards returning the upper stage to the launch site for catch. The flight also includes the launch, return, and catch of the Super Heavy booster. Extensive upgrades to Starship’s upper stage debuted on the previous flight test, focused on adding reliability and performance across all phases of flight. Starship’s forward flaps have been upgraded to significantly reduce their exposure to reentry heating while simplifying the underlying mechanisms and protective tiling. Redesigns to the propulsion system, including a 25 percent increase in propellant volume over previous generations, add additional vehicle performance and the ability to fly longer-duration missions. The vehicle’s avionics underwent a complete redesign. During the flight test, Starship will deploy four Starlink simulators, similar in size to next-generation Starlink satellites, as the first exercise of a satellite deployment mission. A relight of a single Raptor engine while in space is also planned. The flight test includes several experiments focused on enabling Starship’s upper stage to return to the launch site. Many tiles have been removed from Starship to stress-test vulnerable areas across the vehicle. Multiple metallic tile options, including one with active cooling, will test alternative materials for protecting Starship during reentry. On the sides of the car, non-structural versions of Starship’s catch fittings are installed to test the fittings’ thermal performance, along with a section of the tile line receiving a smoothed and tapered edge to address hot spots observed during reentry on Starship’s sixth flight test. Starship’s reentry profile is designed to intentionally stress the structural limits of the upper stage’s rear flaps while at the point of maximum entry dynamic pressure. Finally, several radar sensors will once again be tested on the launch and catch tower’s chopsticks to increase the accuracy when measuring distances between the chopsticks and a returning vehicle. The Super Heavy booster for this flight features upgraded avionics, including a more powerful flight computer, improved power and network distribution, and integrated intelligent batteries. Distinct vehicle and pad criteria must be met before the return and catch of the Super Heavy booster, requiring healthy systems on the booster and tower and a final manual command from the mission’s Flight Director. If this command is not sent before the completion of the boostback burn, or if automated health checks show unacceptable conditions with Super Heavy or the tower, the booster will default to a trajectory for a soft splashdown in the Gulf of America. We accept no compromises when it comes to ensuring the safety of the public and our team, and booster return will only occur if conditions are right. The returning booster will slow down from supersonic speeds, resulting in audible sonic booms around the landing zone. Generally, the only impact on those in the surrounding area of a sonic boom is the brief thunder-like noise with variables like weather and distance from the return site, which determine the magnitude experienced by observers. Developmental testing is, by definition, unpredictable. But by putting flight hardware in a flight environment as frequently as possible, we can quickly learn and execute design changes as we seek to bring Starship online as a fully and rapidly reusable vehicle.

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