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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday May 26 2020, @06:11AM   Printer-friendly
from the That's-what-testing-is-for dept.

Virgin Orbit loses its first rocket shortly after engine ignition:

After more than seven years of development, testing, and preparation, Virgin Orbit reached an important moment on Monday—dropping and igniting its LauncherOne rocket over the Pacific Ocean. Unfortunately, shortly after ignition an "anomaly" occurred, the company said.

"LauncherOne maintained stability after release, and we ignited our first stage engine, NewtonThree," the company stated on Twitter. "An anomaly then occurred early in first stage flight. We'll learn more as our engineers analyze the mountain of data we collected today."

This was the company's first attempt to ignite LauncherOne. Previously, it had strapped the liquid-fueled rocket to its modified 747 aircraft, and flown out over the Pacific Ocean, but not released the booster from beneath the plane's wing.

After Monday's launch attempt the crew on board the 747 and a chase plane safely made it back to the Mojave Air & Space Port without harm. The company stressed that it now has plenty of data to dig into, and is "eager" to get on to its next flight.

Here's the official press release from Virgin Orbit: Virgin Orbit


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 26 2020, @02:23PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 26 2020, @02:23PM (#999216)

    you can point the rocket down, have it enter denser athmosphere, which compressed at the intact shock-cone, eliminates the need to carry oxydizer then after getting to about 11km/sec, pull up and cost to orbit ... oh wait, that's something else: "the virgin hunter".