Third Times the Charm? Starship Flight 9
Date:
Mon, 26 May 2025 19:46:11 +0000
Description:
After a pair of Ship failures for Block 2 and an extended downtime between  flights, The post Third Times the Charm? Starship Flight 9 appeared first on  NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
 After a pair of Ship failures for Block 2 and an extended downtime between  flights, SpaceX is set to try and break the streak with Flight 9 and get a  Ship past Second Stage Engine Cut Off (SECO). Also, Booster 14 will be flying  for its second time, marking the first reuse of a Super Heavy Booster in the  Starship program. Launch is set for Tuesday evening from Starbase, Texas. 
 
 
 
 Flight 7 & 8 
 So far, Block 2 of the Ship has not had the success SpaceX wouldve liked.  Flight 7 failed shortly before SECO due to fires in the attic above the 
engine bay shielding. These fires resulted from damage to the Ship from a  Harmonic Response during the Ships ascent burn. 
 This would result in the vehicle losing control, leading to a breakup over  the Turks and Caicos Islands. The Booster, however, was a different story.  Booster 14 completed its full flight profile and was caught back at the 
launch site, becoming the second Super Heavy Booster to land. Booster 14  returned to Mega Bay 1 for refurbishment and is now set to fly on Flight 9.  Flight 7 in Flight (Credit: BocaChicaGal for NSF) 
 Flight 8 also saw the Ship lost just before SECO. According to SpaceX, a  Raptor Sea Level engine had a hardware failure, resulting in a fire in the  engine bay, eventually leading to the vehicles demise. In the update, SpaceX  stated that the Harmonic Resonance issue from Flight 7 had been fixed and 
that the problems encountered on Flight 8 were unrelated to Flight 7. 
However, SpaceX did not address the problem with the Raptor Vacuum engine 
seen during the flight stream. 
 As with Flight 7, SpaceX would catch Booster 15 and eventually return it to  Mega Bay 1 for refurbishment. If SpaceX reflies it, it is unknown which 
flight this booster is slated to fly on again. Booster 15 Landing (Credit:  BocaChicaGal for NSF) 
 Mission objectives, Trajectory, and Timelines 
 Flight 9s success is riding on many expectations and objectives, with the  Ship failures of the last two flights and the first reflight of a Super Heavy  Booster, an essential step for the program towards reusability. 
 In terms of trajectory, the Ship is set to remain the same with a projected  splashdown in the Indian Ocean after trying to complete the experiments that  the past two ships couldnt complete due to their failure before SECO. These  objectives include deploying eight Starlink simulators, a Raptor engine  relight, and heat shield experiments. The heat shield experiments are also 
the same, with some metallic tiles, an actively cooled tile, the removal of  tiles across the Ship to test durability on reentry, and a tapered edge of  tiles between the aft flaps and the catch points. Pins on Ship 35, via Max  Evans 
 Booster 14s trajectory is going to be different from when it first flew on  Flight 7. SpaceX is not attempting to catch this Booster. Instead, Booster 14  will perform an experimental reentry to test certain objectives. During  hostaging and the Booster flip, Booster 14 will not flip in a random 
direction based on directional push from the Ship, which is what has occurred  in the past. 
 This time, Booster 14 will flip in a controlled direction with the help of a  blocked portion of the hotstage ring to push it in a known direction. This  maneuver is to help require less fuel in reserve for the flip, which will 
lead to more fuel to be used for the ascent burn. After this flip and the  boost back burn, Booster 14 will reenter with a higher angle of attack  relative to the air flow. This means that the Booster will fly more  horizontally, which will create extra drag, thus slowing the Booster down  more. 
 This, in turn, should allow for less fuel to be needed during the landing  burn to slow down, thus allowing for more fuel on the ascent burn as well.  Overall, these improvements are to try and refine the Boosters trajectory and  have more fuel to be used to put more mass into orbit. Super Heavy booster  going from hot-staging to tower catch on Starship's seventh flight test  pic.twitter.com/Cn7mIOMsaM 
 SpaceX (@SpaceX) January 21, 2025 
 
 See Also SpaceX Starship Program L2 SpaceX Section NSF Store Click here to  Join L2 
During the landing burn, SpaceX will also perform an experiment, Booster 14  will demonstrate a unique engine configuration during its landing burn. 
SpaceX plans to intentionally disable one of the three center engines during  the final phase of the landing burn and attempt to use an engine from the  center ring of 10 as a backup. This will demonstrate the capability of engine  out and engine backups in the future. 
 In terms of prelaunch timelines, a few changes have been made to the  propellant loading of Starship for this flight. Ship is set to start Liquid  Oxygen (LOX) propellant load five mins and 36 seconds earlier than on Flight 
8 and Liquid Methane (LCH4) load two mins and 19 seconds earlier. It is  unknown why SpaceX is starting Ship prop load this much earlier than on 
Flight 8. Boosters propellant load has only a few seconds difference compared  to Flight 8. 
 In terms of during flight, most items have changed a few seconds, and 
payload deploy is set to go about a minute later than what was scheduled on  Flight 8. Flight 9 Propellant Load Timeline (Credit: SpaceX) 
 
 Ship 35 and Booster 14-2 
 Ship 35 has had an interesting journey to launch readiness. It was the first  Ship since Ship 24 to have performed at least four separate engine tests. The  reason for this seems to have been at least two Raptor Vacuum swaps. It is  unknown why SpaceX chose to change its engine; it seems to have been out of 
an abundance of caution. 
 Ship 35 has many similarities to Ships 33 and 34, at least externally. Over  the past few flights, SpaceX has introduced mitigations to try to prevent the  failure modes that resulted in the loss of Ships 33 and 34. 
 Ship 35 is set to have upgrades to its Raptor engine mounts and an improved  nitrogen purge system for the ships attic. There are likely many other  internal changes that cant be seen, such as the upgrades to solve the 
harmonic response issue detected on Flight 7 with Ship 33. There is one major  outside visible change: the addition of structural catch pins. Ship 35 
Rollout for Flight (Credit Max Evans) 
 These arent just bolted on like the pins used on Ship 33 and Ship 34. These  catch pins are integrated into the structure of the payload bay through at  least a massive double plate and stringers to distribute the load. The pins  are a slightly different design from what is currently on the booster, as the  pin that slots into the landing rail is smaller and thinner. 
 Booster 14s journey to Flight 9 started on Feb 15, 2024, when it first  started construction. Since then, it has performed a pair of static fires and  even a flight on Flight 7, where it performed nearly flawlessly, becoming the  second Super Heavy Booster to be caught. 
 Visually, Booster 14 has one major change between Flight 7 and Flight 9: the  discoloration from hot staging and reentry. Its going to be interesting to 
see how multiple flights add to the discoloration in the future. 
 The only other major change has been on the hot stage ring, where SpaceX has  blocked off a section on the Quick Disconnect side to aid in the boosters 
flip after stage separation. Booster 14-2 on Launch Mount A (Credit: Jack  Beyer for NSF) 
 Date of Launch 
 SpaceX is targeting no earlier than Tuesday, May 27, with the ~90-minute  window opening at 6:30 pm CST or 23:30 UTC. There are notices with possible  dates until June 4, but there are currently only road closures for May 27, 
28, and 29. Those road closures start at 10:30 am CST and go until 9:30 pm  CST. It is very likely that with SpaceX not catching the Booster, the road  could be open sooner than during past flights. 
 If SpaceX attempts to launch on May 27 but has an abort late in the  countdown, it can try again the next day, assuming the issue isnt too major.  Teams have upgraded the tank farm enough to recapture enough propellant 
during detanking and hold more propellant. The ninth flight test of Starship  is preparing to launch as soon as Tuesday, May 27  
https://t.co/Gufroc2kUz  pic.twitter.com/nTc2x5NAlT 
 SpaceX (@SpaceX) May 23, 2025 
 
 Flight 10 
 After Ship 35 and Booster 14 comes Ship 36 and likely Booster 16, although  the Booster for the next flight has yet to be confirmed. Once again, the  objective for Flight 10 will depend on how Flight 9 goes. Currently, Ship 36  is getting its engines and could be rolled out for static fire testing 
shortly after Flight 9. 
 Booster 16 is likely ready for a static fire, but it will have to wait for  Pad As refurbishment after Flight 9 before completing one. If SpaceX decides  to go with Booster 15 instead, it could be a little longer until it is ready.  If Flight 9 goes well and Flight 10 is Ship 36 and Booster 16, it could be  within a month or less after Flight 9. 
 Featured Image: Flight 9 Fullstack lead image by Max Evans ( @_mgde_) 
 
The post Third Times the Charm? Starship Flight 9 appeared first on  NASASpaceFlight.com .
======================================================================
Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/05/third-times-the-charm-starship-flight- 9/
--- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 (Linux/64)
 * Origin: tqwNet Science News (1337:1/100)