Starbase Pad 1 ends an era, enters preparations for the next phase
Date:
Fri, 24 Oct 2025 16:56:32 +0000
Description:
After 11 Flights and many tests, the booster test stand turned launch mount  has reached The post Starbase Pad 1 ends an era, enters preparations for the  next phase appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
 After 11 Flights and many tests, the booster test stand turned launch mount  has reached the end of its life. Pad 1 propelled the Starship program through  the early years and now moves towards the new phase of operations. 
 
 
 Start of Construction and First Testing 
 Construction on Pad 1 began around July 2020, when crews started laying the  foundation for the six legs of the launch mount. The legs would then be set 
up and poured, and the structure would remain in place for several months  until January 2021, when the crews began construction of the fluids bunker 
and the concrete pad for the original vertical tanks. 
 Just before the completion of the suborbital hops with SN15, SpaceX started  the construction of the launch tower. Once the hops were completed, the  landing pad was turned into a construction zone as the chopsticks and the  ships quick disconnect arm (SQD) were built. 
Initially, SpaceX was going to have two vertical Liquid Nitrogen (LN2) tanks,  three vertical Liquid Oxygen (LOX) tanks, and two vertical Liquid Methane  (LCH4) tanks. Launch Mount legs getting installed Aug 29, 2020 (Credit:  BocaChicaGal for NSF) 
 However, during certification of the tanks, it was found that the LCH4 tanks  didnt meet the Texas state fire code, and SpaceX ended up moving to 
horizontal tanks instead. Eventually, the setup that was settled on for early  testing and flights consisted of seven horizontal methane tanks, two medium  and five small tanks. A sixth small tank was placed in the tank farm but was  never hooked up, even to this day. 
 The mount itself was built at the production site, then rolled to the launch  site and installed on the legs on July 31, 2021. 
Then, just six days later, SpaceX rushed to get Booster 4 and Ship 20 to the  pad shortly after their construction was completed. And, on Aug 6, 2021, the  first-ever starship stack can be seen next to a tower that had no chopsticks,  no SQD arm, and the tank farm was nowhere near completion. 
This stack was accomplished using the Liebherr LR 11350 crane, which was used  to stack the launch tower. Lift of the launch mount ring on July 31, 2021.  (Credit: BocaChicaGal for NSF) 
 The first stack was nothing more than a photo op, as the next stack wouldnt  occur until Feb 10, 2022, using the chopsticks. This stack was used as a test  for the sticks and as a backdrop for SpaceX CEO Elon Musks Starship Update in  February of 2022. The first full-stack testing was during the third and final  stack of Booster 4 and Ship 20, where two cryogenic proof tests were 
completed on March 16 and 18, 2022. 
 As for pumps and subcoolers, the early testing and launches utilized three  LOX pumps and four subcoolers, while the LCH4 side had three pumps and two  subcoolers. The first-ever cryogenic test completed on Pad 1(A) was on Dec 
17, 2021, with Booster 4, which was followed by another two over the next few  days. These tests ruined any chance SpaceX ever had to test Booster 4s  engines, as tons of foreign object debris entered the boosters tanks and  damaged the internal plumbing and the already installed Raptor engines. The  first ever full stack of Starship Super Heavy. @NASASpaceflight  pic.twitter.com/zwdcLpErSn 
 Jack Beyer (@thejackbeyer) August 6, 2021 
 
 As a result, the first engine testing didnt occur until July 11, 2022, with  Booster 7, which would later become infamous as the spin boom, as SpaceX  attempted a spin prime with all 33 engines. 
The collection of oxygen and methane gas below the mount ignited, causing a  detonation; luckily, this did not lead to the entire booster exploding. 
 
After this incident, SpaceX had breakaway hoses going from the engines to a  manifold to divert the LOX engine chill away from the launch mount. These  hoses would stay during the entirety of the pads life. 
 The first-ever static fire on Pad 1 occurred on Aug 9, 2022, with a single  engine test from Booster 7. This would culminate in a 31-engine static fire 
on February 9, 2023. This was due to two engines not igniting during a  33-engine attempt. A full-duration 10-second 33 engine static fire wouldnt  occur until Aug 25, 2023, with Booster 9. Ship 24 stacked on Booster 7 on  January 10, 2023 ahead of the first Wet Dress Rehearsal (Credit: Jack Beyer  for NSF) 
 First Few Flights 
 The first stack of the first set of actual flight vehicles occurred on Oct  11, 2022, with Booster 7 and Ship 24. Following a few more stacks and 
testing, a Wet Dress Rehearsal was completed with Booster 7 and Ship 24 on 
Jan 23, 2023. Following this, the stack then launched on April 20, 2023.  However, the engineers hoped that the concrete-only foundation would be 
enough for just one launch. 
 Instead, the Raptor engines on Booster 7 obliterated the fondag and  superheated the groundwater below, causing a volcanic-like eruption at the  base of Pad 1. During static fire testing, SpaceX realized that using fondag  concrete alone would not be sufficient to protect the launch pad. So, before  Flight 1, crews had already started work on the steel water plate that has  been on every flight and static fire since Flight 1. New water deluge system  to protect against the immense heat & force of Starship launch  pic.twitter.com/JMnBIH8UTM 
 Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 28, 2023 
 
 Following the concrete and dirt cloud of Flight 1, SpaceX upgraded the 
launch pads foundation and added the water-cooled steel plate. This plate  shoots out high-pressure water to counteract the high-pressure exhaust of the  raptor engines, which in turn dampens sound and dust, and protects the launch  pad. 
 Additionally, before Flight 2, SpaceX had to modify the SQD arm to  accommodate the increased height from the hotstage ring, so it was moved up 
an additional 1.82 meters. It had already been moved up once before when the  SQD plate on Ship was moved up a ring between Ship 20 and Ship 24. 
 Following the more successful Flight 2 of Starship, SpaceX started to add  nine LN2 and LOX horizontal tanks as well as expand the number of pumps and  subcoolers for the launch pad. SpaceX added two more LOX pumps and four  additional subcoolers, along with one more LCH4 pump and two more subcoolers.  This brought the propellant load time from 1 hour and 30 minutes to 50  minutes. Booster 9 on the Launch Mount July 31, 2023, ahead of its first set  of engine testing (Credit: Jack Beyer for NSF) 
 Following Flight 3 and before Flight 4, the new horizontal LOX and LN2 tanks  were commissioned into the tank farm, and the vertical tanks began to be  scrapped. 
 Flight 5 and Beyond 
 After Flight 4 crews began to modify the tower and the chopsticks to prepare  for a booster catch. This involved adding reinforcements to the arms and  larger gusset plates to the top of the tower to enhance its strength. Crews  also finished destroying the vertical tanks as they were no longer needed for  the tank farm. 
 Flight 5 was a pivotal flight for the Starship Program, as SpaceX  successfully brought a Super Heavy Booster back, and the launch pad  infrastructure worked perfectly, allowing teams to catch Booster 12. The 
catch arms would go on to catch Boosters 14 and 15, and the launch pad would  even help refly both boosters on later flights. Booster 12 About to be caught  by the tower (Credit: Max Evans for NSF) 
 The configuration of Pad 1during Flight 5 and all the way up to Flight 11  wouldnt change much. There were two instances where SpaceX put a ship on the  pad to conduct a static fire test because Ship 36 had decided to blow up  Masseys. The two ships were Ship 37 and Ship 38. SpaceX made modifications to  the pad to minimize disruptions to flight operations. 
 The quickest turnaround time for Pad 1 was 37 days between Flight 5 and  Flight 6. Over its lifetime, Pad 1 performed 28 cryogenic proof and tanking  tests, 15 spin primes, 34 static fires, six wet dress rehearsals, four 
aborted launch attempts, and 11 Full Stack flight tests. 
In their long original configuration, the chopsticks performed over 100 
lifts, which included boosters being mounted and demounted from the pad, as  well as stacking and destacking of ships. Ship 37 and Booster 16 Lifting off  from Pad 1 as the exhaust scorches the BQD (Credit: Jack Beyer for NSF) 
 The quickest stack in its history was the second-to-last stack of Flight 2  with Ship 25, which, from leaving the transport stand to being placed on  Booster 9, was 33 minutes. 
 After all of the testing and hardships, SpaceX will lay this pad to rest and  begin the conversion to the new design, but without the lessons learned from  Pad 1, that would not have been possible. Thank you for your service, Pad 1. 
 Featured Image: Booster 15 about to be caught by Pad 1 (Credit: BocaChicaGal  for NSF) 
 
The post Starbase Pad 1 ends an era, enters preparations for the next phase  appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/10/pad-1-era-preparations-next-phase/
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