Categories: Manned SpaceRockets

Falcon 9 on way to Station – Dragon Thruster Issues Delay IIS Rendezvous

SpaceX Falcon 9 Second Stage Engine Firing.
Image Credit – NASA

The SpaceX Falcon 9 Rocket lifted of on schedule today in a resupply mission for the International Space Station, but the day was not without issues. The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the Dragon spacecraft lifted off on time at 10:10 a.m. from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, beginning its mission to resupply the International Space Station.

The mission marks the third trip by a Dragon capsule to the orbiting laboratory, following a demonstration flight in May 2012 and the first resupply mission in October 2012. The rocket staged properly, the second stage firing placing the Dragon capsule in the proper orbit. The Dragon capsule however had issues when only 1 of 4 thruster pods would come on line.  At 11:22am SpaceX reported “One thruster pod is running. Two are preferred to take the next step which is to deploy the solar arrays. We are working to bring up the other two pods in order to plan the next series of burns to get to station.”  Shortly after that the solar array was deployed but with only one thruster pod working.

About four hours later SpaceX reported two of Dragon’s four thruster pods were online and mission controllers were optimistically continuing to work on the other two. Due to the thruster issue Dragon will not be able to berth at the International Space Station tomorrow as planned. NASA and SpaceX are assessing the next steps.

Falcon 9 Launch

An hour later SpaceX confirmed all four of the Dragon spacecraft’s thruster pods were up and running. The company will continue to check out Dragon, test its systems, and perform some orbital maneuvers. The next opportunity for Dragon to rendezvous with the International Space Station is early Sunday, if SpaceX and NASA determine the spacecraft is in the proper configuration and ready to support an attempt.

Dan Mantel - KnowledgeOrb Contributor

View Comments

  • It's really nice that filalny the space program is commercially available to all those can afford it. I believe privatization of such sectors could bring a dramatic change on how we view them, more transparency would mean more freedom and scope for development, however we need strict laws to govern all such commercial space accesses too.

Share
Published by
Dan Mantel - KnowledgeOrb Contributor

Recent Posts

NASA’s Best Newly Released Images of Mars June, 2024

https://youtu.be/ycPwgUI3nag NASA’s Perseverance and Curiosity rovers newly released images and pictures of Mars. Mars is…

6 months ago

NASA SLS A ROCKET FUELED BY POLITICS

https://youtu.be/KKygQhBQZnQ NASA SLS Rocket design was done by politicians as much as engineers. There is…

7 months ago

Worst Geomagnetic Storm Since 2005! 5 Earth directed CMEs!

https://youtu.be/slELcxXeLMc First G4 Geomagnetic Storm since 2005.Issue Time: 2024 May 09 1722 UTCWATCH: Geomagnetic Storm…

8 months ago

Rocket Launch Long March-2D Yaogan 42-02

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/1_S9tHINK24 China launched Chinese military remote sensing satellite on a Long March 2D rocket from…

8 months ago

Sun 420 Super High…Activity, CME, Flare, Sunspots

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HlysKwHI2jw The sun put on an impressive display on 4-17-24 to 4-20-24. Many flares, CMEs…

8 months ago

NASA SpaceX Lunar Elevator of Death!

https://youtu.be/8lT0__zYuJk The NASA SpaceX Human Landing System (HLS) for lunar moon landings requires astronauts to…

8 months ago