Boeing Starliner’s helium leak provides one other delay to debut crew flight By Reuters

admin
By admin
2 Min Read

(Reuters) -NASA once more delayed Boeing (NYSE:)’s debut crewed flight of its Starliner capsule on Tuesday so engineers can spend extra time evaluating a helium leak within the spacecraft’s propulsion system, the company mentioned in a press release.

The launch, beforehand set for Might 25, is now on maintain, with the subsequent attainable launch date below dialogue, the assertion mentioned.

“The team has been in meetings for two consecutive days, assessing flight rationale, system performance, and redundancy,” NASA mentioned. “There is still forward work in these areas, and the next possible launch opportunity is still being discussed.”

The most recent postponement of Starliner’s debut mission with people aboard comes as mission officers deepen their assessment of a helium leak in Starliner’s propulsion system, which was found alongside a problem with the Atlas (NYSE:) booster shortly earlier than the spacecraft was poised to launch from Florida on Might 7. The Atlas rocket is constructed by United Launch Alliance (ULA), a Boeing-Lockheed Martin (LMT.N) three way partnership.

Two NASA astronauts, Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore, are set to experience Starliner as its first crew to the Worldwide Area Station after years of delays, technical issues and two uncrewed demonstration flights – one unsuccessful in 2019 and a profitable try in 2022.

With the 2 longtime check pilots aboard, the mission will mark Starliner’s remaining benchmark check earlier than NASA certifies the spacecraft for routine crewed missions to and from the ISS. SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft, developed below the identical NASA program, has been NASA’s main ISS taxi since 2021.

Share This Article