Article 6K2H9 The world’s most-traveled crew transport spacecraft flies again

The world’s most-traveled crew transport spacecraft flies again

by
Stephen Clark
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6K2H9)
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Enlarge / A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off with the Crew-8 mission, sending three NASA astronauts and one Russian cosmonaut on a six-month expedition on the International Space Station. (credit: Photo by Gregg Newton/AFP via Getty Images)

SpaceX's oldest Crew Dragon spacecraft launched Sunday night on its fifth mission to the International Space Station, and engineers are crunching data to see if the fleet of Dragons can safely fly as many as 15 times.

It has been five years since SpaceX launched the first Crew Dragon spacecraft on an unpiloted test flight to the space station and nearly four years since SpaceX's first astronaut mission took off in May 2020. Since then, SpaceX has put its clan of Dragons to use ferrying astronauts and cargo to and from low-Earth orbit.

Now, it's already time to talk about extending the life of the Dragon spaceships. SpaceX and NASA, which shared the cost of developing the Crew Dragon, initially certified each capsule for five flights. Crew DragonEndeavour, the first in the Dragon fleet to carry astronauts, is now flying for the fifth time.

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