Article 51VMR The spacecraft that utterly transformed SpaceX has flown its last mission

The spacecraft that utterly transformed SpaceX has flown its last mission

by
Eric Berger
from Ars Technica - All content on (#51VMR)
  • dragon-1-980x653.jpg

    Cargo Dragon is shown on Tuesday, about to be released by the International Space Station's robotic arm. [credit: NASA ]

The date August 18, 2006 forever altered the trajectory of SpaceX.

On that day, NASA awarded SpaceX a contract to develop a service for delivering cargo to the International Space Station. This "Commercial Orbital Transportation Services" agreement would pay SpaceX $278 million to design and develop a spacecraft and rocket for this purpose-what became known as Cargo Dragon and the Falcon 9.

At the time, SpaceX was just 4 years old. The company had attempted a single launch, of its Falcon 1 rocket, from an atoll in the Pacific Ocean a few months earlier. This small rocket, capable of putting a few hundred kilograms into orbit, had flown for about half a minute before falling back to Earth and crashing into a reef just offshore. The rocket failed because, even before it cleared the launch pad, a fuel leak caused the engine to catch fire.

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