SpaceX delays launch of its giant Starship rocket to swap out a part
Enlarge / The upper stage of SpaceX's Super Heavy-Starship launch vehicle was removed from its position atop the rocket Thursday, clearing the way for the swap-out of a component on the booster stage. (credit: Stephen Clark/Ars Technica)
BOCA CHICA BEACH, Texas-The launch of SpaceX's second full-size Starship rocket from South Texas is now scheduled for Saturday, a day later than previously planned, according to company founder Elon Musk.
This 24-hour delay will allow time for SpaceX technicians at the company's launch facility, known as Starbase, to replace a component on the rocket's stainless steel Super Heavy booster. There is a 20-minute launch window on Saturday, opening at 7 am CST (13:00 UTC), shortly after sunrise in South Texas.
A delay at this point is unsurprising. Starship is a complex launch vehicle with a sum of 39 methane-burning engines, each producing roughly a half-million pounds of thrust, powering its booster stage and upper stage. And this is only the second test flight of SpaceX's new full-scale, nearly 400-foot-tall (121-meter) rocket, the largest launch vehicle ever built.