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NASA, Boeing to conduct uncrewed test flight to ISS for Starliner capsule on 30 July- Technology News, FP


NASA and Boeing are now targeting 30 July for an uncrewed test flight of the aerospace company’s troubled Starliner capsule to the International Space Station, they announced Thursday. The launch has been postponed multiple times, with the last announced date of April scuppered due to a cold snap that caused extensive power outages in Texas in March. The NASA Commercial Crew program is run partly from the Johnson Space Center in Houston, though it launches from Cape Canaveral in Florida.

Lift-off is now scheduled for 2:53 pm Eastern Time (1853 GMT) on 30 July.

A protective tent is used to cover the Boeing CST-100 Starliner after its descent by parachute following an Orbital Flight Test for NASA’s Commercial Crew programs. Image: NASA

A protective tent is used to cover the Boeing CST-100 Starliner after its descent by parachute following an Orbital Flight Test for NASA’s Commercial Crew programs. Image: NASA

“NASA and Boeing have done an incredible amount of work to get to this point,” said Steve Stich, Commercial Crew program manager.

Starliner’s first crewed flight is expected to follow after that, no earlier than September.

During an initial uncrewed test flight in December 2019, the Starliner capsule failed to dock at the ISS and returned to Earth prematurely.

NASA later identified 80 corrective actions Boeing needed to take and characterized the test as a “high visibility close call” during which time the spacecraft could have been lost twice.

Boeing has fallen far behind Elon Musk’s SpaceX, the other company chosen by NASA to develop a vessel to transport astronauts to the ISS.

SpaceX’s Crew Dragon capsule has now taken three astronaut crews to the ISS — the last being the Crew-2 mission which included the first European, Thomas Pesquet, last month.

Both companies were awarded billions of dollars by NASA to restore American capacity to launch astronauts following the end of the Space Shuttle program in 2011.

Between 2011 and 2020, when SpaceX carried its first crew, the US was left reliant on Russian Soyuz rockets for rides to the orbital outpost.





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