SpaceX launches Starship V3 in its twelfth major flight test
Texas, May 23
SpaceX successfully launched the twelfth test flight of its next-generation Starship on Friday evening, marking the first-ever flight of the upgraded Starship and Super Heavy Version 3 vehicles and the debut of the company's new Raptor 3 engines.
According to the SpaceX press release, the mission lifted off from Starbase, Texas, at 5:30 pm CT and also marked the first Starship launch from the company's new Pad 2 facility.
The flight began with all 33 Rapotor 3 engines on the Super Heavy booster igniting successfully as the vehicle ascended over the Gulf of America. SpaceX said that one engine shut down during ascent, but the booster completed its first-stage climb and successfully executed a hot-staging manoeuvre, allowing Starship's upper stage to continue toward space using its six Raptor engines.
Following stage separation, the Super Heavy booster performed a directional flip manoeuvre and attempted a boostback burn. However, according to the company, it was "unable to light all planned engines" and completed only a partial boostback burn before later experiencing a hard splashdown in the Gulf of America during its landing attempt.
During ascent, Starship also lost one of its vacuum-optimised Raptor 3 engines but maintained its planned trajectory and demonstrated "engine-out capability."
SpaceX said the mission successfully deployed 20 Starlink simulators and two modified Starlink satellites designed to image Starship in space, the first time such a deployment has occurred during a Starship test flight.
The spacecraft later re-entered Earth's atmosphere and gathered critical data on heatshield performance and structural integrity. In the final phase of flight, engineers intentionally stressed the vehicle's rear flaps and tested a dynamic banking manoeuvre intended to simulate future return trajectories to Starbase.
Starship eventually guided itself to a planned splashdown zone in the Indian Ocean, where it completed a landing flip manoeuvre, landing burn, and splashdown using two Raptor engines.
Earlier, according to the New York Post, Thursday's (local time) initial launch attempt was scrubbed after engineers detected issues involving the temperature of the rocket's propellants. During the livestream, a SpaceX representative said, "New rocket, new pad, we're learning a lot about these systems as we execute them for the first time."
The publication reported that the aborted attempt was later reclassified as a "wet dress rehearsal," with SpaceX teams preparing for Friday's successful launch attempt.
The New York Post also noted that the upgraded Starship V3 stands 407 feet tall, four feet taller than its predecessor, and features redesigned propulsion systems capable of carrying more fuel for long-duration missions.
The publication further reported that Elon Musk sees Starship as the spacecraft that will eventually carry astronauts to the Moon and Mars, with the vehicle playing a central role in NASA's Artemis lunar exploration program.
— ANI
Reader Comments
The Moon and Mars dreams are nice but let's not ignore the environmental cost. Gulf of America splashdowns, Indian Ocean landings... our oceans are not dumping grounds. And 33 Raptor engines burning methane? That carbon footprint is huge. We need sustainable space exploration, not just big rockets.
Finally some real progress! The fact that this is only test flight 12 and they're already deploying Starlink simulators is incredible. India's ISRO should take notes - rapid iteration beats perfect design every time. That said, the booster issues need sorting. No more Titan IIIC-style failures.
407 feet tall! That's taller than the Qutub Minar! 😲 But I'm so worried about the hard splashdown. In India, we've seen what happens when big projects rush - the 1993 Mumbai bomb blasts taught us patience. SpaceX needs to slow down and get the boostback working properly. Safety over speed, please.
As someone who remembers watching the moon landing on black-and-white TV back home, seeing this is amazing! But yaar, these delays and scrubs... Thursday's attempt called off due to propellant temperature? That's basic stuff. NASA's Saturn V never had such drama. Maybe too much 'fail fast' culture.
Let's be real: this is a massive achievement. Engine-out capability demonstrated, hot staging worked, Starlink simulators deployed. The Indian Ocean splashdown is just bonus. Look at Chandrayaan-3 - India took decades to land softly. SpaceX is doing this in a dozen flights. Respect where it
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