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SpaceX explosion on pad

tynopik

Diamond Member
http://money.cnn.com/2016/09/01/news/companies/spacex-explosion/index.html

A SpaceX rocket exploded at its Cape Canaveral launch pad Thursday morning during a test firing, destroying the rocket and the satellite it was due to launch on Saturday.

kLd58rA.jpg
 
I consider this a win for the world...

An explosion erupted during a SpaceX fueling operation at its launch site in Florida around 9:07 a.m. Eastern Time this morning, destroying a satellite that Facebook had intended to use....
 
Musk: I don't always test my rockets in production, but when I do, I do it with client payloads on board.
 
Watching the video looks like some sort of implosion on the upper stage at one of the eblicals attachment points right before the fireball engulfs the ship.

Hopefully they have some super slow mo of the explosion.
 
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Musk: I don't always test my rockets in production, but when I do, I do it with client payloads on board.

It wasn't always this way, but SpaceX opted to change policy to slim down the time for each launch. A payload for a static fire is always with the consent of the customer.

Watching the video looks like some sort of implosion on the upper stage at one of the eblicals attachment points right before the fireball engulfs the ship.

Hopefully the have some super slow mo of the explosion.

Early analysis makes it look like it come from outside the booster itself:

https://twitter.com/romn8tr/status/771418364581384197
 
hey the payload made it back home

uh oh not covered

That Tweet is misleading. No, it wasn't covered by launch insurance but it was still insured as maritime cargo. The maritime insurance lasts until launch ignition, at which point it becomes the responsibility of the launch policy.

Any guesstimates as to $$$'s lost on those 5 seconds?

Launcher plus payload is around $285 million. Add damage to the pad and easily over $300 million.
 
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