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Blog SpaceX SN6 Prototype Conducts Successful Test Hop

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SpaceX advanced its Starship program Thursday, conducting a successful test hop of the SN6 prototype.

The vehicle, powered by SpaceX’s next-generation Raptor engine, climbed to about 150 meters above the company’s complex in Boca Chica, Texas before landing safely.






SpaceX conducted a similar test last month of the SN5 prototype. Chief Executive Elon Musk has said the company intends to do several test hops before it attempts a full flight.

The goal of Starship is to one day transport dozens of commercial passengers to space. While early tests of the new rocket are moving in the right direction, Musk said there’s still a great deal of testing to do before the company will feel comfortable sending the rocket to space with humans on board.

“We’ve got to first make the thing work; automatically deliver satellites and do hundreds of missions with satellites before we put people on board,” Musk said this week in an interview.

Musk also said that the company started work this week on construction of the first Super Heavy booster prototype, the bottom half of the rocket containing most of the engines powering Starship into space.

“This is really uncharted territory,” Musk said. “Nobody has ever made a fully reusable orbital rocket. Just to have that at all is pretty significant.”

Musk said the first orbital flight of Starship could take place next year.

Photo: SpaceX/SN5 Hop

 
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Longtime Tesla Model S driver and TMC contributor here... John Davis (@DESpaceX)

I've recently partnered with Maria Pointer to produce Boca Chica and SpaceX Starship documentary videos. Maria and her husband Ray moved to Boca Chica 20 years ago and then... SpaceX moved in next door. Here's our latest video of the hop.

We're pushing the technical boundaries as far as our equipment will allow and more improvements are on the schedule.

Please like and subscribe to help us with those pesky YouTube algorithms. Thanks to all my Teslaite brethren!!!

Youtube.com/c/starshipbocachica
 
That is SpaceX, not the government: not specifying the exact date, time, and location means your data is ambiguous. Yes, you specified location, and there there are only roughly less than or equal to one launches per day right now, but you're already ambiguous about which week that was. Please stop using a government standard for an actively engaged company. SpaceX is a moving entity. It even escapes anti-innovation state governments when necessary (although I do wish to have this state become pro-innovation again and win back some of SpaceX's business).