SpaceX
puts Dragon passenger spaceship through test run
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[May 09, 2015]
By Irene Klotz
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (Reuters) - A Space
Exploration Technologies' passenger spaceship made a quick debut test
flight on Wednesday, shooting itself off a Florida launch pad to
demonstrate a key emergency escape system.
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The 20 foot- (6 meter) tall Dragon capsule, a modified version of
the spacecraft that flies cargo to the International Space Station,
fired up its eight, side-mounted thruster engines at 9 a.m. EDT to
catapult nearly one mile (1.6 km) up and over the Atlantic Ocean.
The flight ended less than two minutes later with the capsule's
parachute splash-down about 1.4 miles (2.6 km) east of the Cape
Canaveral Air Force Station launch site.
“I think this bodes quite well for the future of the program,”
SpaceX founder and chief executive Elon Musk told reporters on a
conference call after the flight. “It was quite a complicated test.”
The purpose of the flight was to demonstrate an escape system to
carry the capsule to safety in case of a fire or accident during
launch.
"It’s kind of like an ejection seat in an airplane. You have the
ability to leave the pad sitting in the capsule and the capsule
would come off and land," NASA astronaut Eric Boe said during an
interview on NASA TV.
"It's one of the things the shuttle didn't have," added Boe, who
twice flew as a space shuttle pilot.
NASA retired the shuttles in 2011 and invested in commercial designs
for a new generation of space taxis. The U.S. space agency has
contracts worth a combined $6.8 billion with privately owned SpaceX,
as the California-based firm is known, and Boeing for spaceship
development and up to six flights per company.
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NASA hopes to be flying astronauts to the space station on U.S.
spaceships by December 2017, breaking Russia’s monopoly on crew
ferry flights. NASA currently pays Russia about $63 million per
person for rides on its Soyuz capsules.
No astronauts were aboard the heavily instrumented Dragon capsule
that flew Wednesday, though a crash dummy was strapped into a seat
in the crew cabin. Musk said the capsule reached a peak speed of 345
mph (555 kph).
“That’s pretty zippy,” he said.
SpaceX plans to refly the capsule as early as this summer aboard a
Falcon 9 rocket to test an abort maneuver at supersonic speed and
high altitude. The rocket will fly from SpaceX's launch pad at
Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.
(irene.klotz@thomsonreuters.com; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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