Boeing's botched Starliner test flirted with 'catastrophic' failure:
NASA panel
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[February 07, 2020]
By Joey Roulette
(Reuters) - Boeing narrowly missed a
"catastrophic failure" during its December flight test of an unmanned
space taxi that was cut short by an unrelated problem, a NASA safety
review panel said Thursday, recommending that the agency examine
Boeing's software verification process before letting it fly humans to
space.
The newly revealed software bug, which Boeing said was fixed while the
CST-100 Starliner was still in orbit, could have "led to erroneous
thruster firings" that could have resulted in "a catastrophic spacecraft
failure," panel member Paul Hill said.
Boeing and NASA officials had zeroed in on an unrelated glitch, with the
spacecraft's automated timer, hours after the spacecraft failed to reach
its intended orbit 30 minutes into flight. The timer malfunction forced
the craft to scrub its rendezvous with the International Space Station,
and the Starliner returned to Earth a week early.
NASA still must decide whether to make Boeing repeat the unmanned
docking test before spacecraft can carry astronauts. Boeing recorded a
$410 million charge last month to cover that possibility.
"The panel has a larger concern with the rigor of Boeing’s verification
processes,” said Hill, a former NASA flight director who now serves on
the panel that advises NASA on safety issues. Speaking during the
panel's quarterly meeting on Thursday, Hill said the agency should go
beyond merely correcting the cause of the anomalies and scrutinize
Boeing's entire software testing processes.
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The Boeing CST-100 Starliner spacecraft, atop a ULA Atlas V rocket,
stands at launch complex 40 at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station
in Cape Canaveral, Florida December 19, 2019. REUTERS/Steve Nesius/File
Photo
"We are already working on many of the recommended fixes including
re-verifying flight software code," Boeing said in a statement,
adding that it believes its engineers have found the cause of one of
the software issues and have recommended to NASA corrective actions.
Boeing and Elon Musk's rival SpaceX company are building separate
space taxis to ferry astronauts to the space station under NASA's
effort to revive its human spaceflight program.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Editing by Greg Mitchell and Leslie
Adler)
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