SpaceX's Crew Dragon gets tentative NASA target for first astronaut launch
Source: Teslarati
SpaceXs Crew Dragon gets tentative NASA target for first astronaut launch
ByEric Ralph Posted on June 21, 2019
New information from both NASA and the US Government Accountability Office (GAO) confirm that SpaceX is currently targeting at least very tentatively so Crew Dragons first launch with astronauts aboard no earlier than November 15th, 2019.
SpaceX is currently in the midst of a complex, high-stakes anomaly investigation after its flight-proven DM-1 Crew Dragon capsule suffered a catastrophic failure on April 20th. That investigation is nowhere near full closure due to the fact that the interests of NASA and the Commercial Crew Program (CCP) are equally interwoven into the work involved. Given the potential consequences of a similar failure occurring with astronauts (public or private) aboard, NASA is unlikely to accept anything less than a no-stone-left-unturned analysis and failure resolution, including any necessary design changes to Crew Dragon, no matter how far-reaching.
As NASASpaceflight.coms Chris Gerbhardt notes, the Crew Dragon-related dates included in the NASA Flight Planning Integration Panel (FPIP) document are extremely tentative. Theyre really only there to serve as placeholders for longer-term International Space Station planning, already a necessarily uncertain endeavor. Nevertheless, NASAs NET November 15th 2019 planning date for Crew Dragon DM-2 (the first crewed test flight) was likely okayed by SpaceX if not provided outright by the company before going into an official FPIP.
In other words, November 15th is probably a real target but should be treated as an absolutely-positively-no-earlier-than launch date for Crew Dragons first astronaut-laden mission to the ISS. Back in late March (after DM-1s successfully completion but before the capsules ground failure), anonymous Russian space industry sources confirmed that NASAs DM-2 planning date was July 25th, while also indicating that the space agency was already preparing for delays that could push DM-2 as late as November 2019.
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Read more:
https://www.teslarati.com/spacex-crew-dragon-new-astronaut-launch-target/