Rocket Lab has launch abort at T-0 seconds
In attempting to launch five satellites for a French company today from its New Zealand launch facility, Rocket Lab’s Electron rocket aborted the launch at T-0 seconds.
The rocket was stable and quickly safetied by mission control. However, the launch had an instantanous launch window, so no additional attempts could be made today. No word yet on when the next attempt will be scheduled.
This launch would have been the second of five for the French satellite company Kinéis, which is using Rocket Lab to put its 25 satellite internet-of-things constellation into orbit.
One interesting aspect of this and all recent Rocket Lab launches: The company appears to have dropped its effort to make the first stage of the Electron rocket recoverable and reusable. It has recovered several stages after a gentle splashdown in the ocean, but except for the reuse of one engine, it has said nothing about reusing any of those stages. It could be management has decided to shift resources from this project to its new larger Neutron rocket, which is being designed from scratch for reuse and vertical landing. The test data from those Electron reuse attempts has likely been very useful, but the difficulties of redesigning the rocket to be reusable might not make sense financially at this point.
In attempting to launch five satellites for a French company today from its New Zealand launch facility, Rocket Lab’s Electron rocket aborted the launch at T-0 seconds.
The rocket was stable and quickly safetied by mission control. However, the launch had an instantanous launch window, so no additional attempts could be made today. No word yet on when the next attempt will be scheduled.
This launch would have been the second of five for the French satellite company Kinéis, which is using Rocket Lab to put its 25 satellite internet-of-things constellation into orbit.
One interesting aspect of this and all recent Rocket Lab launches: The company appears to have dropped its effort to make the first stage of the Electron rocket recoverable and reusable. It has recovered several stages after a gentle splashdown in the ocean, but except for the reuse of one engine, it has said nothing about reusing any of those stages. It could be management has decided to shift resources from this project to its new larger Neutron rocket, which is being designed from scratch for reuse and vertical landing. The test data from those Electron reuse attempts has likely been very useful, but the difficulties of redesigning the rocket to be reusable might not make sense financially at this point.















