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STARSHIP FLIGHT 8: A STEP FORWARD, A STUMBLE UPWARD, AND THE ROAD TO REUSABILITY

AppleMagazine

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AppleMagazine #698

SpaceX's eighth Starship flight test, dubbed Flight 8, soared into the skies above South Texas, delivering a mix of triumph and turbulence that underscores the company's relentless push toward a reusable future.

STARSHIP FLIGHT 8: A STEP FORWARD, A STUMBLE UPWARD, AND THE ROAD TO REUSABILITY

The mission saw Booster 15 execute a textbook launch and landing, caught gracefully by the towering "chopstick" arms at Starbase, only for Ship 34 to falter mid-flight, losing control and breaking apart over the Atlantic. Now, as the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) mandates an investigation into the upper stage's failure, SpaceX is dissecting the wreckage-both literal and digital-to refine its Block 2 upgrades. For everyday users, it's a peek into a grand experiment: a rocket built not just to fly, but to return, reload, and fly again, all in pursuit of humanity's off-world ambitions.

Flight 8 lifted off on March 6, 2025, from SpaceX's Starbase facility, a sprawling launch site near Boca Chica Beach. The Super Heavy Booster 15, powered by 33 Raptor engines, roared to life, propelling Ship 34 skyward in a suborbital arc aimed at testing new hardware and objectives. Minutes later, the booster separated and returned, nestling into the launch tower's arms—a third successful catch in the program's history. But the upper stage, Ship 34, hit trouble: four of its six Raptor engines shut down prematurely, sending it into a spin that ended in disintegration. For SpaceX, it's a familiar cycle-breakthroughs paired with setbacks—each feeding into a broader vision of colonizing Mars and slashing spaceflight costs.

The investigation into Ship 34's loss is underway, with SpaceX leading the effort under FAA oversight. Early data points to engine failures echoing Flight 7's woes, where propellant leaks sparked fires in the ship's aft "attic" section.

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