International Space Station | After years of waiting, the Boeing capsule on its way to a test flight

(Washington) After years of delays and successive failures, the Boeing space capsule, Starliner, took off Thursday evening from Florida for an empty test flight to the International Space Station, in the hope of ‘finally becoming the second company to serve as a “taxi” for NASA astronauts in the future, after SpaceX.

Posted at 7:09 p.m.
Updated at 10:30 p.m.

Lucie AUBOURG
France Media Agency

The launch took place from Cape Canaveral at 6:54 p.m. local time. Starliner was powered by a United Launch Alliance (ULA) Atlas V rocket, and is due to dock with the Space Station (ISS) about 24 hours later.

The capsule was placed on the correct course, but two of the 12 thrusters normally used for the maneuver failed, NASA officials told a news conference. This problem should not affect the mission, however, they assured.

“Teams are working to understand why we had these anomalies,” said Mark Nappi, human space program manager at Boeing. “We have a safe vehicle and we are on our way to the International Space Station,” he added.

This test without passengers on board, which must prove that the capsule is safe to then transport humans, had already been attempted in 2019. But it had then come close to disaster, and the ship had to return to Earth prematurely without having reached the ISS.

Then in August 2021, a new test had to be canceled at the very last moment, even before the launch, due to a valve problem detected during the final checks.

Meanwhile, SpaceX, a newcomer to the aerospace industry compared to Boeing, has passed its own tests and started transporting NASA astronauts on regular missions. In all, billionaire Elon Musk’s company has already transported 18 astronauts with its own capsule, Dragon – as well as four private passengers on a space tourism mission.

But NASA wants to diversify its options, so as never again to risk finding itself without American means of transport, as after the shutdown of the space shuttles in 2011. Until SpaceX, the American agency was indeed reduced to paying for places in the Russian Soyuz rockets.

A fixed price contract has been signed with SpaceX as well as with Boeing.

Delicate docking

On Thursday, only a dummy named Rosie sat in the commander’s seat. It is equipped with about fifteen sensors, intended to collect information on the movements of the structure.

Starliner is also carrying approximately 230 kg of supplies on behalf of NASA, including food.

The approach to the ISS on Friday, around 7 p.m., will be closely followed by astronauts aboard the Station. They will first command the capsule to stabilize about 250 meters away, before proceeding with the delicate maneuver of contact. The capsule hatch won’t be opened until the next day, Saturday.

Starliner must remain docked to the ISS for about five days, before descending back to Earth to land in the desert of the US state of New Mexico, at the base of White Sands.

Repeated setbacks

The development of Starliner turned out to be a long epic strewn with pitfalls.

In 2019, the capsule could not be placed in the correct orbit due to a clock problem, and had to return to Earth after two days. Boeing then realized that other software problems had almost caused a serious flight anomaly.

NASA had prescribed a long list of recommendations and modifications to be made.

Then, in 2021, when the rocket was already on the launch pad to attempt the flight again, a humidity problem caused a chemical reaction that blocked the opening of certain valves in the capsule. She had to go back to the factory for inspection—for 10 months.

The problem was solved by hermetically sealing the new valves, in order to prevent moisture from entering, explained Mark Nappi, from Boeing. But in the future, other longer-term solutions, including a modified design, are on the table.

The stakes are high for the company, which hopes to be able to make a first manned flight by the end of the year. This second demonstration mission will be essential to finally obtain approval from NASA.

But the exact schedule will depend on the performance of the capsule this week – which will at the same time restore Boeing’s image a little, to say the least tarnished by these repeated setbacks.


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