Boeing Starliner spacecraft ready for 10-day shakedown mission - UPI.com (2024)

Boeing Starliner spacecraft ready for 10-day shakedown mission - UPI.com (1)

1 of 4 | A United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket is rolled out from the Vertical Integration Building to Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Saturday,. The rocket will carry Boeing's Starliner capsule on its maiden crewed mission for NASA. Photo by Joe Marino/UPI | License Photo

May 6 (UPI) -- After four years of delays, the Boeing Starliner spacecraft is scheduled to undertake a 10-day shakedown mission as soon as Monday.

If all goes well, the CST-100 Starliner will launch its first crewed mission at 10:34 p.m. EDT Monday from Space Launch Complex-41 at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida.

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NASA astronauts and test pilots Suni Williams, 58. and Butch Wilmore, 61, will take the spacecraft on its mission to dock with the International Space Station before returning to Earth seven days later.

Their mission is a shakedown run to ensure all systems work as planned and to certify the spacecraft for manned missions afterward.

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"This has been a developmental process where we've been involved and ensconced in that process," Wilmore said during a virtual news conference Wednesday.

"All the way from hardware and software evaluations in the simulator, we've got our fingerprints on every single procedure in this process," he said. "That's what the test process is."

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Wilmore and Williams are U.S. Navy-trained test pilots and have helped develop the Starliner capsule, which measures 15 feet in diameter and is about the same shape as an Apollo capsule that helped NASA put a man on the moon in 1969.

If Monday night's launch goes as planned, Williams, Wilmore and the Starliner will spend 24 hours traveling to the rendezvous point for docking with the space station and will take another day to return to Earth at the end of the mission.

"Our mission is primarily a test mission to check out flying the spacecraft to the space station, docking and then checking it out while it's docked to ensure it can be a safe haven that can remain docked for a number of months," Williams said.

Both test pilots participated in space shuttle and Soyuz missions to the International Space Station, where each has spent six months on the Earth-orbiting space laboratory.

Those missions required them to complete established training programs that NASA developed based on "years and years of experience," Wilmore said. "This has not been that."

They are working with mission engineers to determine the best procedures to help ensure future successful missions.

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Williams said at times during earlier missions she's wondered why something was done in a particular way instead of one she thought would be better.

"This is our opportunity to lay that groundwork, so in the future, we hope people won't ask why we did it one way or another," she said. "We want to make it as best as possible" for future missions. We are the ones working with the engineering team to make all of that happen."

A United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket will carry the Starliner and its crew into space. A parachute and airbag-assisted landing is scheduled in the southwestern United States.

Williams and Wilmore will suit up in their flight suits 5 hours before launch to prevent nitrogen narcosis during the launch.

They also have their pre-flight plans for entertainment while on their way to the launch pad.

They'll travel to the launch pad in a customized and appropriately named Airstream Astrovan II.

"It's epic," Wilmore said of the Astrovan. "It's got a big video screen in the back."

"As you would expect [from] two Navy test pilots, you know what movie we put on," he said. "Of course it's Top Gun: Maverick," but edited to only include the flight and dramatic scenes.

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Wilmore said they'll watch it again on the trip back after touching down in the Desert Southwest to conclude their return from the shakedown mission.

The Starliner's first manned mission originally was planned to occur four years earlier, but a test mission in 2019 failed to reach the International Space Station.

A 2022 test flight accomplished that feat, but neither of those test flights carried a flight crew. Monday's planned launch will be the first to have humans on board.

A series of software and hardware failures doomed the unmanned 2019 test flight, but it landed successfully at the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico.

Boeing engineers identified the problems that caused the first mission to fail and applied more than 80 fixes.

The improvements enabled the Starliner to successfully reach orbit, dock with the space station and return six days later with another successful landing in New Mexico during the 2022 mission.

Additional delays prevented the Starliner's first manned launch due to problems with the spacecraft's parachute lines and the discovery of flammable tape that might create a fire hazard inside the spacecraft.

NASA engineers said other issues also delayed the first manned mission, but they ironed out the wrinkles with Williams and Wilmore's help.

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NASA initially allocated $4.2 billion to Boeing to design and build the Starliner, and Boeing spent another $1.5 billion while developing it.

The spacecraft has manual and automatic steering capability and can carry up to four astronauts or a mix of crew and cargo for NASA missions to low-Earth orbit.

It's designed to spend up to seven months docked at the International Space Station.

A service capsule and the Atlas rocket are expendable, but the crew capsule is designed to be used for up to 10 missions.

Williams gave the spacecraft its unofficial name, "Calypso," which she chose in honor of legendary French oceanographer Jacques Cousteau and his Calypso research vessel.

The test pilots say they are confident, well-trained and well-fed while preparing for the mission.

Unlike early NASA manned missions, such as the Apollo missions to the moon, Wilmore said theirs won't include any "black zones" that would mean certain death if there were any failures while in those zones while heading for orbit, as was the case in prior space shuttle and Soyuz missions.

"You could not survive if you had certain failures" while in a black zone, Wilmore said. "This spacecraft does not have those."

He said the Starliner will get them to the space station and back "with pinpoint accuracy," which is needed because their chosen landing zone is a 4-kilometer circle in the southwestern United States.

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They also have complete control to abort the mission.

"We can abort from the pad all the way through orbit," Williams said. "That capability is great. We're on the tippety-top end, so we'll be OK."

Williams said it was an honor for her and Wilmore to have participated in space shuttle and Soyuz missions and for them to bring that experience into a new space program.

If the mission launches as planned Monday night and returns successfully, NASA will certify the capsule it for future missions.

That certification could make Boeing a direct competitor to SpaceX, which has developed its commercial flight program that enables tourists to enter low-Earth orbit and return.

Boeing hasn't announced plans for any commercial tourism adventures to space, but a successful mission would ensure potential competition for SpaceX.

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Boeing Starliner spacecraft ready for 10-day shakedown mission - UPI.com (2024)

FAQs

Is Starliner ready? ›

"Teams at NASA and Boeing Space confirmed on Monday that the Starliner spacecraft, ULA Atlas V rocket, and ground support equipment are healthy and ready for the 10:52 a.m. ET June 5 launch of the agency's Boeing Crew Flight Test," NASA's Commercial Crew program wrote on X on Monday (June 3).

How much has NASA paid Boeing for Starliner? ›

Getting Starliner to this point has been a fraught process for Boeing under its $4.2 billion, fixed-priced contract with NASA, which wants the redundancy of two different U.S. rides to the ISS.

Where is Starliner Mission Control? ›

CFT is sending NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams to the ISS for a roughly week-long stay. "Butch and Suni, nicely done," Neal Nagata, NASA's CAPCOM (spacecraft communicator) radioed the Starliner astronauts from Mission Control in Houston.

What time is the Boeing rocket launch? ›

Liftoff took place on June 5 at 10:52 a.m. EDT (1452 UTC), finally marking the first crewed flight of Boeing's Starliner spacecraft after years of delays and setbacks.

Does Starliner have a toilet? ›

The spacecraft sports no toilet—unlike Crew Dragon—and has about the same livable volume as an SUV, making for a relatively cozy rise to and from orbit. It has physical hand controls and switches for the astronauts to control the spacecraft, unlike the touch screens used inside Crew Dragon.

What is the status of Boeing Starliner? ›

Boeing's Starliner successfully docks at ISS after helium leaks, thruster issue. NASA said two of the helium valves have been closed. Boeing's Starliner successfully docked at the International Space Station (ISS) Thursday afternoon, marking another milestone in the first astronaut-crewed test flight of the spacecraft.

Is the Boeing Starliner Rocket reusable? ›

Boeing's Starliner and SpaceX's Dragon are designed to be fully autonomous and reusable. Wilmore and Williams occasionally will take manual control of Starliner on their way to the space station, to check out its systems.

What is the highest salary for NASA astronauts? ›

The pay grades for civilian astronaut candidates are set by federal government pay scales and vary based on academic achievements and experience. According to NASA , civilian astronaut salaries range from $104,898 to $161,141 per year.

Who owns Boeing Starliner? ›

Under the contract the Starliners are owned and operated by Boeing, not NASA, and Boeing is free to offer non-CCP commercial flights if they do not interfere with the contracted CCP flights.

Why is Starliner taking so long? ›

Thruster glitches and helium leaks can't stop Boeing's Starliner astronaut test flight — but why are they happening? The glitches delayed Starliner's docking at the ISS, but so far nothing insurmountable has arisen, officials say.

How much do NASA mission controllers make? ›

How much does a Nasa Mission Control make? As of May 30, 2024, the average hourly pay for a Nasa Mission Control in the United States is $24.98 an hour.

Where will Boeing Starliner land? ›

Wilmore and Williams are the first to launch aboard Boeing's Starliner on an Atlas V rocket. The astronauts will spend about a week at the orbiting laboratory before the crew capsule makes a parachute and airbag-assisted landing in the southwestern United States.

How long does it take for a Starliner to get to the space station? ›

Love ya...It's been wonderful." The Starliner's automated 25-hour rendezvous with the space station will wrap up Thursday as the ship approaches the lab from behind and below before moving in for docking just past 12 p.m. EDT at the Harmony module's forward port.

Where is the Starliner launch today? ›

Update:The Starliner spacecraft launched at 10:52 a.m. ET Wednesday from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

How long will it take Starliner to reach ISS? ›

Boeing's long-delayed Starliner space capsule lifted off from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station carrying two NASA astronauts and reached orbit about twelve minutes later. The crew will spend the next 25 hours racing to catch up to the International Space Station.

Has Starliner docked yet? ›

Working around multiple helium leaks and thruster problems, the crew of Boeing's Starliner spacecraft wrapped up a challenging rendezvous and a delayed-but-successful docking with the International Space Station Thursday in a major milestone for the new ship's first piloted test flight.

How many times can the Starliner be used? ›

A 21st Century Space Capsule

For NASA service missions to the International Space Station, it will carry up to four NASA-sponsored crew members and time-critical scientific research. The Starliner has an innovative, weldless structure and is reusable up to 10 times with a six-month turnaround time.

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