SpaceX's upgraded Starship V3 successfully reached the Indian Ocean on its inaugural flight, avoiding the catastrophic structural failures that plagued the V1 and V2 models during their 2023 and 2025 debuts.
A massive leap in launch reliability
Friday's launch from the Starbase facility in South Texas saw the 408-foot-tall (124-meter) rocket—the largest ever constructed—clear the launch tower and establish an eastward heading over the Gulf of Mexico within seconds. Propelled by 33 methane-fueled main engines, the vehicle maintained structural integrity through the most volatile stages of ascent.
Previous iterations of the stainless steel mega-rocket broke apart during their inaugural flights. By contrast, the V3 managed to complete its mission profile, with the Starship upper stage splashing down on target a little more than an hour after liftoff.
Testing the limits of the V3 architecture
The flight serves as a critical validation of the upgraded Starship and Super Heavy booster architecture. While SpaceX describes the vehicle as still being a "work in progress," the ability to transition from a South Texas liftoff to a controlled splashdown in the Indian Ocean provides the necessary data to refine the next generation of heavy-lift launch vehicles.
Successful deployment of the V3's 33-engine methane propulsion system paves the way for more aggressive testing schedules and higher-cadence orbital missions.
Source: SpaceX's Starship V3-still a work in progress-mostly successful on first flight
Domain: arstechnica.com
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