SpaceX Resumes Starship Flights After Failure: What Changes Now
The U.S. aviation regulatory agency, the FAA, has authorized SpaceX to resume test flights of the Starship. The clearance came after the company identified the likely cause of the failure that destroyed the Super Heavy booster during the May launch. The next flight could take place as soon as this Thursday, July 16, and will bring a significant novelty: it will be the first to carry third-generation Starlink satellites into space.
The detail that makes this launch particularly interesting is not just technical. It is also financial. This is the first test of the Starship with SpaceX as a publicly traded company. The company debuted on Nasdaq on June 12, raising nearly $86 billion in its initial public offering, a record. Now, every explosion, every "unplanned rapid disassembly," as Elon Musk calls failures, happens under the scrutiny of shareholders and market analysts.
What Went Wrong in the May Flight and How SpaceX Fixed It
The May 22 launch was the first test of the V3 version of the Starship, the 124-meter-tall rocket that SpaceX envisions as the centerpiece of its long-term plans. For the most part, the flight worked. The Super Heavy booster took the rocket into space, the upper stage separated correctly, and deployed 20 satellite simulators, in addition to two modified Starlinks that captured images of the exterior of the spacecraft.
The problem occurred on the return. The booster was supposed to return to Earth and simulate a landing in the Gulf of Mexico, but its engines did not reignite properly. According to SpaceX and the FAA, subtle differences in the ignition sequence of the upper stage engines caused a 90-degree rotation in the wrong direction at the moment of separation. The booster plunged uncontrollably into the water.
The FAA pointed to thermal effects on the propulsion system components during ascent and incorrect configurations in the engine alarm system as the most likely causes. SpaceX reported that it modified the ignition sequence to allow for a more reliable rotation and adjusted the alarm and abort systems to reduce the chance of similar failures. As detailed in our technology coverage, this iterative approach is the hallmark of the company's engineering.
Why the Starlink V3 Satellites Are So Important
The next flight will not just be a rocket test. For the first time, the Starship will carry real third-generation Starlink satellites into space. Until now, tests have only carried simulated versions of these larger and more powerful satellites.
There will be 20 units of the new generation, designed to connect to the existing Starlink constellation via high-capacity lasers. Six of them will have cameras to photograph the exterior of the Starship during flight. All are expected to burn up in the atmosphere about 20 minutes after deployment, as this is a test.
The relevance of the Starlink V3 goes beyond engineering. The Starlink division is the only profitable part of SpaceX in the period leading up to the IPO. Larger satellites mean more network capacity and higher speeds for users, which translates directly into revenue. For a newly public company, valued among the top ten in the world, demonstrating progress in the cash-generating product is essential.
The Dilemma of "Fly, Fail, and Fix" with Shareholders Watching
SpaceX's philosophy has always been to test in practice, accept failures, and iterate quickly. This approach, internally dubbed "fly, fail, fix," has led to impressive technical advances over the last decade. But it also produces spectacular explosions, which until recently were only the subject of space enthusiasts and engineers.
With shares listed on Nasdaq, the calculation changes. A catastrophic failure in Thursday's launch would not just be a technical setback. It would be a market event, with potential impacts on stock prices and investors' risk perception. SpaceX needs to balance its aggressive experimentation culture with the predictability expectations that the capital markets demand.
This is, in fact, a dilemma that recurs in various deep tech companies going public. As we have observed in previous analyses of major tech IPOs, there is an adaptation period during which the market learns to price the risk of radical innovation. In the case of SpaceX, the track record is favorable: the company transformed the Falcon 9 into the most reliable rocket in the world after a series of initial failures.
What's at Stake for SpaceX Beyond the Rocket
The fully reusable Starship is the piece that connects all of SpaceX's long-term ambitions. Without it, plans for space data centers, interplanetary travel, and industrial-scale satellite launches become economically unfeasible.
The upper stage of the V3 also had issues in May. One of the three Raptor engines, designed to operate in a vacuum, failed during flight. Despite this, the spacecraft managed to deploy its test payload and simulate a landing, a milestone that SpaceX had not achieved in previous versions. The company stated that it made several hardware and operational modifications to prevent the recurrence of the problem.
Therefore, Thursday's flight will be a simultaneous test of multiple corrections. If the booster can successfully simulate the landing and the Starlink V3 satellites are deployed correctly, SpaceX will have validated not only the technical corrections but also its ability to maintain the accelerated pace of development under the public scrutiny of a publicly listed company.
For investors and observers in the tech sector, the launch is more than just an aerospace spectacle. It is a stress test of the thesis that frontier tech companies can maintain their culture of experimentation even after going public. The outcome, whatever it may be, will say a lot about the future of SpaceX as a stock and as a company.
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