SpaceX launches 10 satellites, but $6- million nose cone crashes

As the nose cone (fairing) fell back towards Earth, the parafoils that were supposed to slow its descent became tangled: CEO Elon Musk

March 31, 2018 12:52 pm | Updated December 01, 2021 12:27 pm IST - WASHINGTON:

 A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on March 30, 2018, carrying 10 Iridium NEXT satellites into orbit. SpaceX confirmed successful deployment of all 10 communications satellites to low-Earth orbit after their launch, but said the $6-million nose cone crashed due to a glitch.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on March 30, 2018, carrying 10 Iridium NEXT satellites into orbit. SpaceX confirmed successful deployment of all 10 communications satellites to low-Earth orbit after their launch, but said the $6-million nose cone crashed due to a glitch.

SpaceX has confirmed successful deployment of all 10 communications satellites to low-Earth orbit after their launch aboard a a Falcon 9 on Friday, but the company reported a glitch in landing the $6 million nose cone into a giant seaborne net.

As the nose cone — also called a fairing — fell back toward Earth, the parafoils that were supposed to slow its descent became tangled, CNNMoney reported citing SpaceX CEO Elon Musk’s tweet.

The Iridium-NEXT satellites were launched for McLean, Virginia-based satellite operator Iridium Communications.

The Iridium-5 NEXT Mission marked the fifth set of 10 satellites that Mr. Musk’s SpaceX has launched for its customer’s Iridium NEXT global satellite constellation.

“Successful deployment of all 10 @IridiumComm NEXT satellites to low-Earth orbit confirmed,” SpaceX said in a tweet after the launch.

Bid to recover fairing

Mr. Musk revealed in a tweet that his company was attempting the recovery of the fairing with a ship, named Mr. Steven.

“It’s a giant steel and webbing catcher’s mitt superstructure on a high-speed ocean ship. Godspeed, Mr. S ...,” Mr. Musk said.

SpaceX is well known for landing and reusing rocket boosters to bring down the price of its rockets, but this was one of the rare occasions Mr. Musk has acknowledged his rocket startup’s attempts to recover the fairing after launch, the CNNMoney report said.

The fairing rests on the top of the rocket, and it acts as a shield for the satellites during launch. Once the rocket is in space, it splits into two and falls away.

Typically, it’s left to plummet back to Earth where the ocean becomes its graveyard.

But SpaceX wanted to recover the fairing. However, the attempt did not bring the expected result.

“GPS guided parafoil twisted, so fairing impacted water at high speed,” Mr. Musk tweeted.

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