SpaceX Says Fix Underway For Rocket Turbine Wheel Cracking
SpaceX's
final version of the Falcon 9 rocket, which Elon Musk aims to launch before the
end of the year, will fix a potential problem with cracks in its turbopumps,
the company said on Thursday. Its statement followed a report that the US
Government Accountability Office will flag turbine wheel cracks in the rocket's
turbopumps as a safety issue. NASA, the US space agency, and the Air Force are
among SpaceX's customers.
The GAO's preliminary findings were reported by the Wall Street Journal on
Thursday.
In an email to Reuters, SpaceX said it has "qualified our engines to be
robust to turbine wheel cracks. However, we are modifying the design to avoid
them altogether," said spokesman John Taylor.
In addition to flying cargo to the International Space Station, SpaceX has NASA
contracts to begin flying astronauts to the orbiting research laboratory as
early as 2018. "SpaceX has
established a plan in partnership with NASA to qualify engines for manned
spaceflight," Taylor said.
GAO investigators found that the Falcon 9 turbopumps, which
are part of the system that delivers propellants to the engine, have blades
that are prone to cracking, the newspaper said.
SpaceX last month resumed flights following a 4-1/2-month
investigation into why a rocket blew up as it was being fuelled for a routine
pre-launch test in Florida.
The cause of the accident was traced to a burst canister of helium in the
rocket's second stage liquid oxygen tank. It was unrelated to the issue with
the rocket's turbopumps.
The accident was SpaceX's second since the Falcon 9 debuted in June 2010. The
company's next launch is targeted for February 14.
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