WASHINGTON — Blue Origin has announced plans to launch its New Shepard suborbital vehicle on its first flight since a mishap more than 15 months ago.
Blue Origin announced on social media Dec. 12 that it will launch its New Shepard vehicle no earlier than Dec. 18 from its West Texas test site. The vehicle will carry 33 experiments as well as 38,000 postcards from Club for the Future, the educational nonprofit affiliated with the company. The flight will be uncrewed.
The mission, designated NS-24, would be the first for New Shepard since a mishap on a September 2022 flight, NS-23, that also was uncrewed. A problem with the vehicle’s main engine triggered the crew capsule’s abort motor about a minute after liftoff. The capsule landed safely while the propulsion module crashed.
Blue Origin said in March that it concluded its investigation into the mishap, finding that the BE-3PM engine in the propulsion module suffered a structural failure of its nozzle. That failure was linked to thermal damage caused by operating temperatures higher than designed.
However, it took six months for the Federal Aviation Administration’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation to close the mishap investigation, identifying 21 corrective actions for the company to undertake before flying again. Those actions ranged from technical modifications to the engine to unspecified “organizational changes.”
When the FAA closed the investigation Sept. 26, Blue Origin said it would resume flights “soon” but did not offer a more specific timeframe. In June, Bob Smith, chief executive of Blue Origin at the time, said the company was ready to resume flights “within the next few weeks.” Smith announced Sept. 25 he would step down as CEO in December, and the company is now led by a former Amazon executive, Dave Limp.
The company has not elaborated on the long delay in returning New Shepard to flight. That delay led to speculation that the company was…
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