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Old May 29th 17, 01:57 AM posted to sci.space.policy
William Mook[_2_]
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Default Rocket Lab's 'Electron' Marks First Orbital-Class Launch From aPrivate Pad

On Monday, May 29, 2017 at 2:05:18 AM UTC+12, Jeff Findley wrote:
In article ,
says...

wrote:


"Rocket Lab, a California-based spaceflight company with its roots in New Zealand,
just launched its two-stage Electron rocket for the first time. The small launch
vehicle successfully lifted off from Rocket Lab's Launch Complex 1 on the Mahia
Peninsula of New Zealand at 12:20 a.m. ET on Thursday May 25?4:20 p.m. New Zealand
time. The successful liftoff marks the first time an orbital-class rocket has been
launched from a private launch facility."

See:

http://www.popularmechanics.com/spac...-first-flight/


It did not, however, reach orbit and it was expected to, so there's a
failure investigation going on.


I'm surprised they got as far as they did.

But yes, there is a bit of a PR spin going on in the news articles.
This was a test flight and it was mostly successful... mostly. But it
did not go into orbit, so it's not quite ready for paying customers who
expect their satellite to be placed into earth orbit.

Still, SpaceX had several Falcon 1 failures before they finally "got it
right". This stuff isn't easy.

Jeff
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Jeff,

RocketLab received $75 million a few months ago, and announced three TEST FLIGHT prior to committing to their first COMMERCIAL LAUNCH. Had everything gone perfectly, the company may have dropped one test launch. As it stands, they will review 25,000 channels of data collected, and run it through their automated design and production process. Their tooling is largely digitally defined, and they have an awesome system of continuous improvement building their hardware with equipment that others might have called in an earlier day rapid prototyping. Their next rocket will have some awesome improvements, and their next one after that. As they strive and achieve perfection.