The rocket was undergoing a static fire test of the stage, in which a vehicle is clamped to a test stand while its engines are ignited, when the booster broke free. According to a statement from the company, the rocket was not sufficiently clamped down and blasted off from the test stand “due to a structural failure.”
Video of the accidental ascent showed the rocket rising several hundred meters into the sky before it crashed explosively into a mountain 1.5 km away from the test site.
rsh@lemmy.world 4 months ago
I feel slightly better knowing that the Chinese suffer from Chinesium-based products as much as we do.
remotelove@lemmy.ca 4 months ago
I feel better knowing that Chinese military partners get to feel the joy as well. (Curbs can be a bitch sometimes…) Image
CosmoNova@lemmy.world 4 months ago
They suffer far more than anyone else from it. I mean just last week another rocket malfunctioned, lost a fuel tank that crashed close to a nearby village, enveloping homes in toxic gas. And spacecraft catastrophes are only the tiny tip if the tip of the iceberg.
Morphit@feddit.uk 4 months ago
I don’t think that was a malfunction…
That was ‘working as intended’.