Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Medieval preacher invoked chivalric hero as a meme in sermon

    Large study squashes anti-vaccine talking points about aluminum

    Congress moves to reject bulk of White House’s proposed NASA cuts

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Business Technology
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Gadgets
    • Gaming
    • Health
    • Software and Apps
    • Technology
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    Tech AI Verse
    • Home
    • Artificial Intelligence

      Another Chinese AI model is turning heads

      July 15, 2025

      AI chatbot Grok issues apology for antisemitic posts

      July 13, 2025

      Apple sued by shareholders for allegedly overstating AI progress

      June 22, 2025

      How far will AI go to defend its own survival?

      June 2, 2025

      The internet thinks this video from Gaza is AI. Here’s how we proved it isn’t.

      May 30, 2025
    • Business

      Cloudflare open-sources Orange Meets with End-to-End encryption

      June 29, 2025

      Google links massive cloud outage to API management issue

      June 13, 2025

      The EU challenges Google and Cloudflare with its very own DNS resolver that can filter dangerous traffic

      June 11, 2025

      These two Ivanti bugs are allowing hackers to target cloud instances

      May 21, 2025

      How cloud and AI transform and improve customer experiences

      May 10, 2025
    • Crypto

      Bitcoin (BTC) Slides From $123,000 High Ahead of US CPI Print

      July 15, 2025

      Shadowy Entity Behind Trump’s DeFi Project Revealed as Disgraced Web3 Firm

      July 15, 2025

      Satoshi-Era 80,000 BTC Whale Move Coins to CEXs as Bitcoin Hits All-Time Highs

      July 15, 2025

      XRP in Focus as Fed’s ISO 20022 Goes Live – What Traders Should Know

      July 15, 2025

      Bitcoin Skeptic Vanguard Quietly Becomes MicroStrategy’s No. 1 Shareholder

      July 15, 2025
    • Technology

      Medieval preacher invoked chivalric hero as a meme in sermon

      July 16, 2025

      Large study squashes anti-vaccine talking points about aluminum

      July 16, 2025

      Congress moves to reject bulk of White House’s proposed NASA cuts

      July 16, 2025

      Seagate’s massive, 30TB, $600 hard drives are now available for anyone to buy

      July 16, 2025

      Chinese firms rush for Nvidia chips as US prepares to lift ban

      July 16, 2025
    • Others
      • Gadgets
      • Gaming
      • Health
      • Software and Apps
    Shop Now
    Tech AI Verse
    You are at:Home»Technology»SpaceX’s next Starship just blew up on its test stand in South Texas
    Technology

    SpaceX’s next Starship just blew up on its test stand in South Texas

    TechAiVerseBy TechAiVerseJune 20, 2025No Comments10 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    SpaceX’s next Starship just blew up on its test stand in South Texas
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    SpaceX’s next Starship just blew up on its test stand in South Texas

    SpaceX had high hopes for Starship in 2025, but it’s been one setback after another.

    A fireball erupts around SpaceX’s Starship rocket in South Texas late Wednesday night.


    Credit:

    LabPadre


    SpaceX’s next Starship rocket exploded during a ground test in South Texas late Wednesday, dealing another blow to a program already struggling to overcome three consecutive failures in recent months.

    The late-night explosion at SpaceX’s rocket development complex in Starbase, Texas, destroyed the bullet-shaped upper stage that was slated to launch on the next Starship test flight. The powerful blast set off fires around SpaceX’s Massey’s Test Site, located a few miles from the company’s Starship factory and launch pads.

    Live streaming video from NASASpaceflight.com and LabPadre media organizations with cameras positioned around Starbase showed the 15-story-tall rocket burst into flames shortly after 11:00 pm local time (12:00 am EDT; 04:00 UTC). Local residents as far as 30 miles away reported seeing and feeling the blast.

    SpaceX confirmed the Starship, numbered Ship 36 in the company’s inventory, “experienced a major anomaly” on a test stand as the vehicle prepared to ignite its six Raptor engines for a static fire test. These hold-down test-firings are typically one of the final milestones in a Starship launch campaign before SpaceX moves the rocket to the launch pad.

    The explosion occurred as SpaceX finished loading super-cold methane and liquid oxygen propellants into Starship in preparation for the static fire test. The company said the area around the test site was evacuated of all personnel, and everyone was safe and accounted for after the incident. Firefighters from the Brownsville Fire Department were dispatched to the scene.

    “Our Starbase team is actively working to safe the test site and the immediate surrounding area in conjunction with local officials,” SpaceX posted on X. “There are no hazards to residents in surrounding communities, and we ask that individuals do not attempt to approach the area while safing operations continue.”

    In a separate post on X, SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk wrote that preliminary data suggests a high-pressure nitrogen tank failed inside Starship’s payload bay. Many rockets have such tanks, or composite overwrapped pressure vessels, containing high-pressure gases used for purging and pressurizing different compartments inside the vehicle. These tanks, or COPVs, can be finicky. SpaceX engineers blamed hardware associated with COPVs for the only two catastrophic failures of the Falcon 9 rocket in 2015 and 2016.

    Musk wrote that the nitrogen COPV appears to have failed below its proof pressure, within conditions that should not have damaged the tank. “If further investigation confirms that this is what happened, it is the first time ever for this design,” Musk added.

    Picking up the pieces

    Earlier Wednesday, just hours before the late-night explosion at Starbase, an advisory released by the Federal Aviation Administration showed SpaceX had set June 29 as a tentative launch date for the next Starship test flight. That won’t happen now, and it’s anyone’s guess when SpaceX will have another Starship ready to fly.

    Massey’s Test Site, named for a gun range that once occupied the property, is situated on a bend in the Rio Grande River, just a few hundred feet from the Mexican border. The test site is currently the only place where SpaceX can put Starships through proof testing and static fire tests before declaring the rockets are ready to fly.

    The extent of the damage to ground equipment at Massey’s was not immediately clear, so it’s too soon to say how long the test site will be out of commission. For now, though, the explosion leaves SpaceX without a facility to support preflight testing on Starships.

    The videos embedded below, from NASASpaceflight.com and LabPadre, show multiple angles of the Starship blast.

    The explosion at Massey’s is a reminder of SpaceX’s rocky path to get Starship to this point in its development. In 2020 and 2021, SpaceX lost several Starship prototypes to problems during ground and flight testing. The visual of Ship 36 going up in flames harkens back to those previous explosions, along with the fiery demise of a Falcon 9 rocket on its launch pad in 2016 under circumstances similar to Wednesday night’s incident.

    SpaceX has now launched nine full-scale Starship rockets since April 2023, and before the explosion, the company hoped to launch the 10th test flight later this month. Starship’s track record has been dreadful so far this year, with the rocket’s three most recent test flights ending prematurely. These setbacks followed a triumphant 2024, when SpaceX made clear progress on each successive Starship suborbital test flight, culminating in the first catch of the rocket’s massive Super Heavy booster with giant robotic arms on the launch pad tower.

    Stacked together, the Super Heavy booster stage and Starship upper stage stand more than 400 feet tall, creating the largest rocket ever built. SpaceX has already flown a reused Super Heavy booster, and the company has designed Starship itself to be recoverable and reusable, too.

    After last year’s accomplishments, SpaceX appeared to be on track for a full orbital flight, an attempt to catch and recover Starship itself, and an important in-space refueling demonstration in 2025. The refueling demo has officially slipped into 2026, and it’s questionable whether SpaceX will make enough progress in the coming months to attempt recovery of a ship before the end of this year.

    A Super Heavy booster and Starship upper stage are seen in March at SpaceX’s launch pad in South Texas, before the ship was stacked atop the booster for flight. The Super Heavy booster for the next Starship flight completed its static fire test earlier this month.


    Credit:

    Brandon Bell/Getty Images

    Ambition meets reality

    SpaceX debuted an upgraded Starship design, called Version 2 or Block 2, on a test flight in January. It’s been one setback after another since then.

    The new Starship design is slightly taller than the version of Starship that SpaceX flew in 2023 and 2024. It has an improved heat shield to better withstand the extreme heat of atmospheric reentry. SpaceX also installed a new fuel feed line system to route methane fuel to the ship’s Raptor engines, and an improved propulsion avionics module controlling the vehicle’s valves and reading sensors.

    Despite—or perhaps because of—all of these changes for Starship Version 2, SpaceX has been unable to replicate the successes it achieved with Starship in the last two years. Ships launched on test flights in January and March spun out of control minutes after liftoff, scattering debris over the sea, and in at least one case, onto a car in the Turks and Caicos Islands.

    SpaceX engineers concluded the January failure was likely caused by intense vibrations that triggered fuel leaks and fires in the ship’s engine compartment, resulting in an early shutdown of the rocket’s engines. Engineers said the vibrations were likely in resonance with the vehicle’s natural frequency, intensifying the shaking beyond the levels SpaceX predicted.

    The March flight failed in a similar fashion, but SpaceX’s investigators determined the most probable root cause was a hardware failure in one of the ship’s engines, a different failure mode than two months before.

    During SpaceX’s most recent Starship test flight last month, the rocket completed the ascent phase of the mission as planned, seemingly overcoming the problems that plagued the prior two launches. But soon after the Raptor engines shut down, a fuel leak caused the ship to begin tumbling in space, preventing the vehicle from completing a guided reentry to test the performance of new heat shield materials.

    File photo of a Starship static fire in May at Massey’s Test Site.

    SpaceX is working on a third-generation Starship design, called Version 3, that the company says could be ready to fly by the end of this year. The upgraded Starship Version 3 design will be able to lift heavier cargo—up to 200 metric tons—into orbit thanks to larger propellant tanks and more powerful Raptor engines. Version 3 will also have the ability to refuel in low-Earth orbit.

    Version 3 will presumably have permanent fixes to the problems currently slowing SpaceX’s pace of Starship development. And there are myriad issues for SpaceX’s engineers to solve, from engine reliability and the ship’s resonant frequency, to beefing up the ship’s heat shield and fixing its balky payload bay door.

    Once officials solve these problems, it will be time for SpaceX to bring a Starship from low-Earth orbit back to the ground. Then there’s more cool stuff on the books, like orbital refueling and missions to the Moon in partnership with NASA’s Artemis program. NASA has contracts worth more than $4 billion with SpaceX to develop a human-rated Starship that can land astronauts on the Moon and launch them safely back into space.

    The Trump administration’s proposed budget for NASA would cancel the Artemis program’s ultra-expensive Space Launch System rocket and Orion crew capsule after two more flights, leaving commercial heavy-lifters to take over launching astronauts from the Earth to the Moon. SpaceX’s Starship, already on contract with NASA as a human-rated lander, may eventually win more government contracts to fill the role of SLS and Orion under Trump’s proposed budget. Other rockets, such as Blue Origin’s New Glenn, are also well-positioned to play a larger role in human space exploration.

    NASA’s official schedule for the first Artemis crew landing on the Moon places the mission sometime in 2027, using SLS and Orion to transport astronauts to the vicinity of the Moon to meet up with SpaceX’s Starship lunar lander. After that mission, known as Artemis III, NASA would pivot to using commercial rockets from Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin to replace the Space Launch System.

    Meanwhile, SpaceX’s founder and CEO has his sights set on Mars. Last month, Musk told his employees he wants to launch the first Starships toward the Red Planet in late 2026, when the positions of Earth and Mars in the Solar System make a direct journey possible. Optimistically, he would like to send people to Mars on Starships beginning in 2028.

    All of these missions are predicated on SpaceX mastering routine Starship launch operations, rapid reuse of the ship and booster, and cryogenic refueling in orbit, along with adapting systems such as life support, communications, and deep space navigation for an interplanetary journey.

    The to-do list is long for SpaceX’s Starship program—too long for Mars landings to seem realistic any time in the next few years. NASA’s schedule for the Artemis III lunar landing mission in 2027 is also tight, and not only because of Starship’s delays. The development of new spacesuits for astronauts to wear on the Moon may also put the Artemis III schedule at risk. NASA’s SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft have had significant delays throughout their history, so it’s not a sure thing they will be ready in 2027.

    While it’s too soon to know the precise impact of Wednesday night’s explosion, we can say with some confidence that the chances of Starship meeting these audacious schedules are lower today than they were yesterday.

    Updated at 3:30 pm EDT (19:30 UTC) with more details from Elon Musk.

    Stephen Clark is a space reporter at Ars Technica, covering private space companies and the world’s space agencies. Stephen writes about the nexus of technology, science, policy, and business on and off the planet.



    626 Comments

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticlexAI faces legal threat over alleged Colossus data center pollution in Memphis
    Next Article Israel-tied Predatory Sparrow hackers are waging cyberwar on Iran’s financial system
    TechAiVerse
    • Website

    Jonathan is a tech enthusiast and the mind behind Tech AI Verse. With a passion for artificial intelligence, consumer tech, and emerging innovations, he deliver clear, insightful content to keep readers informed. From cutting-edge gadgets to AI advancements and cryptocurrency trends, Jonathan breaks down complex topics to make technology accessible to all.

    Related Posts

    Medieval preacher invoked chivalric hero as a meme in sermon

    July 16, 2025

    Large study squashes anti-vaccine talking points about aluminum

    July 16, 2025

    Congress moves to reject bulk of White House’s proposed NASA cuts

    July 16, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    New Akira ransomware decryptor cracks encryptions keys using GPUs

    March 16, 202528 Views

    OpenAI details ChatGPT-o3, o4-mini, o4-mini-high usage limits

    April 19, 202522 Views

    6.7 Cummins Lifter Failure: What Years Are Affected (And Possible Fixes)

    April 14, 202522 Views

    Rsync replaced with openrsync on macOS Sequoia

    April 7, 202520 Views
    Don't Miss
    Technology July 16, 2025

    Medieval preacher invoked chivalric hero as a meme in sermon

    Medieval preacher invoked chivalric hero as a meme in sermon Skip to content “Some are…

    Large study squashes anti-vaccine talking points about aluminum

    Congress moves to reject bulk of White House’s proposed NASA cuts

    Seagate’s massive, 30TB, $600 hard drives are now available for anyone to buy

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us
    About Us

    Welcome to Tech AI Verse, your go-to destination for everything technology! We bring you the latest news, trends, and insights from the ever-evolving world of tech. Our coverage spans across global technology industry updates, artificial intelligence advancements, machine learning ethics, and automation innovations. Stay connected with us as we explore the limitless possibilities of technology!

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    Medieval preacher invoked chivalric hero as a meme in sermon

    July 16, 20252 Views

    Large study squashes anti-vaccine talking points about aluminum

    July 16, 20252 Views

    Congress moves to reject bulk of White House’s proposed NASA cuts

    July 16, 20252 Views
    Most Popular

    Xiaomi 15 Ultra Officially Launched in China, Malaysia launch to follow after global event

    March 12, 20250 Views

    Apple thinks people won’t use MagSafe on iPhone 16e

    March 12, 20250 Views

    French Apex Legends voice cast refuses contracts over “unacceptable” AI clause

    March 12, 20250 Views
    © 2025 TechAiVerse. Designed by Divya Tech.
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.