Skip to main content

Rocket Lab back in business after first launch since July mission failure

Rocket Lab is back in business. The private spaceflight company on Sunday achieved its first successful rocket launch since its failed flight on July 5 when an issue during the second-stage burn caused the loss of seven satellites belonging to three companies.

The latest mission, called “I Can’t Believe It’s Not Optical,” deployed a 100 kg-class microsatellite for San Francisco-based Capella Space, an information services company providing Earth observation data on demand.

Perfect mission. Electron has deployed the Sequoia satellite to orbit for @CapellaSpace. It was a good day to go to space.🚀#ICantBelieveItsNotOptical #ICanBelieveItsInOrbit pic.twitter.com/1qdJ2Y7EOC

— Rocket Lab (@RocketLab) August 31, 2020

Rocket Lab’s Electron rocket departed the launch site at New Zealand’s Mahia Peninsula on Sunday, August 30 at 8:05 p.m. PT (3:05 p.m. local time on Monday, August 31).

The mission had already missed two launch schedules in recent days due to poor weather, but fortunately, conditions were much more settled for this latest effort, with clear blue skies all around. Here’s the launch:

Rocket Lab - I Can't Believe It's Not Optical Launch 08/31/2020

July’s failed mission, which was attributed to an “anomalous electrical connection,” prompted Rocket Lab CEO Peter Beck to post a personal video message in which he apologized to the customers who had satellites on board. He also promised to immediately address the issue in order to make a quick return to flight operations.

Beck founded Rocket Lab in 2006 in an effort to grab a piece of the rideshare market for small-satellite launches using its specially built Electron rocket. Companies such as SpaceX and Virgin Orbit, among others, are also working in the same field.

Similar to SpaceX, Rocket Lab is developing a reusable rocket system to help it reduce operating costs. But whereas SpaceX’s system lands the first-stage booster shortly after launch — it just made such a landing today and you can watch it here –Rocket Lab is planning to use a helicopter with a grappling hook to pluck a falling booster out of the sky as it returns to Earth. It recently demonstrated the feat in a test run using a dummy rocket. As the system isn’t yet ready, Sunday’s mission did not involve booster recovery.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Rocket Lab pushes its first U.S. rocket launch to 2023
Rocket Lab's Electron rocket on the launchpad.

Rocket Lab’s debut mission from U.S. soil has been pushed to next year after strong winds forced the team to call off the latest launch attempt earlier this week.

The mission had already been delayed several times due to administrative issues with the Federal Aviation Administration. Poor weather conditions also played a part. The latest delay was put down to “strong upper-level winds” at Virginia Space’s Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport within NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility about 100 miles southeast of Washington, D.C.

Read more
How to watch Rocket Lab’s first U.S. launch today
Rocket Lab's Electron rocket on the launchpad.

UPDATE: Strong winds have caused Rocket Lab to delay the launch. It's now out of the launch window for 2022 and so will make another attempt to begin the mission in early 2023.

Rocket Lab is about to perform its first-ever launch from U.S. soil in what will be a major step forward for the 16-year-old spaceflight company.

Read more
Rocket Lab will use a helicopter to catch a falling rocket booster
A helicopter attempting to catch a falling rocket booster.

New Zealand spaceflight company Rocket Lab is planning to catch the first-stage of one of its Electron rockets as it falls back to Earth shortly after launch on Friday.

It’s only the second time it has attempted the feat, which involves a helicopter, a strong cable, and a grappling hook. Oh, and one very skillful pilot.

Read more