First orbital rocket launched from Europe crashes after takeoff
First orbital rocket launched from Europe crashes after takeoff
Uncrewed Spectrum test rocket’s failure seconds after blast-off said to have produced extensive data nonetheless

I mean, technically, Russia is in Europe.
Also, as the guys at NASA said back in the day, it takes a thousand failures to create one working rocket. Don't look at something halfway done and call it a failure.
edit = apparently I need to learn to read a map.
45 0 ReplyDon't they do most of their launches from Baikonur in Kazakhstan?
12 0 ReplyYeah, but they do have Plesetsk in the European part of Russia. Only used for unmanned launches.
6 0 ReplyI'll edit my comment
3 0 Reply
Is it? I thought technically it was in Asia?
9 0 ReplyRussia is like Turkey partial in europe. Whereas in Turkey its only part of Istanbul, Russia is up to the ural mountains.
25 0 ReplySchrödinger's Country.
Sometimes it's in Europe and sometimes it's in Asia.
7 0 Reply
Not very orbital, then, is it. Jokes aside, rocketry is hard and I hope they gained the data to make it work next time.
31 0 ReplyYeah it’s pretty much a requirement for a new space company to crash their first rocket. At least that’s my default expectation. Space is crazy hard.
14 0 ReplyDid they forgot about the abort mission function?
That rocket went ballistic into the ground.Also, years of years of rockets (and missiles) development, and it's still so difficult.
3 0 Reply
12 0 ReplyHow dare they zoom back out but not show it falling to the ground.
I can always imagine the tight feeling in the engineers chests as they watch it start to go sideways.1
16 0 Reply15 0 Reply
It did pitch.
2 0 Reply
It crashed? Go read the telemetry and see what went wrong. Try again.
5 0 ReplyArticle said they said 30 seconds would be a success. Not clear how long it stayed up? Clock froze at +18 seconds.
2 0 Reply