CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. ā Boeing launched astronauts for the first time Wednesday, belatedly joining SpaceX as a second taxi service for NASA.
A pair of NASA test pilots blasted off aboard Boeingās Starliner capsule for the International Space Station, the first to fly the new spacecraft.
Recommended Videos
The trip by Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams was expected to take 25 hours, with an arrival Thursday. They will spend just over a week at the orbiting lab before climbing back into Starliner for a remote desert touchdown in the western U.S. on June 14.
Years late because of spacecraft flaws, Starlinerās crew debut comes as the company struggles with unrelated safety issues on its airplane side.
Wilmore and Williams ā retired Navy captains and former space station residents ā stressed repeatedly before the launch that they had full confidence in Boeingās ability to get it right with this test flight. Crippled by bad software, Starlinerās initial test flight in 2019 without a crew had to be repeated before NASA would let its astronauts strap in. The 2022 do-over went much better, but parachute problems later cropped up and flammable tape had to be removed from the capsule.
Wednesdayās launch was the third attempt with astronauts since early May, coming after a pair of rocket-related problems, most recently last weekend. A small helium leak in the spacecraftās propulsion system also caused delays, but managers decided the leak was manageable and not a safety issue.
āI know itās been a long road to get here,ā NASAās commercial crew program manager Steve Stich said before the weekend delay.
Boeing was hired alongside Elon Muskās SpaceX a decade ago to ferry NASAās astronauts to and from the space station. The space agency wanted two competing U.S. companies for the job in the wake of the space shuttlesā retirement, paying $4.2 billion to Boeing and just over half that to SpaceX, which refashioned the capsule it was using to deliver station supplies.
SpaceX launched astronauts into orbit in 2020, becoming the first private business to achieve what only three countries ā Russia, the U.S. and China ā had mastered. It has taken nine crews to the space station for NASA and three private groups for a Houston company that charters flights.
The liftoff from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station was the 100th of an Atlas V for rocket maker United Launch Alliance. It was the first ride for astronauts on an Atlas rocket since John Glennās Mercury era more than 60 years ago; the rocket usually launches satellites and other spacecraft.
Despite the Atlas Vās perfect record, the human presence cranked up the tension for the scores of NASA and Boeing employees gathered at Cape Canaveral and Mission Control in Houston.
Boeingās Starliner and SpaceXās Dragon are designed to be fully autonomous and reusable. Wilmore and Williams occasionally will take manual control of Starliner on their way to the space station, to check out its systems.
If the mission goes well, NASA will alternate between SpaceX and Boeing for taxi flights, beginning next year. The backup pilot for this test flight, Mike Fincke, will strap in for Starlinerās next trip.
āWhen you have a new spacecraft, you need to learn all about it and this has been a great exercise,ā Fincke told reporters late last week.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Instituteās Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.