Hot on the heels of another productive test flight, two new lunar customers have been added to the flight manifest for SpaceX’s Starship.
Eagle landing
Lunar Outpost said on Thursday that SpaceX will deliver its first Lunar Terrain Vehicle, Eagle, to the Moon by 2029.
The Colorado-based company’s rover, the size of a heavy-duty truck, is being built under contract with NASA and recently finished a battery of human factors testing at Johnson Space Center.
“The main reason we went with SpaceX is the technological maturity and the pace at which they’re able to accomplish their objectives, especially after seeing flight five,” Lunar Outpost CEO Justin Cyrus said. “They’re going to do it in the timeline we need to be successful as a company.”
Sun rising
NASA also announced this week that Starship will deliver the pressurized rover that JAXA is developing for the Artemis program no earlier than FY 2032. That vehicle, being built by Toyota, will allow astronauts to rove the lunar regolith without wearing spacesuits.
What does an LTV delivery look like?
Starship is awfully big, and Moon landing variants we’ve seen so far propose lowering cargo to the surface on an elevator.
Cyrus wouldn’t share much detail on how his vehicle would actually exit Starship and, asked if the the agreement was a purchase of the entire vehicle, Cyrus wouldn’t comment, so it is likely other payloads will be on board.
“What I can say is, it fits,” Cyrus says. “Starship is pretty unique in the fact that it does have multiple configurations, and each one provides a unique value add to the ecosystem.”
This story originally appeared on Payload and is republished here with permission.
Войдите, чтобы добавить комментарий
Другие сообщения в этой группе


Sudden equipment failures. Supply chain surprises. Retaining staff as the goalposts move in real time. These aren’t challenges I’ve faced as a tech founder—but I have faced them running restaurant

Amazon recently announced that it had deployed its one-millionth robot across its work
On this week’s Most Innovative Companies podcast, Cloudflare COO Michelle Zatlyn talks with Fast Company staff writer David Salazar about hitting $1B in revenue and going global, as well as

If you’ve built an audience around documenting your 9-to-5 online, what happens after you hand in your notice?
That’s the conundrum facing Connor Hubbard, aka “hubs.life,” a creator who

OpenAI should continue to be

WhatsApp should prepare to leave the Russian market, a lawmaker who regulates the IT sector