close
close

Rocket Report: Rocket Lab's News Blitz; Vibrations for Starschaft -Pehrigerte

Welcome to Edition 7.33 of the Rocket Report! Phew, what a week for Rocket Lab! The company published a crowd of announcements in connection with its quarterly winning report on Thursday. Rocket Lab spends a lot of money on developing the Rocket rocket rocket with medium lift rocket. The company is currently sticking to its public statements that the neutron rocket will start this year– The official line is that it will debut in the second half of 2025-But this schedule requires an almost perfect execution of the program. “We have always been clear that we would carry out aggressive schedules,” said Peter Beck, founder and CEO of Rocket Lab. The official schedule does not quite allow me to appoint a strict interpretation of the Berger law. If the debut of a rocket is predicted in the fourth quarter of a year and this quarter is six or more months away, the start will be delayed. However, the spirit of the law seems to be valid here. Last year Rocket Lab aimed at the first start by the end of 2024, an aggressive goal that came and gone.

As always, we welcome the submissions of readers. If you do not want to miss a problem, please subscribe to the field below (the form is not displayed in AMP-capable versions of the website). Each report contains information about small, medium and heavy rockets as well as a short view of the next three starts in the calendar.

The Australian startup sets a start date. The first attempt to send an Australly produced rocket into the orbit should not take place earlier than on March 15, reports the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. The announcement of the Gilmour Space Technologies starting windows marks an important development for the company that has been working on a test start for a decade. Gilmour previously hoped to start his ERIS test rocket in May 2024, but had to wait for the Australian government to spend a launch license and airspace permits for the flight. These are now in hand and clear the last regulatory hurdle before the deduction.

Set expectations … Gilmour's Eris rocket consists of three stages that are driven by hybrid engines that consume a solid fuel and a liquid oxidizing agent. Eris was developed to bring users of up to 672 pounds (305 kilograms) into orbits with low earth, and starts by Bowen Orbital Spaceport in Queensland on the northeastern coast of Australia. Gilmour said it was “very happy” if the rocket reached the orbit for the first time. “Success means different things for different people, but ignition and upswing will be huge,” said James Gilmour, co -founder of the company. (submitted by Zygp)))