SpaceX Flexes Giant Starship-Catching "Chopsticks" for the First Time
SpaceX's giant robotic "Mechazilla" just came alive.SpaceFlexSpaceX has flexed the Chopsticks arm of its massive Starship-catching tower for the first time this morning at the companys testing facilities in South Texas, as spotted during a live NASASpaceflight stream.The Mechazilla tower, as SpaceX CEO Elon Musk likes to call it, is meant to ensure that the space companys heavy lift rocket called Starship and its accompanying Super Heavy booster make a soft landing.In August, Musk revealed that SpaceX will try to catch largest ever flying object with robot chopsticks in a tweet a truly wild concept that could quickly turn into a disaster unless everything goes perfectly to plan.The Starship catch/stack arm system "Chopsticks" came alive for the first time this morning, swinging to the left relative to the tower around 6:37 AM CDT.This is the first of many motions we expect to see performed by the massive machinery.viahttps://t.co/7zaTWf7AbIpic.twitter.com/1iwjhoyogM Kerbal Space Academy (@KSpaceAcademy) October 28, 2021Chopstick CatchAn animation which was deemed pretty close by SpaceX CEO Elon Musk posted to Twitter in August by a SpaceX fan approximates the daring maneuver.SpaceX has been tirelessly constructing the massive 440-foot robotic tower over the last couple of months.The first orbital-class Starship prototype dubbed Starship 20 successfully completed a static fire test last week, indicating that the company could soon attempt to catch its first Super Heavy and Starship using the tower.When the first orbital test launch will occur is still uncertain, though, given an ongoing Federal Aviation Administration investigation.But if Musk has his druthers, the test would occur as soon as next month, pending regulatory approval, he added.More on Starship:SpaceX Shares Spicy Video of Its Mars Rocket Being TestedCare about supporting clean energy adoption? Find out how much money (and planet!) you could save by switching to solar power at UnderstandSolar.com. By signing up through this link, Futurism.com may receive a small commission.
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