SpaceX just fired up the “Starhopper” prototype for the company’s planned Starship spacecraft for the first time, according to company CEO Elon Musk.
Musk confirmed the short rocket test firing at SpaceX’s newest launch site in Boca Chica, Texas, near Brownsville in a Twitter post late Wednesday (April 3). (In that post, he confirmed the Starhopper nickname for the Starship prototype as well.)
“Starhopper completed tethered hop,” Musk wrote in the update, which also included a video from Starship watcher @LabPadre. “All systems green.”
The test occurred at 8:56 p.m. EDT (0056 April 4 GMT) and lasted less than a minute, according to one of several video feeds watching the company’s launch site. The video featured above was captured by Spadre.com, a website for the South Padre Surf Company on South Padre Island across from SpaceX’s facility. The camera is about 6 miles (10 kilometers) from SpaceX’s site.

Starship render SPACEX
While details of the Starhopper test are scarce, anticipation has been high in recent weeks as SpaceX outfitted the prototype with three of the company’s new Raptor methane-liquid oxygen engines. The test likely used one engine and didn’t get very high, based on earlier comments by Musk. It was also tethered, or connected to ground equipment, for the duration of the test.
“First (really short) hops with one engine,” Musk wrote on Twitter March 17. “Suborbital flights with three.”
The Starhopper prototype is made of stainless steel and has a diameter of about 30 feet (9 meters). SpaceX initially built the prototype with a nose cone, giving it a height of 128 feet (39 meters), but that cone was blown off by powerful winds. Musk has said the nose cone is not needed for the initial test hops.
Starship is the spacecraft SpaceX wants to use to colonize Mars, fly point-to-point trips around the Earth and perform a variety of other tasks. The company has already signed its first passenger, billionaire Japanese entrepreneur Yusaku Maezawa, who plans to fly with a group of artists around the moon — perhaps as early as 2023.
“First hops will lift off, but only barely,” he added in another post.
Sources: • SpaceX
Featured Image: SpaceX






Sebastien Clarke
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