Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Space
  3. News

Rocket Lab has identified failure issue and will resume launches this month

Add as a preferred source on Google

New Zealand private launch company Rocket Lab announced it has discovered the cause of a failed launch last month, and that it will resume launches this month.

On July 5, 2020, Rocket Lab launched an Electron rocket from New Zealand’s Mahia Peninsula, carrying seven satellites from three different companies. The lift-off went well, with no issues, but several minutes after this an error occurred and the rocket failed to reach orbit. The upper stage of the rocket and the payloads crashed back to Earth and were lost.

Recommended Videos

Following the incident, Rocket Lab CEO Peter Beck put out a personal video message to the company’s customers, apologizing for the loss of the payloads. The company also began an investigation into what went wrong, working with the Federal Aviation Authority.

Now, the company says it has identified the cause of the problem: What it describes as “an anomalous electrical connection.” The investigation found that the problem occurred a few minutes into the second stage burn, when a single electrical connection which had been intermittently connecting throughout the flight expanded due to increased resistance and heat. This connection melted other electrical parts around it, leading to the failure of the electrical system which shut down the engines.

Rocket Lab says the issue was not detected in its pre-flight checks because the connection was intermittent, and had been solid during the testing period.

Rocket Lab's Electron rocket
Rocket Lab

The company says that this issue was brand new and had not occurred in previous launches. “The issue occurred under incredibly specific and unique circumstances, causing the connection to fail in a way that we wouldn’t detect with standard testing,” Rocket Lab CEO Peter Beck said in a statement. “Our team has now reliably replicated the issue in test and identified that it can be mitigated through additional testing and procedures.”

“It’s a testament to Electron’s track record of reliability that the FAA has approved us for return to flight already,” Beck continued. “Electron was the 4th most frequently launched rocket in the world last year and prior to the anomaly, we had deployed 53 customer payloads to orbit without fail. Returning to the pad with an even more reliable vehicle for our mission partners is our top priority.”

The company says it has plans for a new dedicated launch within the month of August, with more details to come soon.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
Amazon’s Starlink rival just crossed a major milestone, but don’t expect perfect internet just yet
Amazon finally showed up to the space internet party
Amazon Leo satellite layout across all launch vehicles

Amazon has taken a significant step toward launching its long-awaited satellite internet service. Following its latest rocket launch, the company now has 396 Project Kuiper satellites in low-Earth orbit, enough to begin offering continuous service across select regions. The milestone keeps Amazon on track for its previously announced goal of launching commercial service by mid-2026.

https://twitter.com/Weber44Chris/status/2072575499461963938?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E2072575499461963938%7Ctwgr%5Ed727a1b853cbf519585e7bf2655943afb2f91bb8%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theverge.com%2Fscience%2F960563%2Famazon-leo-service-tipping-point

Read more
Amazon’s Starlink rival is set to launch satellite internet later this year
After launching nearly 400 satellites, Amazon says its Leo broadband service will go live later this year.
Atlas V launches 29 Amazon Leo satellites from Cape Canaveral, Florida

Amazon's long-awaited answer to SpaceX's Starlink is finally nearing liftoff. According to an exclusive report from Reuters, the company plans to begin offering its Leo satellite internet service later this year, after its latest rocket launch pushed the constellation to 394 satellites in orbit.

The pieces are finally falling into place for Project Kuiper

Read more
NASA is investing $590 million in private contractors to build humanity’s first Moon outpost
NASA is counting on private companies to land its Moon Base dream.
Artist impression of a Moon Base concept, with solar arrays for energy generation, greenhouses for food production, and habitats shielded with regolith.

Building a permanent base on the Moon sounds like science fiction, but NASA is making it feel a lot more real. The agency just handed $590 million in contracts to three private companies for four uncrewed lunar lander missions launching in late 2028.

These missions are part of Phase 1 of NASA's broader $30 billion Moon Base program, which needs to deliver landers, rovers, and scientific cargo up there before astronauts eventually move in. These efforts are closely tied NASA's Artemis program, which sent humans on a lunar flyby in April for the first time since the Apollo era.

Read more