Barring any bad weather or other last-minute hiccups, the test flight could lift off as early as 10:34 p.m. ET on May 6.
“When we lay back on our backs on Monday evening, it’s going to be real stuff, and the countdown is gonna be real, and it’s gonna be a really thrilling time,” said Wilmore, the crew commander.
“GO” for #Starliner launch!
@ulalaunch has given the “go” for launch of @Commercial_Crew’s @BoeingSpace Crew Flight Test mission on May 6: https://t.co/Vf4ShMri2hTune in for the prelaunch news conference at 12:30pm ET: https://t.co/RkH9mG6d5e pic.twitter.com/j8F9y1scFy
— NASA’s Kennedy Space Center (@NASAKennedy) May 3, 2024
Boeing’s Starliner has faced years of delays after NASA hired the company in 2014 to build a spaceship, along with SpaceX. The spacecraft has flown two times previously without any astronauts inside. During the first uncrewed test in 2019, the ship got on the wrong orbit due to software problems and didn’t make it to the space station. The company did a redo of the test in 2022, which NASA largely viewed as successful.
But getting to its first flight with humans on board has been a struggle. Boeing wanted to do the crewed test flight last year, but flammable interior tape and parachute lines that didn’t meet safety standards stymied the launch, putting it off to 2024.
Despite the setbacks, NASA says Starliner is ready to fly humans. If it launches on schedule, the ship will dock at the station just before 1 a.m. ET on May 8.
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NASA