Tag

Terran R

All articles tagged with #terran r

space2 years ago

Relativity Space shifts focus to larger reusable rocket after shelving Terran 1.

Relativity Space has decided to retire its Terran 1 small launch vehicle after a single flight that failed to reach orbit, focusing its resources on a revised version of its larger Terran R rocket. The new Terran R design is a somewhat more conventional approach where only the first stage is recovered by landing on a ship downrange from the launch site, like SpaceX’s current Falcon 9 and other vehicles in development, such as Blue Origin’s New Glenn.

space2 years ago

Relativity Space shifts focus to larger reusable rocket with new 3D-printing approach.

Relativity Space is moving on from its Terran 1 rocket after its debut launch failure and is now focusing on developing the Terran R rocket, which will be significantly larger and more powerful. The Terran R will have a fully expendable version capable of lifting 33.5 metric tons and a reusable version capable of 20 re-flights with a payload capacity of 23.5 metric tons to low-Earth orbit. The rocket will be powered by 13 Aeon engines and will land on a drone ship in the Atlantic Ocean. Relativity Space plans to launch the Terran R in 2026.

space2 years ago

Relativity Space shifts focus to larger reusable rocket after Terran 1 launch.

Relativity Space is shifting its focus to its larger reusable rocket, Terran R, after the first launch of its 3D-printed Terran 1 rocket failed to reach orbit. The company is blending its 3D-printing approach with traditional metal-bending techniques to accelerate work on Terran R, which is expected to debut in 2026. Relativity has won launch deals from seven customers worth over $1.6 billion for future flights on Terran R, which can launch up to 33,500 kilograms and is above SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket in terms of capability.

space2 years ago

3D-printed rocket's debut ends in failure.

Relativity Space's Terran 1 rocket successfully launched on its third attempt, but the second stage engine failed to ignite and fell back into the Atlantic Ocean. Despite this, the company characterized the mission as a success due to the rocket's passage through the area of maximum dynamic pressure during its flight profile. The Terran 1 rocket is made with about 85% additively manufactured material, making it a substantially new manufacturing process. Relativity may now pivot to its much larger Terran R vehicle.