First orbital rocket launched from Europe crashes after takeoff
First orbital rocket launched from Europe crashes after takeoff

First orbital rocket launched from mainland Europe crashes after takeoff

First orbital rocket launched from Europe crashes after takeoff
First orbital rocket launched from mainland Europe crashes after takeoff
I mean, technically, Russia is in Europe.
Also, as the guys at NASA said back in the day, it takes a thousand failures to create one working rocket. Don't look at something halfway done and call it a failure.
edit = apparently I need to learn to read a map.
Don't they do most of their launches from Baikonur in Kazakhstan?
Yeah, but they do have Plesetsk in the European part of Russia. Only used for unmanned launches.
I'll edit my comment
Not very orbital, then, is it. Jokes aside, rocketry is hard and I hope they gained the data to make it work next time.
Yeah it’s pretty much a requirement for a new space company to crash their first rocket. At least that’s my default expectation. Space is crazy hard.
Did they forgot about the abort mission function?
That rocket went ballistic into the ground.
Also, years of years of rockets (and missiles) development, and it's still so difficult.
You make it sound like if it was rocket sci... huuuu... never mind.
How dare they zoom back out but not show it falling to the ground.
I can always imagine the tight feeling in the engineers chests as they watch it start to go sideways.1
It did pitch.
It crashed? Go read the telemetry and see what went wrong. Try again.
Article said they said 30 seconds would be a success. Not clear how long it stayed up? Clock froze at +18 seconds.