Pipeline auto-fixer: removed [[ ]] brackets from links that don't resolve to existing claims in the knowledge base.
4.4 KiB
| type | title | author | url | date | domain | secondary_domains | format | status | priority | tags | |||||||||
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| source | Starship Flight 12: Booster 19 10-Engine Static Fire Ends Abruptly, 33-Engine Test Next | Tesla Oracle (teslaoracle.com) | https://www.teslaoracle.com/2026/03/19/starship-flight-12-booster-19s-10-engine-static-fire-ends-abruptly-spacex-prepares-for-a-33-engine-static-fire-test/ | 2026-03-19 | space-development | news | unprocessed | medium |
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Content
Event date: March 19, 2026 (yesterday as of research date) Event: Super Heavy Booster 19 (B19) — the first Starship V3 booster — conducted a static fire test with 10 engines that "ended abruptly" due to a ground-side issue.
What happened:
- B19 conducted an initial static fire test with 10 of its 33 Raptor 3 engines
- The test ended abruptly — a ground-side (infrastructure) issue, not an engine failure
- SpaceX is now preparing for a 33-engine full static fire test
- Ship 39 (S39, first V3 ship) is separately moving through preflight test objectives
- Target: NET April 9, 2026 at 5:30pm CST for Flight 12 launch
Regulatory context:
- FAA had not yet granted Flight 12 launch license as of late January 2026
- SpaceX anticipated FAA approval in March-April timeframe pending environmental reviews
- License approval is an independent dependency from hardware readiness
V3 vehicle specifications (for context):
- Raptor 3: ~280 tonnes thrust each (22% more than Raptor 2), 2,425 lbs lighter per engine
- V3 payload: 100+ tonnes to LEO (vs. ~35 tonnes for V2 non-reusable)
- First flight from new Orbital Launch Pad 2 (OLP-2)
Risk assessment: The abrupt end to the 10-engine static fire adds uncertainty to the April 9 launch target. SpaceX must now:
- Complete the full 33-engine static fire (the critical validation test)
- Resolve whatever ground-side issue caused the abrupt cutoff
- Secure FAA flight license
- Complete Ship 39 preflight test sequence
All four must clear before launch. The April 9 target was always aggressive; this anomaly increases probability of further slip.
Agent Notes
Why this matters: Starship Flight 12 is the first V3 flight — the vehicle that enables 100+ tonnes to LEO. Any delay compresses the timeline for validating the keystone enabling condition. April 9 is already being tracked as a potential slip; this anomaly confirms that uncertainty. For the space economy: Starship V3 is not yet validated hardware.
What surprised me: The issue was ground-side (OLP-2 infrastructure), not engine-related. This is actually somewhat reassuring for Raptor 3 readiness — but the 33-engine fire is still needed to confirm that. The 40,000+ seconds of static fire testing accumulated (per previous archive) was at component level, not full vehicle.
What I expected but didn't find: Details of what specifically caused the abrupt cutoff. Whether the abort was automatic (sensor limit) or commanded (operator call). Timeline for 33-engine rescheduling. FAA license timeline update.
KB connections:
- Starship achieving routine operations at sub-100 dollars per kg is the single largest enabling condition for the entire space industrial economy — V3 is not validated until Flight 12 succeeds
- SpaceX vertical integration across launch broadband and manufacturing creates compounding cost advantages — Starship program resilience depends on maintaining cadence through anomalies
Extraction hints:
- Update to: 2026-03-18-starship-flight12-v3-april-2026.md (the previously archived source)
- When Flight 12 result is known: Was the 33-engine fire completed? Did the flight succeed? Was V3 100+ tonne capacity demonstrated? This is the critical update.
- No new claim yet — this is a delay signal, not a result. The claim update happens after the flight.
Curator Notes
PRIMARY CONNECTION: Starship achieving routine operations at sub-100 dollars per kg is the single largest enabling condition for the entire space industrial economy — this is an update to the timeline and risk profile WHY ARCHIVED: Static fire anomaly on the day before research date is material new information for the Flight 12 risk profile; the April 9 target is now more uncertain EXTRACTION HINT: Do not extract a claim from this alone — pair with the Flight 12 result when available. The claim to update is the keystone variable enabler claim, once V3 specs are empirically validated or modified.