SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has revealed one of the biggest and hardest engineering challenges the company is facing presently in the Starship rocket program. Musk said that orbital refuelling is the next major milestone for the Starship rocket, calling it “one of the hardest engineering challenges that exist.” Speaking at the X takeover event, Musk stressed on the complexity and ambition behind the SpaceX’s reusable rocket program. “I specialize in the impossible to merely late,” Musk quipped, acknowledging delays in the Starship project but reaffirming its progress.
Elon Musk talks about the hardest engineering challenge
SpaceX CEO further explained that the process of orbital refuelling would need two Starships to dock somewhere in the orbit and then transfer propellant. Musk also floated the idea of an orbital propellant depot to streamline future missions to the Moon and Mars.Apart from this the another major hurdle is a fully reusable orbital heat shield. Musk emphasised that no one has yet created anything of this sort. He also acknowledged that the development of a reusable orbital heat shield is very critical to make Starship economically viable.“No one has ever created a fully reusable orbital heat shield before and no one’s created a fully reusable orbital rocket before,” Musk said.Musk also reiterated that a reusable rocket and booster system can help bring down the cost below even the Falcon 1 rocket and can also revolutionise space logistics and enable commercial space travel.
Elon Musk shares timeline of first Starship flight to Mars
A user on X asked Musk about the timeline of Starship flight. “What’s the timeline you have set Elon? It sounds fascinating and I am glad to be alive when this is happening,” an X user named @abhiyogi asked.Responding to the post, Musk wrote, “Slight chance of Starship flight to Mars crewed by Optimus in Nov/Dec next year. A lot needs to go right for that. More likely, first flight without humans in ~3.5 years, next flight ~5.5 years with humans. Mars city self-sustaining in 20 to 30 years.”
Reasons for the delay in Starship flight to Mars
The new target of a crewed mission in approximately 5.5 years—around 2030—is a notable shift from previous, more optimistic predictions. It also follows recent technical hurdles, including ongoing delays in mastering orbital refuelling and the loss of Starship’s upper stage during recent flight tests. The multiple technical issues which may be the cause of the delay include: failures in upper-stage Starship landings, unproven orbital refuelling systems and heat shield durability and rocket recovery mechanism.Earlier this year, SpaceX’s Flight 9 achieved stage separation but it lost control during reentry. Musk however emphasised that mastering in-space propellant transfer is critical for deep-space travel and remains a top priority.