For the first time in more than three years, SpaceX misses a booster landing
For the first time in more than three years, SpaceX misses a booster landing

For the first time in more than three years, SpaceX misses a booster landing

For the first time in more than three years, SpaceX misses a booster landing
For the first time in more than three years, SpaceX misses a booster landing
It is impressive that the landings got so reliable that a failed landing is worth a headline, but the „boring“ successful Falcon9 landing are not. (At least not as the main topic)
Maybe someday a failed landing will be so rare they get NTSB investigations the way an aircraft crash does now.
That's not exactly how it is right now, but it's not far. Hell, the last time a F9 booster went splat, they grounded them for only a couple weeks before it was shown it wasn't a safety-critical issue.
It just stands out because there's only two flying reusable boosters right now (and only one that can go to orbit). Meanwhile, grounding one model of aircraft doesn't usually have that much of an impact because they are so many active. What'll be really cool is when there are so many reusable boosters out there that one can be grounded and spaceflights will just continue on another.
I knew it would happen eventually but damn… it still hurts
I haven't missed a booster landing for well more than 3 years.