The top of the strongback structure at Complex 40, which positions the booster upright after rollout, feeds propellant into the Falcon 9 rocket and routes electrical and purge air to payloads, is badly mangled and will need repair or replacement. Clean-up activities initially required hazardous material experts because of the toxic propellants loaded aboard the Amos 6 satellite.
The rocket integration hangar, located about 600 feet (200 meters) from the launch mount at Complex 40, appeared to have escaped visible damage.
Soot covered one of the launch pad’s four lightning towers, and burn marks covered ground equipment near the site where the Falcon 9 stood, including a support building at the base of the pad housing avionics and other gear, and trailers containing high-pressure gas tanks.
New Note update
Earlier this month, we watched a SpaceX rocket—fully loaded with its satellite—explode suddenly and inexplicably. At the time, the cause remained a mystery, but now SpaceX’s engineers have traced the flaw to its source.
SpaceX has released the initial results of its investigation, which reveal that it believes a breach in the helium system in the Falcon 9's liquid oxygen system caused the sudden flare up. The company gathered up footage of the fire as well as recovering and cataloguing all the remaining debris, which they stored up in a hangar to try and find the source of the problem.
From there, SpaceX says it made a massive “fault tree” tracing every plausible cause of the fire to get to its initial finding. Critically, the private space flight company says that this incident wasn’t related to its previous explosion, where its CRS-7 mission suddenly exploded—along with its full payload of cargo—on the way to the International Space Station.
How much the fire will impact SpaceX’s upcoming launches is dependent not just on the rocket itself though but also on how much damage the blaze did to the launchpad when it flared. The company says that Cape Canaveral’s Launch Pad 40, where the rocket went up in flames, took the brunt of the damage and “substantial areas of the pad systems were affected.”
But there was also plenty of good news. The launch pad control systems are in relatively good condition, the company reports, and SpaceX’s rocket support building had no damage. Also, both the liquid oxygen fuel farm—where the company stores tanks of super-chilled liquid oxygen—and its kerosene fuel farm were thankfully left untouched.
After the CRS-7 explosion, SpaceX ended up slightly revamping its Falcon 9 rocket. Whether we’ll see a similar remodel this time will have to wait for the full final results of the investigation. But—with the facilities intact and the company saying that it wants to start launching rockets as soon as November—we should seeing the company’s Falcons back in the sky again soon.
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