There has been a likely root cause identified since at least early this year, OIG said as much in May and GAO mentioned it in one of their reports during the summer. They're currently waiting on a final decision on how to move forward. What I've heard it that the likely path forward is a change in the entry trajectory and continuing with the mission as planned but we'll see soon enough, hopefully.
So nice to hear a calm conversation, as opposed to talking like your head is about to explode.
Thanks 👍 Will for the update.
Excellent reporting! Just what I needed to hear.
Will Robinson-Smith....great name and excellent reporting 👏
Very clear
Gonna be interesting since they are feet dragging on stacking Orion since they have no root cause of the heat shield damage from flight one
There has been a likely root cause identified since at least early this year, OIG said as much in May and GAO mentioned it in one of their reports during the summer.
They're currently waiting on a final decision on how to move forward.
What I've heard it that the likely path forward is a change in the entry trajectory and continuing with the mission as planned but we'll see soon enough, hopefully.
Hope it won't get aborted this time due to Hydrogen leak, and will be conducted as expected.
Excellent🌺from 矢吹コンサルタント🇯🇵👩💻
*NASA* | _Not About Space Anymore._
Danger danger will robinson. Dont go on starliner
How do the astronauts feel about riding in a Boeing capsule?
The Orion capsule is built by Lockheed Martin and the Service Module is ESA’s contribution. Boeing isn’t involved in either.
@@bbartky You are right...just got confused. Made the same mistake talking to a friend last night. Thanks for the correction.