Slashdot Mirror


Unmanned Russian Soyuz Blows Up On Launch

adagioforstrings writes "CNN reports that a 300-tonne unmanned Soyuz-U launch vehicle exploded 29 seconds after take-off from Russia's Arctic Plesetsk cosmodrome late on Tuesday, its blazing debris showering onto the launchpad and its blastwave killing one and injuring eight others. A modified version of this same kind of rocket will be used to carry cosmonauts to the ISS later this month."

2 of 34 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Facts are EVERYTHING by eggstasy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Wasn't the challenger like over 10 years ago? How many planes have crashed since then? How many cars? How many trains? (...)
    Rockets do NOT blow up all the time.
    Granted, they're not used as often as other vehicles today, but claiming that they blow up all the time isn't doing them justice.

  2. Re:Facts are EVERYTHING by Mt._Honkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ok, 1 shuttle explosion out of ~ 100 launches is about 1%. If 1% of plane flights crashed, we would have around 60 crashes in the U.S. EVERY DAY. If 1% of the time a car was used it crashed, we would have about 2 million car accidents per day (assuming 200 million drives per day). Rockets DO blow up all the time. Manned rockets have the best safety records because no expense is spared to ensure their quality. Unmanned is a different story though. There was a year or two in the US where nearly 1 out of 10 rockets blew up. We lost a lot of business to Europe and Asia in that time.

    --

    Don't Bogart the fish sticks