First SpaceX Mission With Astronauts Set For June 2019 (france24.com)
schwit1 shares a report from France 24: NASA has announced the first crewed flight by a SpaceX rocket to the International Space Station (ISS) is expected to take place in June 2019. It will be the first manned U.S. launch to the orbiting research laboratory since the space shuttle program was retired in 2011, forcing U.S. astronauts to hitch costly rides aboard Russian Soyuz spacecraft. A flight on Boeing spacecraft is set to follow in August 2019. The timetable for both launches has already been postponed several times, but NASA said Thursday it would now be providing monthly updates on deadlines. Both missions are considered tests: the two astronauts transported in each flight will spend two weeks aboard the orbiting ISS before returning to Earth. SpaceX will carry out an uncrewed test in January 2019, and Boeing in March 2019.
Boeing doesn't play fair, and they would just hate to be upstaged by an upstart, when they've gotten fat off of sucking the federal tit forever.
Expect some unexpected developments, either in the media or on some legislative subcommittee or both, to try to slow Elon down.
The Dragon capsule is no where near being man-rated, so the changes of actually flying with a human is ZERO right now.
says someone commenting on an article about the timetable for crew-rating the Dragon capsule in the near future.
Here are some articles about the crew-rating of Dragon and Starliner:
https://www.nasaspaceflight.co...
https://www.nasaspaceflight.co...
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