Astronauts stranded in space due to multiple issues with Boeing's Starliner — and the window for a return flight is closing

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Astronauts stranded in space due to multiple issues with Boeing's Starliner — and the window for a return flight is closing​


Two NASA astronauts who rode to orbit on Boeing's Starliner are currently stranded in space aboard the International Space Station (ISS) after engineers discovered numerous issues with the Boeing spacecraft. Teams on the ground are now racing to assess Starliner's status.

Astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams were originally scheduled to return to Earth on June 13 after a week on the ISS, but their stay has been extended for a second time due to the ongoing issues. The astronauts will now return home no sooner than June 26th, according to NASA.

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After years of delays, Boeing's Starliner capsule successfully blasted offon its inaugural crewed flight from Florida's Cape Canaveral Space Force Station at 10:52 a.m. EDT on June 5. But during the 25-hour flight, engineers discovered five separate helium leaks to the spacecraft's thruster system.

Now, to give engineers time to troubleshoot the faults, NASA has announced it will push back the perilous return flight, extending the crew's stay on the space station to at least three weeks.

"We've learned that our helium system is not performing as designed," Mark Nappi, Boeing's Starliner program manager, said at a news conference on June 18. "Albeit manageable, it's still not working like we designed it. So we've got to go figure that out."

The return module of the Starliner spacecraft is currently docked to the ISS's Harmony module as NASA and Boeing engineers assess the vital hardware issues aboard the vessel, including five helium leaks to the system that pressurizes the spacecraft's propulsion system, and five thruster failures to its reaction-control system.

After powering the thrusters up on June 15, engineers found that most of these issues appeared to be at least partially resolved, but their exact causes remain unknown.

However, the Harmony module's limited fuel means Starliner can only stay docked for 45 days, so the window for a safe return flight is narrowing.

The issues are the latest in a long list of setbacks and headaches for Boeing's spacecraft. The company built the Starliner capsule as a part of NASA's Commercial Crew Program, a partnership between the agency and private companies to ferry astronauts into low Earth orbit following the retirement of NASA's space shuttles in 2011. SpaceX's Crew Dragon also came from this initiative and has racked up 12 crewed flights since it began operating in 2020.

But Starliner's first uncrewed test flight in 2019 was scuppered by a software fault that placed it in the wrong orbit, and a second attempt was held back by issues with a fuel valve. After more reviews last year, the company had to fix issues with the capsule's parachutes and remove around a mile (1.6 kilometers) of tape that was found to be flammable.

The current mission is Boeing's third attempt to take the crew to the ISS. The previous two were scrubbed by a vibrating oxygen valve on the United Launch Alliance's Atlas V rocket on which Starliner was mounted (and which was developed by Lockheed Martin) and a computer glitch in a ground launch sequencer, respectively.
 
Do you think Boeing has gone the route of Microsoft and hired a bunch of streetsh*tters to do coding and engineering?
I don't know about street shitters, but there was a specific initiative back in 2020 to have niggers make up some percentage of their total workforce.

This is what happens when a corporation becomes a personal fiefdom for ideologues. Turns out competent engineering and manufacturing is actually really hard and can't be 10th on your list of corporate priorities.
 
Do you think Boeing has gone the route of Microsoft and hired a bunch of streetsh*tters to do coding and engineering?
Iirc, poojeet engineers with near zero management oversight were ultimately the cause behind the crashes/issues w/ the 737 Max 8s. Iirc, they tried to fix the mechanical engineering deficits on that one with software fixes, which went about as well as you'd think.
 
Iirc, poojeet engineers with near zero management oversight were ultimately the cause behind the crashes/issues w/ the 737 Max 8s. Iirc, they tried to fix the mechanical engineering deficits on that one with software fixes, which went about as well as you'd think.
There weren't actually any deficits with the machine itself, but because it was a new model, it would handle differently, which requires the pilots some time to acclimatize with the machine. Boeing didn't want to wait that much time, so they put a software that 100% for realsies would make the 737 max handle exactly like the regular 737.

The software had a bug, and that was the thing that caused the crashes
 
Fun fact: "Boeing" is not actually Boeing, most positions of leadership and the way of doing business is closer to Douglass' than to OG Boeing's
Correct. That merger was the inception point of Boeing’s slide towards mediocrity….and worse.
There weren't actually any deficits with the machine itself, but because it was a new model, it would handle differently, which requires the pilots some time to acclimatize with the machine. Boeing didn't want to wait that much time, so they put a software that 100% for realsies would make the 737 max handle exactly like the regular 737.

The software had a bug, and that was the thing that caused the crashes
I will never EVER fly on one of Boeing’s Max aircraft. Too many things that are just wrong with it starting with the weird stuff they did with the engines and the fact that software has to constantly correct for the fact that plane is essentially not airworthy.
 
There weren't actually any deficits with the machine itself, but because it was a new model, it would handle differently, which requires the pilots some time to acclimatize with the machine. Boeing didn't want to wait that much time, so they put a software that 100% for realsies would make the 737 max handle exactly like the regular 737.

The software had a bug, and that was the thing that caused the crashes
Don’t let niggers whitewash this. Boeing built a thing that had issues, but only if you bought it with one sensor and also didn’t apply the issue correction procedure if sensor is fucked steps.

Guess what nigger airlines and nigger pilots did and didn’t do?

Now boing is still a fuck, but they’ve successfully pinned this all on mysterious designs and none on pilots or airlines. A masterful win.
 
Don’t let niggers whitewash this. Boeing built a thing that had issues, but only if you bought it with one sensor and also didn’t apply the issue correction procedure if sensor is fucked steps.
Boeing deliberately excluded MCAS from training:

Even fucking Boeing test pilots nearly died from it during flight testing,, it's retarded to expect a pilot who was told his plane handles and behaves exactly like the old one to figure a emergency situation in less than 30 seconds that it takes from it to become unrecoverable.

You're doing the same shit Kia did when they blame the clients and offer them to solve themselves by buying a steering wheel lock when they decided it was a great idea to save 5$ per car and stop installing immobilizers on the ignition.
 
Boeing deliberately excluded MCAS from training:

Even fucking Boeing test pilots nearly died from it during flight testing,, it's retarded to expect a pilot who was told his plane handles and behaves exactly like the old one to figure a emergency situation in less than 30 seconds that it takes from it to become unrecoverable.

You're doing the same shit Kia did when they blame the clients and offer them to solve themselves by buying a steering wheel lock when they decided it was a great idea to save 5$ per car and stop installing immobilizers on the ignition.
From wikipedo: “The problem had occurred on the same aircraft during its immediately preceding flight, and the pilots had recovered using a standard checklist for such a "runaway stabilizer" condition.

During the accident flight, the AoA sensor again fed erroneous data to the MCAS, which pushed the nose of the aircraft down. The pilots did not properly follow the checklist, with the result that MCAS remained active and repeatedly put the aircraft into an unsafe nose-down position until it crashed into the water.”

The second flight also had similar pilot fuckups. Boeing did some shady shit but the biggest mistake they made was assuming pilots knew how to fly a fucking plane instead of monitoring a doggam autopilot.
 
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