Rocket Lab plans second Hawke's Bay test

Peter Beck with his Electron rocket. Photo NZ Herald
Peter Beck with his Electron rocket. Photo NZ Herald

Rockets will soon be blasting off from northern Hawke's Bay again, after Rocket Lab announced its second test-launch window.

The Auckland-based company yesterday said it would fly payloads for clients Planet and Spire on its upcoming second test flight titled "Still Testing" from its Launch Complex 1 site at Mahia Peninsula.

The flight is the second of three in Rocket Lab's Electron test programme and follows May's successful inaugural Electron test flight.

The Electron vehicle for the "Still Testing" flight is expected to be trucked to the site next month, and a launch window will open in the following weeks.

The vehicle will carry two Earth-imaging Dove satellites for Planet and two Lemur-2 satellites from Spire for weather mapping and ship tracking.

Rocket Lab founder and chief executive Peter Beck said carrying a test payload marked a significant milestone for the Electron programme, enabling Rocket Lab to gather crucial data and test systems for the deployment stage of a mission.

"We're thrilled with Electron's performance in the first test flight and now we're eager to test the next crucial step - payload deployment," he said.

"No major changes to the launch vehicle hardware have been required, the third-party error that meant we didn't make orbit has been corrected and we're focusing on the six Electron vehicles in production right now."

The first test launch had to be terminated before it reached orbit because of an issue with an independent contractor's ground equipment.

Mr Beck, who was raised in Southland, said the company was still operating in a test phase, and could expect a few scrubs during the second test-flight attempt.

"We're incredibly excited about carrying Planet and Spire payloads on Electron. The data these companies gather has an increasingly significant role to play in how we understand our planet and better manage it," he said.

Planet senior director of launch Mike Safyanat said it was fitting his company was among the first payloads to fly on Electron, given Rocket Lab and Planet had shared an ethos of "dreaming big".

"The Electron will be a game changer in a traditionally difficult launch market. We are excited to quite literally be riding the leading edge with Rocket Lab."

Spire chief executive Peter Platzer said his company was proud to be on board the inaugural deployment attempt.

"The ability to iterate quickly and execute on an incredibly high level is core to the success of both Rocket Lab and Spire. 'Still Testing' is a culmination of that work into a single event," he said.

- Hawke's Bay Today

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