KEY POINTS
  • Boeing's second uncrewed flight test of its Starliner spacecraft is delayed for at least two months due to issues with the capsule's propulsion valves.
  • The additional work means Boeing will not have an opportunity to launch OFT-2 this month, NASA Commercial Crew program manager Steve Stich told reporters, and is delayed "definitely on the other side" of an agency mission planned for mid-October.
  • OFT-2 represents a redo of Boeing's first uncrewed flight test in December 2019, and the aerospace company has already taken a $410 million charge to cover the costs of the second flight.

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Boeing's Starliner capsule sits on to an Atlas V rocket on the launchpad before the launch of the OFT-2 mission.

Boeing's second uncrewed flight test of its Starliner spacecraft is delayed for at least two months due to issues with the capsule's propulsion valves, the company said Friday.

The latest mission – called Orbital Flight Test 2, or OFT-2 – was previously targeting December 2020, but Boeing delayed the launch multiple times, with Aug. 3 the most recent target. During preparations on launch day, Boeing discovered that 13 propulsion system valves were not opening on the spacecraft, causing the company to delay the launch.

In this article