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SpaceX's Starship Super Heavy booster that flew on Flight 6 failed to sink to the bottom of the ocean, shows fresh footage on X.
While SpaceX had originally planned to catch the booster with the tower, the firm aborted the attempt at the last moment. It chose to land the rocket in the ocean instead softly, and Elon Musk later revealed that the reason behind the abort was a problem with the launch tower.
Now, fresh footage shows the 232-feet-tall Super Heavy gently floating on the water as teams approach it with a ship. SpaceX Ships Another Booster Out Of Production Facilities As It Prepares For Upcoming Starship Flights According to an image from Elon Musk, SpaceX's Starship Flight 4 booster was the first it had recovered from the water.
This rocket landed in the ocean and was the first to complete a soft splashdown in the water. Over the course of Starship's full stack tests, SpaceX has progressively improved its performance as while the booster used in Flight 3 did attempt a splashdown, troubles with its engines destroyed above the ocean's surface. Related Story Elon Musk Says SpaceX Can Try Starship Upper Stage Ship Catch In Flight 8Musk's image showed most of Super Heavy's outer ring of engines intact while the inner ring and the body were absent.