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As it prepares for the fifth Starship test flight, SpaceX is testing the launch tower at its facilities in Boca Chica for the crucial tower catch planned for the next test. The previous Starship test was a success as both the booster and the ship successfully splashed down in the water, and immediately after the test, Elon Musk confirmed that the next test would further raise the stakes. SpaceX's Starship recovery profile requires catching the first stage booster with the launch tower, and right now, the firm is testing the tower arms by pinching them around a test article.
Catching the booster with the tower instead of having it land on a remote drone ship is key to SpaceX's goal to make Starship rapidly reusable. This is because if the rocket is 'caught' at the pad, then the time it takes to refuel it and conduct other minor repairs drops, allowing SpaceX to launch Starship in quick succession. A rapid cadence is essential to the rocket's key missions since flights to the Moon and Mars will require launching propellant tankers first before a crewed or cargo flight is launched to refuel in space.
Since no other rocket company or government organization has caught a rocket on the pad to date, SpaceX has to test the technologies first before it can implement them on crucial operational missions. On this front, June has seen the firm roll out the forward section of the booster to the pad to test the tower's 'chopsticks.' These are giant arms that also lift the second stage Starship on the booster for test flights and operations, and footage from local media channel NASASpaceflight shows that SpaceX appears to be fine tuning its chopstick operation ahead of the fifth
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