five rocket. the rocket s upper stage. there was an she with a faulty sensor that s used when fueling this upper stage. and they say that they fix that problem. unclear if it s another issue with that faulty sensor or if it s something else entirely, the other issue we ran into, of course, was with that flashing red light on which wilmore is console, which was an issue with his spacesuit specifically the fan inside his suit. it wasn t circulating and that s a problem because you don t want to overheat when you re inside this rocket and then the only other problem that we ve really been monitoring and so far it hasn t been a problem has just been the wind speeds. there, gusting a bit higher than nasa would like for launch, but still within the constraint when the kids constraints of what is considered to be accepted optimal for launch for the atlas five and the boeing starliner spacecraft, putting that model down there, it s not mine, so i don t want to break it but allison, right now,
that s reading the data wrong and that s what causes a scrub and that can lead to an automatic cold which may be what happened here. but again, we just don t know yet. and, you know, allison, i think big picture here. i m sure some folks are wondering, you know? why is it so important to have a second spacecraft that can take nasa astronauts up to the international space station. a lot of people say, hey, we already have the spacex its crew dragon doing that reliably for four years now and there s also a russian soyuz rocket that can do the same and is currently doing the same. despite these ongoing tensions between the us and russia over ukraine. so why do we need a third vehicle? the reason is, according to nasa they want a competitor to spacex. they want that redundancy. they want a backup in case something happens to the space x fleet of falcon nine rockets and crew dragon capsule. so this is about backup systems. it s about redundancy, it s
we re just everybody standing around and waiting. i ll tell you one more sign. that s not a good sign. i m all of the nasa press personnel, everybody they re typically watching this from inside a press office. they walked out to see the actions full launch, and i just saw all of them walk back in. so typically when the nasa press team is walking back in, they tend to know things that maybe we don t know yet, which is why another reason why i m so skeptical that this launch is now going to happen given the fact that it s now it s now 12, 27 yeah it s 12, 27 we re now two minutes past that instantaneous launch window i can t officially call it, but i think it s highly unlikely see that this, that this launch happens today. allison, if impossible. and so what this would mean is there is a chance that they could try again tomorrow, allison? yeah. yeah. yep. okay. let s bring in former nasa administrator, charles bolden, who you see if you can shed new
information in your free gift. that s what 806881300. don t wait 180688 eight 81300. call now okay. ready to ask me one second. i got to finish my laundry it s like one second. i use rinse. rinse, the company that will pick up wash, fold and olivia laundry and dry-cleaning at the testimony. that i do not trust other people with my laundry ren s guarantees yourself as i ve been using it for months now with no issues okay. let s watch this weight. i m gonna do my laundry. better, hurry gun. i ll schedule, sign up for rinsing, rinse.com to get $20 it s off your first order. juneteenth, celebrating freedom and legacy. wednesday, june 19 at ten on cnn okay, folks. so let me bring you up to speed on what s been happening here. so moments ago, nasa just scrubbed the planned launch of this boeing starliner spacecraft the two astronauts that we ve been watching live on board.
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