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We want to be the Uber service to space

news We want to be the Uber service to space Snow swirled and a biting wind sent temperatures plummeting to several degrees below zero as the Stardust 1.0 made its debut at a former military base in Maine. Strapped to a trailer and pulled by a pick-up truck along a runway once used by B-52 bombers in the Cold War, it wasn t the most glamorous entrance for a rocket about to make history. And it very nearly didn t as the subzero conditions played havoc with the electronics and clouds moved in. But after several delays and as the Sunday afternoon light waned, Stardust finally lifted off, becoming the first commercial launch of a rocket powered by bio-derived fuel.

Groundbreaking biofuel rocket could be Uber for space

Watch live today: bluShift Aerospace to launch 1st biofuel rocket from Maine

Watch live today: bluShift Aerospace to launch 1st biofuel rocket from Maine Space 31/01/2021 Space.com Staff © Provided by Space The small satellite launch startup Blushift Aerospace prepares its first Stardust 1.0 rocket prototype for a Jan. 31, 2021 launch from the Loring Commerce Centre in Limestone, Maine. 10:30 a.m. EDT (1530 GMT).   The Brunswick, Maine-based bluShift will attempt to launch its Stardust 1.0 suborbital rocket up to a 1 mile high from a runway on the decommissioned Loring Air Force Base (now the Loring Commerce Centre) in Limestone, Maine. The rocket can carry about 17 lbs. (8 kilograms) on this launch, and is carrying three primary payloads on this flight. 

Replay: bluShift Aerospace launches 1st biofuel rocket from Maine

Replay: bluShift Aerospace launches 1st biofuel rocket from Maine Space 1/31/2021 Space.com Staff © Provided by Space The small satellite launch startup Blushift Aerospace prepares its first Stardust 1.0 rocket prototype for a Jan. 31, 2021 launch from the Loring Commerce Centre in Limestone, Maine. Update for 3:56 pm EDT: bluShift Aerospace launched its Stardust 1.0 rocket and recovered the small booster and its payload. An update on the test flight is expected soon.  10:45 a.m. EDT (1545 GMT).   The Brunswick, Maine-based bluShift will attempt to launch its Stardust 1.0 suborbital rocket up to a 1 mile high from a runway on the decommissioned Loring Air Force Base (now the Loring Commerce Centre) in Limestone, Maine. The rocket can carry about 17 lbs. (8 kilograms) on this launch, and is carrying three primary payloads on this flight. 

Brunswick aerospace company to launch its first rocket

Brunswick aerospace company to launch its first rocket bluShift, located at the former Navy base, plans to launch its first rocket fueled by a first-of-its-kind biofuel in Limestone Friday. Share BRUNSWICK After more than five years of planning and development, Brunswick-based bluShift Aerospace plans to launch its first rocket powered by a new biofuel Friday morning in Limestone. The launch is scheduled for 8 a.m., pending results from testing bluShift conducted Thursday. The launch will be streamed live. bluShift CEO Sascha Deri said the company chose to do the launch at Loring Commerce Centre where there wouldn’t be a risk to people or property if something went wrong.

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