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SpaceX founder Elon Musk admits new rocket has high chance of blowing up, so it will be unmanned

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A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Kennedy Space Centre in Cape Canaveral, Florida. A Heavy Falcon rocket to be launched later this year may well fail, SpaceX founder Elon Musk said. Photo: Florida Today via AP
Associated Press

SpaceX’s chief said on Wednesday that the first launch of its big new rocket is risky and stands “a real good chance” of failure.

Founder Elon Musk told a space station research conference that he wants to set realistic expectations for the flight later this year from Cape Canaveral. The Falcon Heavy will have three boosters instead of one, and 27 engines instead of nine, all of which must ignite simultaneously.

Going to Mars is not for the faint of heart. It’s risky, dangerous, uncomfortable and you might die
SpaceX founder Elon Musk

No one will be aboard the initial flights. When it comes time to add people, Musk said, “no question, whoever’s on the first flight, brave.”

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SpaceX plans to fly two paying customers to the moon late next year, using a Falcon Heavy.

While the moon may not be in Musk’s personal travel plans, he said in response to a question that he’d like to ride one of his smaller Falcon rockets to the International Space Station in maybe three or four years. SpaceX plans to start ferrying Nasa astronauts to the orbiting outpost, using Falcon 9 rockets and enhanced Dragon capsules, by the middle of next year.

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SpaceX now uses the Dragon capsule to deliver supplies to the space station.

“All right, we’ll put you on the manifest,” said Nasa’s space station programme manager Kirk Shireman.

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