• atocci
      link
      English
      175 months ago

      No, it won’t. At least, not because of a helium leak. Starliner is currently holding ten times the amount of helium needed to safely deorbit the capsule. These new leaks aren’t anything mision-endangering and are leaking hundreds of times slower than the one they detected beforehand that NASA still deemed acceptable to launch with.

    • @BoxOfFeet
      link
      English
      85 months ago

      More like Columbia, where the issue is detected and they bring it home anyway and it breaks up on reentry.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          35 months ago

          The only option they had were to send another shuttle up and transfer to it. There was nothing in place to repair the heat shielding, even if they had known the amount of damage.

          The shuttle transfer would have been something never attempted or even planned for.