

SpaceX’s newest Starship prototype was briefly placed atop of its massive booster for the first time on Friday (Aug. 6), setting a new record for the world’s tallest rocket ahead of a planned orbital test flight this year.
Engineers performed the stacking test at the SpaceX Starbase facility in South Texas, near the village of Boca Chica, in view of livestreams from NASA Spaceflight and Spadre.com. SpaceX has not commented on the stacking procedure yet on Twitter, although founder Elon Musk sent an update suggesting the company actually wanted to complete the stacking Thursday (Aug. 5), a few hours after Starship completed its rollout to the launch pad, but winds were too high.
Starship SN20 (“Serial No. 20”) and its Super Heavy booster were mated for about an hour for fit checks, during which time the two vehicles posed a towering site. Super Heavy alone stands 230 feet (70 meters) tall and Starship SN4 added another 165 feet (50 m) of height. Together they stood a whopping 395 feet tall (120 m), taller than NASA’s massive Saturn V moon rocket, which was 363 feet tall (110 m).
Video: Watch SpaceX’s Starship SN20 & a fuel tank roll out to launch site
Photos: SpaceX lifts huge Super Heavy rocket onto launch stand
But when the mission will get a chance to fly its round-the-world trip is unknown. The Super Heavy rocket, known as Booster 4, must pass several pressurization and engine tests before lifting off. SpaceX is also waiting on an environmental review of Starship’s launch operations being performed by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, and it’s unclear when that review will be completed.
The first ever full stack of Starship Super Heavy. @NASASpaceflight pic.twitter.com/zwdcLpErSnAugust 6, 2021
A Starship orbital flight plan submitted by SpaceX to the Federal Aviation Administration includes some firsts for the Starship program, which has been regularly testing prototypes for flight operations. According top that plan, the Super Heavy Booster 4, after hefting its first Starship prototype aloft, will splash down in the Gulf of Mexico roughly 20 miles (32 kilometers) offshore. Meanwhile, Starship will boost itself into orbit for the first time, fly around the Earth once and then return over the Pacific Ocean — near the Hawaiian island of Kauai — roughly 90 minutes after launch.
SpaceX plans to eventually use Starship as a fully reusable, two-stage transportation system to send humans and large sets of cargo to the moon, Mars and other distant solar system destinations. Recently, the program got a large contract win after NASA selected Starship as the crewed lander for the agency’s Artemis moon-landing effort. Under the previous Trump administration, NASA was shooting for a 2024 deadline to put boots on the surface; the new Biden administration hasn’t yet committed to a timeline.
Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.
More Stories
The Expanse: A Telltale Series preview — Trust your gut before your head gets in the way
Odd supergiant star Betelgeuse is brightening up. Is it about to go supernova?
Zany new trailer for Fox’s ‘Stars on Mars’ reality show counts us down to launch (video)