Dragon capsule ‘almost untouched’

This framegrab image from NASA-TV shows the SpaceX Dragon capsule, center, the U.S. Destiny lab, left and the Japanese module Kibo module, right as the International Space Station travel over Africa.

This framegrab image from NASA-TV shows the SpaceX Dragon capsule, center, the U.S. Destiny lab, left and the Japanese module Kibo module, right as the International Space Station travel over Africa.

Published Jun 16, 2012

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McGregor, Texas - Marred by just a few scorch marks from its re-entry to the Earth's atmosphere, the world's first commercial supply spacecraft to visit the International Space Station weathered its maiden voyage well, Nasa and SpaceX officials said.

“It's almost untouched,” SpaceX Chief Executive Elon Musk said as he looked at the Dragon capsule, which was on display at the company's rocket factory in McGregor. The large, bell-shaped craft is more than 14 feet (4.2 meters) high and 12 feet (3.6 meters) in diameter.

Last month, the unmanned SpaceX Dragon delivered 1,000 pounds (453 kilograms) of provisions - mostly food - to the space station and returned with nearly 1,400 pounds (635 kilograms) of old equipment and a handful of experiments. Because it was a nine-day test flight, Nasa did not load it with anything valuable.

The California-based SpaceX - formally named Space Exploration Technologies - is the first private business to send a cargo ship to the space station. The company hopes to launch another capsule in September.

Musk said that a site near Brownsville in South Texas is the leading candidate for SpaceX's latest spaceport. He said he planned to talk to Texas Gov. Rick Perry later Wednesday about incentives and other issues.

He said other launch sites under consideration - in Florida and Puerto Rico - had made stronger cases than Texas, “but that may be changing.”

Nasa Administrator Charles Bolden praised SpaceX and the Dragon, saying last month's flight was a success that had taken much time and hard work. Bolden said the capsule was “beaten up” during re-entry, but is robust.

President Barack Obama is leading the move to commercial spaceflight. He wants routine orbital flights turned over to private businesses so the federal space agency can work on sending astronauts to Mars and asteroids.

Nasa has provided hundreds of millions of dollars in seed money to vying companies, including SpaceX. It received nearly $400 million as part of its contract with Nasa for the recently completed Dragon flight, said company spokeswoman Kirstin Brost Grantham. - Sapa-AP

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