Starship Booster 19 Raptor 3 Engine Static Fire Problem...What Wrong?

Starship Booster 19 Raptor 3 Engine Static Fire Problem...What Wrong?

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ALPHA TECH
2 Video Views·Mar 17, 2026  #alphatech #techalpha #spacex

Starship Booster 19 Raptor 3 Engine Static Fire Problem...What Wrong?
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Starship Booster 19 Raptor 3 Engine Static Fire Problem...What Wrong?
Booster 19 just ran into trouble during its first static fire test, forcing SpaceX to roll it back to the Mega Bay the same day for urgent checks. So what exactly went wrong?
Meanwhile, over in Florida, SpaceX has also filed a new request with the FAA to build a large communications tower next to SLC37, preparing the site to support the intense wave of future Starship launches planned for the Cape.
NASA also hit a small delay. The agency has pushed back the rollout of SLS and Orion to the pad by one day, right as preparations for Artemis 2 were ramping up. So what happened there?
Let’s break it all down in today’s episode of Alpha Tech.
Starship Booster 19 Raptor 3 Engine Static Fire Problem...What Wrong?
Over the past few days, Booster 19 preparations have ramped up. Things started to take shape on the morning of the 15th, when the team began loading the rocket with liquid oxygen and a small amount of liquid methane. Thick white vapor started pouring across the pad. Then suddenly, a brief orange flash appeared. Just a single blink, right around the engine section of B19. Many observers believe this was an igniter test, likely a quick check to confirm the startup reliability of the new Raptor 3 engines.
After that, the team performed a detank procedure, pulling the propellant back out of the vehicle and sending it back to the tank farm.
This might look routine, but it’s actually a very important intermediate step for SpaceX whenever they’re testing brand-new hardware. They gradually increase the intensity of the tests rather than jumping straight to a full engine firing.
Starship Booster 19 Raptor 3 Engine Static Fire Problem...What Wrong?
Then came the 16th.
The space community was buzzing with excitement because everyone expected a real static fire that day, a chance to finally see how powerful the new engines would look on the pad. SpaceX had also issued a beach closure notice starting at 8 a.m. and lasting ten hours, which strongly suggested that something big was coming.
The weather, however, wasn’t exactly calm. Strong winds were shaking the tracking cameras pointed at Booster 19. For a moment, it almost felt like the test might be delayed.

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