Skip to main content

Rocket Lab’s booster catch didn’t go entirely according to plan

Rocket Lab achieved a world’s first on Monday when its helicopter caught a rocket booster as it fell from the sky. However, moments after the catch, the booster was released and splashed down in the sea.

The company performed the feat during its There And Back Again mission to deploy 34 satellites into orbit for a range of private companies.

A livestream of the mission showed the first-stage booster as it returned to Earth shortly after launch, its descent slowed by a parachute. The video (below) also captured the moment the grappling hook on Rocket Lab’s customized Sikorsky S-92 helicopter successfully snagged the parachute’s drogue line.

Rocket Lab - 'There And Back Again' Launch

A Rocket Lab spokesperson said that after successfully catching the booster, the pilot noticed that the extra weight was affecting the helicopter’s flying performance more than expected. So instead of sticking with the original plan to carry the booster to a recovery vessel, the pilot decided to offload it for a successful splashdown. It was then plucked from the water by a waiting Rocket Lab team.

“Incredible catch by the recovery team, can’t begin to explain how hard that catch was and that the pilots got it,” Rocket Lab CEO Peter Beck tweeted a short time after the mission ended. “They did release it after hookup as they were not happy with the way it was flying, but no big deal, the rocket splashed down safely and the ship is loading it now.”

Catching the first stage of its Electron rocket instead of letting it land in water will allow the company to reuse the booster, enabling it to cut mission costs, increase the frequency of launches, and reduce the amount of waste materials. If the rocket has remained intact following Monday’s splashdown, there’s still a chance that parts of it can be reused.

Rocket Lab has spent several years planning for Monday’s catch attempt, using a dummy rocket booster to rehearse the process. The partial success will give the company hope that it can now refine the process to make it a regular part of its Electron launch activities.

Rocket Lab, which was founded by Beck in 2006, later confirmed that all of the satellites were successfully deployed in what was the company’s 26th orbital mission.

While it aims to perfect the rocket-catching process with its two-stage Electon rocket, with its next-generation Neutron rocket, it’s planning to land the first-stage booster upright in a similar way to SpaceX’s workhorse Falcon 9 rocket.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
What’s going on with NASA’s mega moon rocket launch?
NASA's SLS rocket at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

NASA’s next-generation Space Launch System (SLS) rocket is still on the ground.

It’s secured inside the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida to keep it safe from Hurricane Ian, which at this moment is battering the state with strong winds and torrential rain.

Read more
Watch Rocket Lab achieve its 30th launch and 150th satellite delivery
A Rocket Lab Electron rocket blasts off from the launchpad.

Rocket Lab has achieved its 30th Electron rocket launch since its first one in 2017 and deployed its 150th satellite to orbit.

The mission, called The Owl Spread Its Wings, departed Rocket Lab’s launch site in New Zealand on Friday morning local time, Thursday afternoon in the U.S.

Read more
NASA rocket repairs going to plan ahead of 3rd launch effort
NASA's SLS rocket on the launchpad at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

NASA is working to get its next-generation rocket into orbit to finally launch the ambitious Artemis space exploration program.

Following failed attempts to blast the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket skyward on August 29 and September 3, NASA engineers at the Kennedy Space Center launch site in Florida have been working tirelessly to fix the issues that caused those countdowns to halt.

Read more