The sun will shine around the paddle under the starship SN8 on December 9, 2020. Trevor Mahlman Double Star Ships. Trevor Mahlman Golden Hour turns blue, which is a 12.5 km stretch of the starship SN8. Trevor Mahlman closes the surface of the SN8 with forward paddles and RCS (reaction control system) thrusters, which will modify the starship into the apogee to return it to its (hopefully, controlled) bellyflap landing pad. Close location of Trevor Mahlman Starship SN8. Trevor Mahlman Starship SN8 at sunrise on December 9, 2020. Trevor Mahlman Original Story The launch window extends from 12:45 pm to 5 pm (23:00 UTC) local time, and sources say that no lift will occur before 2 pm local time. The company is very close to launching a “SN8” prototype on Tuesday evening, with the effort automatically halting with 1.3 seconds remaining in the countdown. It is not clear what caused the last-second scrub — perhaps a pressure or temperature reading outside of acceptable levels — but SpaceX engineers seem to have solved the problem. The weather at the coastal launch site is Wednesday with almost perfect winds and clear skies. If a technical problem arises again, there are additional opportunities on Thursdays and Fridays. However, the weather in South Texas will be very windy in those days, probably more than a plane. This is the first time the SpaceX Starship has attempted to fly at high altitudes – the vehicle could fly at an altitude of 12.5 km. Previous test flights only went up to about 150 meters, and those vehicles did not include the folds, nose cone and other features needed to control the vehicle’s flight in the thin upper atmosphere. Managing this is no small feat because the massive vehicle is more than 50 meters high and wide. Since most of the advertising will be new to the vehicle and its engineers, the chances of failure are high. Hundreds of thousands of people may have joined SpaceX’s brief summary of Tuesday’s launch effort – there is uncertainty as to exactly what will happen. As we look forward to the second attempt today, check out the gallery of images captured by Trevor Mahlman early Wednesday morning before visiting the publishing site before being shut down via traffic for the Boca Sica Boulevard test. Update 3:10 pm EST: The webcast below is unlikely to start until five minutes before the launch attempt, which is now likely to occur just before 3pm local time (21:00 UTC). SN8 high altitude flight test. Image by Trevor Mahlman