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Added a source, Date it was postponed, and Length between postponing and final launch
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John Doty
  • 4.8k
  • 14
  • 21

269 Days, almost 9 Months

HETE-2 was attached to its Pegasus launch vehicle in December, 1999, ready for a January launch. But then, NASA got cold feet. On January 14, 2000, NASAthey decided to postpone the launch of HETE-2. We had built it in an MIT lab for about 1/3 what the parametrics said it should cost, and that made some people nervous. Even though it was already well-tested, NASA demanded more testing. So, back to Massachusetts it went. No problems were discovered. We finally launched on October 9, 2000.

Source

269 Days, almost 9 Months

HETE-2 was attached to its Pegasus launch vehicle in December, 1999, ready for a January launch. On January 14, 2000, NASA decided to postpone the launch of HETE-2. We had built it in an MIT lab for about 1/3 what the parametrics said it should cost. Even though it was already well-tested, NASA demanded more testing. So, back to Massachusetts it went. No problems were discovered. We finally launched on October 9, 2000.

Source

269 Days, almost 9 Months

HETE-2 was attached to its Pegasus launch vehicle in December, 1999, ready for a January launch. But then, NASA got cold feet. On January 14, 2000, they decided to postpone the launch. We had built it in an MIT lab for about 1/3 what the parametrics said it should cost, and that made some people nervous. Even though it was already well-tested, NASA demanded more testing. So, back to Massachusetts it went. No problems were discovered. We finally launched on October 9, 2000.

Source

Added a source, Date it was postponed, and Length between postponing and final launch
Source Link

269 Days, almost 9 Months

HETE-2 was attached to its Pegasus launch vehicle in December, 1999, ready for a January launch. ThenOn January 14, 2000, NASA got cold feetdecided to postpone the launch of HETE-2. We had built it in an MIT lab for about 1/3 what the parametrics said it should cost. Even though it was already well-tested, NASA demanded more testing. So, back to Massachusetts it went. No problems were discovered. We finally launched on October 9, 2000.

Source

HETE-2 was attached to its Pegasus launch vehicle in December, 1999, ready for a January launch. Then, NASA got cold feet. We had built it in an MIT lab for about 1/3 what the parametrics said it should cost. Even though it was already well-tested, NASA demanded more testing. So, back to Massachusetts it went. No problems were discovered. We finally launched on October 9, 2000.

269 Days, almost 9 Months

HETE-2 was attached to its Pegasus launch vehicle in December, 1999, ready for a January launch. On January 14, 2000, NASA decided to postpone the launch of HETE-2. We had built it in an MIT lab for about 1/3 what the parametrics said it should cost. Even though it was already well-tested, NASA demanded more testing. So, back to Massachusetts it went. No problems were discovered. We finally launched on October 9, 2000.

Source

Source Link
John Doty
  • 4.8k
  • 14
  • 21

HETE-2 was attached to its Pegasus launch vehicle in December, 1999, ready for a January launch. Then, NASA got cold feet. We had built it in an MIT lab for about 1/3 what the parametrics said it should cost. Even though it was already well-tested, NASA demanded more testing. So, back to Massachusetts it went. No problems were discovered. We finally launched on October 9, 2000.