“The first core stage for the Space Launch System, intended to get us back to the moon by 2024, has left Boeing’s manufacturing center in New Orleans for launch readiness test,” writes long-time Slashdot reader Excelcia:

This is very good news for the troubled project which has been plagued by delays and cost overruns. Back when it was thought the system would launch in 2017, the cost estimate was $19-$22 billion for the program. But now the race is on in earnest to see who can get super-heavy lift into orbit, and it looks like NASA is finally out of the starting gate. The next step is a full-power burn of the four Space Shuttle RS-25 engines.

“Some in the space community believe it would be better to launch deep space missions on commercial rockets,” reports the BBC. “But supporters of the programme say that NASA needs its own heavy-lift launch capability… The SLS was designed to re-use technology originally developed for the space shuttle programme, which ran from 1981-2011.”

All I know is that’s an amazing photo of the enormous core stage — the largest one ever built in NASA’s Louisiana factory — heading down a Louisiana highway.

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Source:: Slashdot