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Stoke Space Hopper 2 prototype conducted a vertical takeoff and vertical landing (VTVL) in Moses Lake, Washington. Credit: ...
The medium-lift Nova rocket’s first-stage booster will be powered by seven of the engines. “We are incredibly proud of this achievement,” Stoke Space CEO Andy Lapsa said.
Stoke Space is developing its Nova rocket at its headquarters and at its test facility in Moses Lake, Wash., and is targeting 2025 for its first orbital test launch.
Stoke Space is a new entrant into the launch sector and is developing its Nova rocket, which is designed to be 100% reusable. Related stories: — Rocket Lab: Private spaceflight for small satellites ...
Press Release Stoke Space, the rocket company building the world’s first 100% reusable medium-lift rocket, announced today that it has raised $260 million in new Series C investment to drive ...
According to TechCrunch, Stoke told regulators that Nova will be capable of carrying up to 7,000 kilograms to low-Earth orbit, the maximum payload capacity of the rocket when it will not be reused ...
Stoke Space has mounted its Andromeda2 upper stage rocket engine cluster on a test stand at its Moses Lake, Washington, site ahead of ground testing. The Kent, Washington-based startup is ...
Space startup Stoke announced the completion of the first hot fire test of a full-flow, staged-combustion (FFSC) engine for the Nova rocket ...
COLORADO SPRINGS—Startup Stoke Space has begun tests of the full-flow staged combustion rocket engine that will power the first stage of its reusable Nova medium-lift launch vehicle. Updating ...