Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • 10/05/2025
The Falcon 1 made history on September 28, 2008 by becoming the "first privately developed liquid fuel rocket to reach Earth orbit," according to SpaceX. Hear from the team that made it happen.

Credit: SpaceX
Transcript
00:00In the early days it was very clear, it was like a David and Goliath story, you
00:07know, no privately developed launch vehicle company had ever achieved Earth
00:10orbit. Everybody tried and failed. I started within the first year of the
00:14program and we were designing and building Falcon 1. The rocket was out on
00:19Omelac. It was so cool to go to this secluded place for work. All that was
00:24there was the launch pad, a very small hangar, an office trailer, and basically
00:29an outhouse for a bathroom. We would sleep under the stars sometimes, have
00:33horrific sunburns sometimes. It was like Omelac Survivor we called it and we were
00:39right there next to the rocket and the launch pad. Living through the first few
00:45failures of Falcon 1 was really difficult. We literally had blood, sweat, and tears
00:50on that rocket and then to see it come back down so quickly it was heartbreaking.
00:54Flight 2 was disappointing because we made it almost all the way to orbit. We
00:58basically started spinning out of control once the vehicle was in space but then
01:02flight 3 was just so sad to basically go through stage separation and then have
01:07the stages come back and recontact. That one hurt the most. We were essentially out
01:11of money at that time. We had had the three failures but we luckily we had had
01:16another kind of spare vehicle ready to go. We pushed super hard to get that
01:20vehicle ready. We rented a C-17 to fly the first stage and second stage over to
01:26Kwajalein instead of taking the three weeks on the barge. When we were landing you
01:30know we heard a loud pop. We looked back and saw that the first stage tanks had
01:34sunken in. I think we thought for sure we were done. I think we thought that was the
01:39end of SpaceX.
01:40We still felt like the underdogs. We still had
01:45everything to prove so it was just like nope we're gonna fix it and we're gonna
01:48make this happen. Three weeks later I think we had the first successful flight
01:52of Falcon 1.
02:02It worked. We buckled the stage on the way to Kwajalein and we still managed to get
02:08that rocket to orbit so that gave us good confidence moving forward that we'd be
02:12able to get anything to orbit. For me it was like a dream come true because it was
02:16something that we had been working so hard for for years like since I started
02:19at SpaceX and that we had seen so many failures for. I just felt validated and
02:24proud of the team for doing something that I think a lot of people didn't think
02:28was possible.

Recommended