The huge Spacex missile explosion over southern Florida led a huge headache for air travelers who were forced to withstand an unexpected delay due to the company’s latest accident on Thursday.
FAA had to stop air traffic around Miami, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach and Orlando in fear of “space launching”, after Spacex failed.
“After all my years of traveling, this is the first,” a Facebook user who knew himself was the CEO of Pharmaceutical Pharmaceuticals Ray Beck after his trip to South America, had to land in Miami.
Beck, CEO of VXP Pharma in Indianapolis, had just taken care of a continuous journey from Miami to Midlin, Colombia, when his journey was forced to return to Mia.
“This was all first,” Beck, 62, told NBC News from Colombia, where nearly five hours fell early Friday morning.
He added: “I had no situation that I would not have said,” No, I was not late because of a missing contact, a mechanical problem, or even a unbridled passenger. Yes, our journey was late and I had to return to Miami because a missile exploded over our heads and the pieces were falling. “
Beck added that after the pilot’s announcement, the passengers in Colombia took out their windows to obtain a potential wreckage.
“Everyone was looking and wondering whether they would see pieces of the missile that wandered on the plane,” he said. “If so,” here comes the missile engine to cancel support, “it was not good.
Traveler Jesse Wennans, who was on a trip from Costa Rica to Charlotte, had only to look at disbelief where he and his colleagues were forced to stop the unexpected stopping in Fort Lauderdale.
“They are trying to deal with customers, but I think it will be a long process to get to the place we go,” an angry traveler told NBC South Florida.
The debate of a SpaceX missile over the Bahamas on Thursday.
Spacex, who witnessed a similar accident in January, has again learned from this last failure.
“We will review the data from the flight test today to better understand the root cause,” TJE said in a statement on Thursday night. “As is always the case, success comes from what we learn, and today’s trip will provide additional lessons to improve Starship reliability.”
Or, as Musk tried to explain more briefly: “difficult missiles.”
This article was originally published on NBCNEWS.com