NASA's famous Voyager probes nearly failed during their rocket launches - here's what went terribly wrong

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NASA's famous Voyager probes nearly failed during their rocket launches - here's what went terribly wrong

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voyager 2 launch august 20 1977 PIA01480

NASA/JPL

The Voyager 2 spacecraft launched from NASA's Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral, Florida, on August 20, 1977.

  • NASA's twin Voyager space probes launched 40 years ago this year.
  • The space agency recently fired Voyager 1's thrusters, orienting the robot's antenna toward Earth and helping extend its mission.
  • However, both of the Voyagers nearly failed during launch in 1977.
  • One probe refused to communicate with Earth while the other launched aboard a leaky rocket.


More than four decades after NASA launched the twin Voyager probes, the robots are still humming along in deep space.

In fact, on November 29, the space agency flawlessly fired up one of the robot's thrusters after 37 years of dormancy.

The puffs of propellant rotated Voyager 1 into a position that helps it communicate with Earth from 13 billion miles away, where it's traveling through the unexplored space between stars. The maneuver will ultimately extend the nuclear-powered spacecraft's storied lifespan by up to three years, according to NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

The Voyager mission is easily most exalted in NASA's history; collectively, the probes explored Jupiter and Saturn more deeply than ever before, surveyed Uranus and Neptune for the first time, then left the solar system.

But, as detailed in a PBS documentary film called "The Farthest", which premiered in September and is now available to watch on Netflix, each probe almost didn't survive launch.

Voyager 2's mutiny in space

voyager leaving solar system illustration nasa jpl

NASA/ESA/G. Bacon (STScI)

An illustration of a Voyager probe leaving the solar system.

Voyager 2 launched first, on August 20, 1977. (The first probe got a "2" label because Voyager 1 would travel faster through space and overtake its twin.)

The rocket launch was flawless, but "things went crazy" in the Voyager 2 probe itself, John Casani, the mission's project manager, said in the film.

"Voyager was not in control of itself, it was just riding this big rocket, and it was shaking it in such a way that it thought it was failing," Ed Stone, the Voyager mission's chief scientist, said in the film. "And so it started switching off various boxes, changing to the backup this, to the backup that - trying to figure out why all of this stuff was happening."

These shutdowns made the probe essentially refuse to talk to Earth, prompting one newspaper to title the story "Mutiny in Space."

"The Voyager spacecraft had decided it just didn't want to follow the instructions its human controllers were giving it, and it was going to do what it wanted to do," Dave Linick, a Voyager engineer, said in the film.


The problem? Voyager 2's computer wasn't programmed to handle the rocket's twisting and rattling on its way toward space - so it went on the fritz.

"For a couple of days, it was a real nail-biter. People were asking us, 'have you lost the spacecraft?' and we would say, 'we don't know for sure,' because we didn't know for sure," Casani said.

Frank Locatell, the project engineer of Voyager's mechanical systems, added: "That was a cliffhanger. That was the end of the mission - that could have been the end of the mission."

Luckily, the person who coded Voyager 2 was able to reestablish contact with the probe after several days and patch its software as well as Voyager 1's.

But that probe would have its own close call with failure.

The leaky rocket that nearly sunk Voyager 1

voyager probe titan 3e centaur rocket launch vehicle diagram labeled nasa

NASA via Drew Ex Machina

A labeled illustration of the Titan-Centaur rocket used to launch NASA's Voyager probes into space.

The faster-moving Voyager 1 probe launched from Kennedy Space Center on September 5, 1977, aboard a powerful Titan-Centaur rocket.

This launch vehicle had several stages: two solid-fuel boosters (stage 0), a liquid-fueled first- and second-stage motors (stages 1 and 2), and a fourth upper stage that housed the Voyager 2 probe.

Each stage fired after the prior one ran out of fuel and separated, boosting the probe faster and faster toward Jupiter

"We're thinking everything's ok, and then we begin to hear something wasn't right," Charley Kohlhase, who was in charge of Voyager's navigation and mission design, said in the film.

Propellant appeared to be leaking from a fuel line that led to the second stage, draining the tanks. "The second stage never got to deliver its full thrust because it ran out of fuel," Casani said.

A computer in the upper-stage rocket, called a Centaur, knew it wasn't traveling fast enough to reach Jupiter, so it began to burn through its extra liquid-hydrogen and -oxygen fuel reserves.

"The Centaur had used 1,200 pounds of extra propellant," Kohlhase said." Now we're all thinking, 'is it gonna have enough left in the tanks, or is it gonna run out of fuel?'"

Fortunately, he said, the Centaur had just enough - it cut off its engines with 3.5 seconds' worth of thrusting left.

"Three-and-a-half seconds," he added. "Voyager 1 just barely made it."


Had the Centaur not saved the mission, it "would have gotten almost to Jupiter, and then come back toward the sun, which would not have been good," Casani said.

Yet on March 9, 1979, Voyager 1 safely swung past Jupiter during its closest approach and went on to Saturn.

Both probes sent back incredible images of the outer solar system, including the first (and so far only) close-up photos of Uranus, Neptune, and those planets' moons and rings.

And 40 years later, they're both still cruising while sending back unprecedented details about the structure of our solar system and interstellar space.