The success and visibility of SpaceShipOne showed to the world a small team of people was able to send someone to space – this spaceflight kicked off a new era of commercial space because “if that little company in the desert can do that…”
And the little company did it two more times: SpaceShipOne flew to space on September 29, 2004 and October 4, 2004 to meet the requirements and win the Ansari X-Prize: surpassing an altitude of 100km twice within two weeks while carrying the weight equivalent of three people on board and replacing no more than 10% of the non-fuel weight of the craft between flights. After the successful completion of SpaceShipOne’s mission, it was donated to the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum, where it has been on display in the entrance hall.
The legacy of SpaceShipOne holds strong within Scaled – we remain that “little company in the desert” with small teams working together to bring challenging and complex aircraft to reality. Many of the employees who have come through Scaled Composites’ doors over the last twenty years arrived with stars in their eyes having heard about SpaceShipOne on the news while children or highschoolers and watching Scaled’s journey to the spaceflight as immortalized in the Black Sky documentary – there are many who were even among the spectators in 2004.