SpaceX ramps up Raptor engine production as Starship booster engine count will rise to 32 this year

-

-Advertisement-

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk answered a few interesting questions about the production of the Raptor engines and the increasing count of these giant engines on the Starship Super Heavy rocket booster.

The local observer Mary who hails from Starbase Boca Chica, Texas took a picture of the Super Heavy thrust puck that shows a 9 Raptor engine configuration for the inner circle at the bottom of the rocket. Adding the fixed 20 Raptors on the outside circle suggests a 29 Raptor engine configuration which Elon Musk endorsed.

Tesla Accessories by EVANNEX.
– Sponsored –

“29 Raptors on Booster initially, rising to 32 later this year, along with thrust increase per engine. Aiming for > 7500-ton thrust long-term. T/W ~1.5,” Musk explained the next Super Heavy engine configuration and quantity of thrust.

Here, the discussion took an interesting turn, if SpaceX wants to test 2 Super Heavy boosters this year for orbital flight, at least 60 flight-ready Raptor engines will be required for this operation.

In response, Musk revealed that Raptor engine production is ramping up and currently 1 engine is produced every 48 hours. This makes for 3.5 Raptors a week and 14 per month at the current pace. Developing 60+ Raptor engines will require a time of 4-5 months, so the 2nd Super Heavy booster with 32 engines might come to the limelight most probably at the very end of this year.

Related: SpaceX performs first static fire on Super Heavy booster with 3 engines

– Advertisement –

3D artist and SpaceX fan ErcX Space visualized the 32 Raptor engine configuration on the Super Heavy booster bottom in a CGI render.

Rendering of the 32 Raptor engine configuration on a Starship Super Heavy booster rocket.
Rendering of the 32 Raptor engine configuration on a Starship Super Heavy booster rocket. Photo credits: @ErcXspace / Twitter.

Elon Musk endorsed that this configuration is very close to the one that will be applied on the Starship Super Heavy rocket, “Pretty close. Inner ring is closer to center 3, as all 12 gimbal together. Boost back burn efficiency is greatly improved in this config,” he said.

The fixed engines provide a constant vertical thrust, while the gimbal engines provide thrust vectoring. The entire engine or just the nozzle is able to swivel from side to side (pitch and yaw). The gimbal thrust is used to set the angle of the rocket, we have witnessed this phenomenon clearly in the Starship SN10 high-altitude test and landing (for a visual representation see animation below).

Stay tuned for future updates on Starship and SpaceX, follow us on:
Google News | Flipboard | RSS (Feedly).

Animation of the motion of a rocket as the nozzle is gimbaled.
Animation of the motion of a rocket as the nozzle is gimbaled. Source: NASA via Wikipedia (public domain).
Iqtidar Ali
Iqtidar Alihttp://www.teslaoracle.com
Author of more than 1500 articles on Tesla, SpaceX, and EVs. His work has been liked and tweeted by Elon Musk and other prominent influencers. You can reach him on Twitter @IqtidarAlii

Latest News

Know why the FAA triggered an investigation into SpaceX’s Flight 12 Starship launch

According to the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), SpaceX's Starship Flight 12 Super Heavy rocket booster experienced an anomaly...

American Airlines to integrate in-flight Starlink satellite broadband from 2027

Elon Musk's space-launch and exploration company SpaceX has bagged another big customer for its Starlink satellite broadband. On Monday, American...

SpaceX shares stunning buoycam footage of Flight 12 Starship’s landing burn

The Starship's Flight 12 saga continues. Yesterday, Elon Musk's space-launch and astronautics company, SpaceX, shared additional footage of Starship...

2026 Tesla Spring Update feature: watch the blind spot warning accent lights in action

Tesla (TSLA) rolled out a ton of new features in this year's Spring software update (firmware version 2026.14 and...
- Advertisement -

Stay tuned with the updates in your Inbox

Get the latest Tesla FSD, Software Updates, Starship News in Your inbox.

By hitting the Subscribe button you agree to receiving email communications from TeslaOracle.com.
We don't email everyday. Frequency will be weekly at max.

Know why the FAA triggered an investigation into SpaceX’s Flight 12 Starship launch

According to the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), SpaceX's Starship Flight 12 Super Heavy rocket booster experienced an anomaly...

American Airlines to integrate in-flight Starlink satellite broadband from 2027

Elon Musk's space-launch and exploration company SpaceX has bagged another big customer for its Starlink satellite broadband. On Monday, American...

SpaceX shares stunning buoycam footage of Flight 12 Starship’s landing burn

The Starship's Flight 12 saga continues. Yesterday, Elon Musk's space-launch and astronautics company, SpaceX, shared additional footage of Starship...

Tesla Tips & Tricks

Here’s how much battery is drained if a Tesla is left unplugged for 32 days

A Tesla Model 3 owner parked her car in...

Tesla HW4 cameras can melt snow to clear the Autopilot FSD Vision

As the winter season enters its full swing at...

Tesla Quarterly Reports & Eearnings

Tesla (TSLA) vehicle deliveries grew ~6% in Q1 2026 YoY despite challenges, energy business is down ~15%

Tesla, Inc. (TSLA) disclosed its first-quarter vehicle production and...

Tesla Q4 2025: Financial Results, Key Takeaways from Elon Musk’s Earnings Call, more

The Tesla (TSLA) Q4 2025 Earnings Call was important...

Stay tuned with the updates in your Inbox

Get the latest Tesla FSD, Software Updates, Starship News in Your inbox.

By hitting the Subscribe button you agree to receiving email communications from TeslaOracle.com.
We don't email everyday. Frequency will be weekly at max.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended for You