Hopefully the third time will be the charm for Relativity Space and its 3D-printed rocket’s inaugural blast into space.

The Long Beach, California-headquartered space company aborted Saturday’s launch attempt of its 110-foot-tall Terran 1 rocket at about 4 p.m. ET Saturday afternoon. This second attempt at liftoff for the rocket – 85% of which is made with massive 3D printers – had been scheduled during a three-hour window of 1-4 p.m. EST at Cape Canaveral, Florida.

An initial launch attempt Wednesday was scrubbed “due to exceeding launch commit criteria limits for propellant thermal conditions on stage 2,” the company said.

After the mission was scrubbed, Relativity Space posted on Twitter that more information would be forthcoming about the “cause of aborts today.” Earlier Saturday morning, the launch crew said on Twitter that “upper-level winds are a potential concern today and we are continuing to monitor.”

Relativity Space’s next launch attempt has not yet been set, but it will take at least two days for teams to replenish propellants at Cape Canaveral Launch Complex 16, reported Florida Today, part of the USA TODAY Network.

Relativity Space:Second attempt at launching world’s first 3D-printed rocket gets scrubbed

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