On This Day in History / January 14, 2025 1999: The National Air and Space Administration delayed the first X-33 flight for 18 months, following the failure of its liquid hydrogen tank. This action basically ended the development of the single-stage-to-orbit X-33 project at Edwards AFB, Calif., as a Space Shuttle replacement.The Lockheed Martin X-33 was a proposed uncrewed, sub-scale technology demonstrator suborbital spaceplane that was developed for a period in the 1990s. The X-33 was a technology demonstrator for the VentureStar orbital spaceplane, which was planned to be a next-generation, commercially operated reusable launch vehicle. The X-33 would flight-test a range of technologies that NASA believed needed for single-stage-to-orbit reusable launch vehicles (SSTO RLVs), such as metallic thermal protection systems, composite cryogenic fuel tanks for liquid hydrogen, the aerospike engine, autonomous (uncrewed) flight control, rapid flight turn-around times through streamlined operations, and its lifting body aerodynamics.