The airplane took 118 hours to cross from Japan to Hawaii in the most perilous leg of its goal to circumnavigate the globe without a drop of fuel.
The flight last week saw Swiss pilot Andre Borschberg smash a record for the longest solo plane flight. But the historic journey also took its toll on the aircraft's batteries, grounding it for repairs until at least August.
Too much insulation caused the plane's battery temperature to spike on the first day of the flight and there was no way to cool it after Solar Impulse was off the ground, the aircraft's team said.
"Solar Impulse does not see the possibility for any flights before 2-3 weeks at the earliest."
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The crew said it's looking for ways to improve cooling as it gets ready to tackle the last five stretches of the 13-leg journey.
Solar Impulse 2 took off from the United Arab Emirates earlier this year in its around-the-world journey powered by 17,000 solar cells and on-board rechargeable lithium batteries, allowing it to fly through the night.