It's official: our first commercial satellite has a ride to space, courtesy of @SpaceX! This is an important milestone in our mission to triple the satellite internet capacity of Alaska -- and we couldn't be more excited.Read more here: https://medium.com/@johngedmark/launch-with-spacex-3f55960afd59
We’ve reserved a ride on a SpaceX Falcon 9 with a launch window at Florida’s famed Cape Canaveral starting in the fourth quarter of 2020.This means that Pacific Dataport and Microcom, our Alaska partners, will be able to provide residential and commercial Alaskan customers in even the most remote parts of the state with faster, more affordable and more reliable true broadband internet service by March 2021.
The Astranis sat is very small, will be interesting to find out the launch details. I'm assuming a rideshare.
Gedmark told SpaceNews by email that Astranis’ satellite will be a secondary payload, with SpaceX announcing primary payloads at a later date. Astranis arranged the launch itself, not through a rideshare aggregator like Spaceflight, he said.
https://twitter.com/thesheetztweetz/status/1166875475446247427QuoteUpdate from @SpaceX on its recently announced Smallsat Rideshare program:3 annual missions now, up from 1 per year, after feedback from customers.
Update from @SpaceX on its recently announced Smallsat Rideshare program:3 annual missions now, up from 1 per year, after feedback from customers.
I'm not adding 3 SSO missions a year to the manifest yet until we see these actually start flying as dedicated flights.
Passengers who run into delays that prevent them from launching can apply 100% of monies paid towards the cost of rebooking on a subsequent mission, subject to a 10% rebooking fee.
That’s reasonable but SpaceX is VERY specific:Quarterly SSO rideshares starting next MarchMonthly “mid-inclination” rideshares starting next AprilFully listed thru the end of 2021
Yes, but the rideshare in March is an existing mission, not a dedicated launch...
In addition, SpaceX will also offer traditional rideshare opportunities on existing low Earth orbit missions, with the first mission targeted for March 2020
https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20190909005381/en/"We are delighted to have SpaceX as partners for our historic O3b mPOWER launch, and together, we will extend high-performance connectivity to all who have limited access to it today.”This suggests that it is one launch.
Not a quote but from the very same article: SES announced today that it has selected SpaceX as a launch partner to deliver its next-generation Medium Earth Orbit (MEO) satellite constellation into space on board Falcon 9 rockets from Cape Canaveral.
.@SES_Satellites says it likely will use 2 @SpaceX Falcon 9 rockets to launch the 7 O3b mPower MEO broadband spacecraft - 3 on one, 4 on a second- in 2021. @Arianespace says SES mPower launch procurement was open, but Ariane 5/6 manifest for 2021 is fairly full.
https://mobile.twitter.com/pbdes/status/1171004186923810816
.@SES_Satellites chooses @SpaceX Falcon 9 to launch 'up to seven' O3b mPower MEO-orbit broadband satellites starting in 2021. Unclear how many 1,700-kg O3b mPower sats will go on each Falcon 9.