CREW-10 | UNDOCKING Aug 8, 2025Mission TimelineAll Times ApproximateAugust 8 - 9 Event4:20 p.m. ET | August 8 Dragon Hatch Closure6:05 p.m. ET | August 8 Dragon Autonomously Undocks from the International Space Station6:05 p.m. ET | August 8 Departure Burn 06:10 p.m. ET | August 8 Departure Burn 16:58 p.m. ET | August 8 Departure Burn 27:44 p.m. ET | August 8 Departure Burn 37:39 a.m. PT | August 9 Deorbit Burn7:58 a.m. PT | August 9 Trunk Jettison8:02 a.m. PT | August 9 Nosecone Closed8:29 a.m. PT | August 9 Drogue Parachutes Deploy8:30 a.m. PT | August 9 Main Parachutes Deploy8:33 a.m. PT | August 9 Dragon Splashdown
Friday, Aug. 85:45 p.m. | Undocking coverage of NASA’s SpaceX Crew-10 from the International Space Station. Undocking is scheduled for 6:15 p.m. Stream on NASA+ and Amazon Prime
William Harwood @rocketksc.bsky.socialCrew 10: The Crew Dragon Endurance undocked from the International Space Station's forward port a 6:15pm EDT (2215 UTC) as the spacecraft were flying 260 miles above Jakarta, Indonesia; splashdown off the coast of southern California is planned for 11:33am EDT (1533 UTC) Saturday
William Harwood @rocketksc.bsky.socialCrew 10: The Crew Dragon Endurance's forward Draco thrusters are expected to fire at 10:39:47am EDT (1439 UTC), putting the spacecraft on a trajectory leading to splashdown off the southern California coast at 11:33am EDT (1533 UTC)
William Harwood @rocketksc.bsky.socialCrew 10: The 17m 34s burn will slow the ship by about 257 mph; 43 minutes later, still traveling at about 17,000 mph -- nearly 84 football fields per second -- the ship will slam into the discernible atmosphere for a fiery southwest-to-northeast descent toward splashdown near San Diego
William Harwood @rocketksc.bsky.socialCrew 10: SPLASHDOWN! At 11:33am EDT (1533 UTC)
Jonathan McDowell @planet4589Crew-10 splashdown near 117.7W 32.5N off San Diego at about 1533:20 UTC. NASA TV camera was looking at the jettisoned drogues instead of the Dragon at the time of splash!
HTV-X will launch in October according to today's Crew-10 post splashdown news conference.
CRS SNC-1Launch TimeNET 2025First flight of the Dream Chaser spaceplane....Kennedy SLF Runway 15DC-101 (Tenacity)
From https://nasa-public-data.s3.amazonaws.com/iss-coords/current/ISS_OEM/ISS.OEM_J2K_EPH.txt: SpX-33 Launch 233:07:55:56.000 (August 21 07:55:56 UTC) SpX-33 Docking 234:12:22:48.000 (August 22 12:22 UTC)
Katya Pavlushchenko @katlinegreyA planned #ISS orbit correction was performed today at 4:28 UTC to maintain the station’s orbit altitude. The engines of #ProgressMS30 fired for 647.3 seconds with an impulse of 1 m/s, increasing the average orbit altitude for 1.7 km up to 416.7 km above the Earth.
UPDATED AUGUST 14, 2025...A Falcon 9 will launch the CRS-33 Cargo Dragon resupply mission to the ISS from pad 40 on August 24 at 2:45 a.m. EDT.
August 24 Falcon 9 • CRS-33Launch time: 2:45 a.m. EDT (0645 UTC)Launch site: SLC-40, Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, FloridaA SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will launch a Cargo Dragon spacecraft with more than 5,000 of pounds of science and supplies to the International Space Station. The Dragon flying this mission will include a new propulsion system within the vehicle’s trunk that will allow it to perform a boost of the space station’s orbit. This is a milestone in SpaceX’s development of the ISS Deorbit Vehicle, which will help slowly lower the orbit of the space station at the end of its functional life around the 2030/2031 timeframe. Delayed from Aug. 21.Updated: August 14
At the Crew-11 press conference on July 10th, Spetch confirmed NG-23 is still on track for the fall so the 14th as noted earlier sounds like it's accurate.https://twitter.com/SpaceflightNow/status/1943344760724337023Quote9/ Spetch notes that another Progress spacecraft and NG-23 are launching this fall, with the latter including the first extended Cygnus spacecraft. JAXA will also launch the HTV-X cargo vehicle to the ISS in the fall.
9/ Spetch notes that another Progress spacecraft and NG-23 are launching this fall, with the latter including the first extended Cygnus spacecraft. JAXA will also launch the HTV-X cargo vehicle to the ISS in the fall.
August 24, 2025 06:35 UTСCRS-33 MissionSpaceX is targeting Sunday, August 24 for Falcon 9’s launch of Dragon’s 33rd Commercial Resupply Services (CRS-33) mission to the International Space Station from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. Liftoff is targeted for 2:45 a.m. ET, with a backup launch opportunity available on Monday, August 25 at 2:22 a.m. ET if needed.A live webcast of this mission will begin about 20 minutes prior to liftoff, which you can watch here and on X @SpaceX. You can also watch the webcast on the new X TV app.CRS-33 is the third flight for the Dragon spacecraft supporting this mission, which previously flew CRS-26 and CRS-29 to and from the space station. After an approximate 28-hour flight, Dragon will autonomously dock with the orbiting laboratory on Monday, August 25 at approximately 7:30 a.m. ET.This will be the seventh flight of the first stage booster supporting this mission, which previously launched O3b mPOWER-E, Crew-10, Bandwagon-3, O3b mPOWER-D, and two Starlink missions. Following stage separation, the first stage will land on the A Shortfall of Gravitas droneship, which will be stationed in the Atlantic Ocean.
Quote[16:00] CRS-33 launches "in a couple of weeks", Flight Readiness on Tuesday, and will be the 50th Dragon launch.[33:00] Boost trunk will have 4-5 burns, imparts ~9 m/s Delta-v to ISS.[33:50] Much longer SpaceX mission, Dragon docked "through end of December at least".[35:00] Boost trunk propellent wont affect pressurised supplies up mass.[36:00] Will provide "~3 times more capability" to reboost ISS than Cygnus capsule.
[16:00] CRS-33 launches "in a couple of weeks", Flight Readiness on Tuesday, and will be the 50th Dragon launch.[33:00] Boost trunk will have 4-5 burns, imparts ~9 m/s Delta-v to ISS.[33:50] Much longer SpaceX mission, Dragon docked "through end of December at least".[35:00] Boost trunk propellent wont affect pressurised supplies up mass.[36:00] Will provide "~3 times more capability" to reboost ISS than Cygnus capsule.
2025/8/18The launch schedule for Falcon 9 Block 5 (CRS SpX-33), which will carry the music-composing satellite “RSP-03,” has been rescheduled to 2:45 a.m. (ET) on August 24, 2025.
Sunday, Aug. 242:25 a.m. | Launch coverage of NASA’s SpaceX CRS-33 commercial resupply services mission to the International Space Station. Launch scheduled for 2:45 a.m. Stream on NASA+, Netflix, Amazon Prime, YouTubeMonday, Aug. 256 a.m. | Rendezvous and docking coverage of NASA’s SpaceX CRS-33 commercial resupply services mission to the International Space Station. Docking scheduled for 7:30 a.m. Stream on NASA+, Netflix, Amazon Prime, YouTube
UPDATED AUGUST 22, 2025...A Falcon 9 will launch the Cygnus NG-23 resupply mission to the ISS from pad 40 on September 15 at 6 p.m. EDT. The first stage will land back at the Cape about eight minutes after launch. ...