South Korea will launch its first military satellite in November, as part of offset arrangements with Lockheed Martin in purchasing F-35A stealth fighter jets, a spokesman at the Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA) said Thursday."Lockheed Martin is going to provide a military communications satellite to the South Korean government as an offset offering for the South's introduction of its F-35A Lightning II jets," he said.The satellite for the Republic of Korea (ROK) Army will be launched in November from an airbase in Florida.The military has so far shared the use of Korea's Mugunghwa-5 civilian satellite launched in 2006, under a military communication system named ANASIS that enables communication for a 6,000 kilometer radius around the Korean Peninsula.
Is this one of the 5-8 unlisted missions Shotwell was talking about?
"An airbase in Florida" would bei SLC-40, but SpaceX listed it today only for "Florida launch site", which as well could be LC-39A.
Quote from: PM3 on 05/23/2019 06:31 am"An airbase in Florida" would bei SLC-40, but SpaceX listed it today only for "Florida launch site", which as well could be LC-39A.If a flight isn't for Commercial Crew or launching on Falcon Heavy, then it's probably going to launch from SLC-40.
39A is for government and heavy launches primarily.
And two others were conducted from LC-39A for some reason I'm not aware of.
Quote from: gongora on 05/23/2019 04:34 pmQuote from: PM3 on 05/23/2019 06:31 am"An airbase in Florida" would bei SLC-40, but SpaceX listed it today only for "Florida launch site", which as well could be LC-39A.If a flight isn't for Commercial Crew or launching on Falcon Heavy, then it's probably going to launch from SLC-40.39A is gonna spend a lot of time unused if it's relegated to Crew and Heavy launches alone. Unlikely that it would ever get above ~6 launches annually, which would mean that 39A is only operating at ~1/4th its actual capacity. Given that it apparently takes only a few days to a week at most to change configurations and that the Crew config can probably support non-Dragon F9 launches, there's no good reason to assume that SpaceX wont use both pads somewhat interchangeably.Plus, just from a practical perspective, Crew Dragon's failure means that 39A will have at least 3-6 months of downtime this year, if not more.
SpaceflightNow has listed it in the late April timeframe. https://spaceflightnow.com/launch-schedule/
Meanwhile, Pietrobon,http://www.sworld.com.au/steven/space/uscom-man.txtlists it as 4th week of April.Suspect that could be quite tentative, so don't blame me if it is wrong.