2014: http://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=32503.msg1346716#msg13467162015: https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=34603.msg1472467#msg14724672016: https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=40231.msg1629673#msg16296732017: https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=43418.msg1764805#msg1764805OTV-5 not counted as "commercial / competitively bid" 2018: https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=43418.msg1895351#msg1895351
Launch Alert 4:58 PM Dec 22, 2019 LAUNCH ALERT Brian Webb [email protected] www.spacearchive.info 2019 December 22 (Sunday) 16:41 PST------------------------------------------------------------ VANDENBERG AFB LAUNCH SCHEDULE All launch dates and times are subject to change. Launch Time/Window Date (PST/PDT) Vehicle Pad/Silo-------- ----------------- ------------- --------MAR Unknown Falcon 9 SLC-4EVehicle will launch the SmallSat Rideshare Mission 1OCT Unknown Falcon 9 SLC-4EVehicle will launch the SmallSat Rideshare Mission 9NOV Unknown Falcon 9 SLC-4EVehicle will launch the Sentinel 6A (Jason-CS) satelliteDEC Unknown Falcon 9 SLC-4EVehicle will launch the SmallSat Rideshare Mission 11The above schedule is a composite of unclassified informationapproved for public release from government, industry, and othersources. It represents the Editor's best effort to produce a schedule,but may disagree with other sources. Details on military launches arewithheld until they are approved for public release. For officialinformation regarding Vandenberg AFB activities, go tohttp://www.vandenberg.af.mil.All launch dates and times are given in Pacific Time using a 24-hourformat similar to military time (midnight = 00:00, 1:00 p.m. = 13:00,11:00 p.m. = 23:00, etc.).The dates and times in this schedule may not agree with those on otheronline launch schedules, including the official Vandenberg AFBschedule because different sources were used, the information wasinterpreted differently, and the schedules were updated at differenttimes.NET: No earlier thanTBD: To be determinedPDT: Pacific Daylight TimePST: Pacific Standard TimeSLC: Space Launch Complex---------------------------------------------------------Copyright 2019, Brian Webb. All rights reserved. No portion of this newsletter may be used without identifying Launch Alert as the source and providing a functioning hyperlink or text that point to (the www.spacearchive.info source)
Nilesat partners with SpaceX to launch Nilesat-301 satellite in 2022by Staff Reporter January 22, 2020 Positioned at 7° West, Nilesat-301 will work with Nilesat-201 to provide Ku-band services for the Middle East and North Africa.Egyptian satellite operator Nilesat has partnered with SpaceX for the launch of Nilesat-301 geostationary communications satellite due in 2022. A contract was sealed between Nilesat and SpaceX in Cairo on Tuesday, the first cooperation between the two companies.
Intuitive Machines confirmed plans Wednesday to launch a commercial lunar lander aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Florida’s Space Coast in 2021 on a mission to deliver multiple payloads to the moon, including up to five science instruments for NASA.The Houston-based company’s first robotic Nova-C lander will carry up to 220 pounds, or 100 kilograms, of payloads to the moon’s surface. Launch and landing are scheduled for July 2021, according to Trent Martin, vice president of aerospace systems at Intuitive Machines....The Nova-C lander will likely launch on a rideshare mission with other spacecraft on the same Falcon 9 rocket, Martin said.“They don’t specify it in that way, but essentially, we’re a primary (payload),” Martin said. “The reason it’s a rideshare is we weigh 1,700 kilograms (about 3,750 pounds), so they have remaining mass available.”...“Depending on their rideshare, they could have someone that goes to GTO and we can do our own TLI, or there’s a possibility they could throw us (directly toward the moon), so we’re protecting for both,” Martin said Wednesday.
In the Third Row Tesla Podcast Part 2 Elon mentions an upcoming retrograde launch. Any idea what that would be?
"How it would look like if SpaceX launch everything form the same pad with 10-15 day intervals"
Finnish startup Aurora Propulsion Technologies signed a contract at the SmallSat Symposium to fly a deorbiting technology demonstration on a Momentus Space Vigoride mission.Aurora plans to send a 1.5-unit cubesat into orbit on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket in December 2020 before riding with Momentus’ Vigoride service to sun-synchronous orbit.
It seems Momentus moved their payload from a Starlink rideshare to the December SSO rideshare.
ELaNa 35Date: October 20, 2020Mission: Space X-21 – Falcon 9, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, FL1 CubeSat Mission scheduled to be deployed PTD-1 - NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, California
2020-late (NET) F9 . . USAF GPS III-5 MEO 4400 C...2021 F9 . . USAF GPS III-6 MEO 4400 C
Quote2020-late (NET) F9 . . USAF GPS III-5 MEO 4400 C...2021 F9 . . USAF GPS III-6 MEO 4400 CThese two starts are not in the SpaceX launch manifest.Are these just options?https://www.spacex.com/missionsTried to search the forum. The search is annoying.