Unfortunately, no broadcast from NSF tonight due to no media access from SLD 45.
SpaceX launched its 180th Falcon 9 rocket tonight, and 46th booster of the year, for a cadence of one flight every 6.1 days. This first stage was making its 14th flight, and was a purely commercial mission. The customer received no discount for an "aged" booster. Reuse is real.
Today is the 10th anniversary of the fourth flight of the Falcon 9, and first operational Cargo Dragon mission. It was notable in that the first stage suffered an engine shutdown, but still got Dragon (& Blue Bell ice cream) to orbit. A secondary Orbcomm payload was lost.
Deployment of @Intelsat Galaxy 34 confirmed
VIDEO: SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket transits the 98.9% waxing gibbous moon during this evening’s launch of the Intelsat G-33/G-34 mission
Liftoff! Falcon 9 B1077 Transits the launch of Intelsat Galaxy 33 & 34. A 1 time proven booster and a 14 time proven booster meet face to face!
https://twitter.com/TSKelso/status/1578967610237935616300 x 19800 km, 26.8 degSFN shows the payload mass around 7.3 tons
Falcon 9 launches the @Intelsat G-33/G-34 mission to orbit
Managed to see the jellyfish from Bermuda
Intelsat Announces Successful Launch of Galaxy 33 and Galaxy 34 SatellitesBy INTELSAT CORPORATE COMMUNICATIONSOctober 08, 2022Serving 100 million television customersMCLEAN, Va. – Intelsat, operator of the world’s largest integrated satellite and terrestrial network and leading provider of inflight connectivity, announced the successful launch of Galaxy 33 and Galaxy 34, geosynchronous communications satellites that will ensure service continuity to Intelsat’s North American media customers.The Northrop Grumman-manufactured Galaxy 33 and Galaxy 34 satellites launched aboard SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida at 7:05 p.m. EDT.“Today’s launch demonstrates Intelsat’s long-term commitment to our media customers,” said Intelsat CEO Dave Wajsgras. “The Intelsat Galaxy fleet is the most reliable and efficient media content distribution system in North America, and this investment will provide our customers with a reliable and high-performance technology path for media distribution through the next decade.”Galaxy 33 separated from the vehicle at 7:38 p.m. EDT, and Intelsat confirmed its signal acquisition at 7:43 p.m. EDT. Galaxy 34 separated from the vehicle at 7:43 p.m. EDT, and Intelsat confirmed its signal acquisition at 8:20 p.m. EDT.Galaxy 33 will be the replacement satellite at 133 degrees west once it is in service in early November. The satellite will provide service continuity for distribution to cable headends throughout the United States.Galaxy 34 will replace Galaxy 12 at 129 degrees west once it is in service in late 2022. This satellite will serve as the new restoration payload for Intelsat’s Galaxy cable distribution customers, allowing the previous restoration role at 121 degrees west to be converted to a core cable distribution satellite.Today’s launch continues Intelsat’s Galaxy fleet refresh plan that started with Galaxy 30 in 2020 and carries the first two of a total of seven new Intelsat satellites launching in the next six months.