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SpaceX CRS-7, also known as SpX-7, [1] was a private American Commercial Resupply Service mission to the International Space Station, contracted to NASA, which launched and failed on June 28, 2015. It disintegrated 139 seconds into the flight after launch from Cape Canaveral , just before the first stage was to separate from the second stage. [ 2 ]
CRS-4 (Dragon C106) Success No attempt Expended B1011 v1.1: 7 September 2014: F9-012: AsiaSat 6 / Thaicom 7: Success No attempt Expended [20] B1012 v1.1: 10 January 2015: F9-014: CRS-5 (Dragon C107) Success Failure Destroyed B1013 v1.1: 11 February 2015: F9-015: DSCOVR: Success No attempt Expended B1014 v1.1: 2 March 2015
CRS OA-6: 23 March 2016 - Atlas V; CRS OA-5: 17 October 2016 - Antares 230; CRS OA-7: 18 April 2017 - Atlas V; During August 2015, Orbital ATK disclosed that they had received an extension of the resupply program for four extra missions. These flights enable NASA to cover ISS resupply needs until CRS-2 begins. [29] CRS OA-8E: 12 November 2017.
Rockets from the Falcon 9 family have a success rate of 99.34% and have been launched 458 times over 15 years, resulting in 455 full successes, two in-flight failures (SpaceX CRS-7 and Starlink Group 9–3), one pre-flight failure (AMOS-6 while being prepared for an on-pad static fire test), and one partial failure (SpaceX CRS-1, which delivered its cargo to the International Space Station ...
90.0 minutes PharmaSat Risk Evaluation Satellite (or PRESat ) nanosatellite , for NASA , was about the size of a loaf of bread, weighed about 4.5 kg (9.9 lb) and was constructed in just six months.
Hispasat 30W-6 (formerly Hispasat 1F) is a Spanish communications satellite by Hispasat that launched on a Falcon 9 on March 6, 2018. [3] It is replacing Hispasat 1D at 30° West longitude and will provide service for television, broadband, corporate networks and other telecommunications applications. [ 2 ]
The Dragon Spacecraft Qualification Unit was a boilerplate version of the Dragon spacecraft manufactured by SpaceX.After using it for ground tests to rate Dragon's shape and mass in various tests, SpaceX launched it into low Earth orbit on the maiden flight of the Falcon 9 rocket, on June 4, 2010.
It was the final assessment for the Crew Dragon capsule and Falcon 9 launch system before they would be certified to carry humans into space. [6] Booster B1046.4 and an uncrewed capsule C205 were launched from Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A) on a suborbital trajectory, followed by an in-flight abort of the capsule at max Q and supersonic speed.