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SR space: 18.5 m 390: N/A 310 to SSO N/A Vostochny, Yasny: TBA Cyclone-4M Ukraine: Yuzhnoye Yuzhmash: 38.7 m 5,000 [155] 1,000 [156] 3,350 to SSO [155] Expendable: Nova Scotia: 2025 [157] Dauntless United States: Vaya Space: 35 m 1,100 [158] N/A 600 to SSO Expendable: CCSFS, The Spaceport Company Launch Platform 2026 [158] Daytona I United ...
Falcon Heavy (FH) is a super heavy lift space launch vehicle designed and manufactured by SpaceX. The Falcon Heavy is a variant of the Falcon 9 launch vehicle comprising three Falcon 9 first stages: a reinforced center core, and two additional side boosters. All three boosters are capable of being recovered and reused, although most flights use ...
Falcon Heavy USA: SpaceX: 63,800 ... first stage recovery via ocean landing ... (Space Shuttle)
Gravity Space Falcon Heavy was originally slated to launch the Viasat-2 satellite, but due to delays an Ariane 5 launch vehicle was used instead. [150] Viasat maintained the launch option and delivered its next Ka-band satellite aboard the Falcon Heavy – this one intended to provide service to the Americas region. Astranis' microGEO satellite ...
In early 2016, considering the busy Falcon 9 launch manifest, it became unclear if the Falcon Heavy would be the first vehicle to launch from Pad 39A, or if one or more Falcon 9 missions would precede a Falcon Heavy launch. [59] In the following months, the Falcon Heavy launch was delayed multiple times and eventually pushed back to February 2018.
Engine Origin Designer Vehicle Status Use Propellant Power cycle Specific impulse (s) [a] Thrust (N) [a] Chamber pressure (bar) Mass (kg) Thrust: weight ratio [b] Oxidiser: fuel ratio
Rockets from the Falcon 9 family have been launched 425 times over 15 years, resulting in 422 full successes (99.29%), two in-flight failures (SpaceX CRS-7 and Starlink Group 9–3), and one partial success (SpaceX CRS-1, which delivered its cargo to the International Space Station (ISS), but a secondary payload was stranded in a lower-than-planned orbit).
Landed at Shuttle Landing Facility Runway 33; Success OTV-7 2 LC-39A, Kennedy Space Center: 29 December 2023 01:07 UTC Falcon Heavy: USSF-52: 356 days, 12 hours, 41 minutes First launch of an X-37B on SpaceX's Falcon Heavy; Fourth flight of second X-37B; First spaceplane beyond low earth orbit in Highly elliptical HEO orbit. [5] Ongoing