Y'all... Block 2 Starship really hits different. I can *not* wait to see this thing in the air. @NASASpaceflight pic.twitter.com/qK6ytD38LN
— Jack Beyer (@thejackbeyer) January 10, 2025
Y'all... Block 2 Starship really hits different. I can *not* wait to see this thing in the air. @NASASpaceflight pic.twitter.com/qK6ytD38LN
— Jack Beyer (@thejackbeyer) January 10, 2025
Flight 7 full tanking test (wet dress rehearsal) complete tonight. Lots learned and lots of data to work through this weekend. But only a few things left before flight test. Starship V2 wants to fly!
— Shana Diez (@ShanaDiez) January 11, 2025
The sea could still be out-of-limits for tonight's launch attempt. @Windycom is forecasting 20 knots, gusting 32kt, 4.1 metre (13.5ft) waves at the opening of the window, settling down slightly towards the end.
— Ryan Caton (@dpoddolphinpro) January 11, 2025
A 24 hour delay to Monday morning would see 9kt winds, gusting 14kt,… https://t.co/2rfLpYJlNY
A timeline for the Blue Origin New Glenn launch, scheduled for Sunday between 1-4am EST. pic.twitter.com/S5Oyp6NKx4
— Jeff Foust (@jeff_foust) January 11, 2025
The 7th Flight of Starship is scheduled to fly next week, as early as 13th of January 2025. This time a whole new, slightly taller Starship will fly, let's see what changed visually:
— Boca Bingo (@BingoBoca) January 11, 2025
Link to the Infographic in the comments below!
S33:
- The height increased from 50.3m to 52.1m… pic.twitter.com/kz1sACQvLp
Now targeting Wednesday, January 15 for the seventh flight test of Starship → https://t.co/QNCSPTdYW2 pic.twitter.com/xz8eNkfV0T
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) January 12, 2025
There will probably be another 10m added to the Starship stack before we increase diameter https://t.co/SVIfkZHNet
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 12, 2025
Bert315 said:
I would take a Friday at 4pm launch. Will be on a flight back to Houston and based on flight time might be able to see launch from plane.
I was in a meeting where a large defense/space contractor was discussing their launch trade study and the constraints each vehicle would put on their new project. Fairing size was a key driver for them more-so than mass.bthotugigem05 said:
Mass to LEO is closer to Falcon Heavy than Starship.
Ariane 6 w/4 boosters: 21650kg
Vulcan: 27200kg
New Glenn: 45000kg
Falcon Heavy Outer Cores Recovered: 57000kg
Falcon Heavy Fully Expended: 63800kg
Starship (estimated): 50000-100000kg
The big difference between NG and Falcon is the diameter, since NG is not transported on land.
Falcon: 3.7m
Ariane 6: 5.4m
Vulcan: 5.4m
New Glenn: 7m
Starship: 9m
Starship, once fully and rapidly reusable, kind of resets the commercial space launch industry, but until then New Glenn can take missions that no other launch vehicle can take.
After left-wing activists & the Italian media, a French MP is now trying to block the Starlink deal with the Italian government.
— DogeDesigner (@cb_doge) January 12, 2025
Starlink can provide Italy with the most secure & advanced connectivity. These people want this deal blocked because of their hatred toward Elon Musk. pic.twitter.com/DPkl90WovV
Space-X could probably produce an expendable Starship variant with a 9m faring in a few months but that sort of defeats the purpose of having a fully reusable launch system. If the market is large enough, I'm sure they'll do it.Kansas Kid said:
Knowing Musk and his companies, if New Glenn has commercial advantages, they won't last long before they innovate and reclaim the top spot.
New Glenn is also hyping their ability to go straight from launch to TLI without having to refuel in space. If you want to do it in one launch, New Glenn is it. But if you are willing to use multiple launches to refuel starship, the payload mass and cost hugely favor Starship (once Spacex proves out their refueling in space capability).bthotugigem05 said:
Mass to LEO is closer to Falcon Heavy than Starship.
Ariane 6 w/4 boosters: 21650kg
Vulcan: 27200kg
New Glenn: 45000kg
Falcon Heavy Outer Cores Recovered: 57000kg
Falcon Heavy Fully Expended: 63800kg
Starship (estimated): 50000-100000kg
The big difference between NG and Falcon is the diameter, since NG is not transported on land.
Falcon: 3.7m
Ariane 6: 5.4m
Vulcan: 5.4m
New Glenn: 7m
Starship: 9m
Starship, once fully and rapidly reusable, kind of resets the commercial space launch industry, but until then New Glenn can take missions that no other launch vehicle can take.
LIVE NOW: Tune in to watch the NG-1 webcast https://t.co/WQR7sJIU6I
— Blue Origin (@blueorigin) January 13, 2025
bthotugigem05 said:
Now saying 2:07am EST.