First SpaceX flight from Launch Complex 39A slated for Feb. 18 – SpaceFlight Insider

Bart Leahy

February 8th, 2017

SpaceX Falcon 9 lifts off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Stations Space Launch Complex 40 with NASAs CRS-6 mission to the International Space Station on April 14, 2015. Photo Credit: SpaceX

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. The launch of aSpaceXFalcon 9 rocket with NASAsCargo Resupply Services10 (CRS-10) mission is now targeted forFeb. 18. The launch of the cargo variant of SpaceXs Dragon spacecraft is expected to mark the rebirth ofone of KSCs most iconic launch sites LC-39A.

Some 4,473 pounds (2,029 kilograms) of pressurized and 2,154 pounds (977 kilograms) of unpressurized cargo will be aboard the CRS-10 Dragon capsule bound forthe International Space Station (ISS). It will take to the skies during an instantaneous (one second long) launch window.

While any number of factors could have caused the launch to be set for this date, a report appearing on Universe Today suggestsit was due to the mission having not receivedits Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) license.

Previously, on Jan. 30, the NewSpace companydecidedto change the order of its launch manifest to move CRS-10 before to the launch of the EchoStar 23 communications satellite.

A SpaceX statement stated: This schedule change allows time for additional testing of ground systems ahead of the CRS-10 Mission The launch vehicles, Dragon, and the EchoStar satellite are all healthy and prepared for launch.

This will be thefirst launch from LC-39A since the final Space Shuttle mission, STS-135, in July 2011. In 2014, the NewSpace firm signed a 20-year lease on the complex. Since then, it has been modifying it to be able to process and launch Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rockets.

Changes to LC-39A include the addition of a horizontal integration facility (HIF), a rail system to carry rockets from the HIF to the pad, and a Transporter Erector (TE) attached to the top of the pad.

CRS-10 will also mark SpaceXs first launch from the East Coast since the Sept. 1, 2016,launch pad explosionat Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station just south of Kennedy Space Center. That accident saw the complete loss of the Falcon 9 launch vehicle, the $195 million Amos 6 satellite, and the destruction of much of the launch service equipment at SLC-40.

SpaceFlight Insider reached out to both NASA and SpaceX in order to confirm the new launch date. SpaceX responded with the following: Our current guidance is NET mid-February. Before that, it was NET February [].

On Feb. 8, 2017, the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS) held a teleconference, during which it was stated that the launch would take place on Friday, Feb. 17. Shortly thereafter, SpaceX issued a tweet stating that they were targeting Feb. 18.

Tagged: CRS-10 Falcon 9 Launch Complex 39A Lead Stories SpaceX

Bart Leahy is a freelance technical writer living in Orlando, Florida. Leahy's diverse career has included work for The Walt Disney Company, NASA, the Department of Defense, Nissan, a number of commercial space companies, small businesses, nonprofits, as well as the Science Cheerleaders.

Here is the original post:

First SpaceX flight from Launch Complex 39A slated for Feb. 18 - SpaceFlight Insider

Related Posts

Comments are closed.