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SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket ties turnaround record, nears 1000 Starlink satellites launched


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Posted
 

B1060’s Starlink-14 launch and landing represents the 63rd time SpaceX has successfully landed a Falcon booster, as well as the 55th orbital launch to include a successful booster landing and 43rd mission to use a flight-proven rocket. Including Falcon 1 and Falcon Heavy, Starlink-14 also marked SpaceX’s 100th successful launch since the company’s first success in September 2008.

If all 60 Starlink-14 satellites manage to boost up to their final orbits, SpaceX will soon have a constellation of more than 800 operational communications satellites – perhaps just three launches away from crossing the 1000-satellite mark. Typically averaging a boost of 6 km (3.7 mi) in orbital altitude every day, each batch of Starlink satellites takes approximately 30-60 days to reach their operational orbits and join the rest of the fleet. SpaceX has already indicated that the first public Starlink beta tests will begin to rollout once Starlink-13 satellites are operational – a milestone they will likely cross in November.

 

https://www.teslarati.com/spacex-falcon-9-turnaround-record-tied-1000-starlink-milestone/

Posted

What abt the debris that’s created what will they do ani adagamannaru musk uncle ni musk haters 

Posted
Just now, macha said:

which debris are you talking ani adamanadu Musk...

Space debris those small constellation of satellites have shelf life right what happens to them 

Posted
7 minutes ago, keviinusa said:

What abt the debris that’s created what will they do ani adagamannaru musk uncle ni musk haters 

do you know how many boosters as (space debris) were removed from space by Nasa using Spacex falcons ?

Posted
28 minutes ago, macha said:
 

B1060’s Starlink-14 launch and landing represents the 63rd time SpaceX has successfully landed a Falcon booster, as well as the 55th orbital launch to include a successful booster landing and 43rd mission to use a flight-proven rocket. Including Falcon 1 and Falcon Heavy, Starlink-14 also marked SpaceX’s 100th successful launch since the company’s first success in September 2008.

If all 60 Starlink-14 satellites manage to boost up to their final orbits, SpaceX will soon have a constellation of more than 800 operational communications satellites – perhaps just three launches away from crossing the 1000-satellite mark. Typically averaging a boost of 6 km (3.7 mi) in orbital altitude every day, each batch of Starlink satellites takes approximately 30-60 days to reach their operational orbits and join the rest of the fleet. SpaceX has already indicated that the first public Starlink beta tests will begin to rollout once Starlink-13 satellites are operational – a milestone they will likely cross in November.

 

https://www.teslarati.com/spacex-falcon-9-turnaround-record-tied-1000-starlink-milestone/

Tesla stocks enni konnavu?

 

 

Posted
2 minutes ago, keviinusa said:

Space debris those small constellation of satellites have shelf life right what happens to them 

They are brought back and replaced with new one not let it die in space... only 3% of them fail during launch that  is only concern ...but that is negligible 

Posted
3 minutes ago, macha said:

do you know how many boosters as (space debris) were removed from space by Nasa using Spacex falcons ?

Cheppu macha naak telidu 

Posted
1 minute ago, AndhraneedSCS said:

Tesla stocks enni konnavu?

 

 

unaiee koni... my average is been $78 till 2019 and its $130's been accumulating since 2016... waiting for Spaex IPO

Posted
5 minutes ago, keviinusa said:

Cheppu macha naak telidu 

ok aduguntunavu kada so telling... there were 99 launches so far.. that means average of min 100 boosters and 100 capsule how ever capsules are short lived and burn out in 20 days in atmosphere only    and booster are brought back saving 100 tons of sapce waste back so you can do math now...  how ever companies started utilizing cheaper rockets  services ..now the traffic is accelerating fast... why cant you see brighter side of it...when talking about minute non hazardous things... 

Posted
1 minute ago, macha said:

ok aduguntunavu kada so telling... there were 99 launches so far.. that means average of min 100 boosters and 100 capsule how ever capsules are short lived and burn out in 20 days in atmosphere only    and booster are brought back saving 100 tons of sapce waste back so you can do math now...  how ever companies started utilizing cheaper rockets  services ..now the traffic is accelerating fast... why cant you see brighter side of it...when talking about minute non hazardous things... 

ledu bro those are good but I am not against anything. Whatever the space exploration thing is those things should be addressed as well. I am not sure what orbits they would be placed in but space debris is matter of concern which is in the orbit of ISS too right. I am speaking abt bigger picture. 

Posted
2 minutes ago, keviinusa said:

ledu bro those are good but I am not against anything. Whatever the space exploration thing is those things should be addressed as well. I am not sure what orbits they would be placed in but space debris is matter of concern which is in the orbit of ISS too right. I am speaking abt bigger picture. 

when your talking about SpaceX.. there is no waste which would impact ISS... its learnt SpaceX team is working with the organization who tracks the debris(forgot its name) to clean up the sapce... there should be something soon on it...

Posted
5 minutes ago, macha said:

when your talking about SpaceX.. there is no waste which would impact ISS... its learnt SpaceX team is working with the organization who tracks the debris(forgot its name) to clean up the sapce... there should be something soon on it...

SpaceX is one fascinating company i must in ~10 yrs they did better than what Boeing could do with its vast experience in manned missions 

Posted
4 minutes ago, keviinusa said:

SpaceX is one fascinating company i must in ~10 yrs they did better than what Boeing could do with its vast experience in manned missions 

ya they left boeing in dust.... although they have fair amount of share in Nasa...but the team in Spacex is the brightest ... think about this the average time to produce a engine for starship is 3 days, by end of 3rd day they found more efficient way to integrate into starship ..

Posted
3 minutes ago, macha said:

ya they left boeing in dust.... although they have fair amount of share in Nasa...but the team in Spacex is the brightest ... think about this the average time to produce a engine for starship is 3 days, by end of 3rd day they found more efficient way to integrate into starship ..

Yeah their lean mode of manufacturing awesome. 

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