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Virgin Orbit files for bankruptcy. Richard Branson doesn't have Musk magic. Virgin Orbit launches satellites to orbit, a lucrative biz if you can do it. Unlike the heavy lifters that SpaceX uses, Orbit launched their vehicles from an airplane, not ground. So, there is some fuel savings there, not sure how much.

Regardless the savings, failures will ultimately doom a company, and the recent failure in January (US and UK satellites ended up in ocean) meant the end for this player.
 
My neighbors daughter worked for them and was recently laid off. She said that after January's launch failure, everything dried up. One big difference is payload size, these are very small rockets that don't carry much. Larger rockets can carry multiple payloads that also share the cost, not one like Virgin Orbit's.
 
I thought I had heard on the news that Musk said Starship would launch later in April but maybe that was just late reporting of the April 17 date.

Anyway, yeah, when this sucker flies it is gonna be epic...

1681259080194.png


Cheers!
 
My neighbors daughter worked for them and was recently laid off. She said that after January's launch failure, everything dried up. One big difference is payload size, these are very small rockets that don't carry much. Larger rockets can carry multiple payloads that also share the cost, not one like Virgin Orbit's.

Rocket lab reported last year that they would launch more often if they had more customers.
 
Looks like SpaceX confirmed the Monday morning Starship launch. Also confirmed that both the booster and vehicle will end up landing in water (literally - they're gonna drown!) instead of landing pads or ships.

Meanwhile it looks like the upcoming Falcon Heavy launch window will open for an ~hour at 7:29 p.m. EDT Tuesday, April 18, 2023. Presumably they will attempt to land at least two of the three cores...

Cheers!
 
Looks like SpaceX confirmed the Monday morning Starship launch. Also confirmed that both the booster and vehicle will end up landing in water (literally - they're gonna drown!) instead of landing pads or ships.

Meanwhile it looks like the upcoming Falcon Heavy launch window will open for an ~hour at 7:29 p.m. EDT Tuesday, April 18, 2023. Presumably they will attempt to land at least two of the three cores...

Cheers!
I’m excited about starship!

Next falcon heavy is fully expendable so no landings.
https://www.kennedyspacecenter.com/...-launch-spacex-falcon-heavy-viasat-3-americas
 
Should be exciting. 33 methane-fueled Raptor engines.

Important to note that this is the rocket that will carry humans to the moon in 2025. Americans have not stepped on the moon since Gene Cernan did so in 1972. I was 7 yrs old at the time - no I do not remember the event.

Also important to note that, at this date, it's the vehicle that will take men to mars. Lot's to say about that, but not germane.
 
excited! (I get up with the sun, no alarm needed!)

By the way, I don't see where I signed up for notifications, but this site below will tell you when everything is happening. Pretty nice. The notifications just pop up, I don't have to go looking. There must be a "sign up for notifications" link somewhere.

https://www.spacelaunchschedule.com/
 
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