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Sat, Dec 17, 2005

SpaceX Will Try Again Monday With Falcon 1 Launch

They'd REALLY Like To Be Off Omelek By Christmas...

Officials at El Segundo, CA-based SpaceX have told Aero-News the company plans to launch its Falcon 1 rocket on Monday, December 19 at 11 am PST (7 p.m. GMT). The two-stage Falcon 1 rocket -- powered by liquid oxygen and purified, rocket grade kerosene -- is expected to accelerate to 17,000 mph (25 times the speed of sound) in less than ten minutes.

We're really keeping our fingers crossed this time,  as last month's initial launch attempt was grounded by a number of issues -- not the least of which seems to have been a double shot of bad luck. As previously reported by Aero-News, an uncommanded computer reboot followed by a mis-set LOX valve conspired to scrub the planned November 26 launch from Omelek Island in the Kwajalein Atoll.

The last issue caused precious liquid oxygen to leak out of the rocket, which required a new batch of fuel -- colorfully referred to by SpaceX founder Elon Musk last week as "a double s*load" -- to be sent by barge to the mid-Pacific island. As a backup (and likely at least, in part, to give staffers stuck on the remote island something to do) SpaceX crewmembers also got the island's LOX production facility up and running again, as well.

Musk, who has much of his net worth (earned from previous ventures, including founding Zip2 and a little company known as PayPal) tied into the SpaceX project, maintained a positive -- and realistic -- outlook on the ordeal, reminding ANN "[a]s I warned, the likelihood of an all new rocket launching from an all new launch pad on its first attempt is low."

The customer for SpaceX's first mission is DARPA and the Air Force. The payload aboard the rocket will be FalconSat-2, part of the Air Force Academy’s satellite program that will measure space plasma phenomena, which can adversely affect space-based communications, including GPS and other civil and military communications. The target orbit is 400 km X 500 km (just above the International Space Station) at an inclination of 39 degrees.

Designed from the ground up by SpaceX, Falcon 1 is a two stage rocket powered by liquid oxygen and purified, rocket grade kerosene. On launch day, Falcon 1 will launch into the history books for several notable reasons:

  • It will be the first privately developed, liquid fueled rocket to reach orbit and the world's first all new orbital rocket in over a decade.
  • The main engine of Falcon 1 (Merlin) will be the first all new American hydrocarbon engine for an orbital booster to be flown in forty years and only the second new American booster engine of any kind in twenty-five years.
  • The Falcon 1 is the only rocket flying 21st century avionics, which require a small fraction of the power and mass of other systems.
  • It will be the world's only semi-reusable orbital rocket apart from the Shuttle.
  • Most importantly, Falcon 1, priced at $6.7 million, will provide the lowest cost per flight to orbit of any launch vehicle in the world, despite receiving a design reliability rating equivalent to that of the best launch vehicles currently flying in the United States.

SpaceX tells Aero-News the company will offer still photos and a video feed of the Monday launch on the SpaceX website, available through the FMI link below, within hours of Falcon 1's trip into space. Start rubbing those rabbit feet now...

FMI: www.spacex.com

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