Falcon Heavy: USSF-44 spysat (+ 2 others)


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Falcon Heavy will be flexing its muscles a bit; three direct to geostationary satellites at once. No GTO (geostationary transfer orbit), straight to 35,785 km (22,236 miles).

 

USSF-44: a US spysat

 

Aurora 4A: a commercial commsat

 

TETRA-1: a tech demo microsat built by Boeing's Millennium Space Systems [read: Boeing Phantom Works] for USSF's Space and Missile Systems Center’s Space Enterprise Consortium

 

Date: October 9, 2021
Time: TBA
Pad: LC-39A
Recovery: 2 boosters on Just Read the Instructions and A Shortfall of Gravitas
Orbit: direct insertion to geosynchronous orbit

 

Bring yer popcorn

 

Aurora 4A

https://www.anchoragepress.com/news/new-telecom-satellite-for-alaska-on-schedule-for-launch-next-summer-will-provide-broadband-high/article_3c355424-0dad-11eb-8f93-0feaade192f0.html

 

TETRA-1

https://www.satellitetoday.com/government-military/2020/04/24/u-s-space-forces-tetra-1-satellite-is-ready-for-launch/

 

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really looking forward to this one. Will it be the regular fairing or using the new extended one? Any changes to the 'second' stage to get it straight to geostationary?

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On 25/09/2021 at 01:58, bguy_1986 said:

I also want to make sure I read/understood this right because I'm an idiot...haha.  Center core isn't being recovered?

No it’s to be expended. This is going to be a really high power launch, that’s why there will be two recovery ships out at sea for the side boosters, there means there won’t be one for the main stage and it will be going too fast to slow down.

 

Anyone know how much this launch is costing compared to a fully recovered FH? I presume we won’t see any centre stages land now to be honest.

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On 25/09/2021 at 03:14, anthdci said:

>

Anyone know how much this launch is costing compared to a fully recovered FH? I presume we won’t see any centre stages land now to be honest.

 

A fully expended new Falcon Heavy is about $150m + launch services like fuelling the payload,  storage, etc.

 

An expended center core w/recovered boosters FH launch is about $90m + launch services, and can deliver about 90% of the full expended performance (57.4t to LEO vs 63.8t).

 

This launch having a Space Force primary payload, they likely asked for extra margins hence the expense of the center core.

 

"Lower energy" launches, like tossing a car into the asteroid belt 😂, with lower margins could see the boosters land at LZ-1/2 and the center core on a droneship.

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On 24/09/2021 at 15:20, anthdci said:

really looking forward to this one. Will it be the regular fairing or using the new extended one? Any changes to the 'second' stage to get it straight to geostationary?

 

Most likely a standard fairing.

 

The extended fairing will be for the really big DoD spy birds, launching 2 Lunar Gateway modules at once, etc. and those will need the LC-39A mobile vertical integration tower, which hasn't been built yet. They're preparing the pad & infrastructure, and building the segments off-site.

 

Pad-39A-mobile-service-tower-renders-SpaceX-Falcon-Heavy-stretched-fairing-1.thumb.jpg.5bf5dda0ee1fca695c8f67d6424dd0c9.jpg

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  • 2 weeks later...
  • 1 year later...

Falcon Heavy is on the transporter in the hanger.  Over 5 million lbf {22.82 mega-Newtons} of thrust waiting to be unleashed, equal to 18 747s at full throttle.

 

 

20221023_210436.thumb.jpg.6cb789334d64222bc6609625e84b63f2.jpg

Edited by DocM
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According to SpaceFlightNow...

 

Quote

Oct. 31Falcon Heavy • USSF 44

Launch time: 1344 GMT (9:44 a.m. EDT)
Launch site: LC-39A, Kennedy Space Center, Florida

A SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket will launch the USSF 44 mission for the U.S. Space Force. The mission is expected to deploy two spacecraft payloads directly into geosynchronous orbit, one of which is the military’s TETRA 1 microsatellite. The Falcon Heavy’s two side boosters will land at Landing Zone 1 and 2 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, and the core stage will be expended. Delayed from late 2020, 2nd quarter of 2021, July 2021, and October 2021 by payload issues. Delayed from early 2022 and June 2022. Delayed from Oct. 28. [Oct. 21]

https://spaceflightnow.com/launch-schedule/

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On 05/11/2022 at 15:48, FloatingFatMan said:

So, why has it been 3 years since they flew the Heavy?  I thought they wanted several launches of this per year?

 

Many of the early scheduled payloads for FH are US military and NRO spy satellites, and those have been delayed because of payload problems or changes.

NASA payloads were also delayed. One launch is the PPE-HALO sections for the Lunar Gateway mini-space station in a high lunar orbit.  PPE is the Power and Propulsion Element and HALO the Habitation and Logistics Outpost.  They were designed to be launched as separate parts, but Falcon Heavy has so much performance they decided to launch them together as a single unit. This too required changes, and they decided to add a few bells and whistles while they were at it.

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