
Spacex is preparing to launch its first Falcon 9 Rocket of the Month and its first Starlink flight, as it is reportedly reaching 5 million customers for satellite internet service.
The lift of Starlink 12-20 mission at Cape Canveral Space Force Station has been scheduled for EST (3 March 0224 UTC) at the lift of 12-20 mission on Sunday, March 2, 9:24. This will launch the 26th Falcon 9 rocket of SpaceX.
Spaceflight will now start live coverage about an hour before the liveoff.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=599svl_-sv8
Falcon 9 First Stage Booster will use B1086 to launch the SpaceX mission. This Falcon will fly for the fifth time after launching a side booster on Heavy Go-U mission and then as Falcon 9 boosters for the third pair of Maxer’s world artery legend satellites and two starlink missions.
Eight minutes after the liftoff, the B1086 will target a landing on the SpaceX droneship, ‘Read the bus instructions.’ If successful, it will be 112th booster landing on JRTI and 415th booster landing to date.
Among the 21 Starlink satellites on the board, there are 13 that offer directly to cell capabilities. To date, Spacex has launched more than 500 of these DTC capable satellites.
Starlink published a short video in its X account, marked a 5 million subscriber milestone, but now the video appearing was not original. The first version of the published video included an image in the 39-second mark, which was speculated that the official version of the Starlink was an image of two Starsild satellites.
All the missions of the Proliferedeted Architecture Nakshatra of the National Recharging Office, allegedly populated by these starsled satellites, features the features that do not deliberately show the moment of satellite purpose.
If the removable video now has two satellites Starshild, it will be the first known images of these satellites. Spacex has not issued a statement for the reason that it has taken the original video down or it has swapped that image for a clip of Starlink Satellite Perinogen.
Starlink is adding more than 5m people with high -speed internet to 125 countries, regions and many other markets.
Thank you all our customers around the world! → → https://t.co/ZR6W4T1QM9 pic.twitter.com/pgjnzaiifm
– Starlink (@Sstarlink) 28 February, 2025
Launch delay
Meanwhile, at the Wandenberg Space Force Base in California, SpaceX is still working through an unlike issue associated with Falcon 9 rocket set to launch NASA’s Sphrex and Panch Spacecraft.
The mission was originally scheduled to launch on 27 February, but now the rocket is delayed three times.
In its latest blog update, NASA announced that the mission will not launch earlier compared to Tuesday, March 4. The agency said that “teams need additional time to evaluate launch vehicle hardware data.”
Spherex (spectro-photometer for the history of the universe, Epoch of Reionization and ICES Explorer) will conduct an all-ski spectral survey of the sky on a planned two-year mission. The punch (polemimeter to unite the corona and heliosfare) is a collection of four satellites, which, according to NASA, will form a 3D observation of the entire internal heliosfare to find out how the sun’s corona becomes solar wind.