SpaceX's Falcon Heavy is about to launch again making NASA crazily…



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SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy is about to launch again making NASA crazily…
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SpaceX Falcon Heavy

Space fans are definitely looking forward to SpaceX Starship’s first orbital flight in March. It’s bound to happen sooner or later, I don’t know! But before that, we also have an equally spectacular launch of Falcon Heavy on April 8.
That launch will send ViaSat-3, the first in a trio of high-capacity Geostationary Orbit (GEO) satellites for Viasat. The satellite has completed construction and testing after what Visat described as a “long, painstaking process.”
The ViaSat-3 class of Ka-band satellites is expected to provide vastly superior capabilities in terms of service speed and flexibility for a satellite platform. The first two satellites will focus on the Americas and on Europe, the Middle East, and Africa (EMEA), respectively, with the third satellite planned for the Asia Pacific (APAC) region, completing Viasat’s global service coverage. Each ViaSat-3 class satellite is expected to deliver more than 1 terabit per second of network capacity, and to leverage high levels of flexibility to dynamically direct capacity to where customers are located.
The FCC filing for the ViaSat-3 Falcon Heavy launch had been published, and it reveals that the Falcon Heavy will be FULLY EXPENDED. “The center core and both side core boosters are all expendable with a water landing.”
SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy is about to launch again making NASA crazily…
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32 thoughts on “SpaceX's Falcon Heavy is about to launch again making NASA crazily…”

  1. NASA should no longer be developing launch vehicles and paying for their research and development. They should do what was being done in the competition between the F16 and F17 or even the F22 and F23. Put out specifications needed to be met by a launch vehicle and let private industry compete to see who builds it better and faster. Government can never do Better, Cheaper, Faster. You only get 2 out of the 3 no matter what you try. Innovative private industry will try new and as space x has proven, efficient ways of accomplishing the goal.

    Reply
  2. This is how life goes. Sometimes one just bets on the wrong horse.

    That said NASA did have a great success with JWST, albeit a bit delayed and over budget but it is working well and taking amazing imagery and such.

    Reply
  3. Unfortunately this episode is not new. I have seen it earlier before. Nevertheless an amazing production though. It's good for spacex to launch more rockets and good for Nasa to aim at producing satellites.

    Reply
  4. NASA Definitely Needs To Scrap The Space Launch System And Also The Orion Space Craft To, NASA Would Save Billions Of Dollars Every Year For Other Space Mission's In The Solar System, SpaceX Are The Future Of Manned Space Exploration, Back To The Moon And The First Man Mission To Mars.🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀

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  5. Viasat? Ye gads. That's throwing good money after bad in a big way, unless they're switching to something other than Internet "service". Unless somebody has figured-out that Star Trek subspace thing to make signals faster than light, geostationary relay Internet sucks by its very nature. That's why people who can't get ground-line service are getting in line for Starlink, despite its price.

    Oh well… Glad SpaceX can make a buck on this folly.

    Reply
  6. Your thoughts on the current controlled extraterrestrial reality disclosure process and related US GOV cover-up? When the contagious giggling subsides, how will our civilization adapt to this publicly known reality?

    What might be some of the potential implications of disclosure of this reality? New energy sources perhaps? Religions? History?

    Do we really want to know the full truth?

    Reply
  7. A minor mistake in your narration. At 7:09 you said there was a 3-year delay with SLS but if the original launch was planned for 2017 and it didn't launch until 2022, that would make it a 5-year delay, correct?

    Reply

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