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A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with 27 Starlink satellites starts on June 28, 2025 by Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. | Credit: SpaceX
One up, one to go: SpaceX started the first of two Starlink missions on Saturday (June 28th).
A Falcon 9 rocket with 27 of the broadband internet satellites, which was canceled at 12:26 p.m. Edt from Space Launch Complex 40 at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. The newcomers for SpaceX’s Megaconstellation (group 10-34) reached a low floating lane about 9 minutes after leaving the floor and were on the right track to be used about 50 minutes later.
In the meantime, the first stage of the Falcon Rocket (Booster B1092) flew back into the drunship “a lack of gravitas”, which landed safely for the fifth time.
The first stage of SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket is on a DRON-based DRON-based ocean after he brought to the Low Earth orbit on June 28, 2025. | Credit: SpaceX
Booster 1092 missions
CRS-32 | Nrol-69 | GPS III 7 | 2 Starlink missions
The Starlink start in the early morning is the second of these flight spaceex plans to drive on Saturday. At 12:47 p.m. EDT (1643 GMT), the company planned a second mission to send 26 more relay satellites from the Space Launch Complex-41e on the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California.
If this second start is continued as planned, the Starlink network from SpaceX will exist. The 7,900 count of active satellites will exist, says Satellite Tracker Jonathan McDowell.