Spaceflight Purchases SpaceX Falcon 9 Rocket to Provide
More Frequent, Cost-Effective Rideshare Availability for
Small Satellite Industry
Sept. 30, 2015
Spaceflight announced the purchase of
a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and the expansion of its launch
services to include dedicated rideshare missions. Spaceflight's
first dedicated rideshare mission, named the "2017 Sun Synch
Express," will launch in the second half of 2017 to a
sun-synchronous low Earth orbit which is popular for earth
imaging satellites.
Dedicated rideshare is a new launch
alternative that blends cost-effective rideshare pricing with
first-class service typically associated with buying a private
rocket. Spaceflight's dedicated rideshare missions will deliver
customer spacecraft to popular destinations, such as
sun-synchronous and geosynchronous transfer orbits, and provide
a new solution for smaller satellites that cannot afford a
complete launch vehicle.
"By purchasing and manifesting the
entire SpaceX rocket, Spaceflight is well positioned to meet the
smallsat industry's growing demand for routine, reliable access
to space," said
Curt Blake, President of
Spaceflight's launch business. "Our purchase of a private rocket
further continues our mission of providing a customer-focused,
full-service launch experience."
Spaceflight's dedicated rideshare
routes are not tied to any particular primary satellite mission,
so commercial and non-commercial smallsat operators using the
service will benefit from the certainty of set launch schedules
that were not previously available to rideshare customers, and
can thereby avoid delays resulting from geo-political issues or
primary satellite schedule changes. This enables customers with
spacecraft that range in mass from 5 to 2500 kg to create
long-range mission plans to
Sun Synch and GTO with more
dependable launch dates. Spaceflight is creating steady access
to space with yearly dedicated rideshare missions planned
beginning in 2017.
Spaceflight's 2017 Sun Synch Express
mission manifest includes satellites as small as 5 kg 3U CubeSat
up to 575 kg satellite. Over 20 satellites will be deployed
during the mission, with commercial customers pursuing a range
of endeavors and government-sponsored scientific research
originating from six different countries. The manifest is nearly
at capacity.
"Dedicated missions for
Rideshare-class payloads are an excellent way to promote space
enterprise and research," said
Gwynne Shotwell, President
and COO of SpaceX. "We are pleased that Spaceflight has
successfully brought this multi-faceted partnership together."
Spaceflight has launched 81 satellites
to date and has over 135 satellites to deploy through 2018. The
frequency of satellite launches, combined with Spaceflight's
cross-section of customers and variety of mission-applications,
is a strong indicator of the growing capabilities of small
satellites and the need for more timely and cost-effective
access to space.