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Relativity Space and
OneWeb sign multi-launch agreement for Terran R
June 30, 2022
Relativity Space has signed a
multi-year, multi-launch Launch Services Agreement
(LSA) with OneWeb. Under the agreement, Relativity
will launch OneWeb’s low Earth orbit (LEO)
satellites on Terran R, the first fully reusable and
entirely 3D printed rocket, starting in 2025. These
launches will support OneWeb’s deployment of its Gen
2 satellite network, which will add capacity and
fresh capabilities to build upon the initial
constellation of 648 satellites that the company is
currently building out.
Terran R will launch OneWeb
missions from Launch Complex 16, Relativity’s site
at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, where the
first entirely 3D printed rocket, Terran 1, is also
set for its first orbital launch this year.
As a medium-heavy lift, fully
reusable launch vehicle made for growing satellite
constellation launch demand and, eventually,
multiplanetary transport, Terran R provides both
government and commercial customers affordable
access to space, in LEO and beyond. With the
addition of its multi-launch agreement with OneWeb,
Relativity has a total of five signed customers for
Terran R, including multiple launches and totalling
more than $1.2B in backlog.
“We are honoured to be chosen
by OneWeb to help launch their Gen 2 constellation,”
said Tim Ellis, Cofounder and CEO of Relativity.
“They have an incredible team, technology, and
momentum as a world leader in satellite connectivity
with hundreds of operational satellites already in
orbit. It is clear that more disruptive launch
capacity is needed in the marketplace. Relativity is
developing Terran R to fill this additional demand.
We cannot wait to plan, execute, and successfully
launch these missions together with OneWeb!”
“We are excited about this
agreement with Relativity, who we’ve long admired as
a true disruptor in the aerospace manufacturing
industry. Relativity will add new capacity to our
launch programme well into the future,” said
Massimiliano Ladovaz, CTO, OneWeb.
Disrupting 60 years of
aerospace manufacturing with 3D printing, autonomous
robotics, and machine learning, Relativity’s
radically simplified supply chain enables the
company to print its rockets with 100x fewer parts
in less than 60 days, compared to industry standards
of 18 months or longer. Since its founding six years
ago, Relativity has developed a new tech stack for
aerospace manufacturing that centres on its Stargate
printers, which are capable of 3D printing Terran 1,
which is an expendable, entirely 3D printed, 110 ft.
tall, 7.5 ft. wide rocket with a three-metre payload
fairing, simultaneously with Terran R – a 20X
larger, fully reusable launch vehicle.
Relativity recently deployed
the fourth generation of Stargate, improving its
prior generation’s print speed by ten times. Located
in the company’s new 1MM+ square-foot factory
headquarters, these new, fourth generation Stargate
printers will allow Relativity to take its
production to new heights, scale, and quality. With
in-process monitoring, Stargate printers can now
analyse the prints in real time, detecting any
quality issues, and using predictive capabilities to
print fuselages to aerospace dimensional tolerances.
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