SpaceX Conducts Static
Test Firing of Next Falcon 1 Rocket
Space Exploration Technologies Corp.
successfully conducted a full launch dress
rehearsal and hold down firing of the Falcon 1
Flight 3 vehicle on June 25, 2008 (Marshall
Island Time) on Omelek Island, SpaceX’s launch
site at the Kwajalein Atoll. This test is the
final step before launch of the Falcon 1 rocket.
This marks the first launch
pad firing of SpaceX’s new Merlin 1C
regeneratively cooled engine, which operated at
full power with only the hold-down system
restraining the rocket from flight. In the
coming weeks, SpaceX will conduct a thorough
review of all data prior to the opening of the
launch window for flight, which runs from late
July through early September.
“We are definitely not tied
to the clock for this launch, and we are
checking and crosschecking every aspect of the
vehicle and ground systems to ensure a
successful mission,” said Elon Musk, CEO and CTO
of SpaceX. “Our primary concerns remain the
safety and reliability of our vehicle, and the
successful delivery of the Defense Department
and NASA satellites to orbit.”
During launch, SpaceX will
use the extensive range safety, tracking and
telemetry services provided by the Reagan Test
Site (RTS) at the United States Army Kwajalein
Atoll (USAKA) in the Central Pacific. RTS will
be closed for the national Fourth of July
holiday, and resumes operations on 24 July. The
next launch window opens 29 July and runs
through 6 August, followed by one from 29 August
to 5 September.
The Falcon 1 will carry the
Trailblazer satellite for the Jumpstart Program
of the Department of Defense’s Operationally
Responsive Space Office (ORS). Additional
secondary payloads include an adapter system
developed by the government of Malaysia that
holds two small NASA satellites.