Next year, SpaceX aims to average one launch every 2.5 days

The rollout of Starlink-for-phones will add new demands to SpaceX’s launch 
schedule.

By STEPHEN CLARK - 10/21/2023  
https://arstechnica.com/space/2023/10/next-year-spacex-aims-to-average-one-launch-every-2-5-days/


Earlier this week, SpaceX launched for the 75th time this year, continuing a 
flight cadence that should see the company come close to 100 missions by the 
end of December.

SpaceX plans to kick its launch rate into a higher gear in 2024.

This will be largely driven by launches of upgraded Starlink satellites with 
the ability to connect directly with consumer cell phones, a service SpaceX 
calls "Starlink Direct to Cell," a company official told Ars this week.

The goal next year is 12 launches per month, for a total of 144 Falcon rocket 
flights.

Like this year, most of those missions will be primarily devoted to launching 
Starlink broadband satellites. So far in 2023, more than 60 percent of SpaceX's 
launches have delivered the company's own Starlink satellites into orbit.

"With our 2 million users, (we) need that constellation refreshed," the SpaceX 
official told Ars on background. "We're also going to look at direct to cell 
communications with Starlink, and that's a key feature that gets added next 
year with those 144 flights."

Here are some numbers. Last year, SpaceX launched 61 missions. In 2021, the 
number was 31. In the last 12 months, SpaceX has launched 88 Falcon rockets, 
plus one test flight of the company's much larger Starship rocket.

SpaceX's success in recovering and reusing Falcon 9 boosters and payload 
fairings has been vital to making this possible. SpaceX has gone past the 
original goal of launching each Falcon 9 booster 10 times before a major 
overhaul, first to 15 flights, and then recently certifying boosters for up to 
20 missions. Technicians can swap out parts like engines, fins, landing legs, 
and valves that malfunction in flight or show signs of wear.

With so many launches planned next year, 20 flights is probably not a stopping 
point. "We might go a little higher," the SpaceX official said.

Engineers have shortened the time needed to reconfigure SpaceX's busiest launch 
pad in Florida to less than four days. SpaceX has also improved the turnaround 
time at its launch pad in California.

Supply chain management isn't as eye-popping as landing rockets on a floating 
platform in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, but it's still important. SpaceX 
is ordering more components from suppliers in bulk and is asking its 
subcontractors to perform more quality inspections in the factory rather than 
SpaceX doing them after the parts are delivered.

Fundamentals of launch

"You can't increase that kind of number by just adding more bodies or extra 
shifts of work," the SpaceX official said. "You've got to fundamentally change 
the way you do business. You've got to fundamentally increase first pass yield, 
so there's less inspection needed later. The hardware is built more reliable 
from the get-go, so it's ready to go fly. It's forcing a ton of innovation into 
SpaceX that we would not do in any other way if we weren't driven by that 
flight rate."

>From the outside, it can seem like SpaceX is rushing to each launch. But 
>SpaceX says there's automation at every step, from launch processing to 
>countdown operations, to post-flight data reviews, where engineers look for 
>near-misses that may be harbingers of reliability concerns. Also, getting most 
>of the rocket back after each flight allows for detailed inspections to catch 
>little problems before they become big ones.

"I see the fight rate can only occur if I can increase reliability, so that 
they're not competing entities," the SpaceX official said. "So we end up with 
actually a safer system, more reliable system to enable that flight rate. It's 
a really cool thing to be challenged to do that, and we're building all kinds 
of electronic processes and tools, techniques and ways to communicate within 
the company to actually make that a reality, to fly those 12 flights each 
month."

Aside from Starlink, there may also be a small uptick in SpaceX missions next 
year for external customers, like NASA, the US Space Force, or commercial 
companies. External demand for Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy launches is "steady," 
the official said, but some customers that had launches scheduled for this year 
encountered delays with their satellites, moving them into 2024.

"We saw some customers move out of this year, and some commercial customers 
move into next year," the SpaceX official said. "So that's driving some of the 
demand."


But the big driver is Starlink. SpaceX is rolling out the direct-to-cell 
capability, which it says will allow Starlink satellites to connect with normal 
smartphones, initially with texting coverage.

That will be available to users beginning in 2024, according to SpaceX, 
followed by voice and data services in 2025.

SpaceX says the Starlink-for-phones service "works with existing LTE phones 
wherever you can see the sky. No changes to hardware, firmware, or special apps 
are required, providing seamless access to text, voice, and data."

That would put Starlink in a different paradigm from legacy satellite phone 
companies, like Iridium and Globalstar. Those services require larger, 
specially designed handsets to allow a subscriber to place a voice call over 
the satellite network.

In 2022, when SpaceX and T-Mobile first announced the Starlink phone service, 
SpaceX founder Elon Musk suggested it would require much larger Starlink 
satellites that could only launch on the company's giant new Starship rocket. 
That rocket has taken longer to make operational than SpaceX expected, and Musk 
said earlier this month he expects Starship to be ready to carry Starlink 
satellites into orbit in roughly a year.

SpaceX developed an intermediate Starlink spacecraft design—bigger than the 
original Starlink satellites but smaller than the ones that will go on 
Starship—with additional throughput capacity to fly on the company's workhorse 
Falcon 9 rocket.

Now, a new iteration of Starlink satellites enabled for direct-to-cell 
communications will also start flying on Falcon 9 because Starship isn't ready.

Ars reported last week that Starlink direct-to-cell upgrades planned in 2025 
and 2026, like voice, data, and Internet of Things services, most likely depend 
on Starship getting up and running.

--
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to