Elon Musk was the luncheon speaker Tuesday at the Satellite 2009 conference in Washington. His speech was a general overview of what SpaceX is doing on both the Falcon launch vehicles and Dragon spacecraft, but he did offer a few new and interesting items:
- Musk said that SpaceX has 19 Falcon 9 orders (12 of which under NASA’s commercial ISS resupply program), a number that he said would “soon” be 21. He didn’t offer any details on the two new orders other than that they are not for US Government customers. He did add (given the audience of primarily commercial satellite professionals) that the commercial launch market was “important” to SpaceX, and that the company was in negotiations with several potential customers.
- The first Falcon 9 launch is scheduled for this summer. Musk said after his speech that the biggest obstacle to an on-time launch this summer is the fairing and fairing separation system for the rocket, which SpaceX is doing in-house. He also said that SpaceX hopes to do 2-3 Falcon 9 launches this year and 4-5 next year.
- The next Falcon 1 launch is scheduled for April 21, when it will launch Malaysia’s Razaksat from Omelek Island; the satellite arrived in Kwajalein just within the last few days. Musk did note that the launch might slip towards the end of the month.
- Musk noted in passing that he hopes that NASA will “turn on” the option for Capability D (human space transportation) in its COTS agreement with SpaceX this year, but didn’t go into further details about the prospects for getting that done.
- After his speech he said that SpaceX is not affected by PlanetSpace’s protest of the commercial resupply contracts NASA awarded in December to SpaceX and Orbital Sciences Corporation. Musk said that PlanetSpace has dropped its protest of the SpaceX award but is continuing to pursue its protest of the Orbital award: SpaceX scored better than the other two companies on technical and financial merits, but PlanetSpace did better than Orbital. Thus, he said, even if the GAO sides with PlanetSpace in its protest, it should not affect the SpaceX contract.
Great notes (also on Twitter). Regarding the Falcon 9 fairing problem, how exactly did he word it – a major obstacle as in it’s not working as planned or something different?
In other words, do you know if they are looking at a major redesign or a production delay?
[…] ever-chatty Elon Musk was the luncheon speaker at the Satellite 2009 conference in Washington on Tuesday. Jeff Foust has an extensive review of the SpaceX CEO’s speech over […]
Gordan: Musk didn’t suggest that there were problems with the fairing, only that it anything cause their launch date to slip, that would be it. SpaceX originally planned to have another company do the fairing but brought it in-house because of cost and schedule issues.
Thanks, Jeff. That clears it up a bit – the original wording suggested major problems with whether the current fairing would work or not.
Cool. I’m looking forward to seeing SpaceX rockets delivering people to Bigelow’s inflatable space stations. Haven’t heard much from Bigelow in a while…? I Can’t wait for the first one to be sent up!
Since Planetspace has dropped its CRS protest against SpaceX, does that mean that NASA can award Spacex’s portion of the contract, even if Orbital’s portion gets extended into further litigation?
[…] pard Elon says his big ol’ rocket hoss the Falcon 9 has problems with a cussed ornery fairing. A fairing? What in tarnation is a fairing? A easterner dude word for saddle? Me and Widowmaker […]
R. Simko: the contract award to SpaceX has already been made, and with no PlanetSpace protest, it’s no longer (presumably) on hold. Any action on the protest would only affect Orbital’s contract.
[…] in his speech yesterday at the National Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, at least compared to his address last week at a satellite conference in Washington. However, there is one new development that he did not mention in his speech. As reported by […]