SpaceX

On a bright and sunny but very breezy morning, SpaceX launched another tranche of Starlink Mini V2 satellites to orbit today from Space Launch Complex 40 in Cape Canaveral. Launch was at 11:00 AM ET, and sixty-six minutes later at 12:06 PM ET, SpaceX declared the mission was a success when it announced a successful deployment of all 28 satellites included in the payload.

Falcon 9 and Starlink 10-21 rise as a fine sea mist hugs the wind-beaten surface of the Banana River today. Coupled with the inevitable heat-distortion of shooting through miles of distance between camera and pad, the photo takes on an almost Impressionist view.
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Falcon 9 and Starlink 10-21 rise as a fine sea mist hugs the wind-beaten surface of the Banana River today.
Photo: Charles Boyer / Talk of Titusville

SpaceX launched another tranche of Starlink Mini V2 satellites to orbit today from Space Launch Complex 40 in Cape Canaveral. Launch was at 11:00 AM ET, and sixty-six minutes later at 12:06 PM ET, SpaceX declared the mission was a success when it announced a successful deployment of all 28 satellites included in the payload.

Booster B1077 completed its 24th flight when it landed aboard ASDS ‘A Shortfall of Gravitas,’ located about 625 km (388 miles) downrange from SLC-40 in the Atlantic Ocean. Both the booster and the barge will now return to Port Canaveral, where the booster will be offloaded and transported to Hangar X at the Kennedy Space Center for refurbishment and preparation for its next flight.

SpaceX Booster Reuse List
Booster Flights Last Launch Last Mission
B1067 31 flights October 19, 2025 Starlink Group 10-18
B1063 28 flights September 29, 2025 Starlink Group 11-20
B1069 27 flights September 5, 2025 Starlink Group 10-57
B1077 24 flights October 26, 2025 Starlink Group 10-21
B1078 22 flights July 26, 2025 Starlink Group 10-26

As of Sunday, October 26, 2025. Booster flight histories and mission names are subject to change as new launches occur. Consult SpaceX.com or RocketLaunch.Live for the most current information.

Launch Replay

Next Launch

Details
Mission Falcon 9 Block 5 | Starlink Group 10-37 — Go for Launch!
Organization SpaceX
Customer / Payload Provider SpaceX — Starlink Division
Location Cape Canaveral SFS, FL, USA
Rocket Falcon 9
Pad Space Launch Complex 40
Status Go for Launch
Status Info Current T-0 confirmed by official or reliable sources.
Window Opens Tuesday, 10/28/2025 9:14 AM
Window Closes Tuesday, 10/28/2025 1:14 PM
Destination Low Earth Orbit
Mission Description A batch of 29 satellites for the Starlink mega-constellation — SpaceX’s project for a global, space-based Internet communication system.
Broadcast Start Time Coverage typically begins ~15 minutes before liftoff.
SpaceX Streaming Coverage Watch Live on SpaceX.com
Spaceflight Now YouTube Coverage Watch on YouTube – Spaceflight Now Live Stream

As of 12:18 PM Saturday October 25, 2025. Launch times are subject to change or cancellation at any time. Consult SpaceX.com for more information.

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File photo of a typical Falcon 9 Starlink launch from SLC-40. Photo: Charleds Boyer

SpaceX is planning to launch a Falcon 9 carrying 28 Starlink Mini V2 satellites to orbit tomorrow morning fron Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. The launch window opens at 10:02 AM ET and closes four hours later at 2:02 PM the same day.

This will 24th flight for B1077, the fourth most flown active booster in SpaceX’s Falcon fleet:

Booster Flights Last Launch Last Mission
B1067 31 flights October 19, 2025 Starlink Group 10-18
B1063 28 flights September 29, 2025 Starlink Group 11-20
B1069 27 flights December 21, 2024 Starlink Group 7-17
B1077 23 flights July 8, 2025 Starlink Group 10-04
B1078 23 flights September 12, 2024 Starlink Group 7-12

As of 12:18 PM Saturday October 25, 2025. Booster flight histories and mission names are based on the latest verified data and are subject to change as new launches occur. Consult SpaceX.com or RocketLaunch.Live for the most current information.

Weather looks…okay…but the odds are in SpaceX’s favor throughout the launch window. For spectators, temperatures around 80ºF with a 40-50% chance of precipitation and winds around 15 MPH are expected. That’s a decent day here down at the coast and it should be a pleasant day.

At A Glance

Details
Mission Falcon 9 Block 5 | Starlink Group 10-21 — Go for Launch!
Organization SpaceX
Customer / Payload Provider SpaceX — Starlink Division
Location Cape Canaveral SFS, FL, USA
Rocket Falcon 9
Pad Space Launch Complex 40
Status Go for Launch
Status Info Current T-0 confirmed by official or reliable sources.
Window Opens Sunday, 10/26/2025 10:05 AM
Window Closes Sunday, 10/26/2025 2:05 PM
Destination Low Earth Orbit
Mission Description A batch of 28 satellites for the Starlink mega-constellation — SpaceX’s project for a space-based Internet communication system.
Broadcast Start Time Coverage typically begins ~15 minutes before launch.
SpaceX Streaming Coverage Watch Live on SpaceX.com
Spaceflight Now YouTube Coverage Watch on YouTube – Spaceflight Now Live Stream

As of 12:18 PM Saturday October 25, 2025. Launch times are subject to change or cancellation at any time. Consult SpaceX.com for more information.

Trajectory

Northeast.

Weather

The 45th Weather Squadron of Space Launch Delta 45 has released its Launch Mission Execution Forecast for the flight and says the weather criteria should be 85% GO at the start of the launch window, with chances dropping to 70% GO by the time the launch window closes.

Launch Viewing: In Person

Best Public Viewing Spots for SpaceX Launches from SLC-40 (Cape Canaveral)
Area Spot Distance to SLC-40 Notes
KSC (Ticketed) LC-39 Observation Gantry ~3.4 mi Ticketed (KSCVC bus). Closest public option when offered; limited inventory. KSCVC viewing options.
KSC (Ticketed) Banana Creek / Apollo–Saturn V Center ~6.3 mi Ticketed (KSCVC bus). Seating, restrooms, big screens. KSCVC viewing options.
Canaveral Nat’l Seashore Playalinda Beach (Lots 1–2) ~6–7 mi Entrance fee (NPS). See fees & passes. Hours/road access vary; limited amenities.
Port Canaveral SR-528 Bennett Causeway pull-offs ~11–12 mi Free roadside shoulder; arrive early; bring chairs.
Port Canaveral SR-401 / Port waterfront ~11–13 mi Free public areas; sightlines toward pads; occasional security closures. Port launch viewing info.
Port Canaveral Jetty Park (pier & beach) ~12–13 mi Park fee; restrooms & concessions; popular & crowded. Jetty Park fees/passes.
Cape Canaveral (city) Cherie Down Park ~13–14 mi Free public beach access; small parking lot.
Cocoa Beach Cocoa Beach Pier ~17–20 mi Public beach; shops & restrooms; tourist crowds. Parking fees (city).
Cocoa Beach Alan Shepard Park ~18–19 mi Paid parking; restrooms; easy beach access. Parking fees (city).
Cocoa Beach Lori Wilson Park ~19–20 mi Free parking; restrooms & boardwalks; large lot.
Titusville / US-1 Max Brewer Bridge & Parrish Park ~12–14 mi Free public area; elevated views; fills quickly.
Titusville / US-1 Space View Park ~13–15 mi Free public park; historical displays; occasional audio feeds.
Titusville / US-1 Rotary Riverfront Park ~13–15 mi Free public park; open river views; moderate parking.
Titusville / US-1 Kennedy Point Park ~13–15 mi Free public park; long riverfront; good tripod space.
Titusville / US-1 Space Bar (Rooftop) ~12–14 mi Rooftop bar at Courtyard by Marriott with launch views; seating fills quickly. Hours vary—see official hours.
Note: Distances are approximate straight-line measures. Access, hours, fees, security zones, and closures change by mission—verify on launch day.

The best options are available for spectators: Jetty Park, the Banana River Bridge on FL 528 W or the southern Titusville parks on Washington Avenue / US-1.

The Space Bar will be open through the launch window. Restaurants in Port Canaveral, specifically Gators Dockside, Fishlips and Grills Seafood should have good views after the rocket clears obstructions.

Remember that there is a delay between a launch stream and the actual countdown clock. That is simply because of physics: it takes time for the signal to travel from the launch site, through the Internet, and back down to your phone, resulting in a five to fifteen-second delay.

For a deeper dive for folks from out of town interested in watching the launch in person, read my guide here: Best Viewing Spots for Launches from SpaceX Launches From SLC-40 At Cape Canaveral.

Launch Viewing: Online

SpaceX will have a livestream of the launch on their website: Starlink 10-21. This will also be available on the X platform. Coverage starts about five minutes before liftoff.

Spaceflight Now will have coverage of the launch starting about one hour before liftoff on Youtube: link

For official updates regarding launch timesSpaceX.com is the best source of information. Starlink launch times change from time to time, and the company generally updates their website within minutes of the decision to change the launch time. This is very handy if none of the streaming options on YouTube have started their broadcasts.

Next Space Flight an app for iOS and Android phones, has a real-time countdown clock that is accurate to a second, give or take. The app is free. Search the App Store or Google Play. They are also on the web: nextspaceflight.com.


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Astrobotic has announced that its Griffin-1 lunar mission is now targeting July 2026, a shift that gives engineers time to complete propulsion integration and qualify the lander’s engines. Their update, published today, also outlines steady progress on systems from tanks to software as the company prepares to deliver multiple payloads to the Moon’s south-polar Nobile region.

With this news, any chance of a Falcon Heavy launch from Kennedy Space Center in 2025 is now kaput.

Status

Astrobotic said that Griffin-1’s structural build is “nearing full integration,” with pressure tanks, ramps, attitude-control thrusters and solar arrays completing fit checks. The company says each completed milestone narrows the gap to launch and the attempted precision landing at Nobile.

The stakes are significant for the Pittsburgh-based firm after Peregrine Mission One failed to reach the Moon last year due to a propellant leak and later burned up on reentry, an outcome that the company says sharpened their focus on ground testing and flight-like rehearsals ahead of Griffin-1.

Today’s schedule update marks the clearest timing guide since mid-2025, when NASA’s CLPS page last summarized the mission.

Astrobotic also reports its flight avionics are assembled and accepted for flight, and a “closed-loop” landing rehearsal is running on the ground. Using the company’s LunaRay software to generate real-time images and 3D point-clouds of the terrain, the testbed feeds data into Griffin’s Terrain Relative Navigation and Hazard Detection & Avoidance algorithms—critical for an autonomous touchdown in a place where GPS doesn’t exist.

About Griffin-1

Griffin-1 is Astrobotic’s follow-on to the failed Peregrine demo and is part of NASA’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) line of deliveries supporting Artemis-era science at the south pole. NASA previously confirmed that after the VIPER rover was canceled in 2024, the Griffin task order would continue as a lander and engine flight demonstration on a reconfigured manifest—an approach that today’s update effectively advances toward with engine qualification now underway.

The lander’s propulsion system is built around four composite-overwrapped propellant tanks, designed to stay lightweight while holding high-pressure loads. With the tank installs and remaining harness work finished, Griffin will move into environmental acceptance tests—vibration, thermal vacuum and other checks—to certify the vehicle for launch and lunar operations.

The payload manifest remains anchored by Venturi Astrolab’s FLIP (FLEX Lunar Innovation Platform) rover, which is deep into thermal-vac and integrated functional tests; Astrobotic’s own CubeRover; and BEACON rover (the Benchmark for Engineering and Autonomous Capabilities in Operations and Navigation — a joint lunar surface demonstration from Mission Control and Astrobotic), which has already completed end-to-end “flatsat” simulations with the lander. Secondary cargo now in house includes a Nippon Travel Agency plaque carrying messages from Japanese schoolchildren, a Nanofiche “Galactic Library to Preserve Humanity,” and a sealed MoonBox capsule with items from around the world.

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File photo of Booster B1076 in flight. Photo: Charles Boyer / Talk of Titusville

SpaceX is set to launch Falcon 9 and the SpainSat NH II satellite for Spanish operator hisdeSat this evening. Liftoff is currently slated for 9:30 PM ET (0130Z) with a four hour window. Weather is not expected to pose a problem.

Stripped of legs and hypersonic fins, expect the rocket to look slightly different from normal. That’s because the mission tonight is somewhat unusual, as Booster B1076 will make its 22nd and final flight due to operational requirements — the mission demands are such that it will take every bit of push from the booster to set up Falcon Stage 2 to achieve its desired orbital placement. The last time SpaceX deliberately sent a Falcon 9 booster to a watery grave was in January of this year, when they lofted the SpainSat NG I payload.

At A Glance

Details
Mission Falcon 9 Block 5 | SpainSat NG II — Go for Launch!
Organization SpaceX
Customer / Payload Provider Hisdesat / Airbus Defence & Space
Location Cape Canaveral SFS, FL, USA
Rocket Falcon 9
Pad Space Launch Complex 40
Status Go for Launch
Status Info Current T-0 confirmed by official or reliable sources.
Window Opens Thursday, 10/23/2025 9:30 PM
Window Closes Friday, 10/24/2025 1:30 AM
Destination Geostationary Transfer Orbit
Mission Description Second of two new-generation satellites built by Airbus to provide secure communications to the Spanish government, its allies, and various international organizations.
Broadcast Start Time Coverage begins ~15 minutes before liftoff.
SpaceX Streaming Coverage Watch Live on SpaceX.com
Spaceflight Now YouTube Coverage Watch on YouTube – Spaceflight Now Live Stream

As of 7:14 AM Thursday October 23, 2025. Launch times are subject to change or cancellation at any time. Consult SpaceX.com for more information.

Trajectory

Weather

The 45th Weather Squadron of the Space Force’s Space Launch Delta 45 has released their Launch Mission Execution Forecast and weather is expected to be just about as good as it gets for a rocket launch: 95% GO.

Payload

SpainSat NG II is the second spacecraft in Spain’s next-generation secure communications system for government and defense, operated by Hisdesat. Built on Airbus’s Eurostar Neo geostationary platform, it carries a tri-band payload—military X-, Ka-, and UHF—that enables resilient, encrypted links for Spain and partner nations. Airbus (Spain/France) leads the platform and X-band payload, while Thales Alenia Space (Spain/France) provides the military Ka- and UHF-band payloads and integrates the communications module.

The satellite’s payload is designed for flexibility: active X-band antennas with in-orbit reconfiguration, an onboard digital processor that can cross-connect X and Ka services, and a high-speed service link to retask beams rapidly. It’s engineered with advanced anti-jamming features and capabilities to geolocate interference sources—key for contested environments—while providing coverage spanning roughly two-thirds of the Earth from geostationary orbit.

Program-wise, NG II follows SpainSat NG I (launched Jan. 30, 2025) to complete the two-satellite constellation that replaces the legacy SpainSat and XTAR-EUR systems. The pair are stationed at 30° W (NG II) and 29° E (NG I) with a design life on the order of 15 years, and both rideshare Falcon 9 launches to geostationary transfer orbit. Together, they multiply Spain’s protected X/Ka capacity versus earlier satellites while adding a new UHF payload for broader mission flexibility.

Launch Viewing: In Person

Since the launch is after hours at the Kennedy Space Center Visitors Center, Banana Creek, or the LC-39A Gantry won’t be available. Playalinda would be closed anyway were it not for the government shutdown, so that will not be an option either.

The best free options are available for spectators: Jetty Park, the Banana River Bridge on FL 528 W or the southern Titusville parks on Washington Avenue / US-1 are your best bets.

The Space Bar will be open at least in the first part of the launch window. Restaurants in Port Canaveral should be open for the initial hour or two of the launch window as well, specifically Gators Dockside, Fishlips and Grills Seafood. All have good views after the rocket clears obstructions.

The best free options are available for spectators: Jetty Park, the Banana River Bridge on FL 528 W or the southern Titusville parks on Washington Avenue / US-1 are your best bets.

A deeper dive into spectator locations, with maps and distance to the pad can be found here: Best Viewing Spots for Launches from SpaceX Launches From SLC-40 At Cape Canaveral

Launch Viewing: Online

SpaceX will have a livestream of the launch on their website: SpainSat NG II. This will also be available on the X platform. Coverage starts about fifteen minutes before liftoff.

Spaceflight Now will have coverage of the launch starting about one hour before liftoff on Youtube: link

For official updates regarding launch timesSpaceX.com is the best source of information. Starlink launch times change from time to time, and the company generally updates their website within minutes of the decision to change the launch time. This is very handy if none of the streaming options on YouTube have started their broadcasts.

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Artemis I
Artemis I
The first SLS rocket, Artemis I, sits on the launch pad at KSCs LC39B in 2022

Business is picking up here on the Space Coast, and we’re heading into a very busy stretch on the Eastern Range with missions to Mars, the Moon, low Earth orbit and of course ISS all set to launch here. Best of all, they’ll ride aboard a wide array of rockets and we’ll see some rare birds taking flight from here in Florida.

Those flagship and keystone launches will be mixed in with the regular Starlink and Project Kuiper missions along with some commercial satellite missions. In short, if you like watching rocket launches, the next few months here at The Cape are going to be a treat. Get your bug spray and lawn chair ready.

New Glenn NG-1 lifts off in January from LC-36. Photo: Charles Boyer / Talk of Titusville
New Glenn NG-1 lifts off in January from LC-36. Photo: Charles Boyer / Talk of Titusville

Regulars who watch pad activity or track transport moves out of Astrotech or the Blue Origin integration facility off Space Commerce Way are already seeing the signs: New Glenn’s first stage is at LC-36 being integrated to GS-2 (New Glenn’s second state) and preparing for an integrated static firing as part of its launch campaign. SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy is on the manifest again, albeit in lightly written pencil. And NASA’s Artemis II stack is inching toward flight, with some saying that the crew of that mission will be heading to moon as soon as February 2026. Best we can tell, here’s what’s real, what’s rumor, and what’s sitting on the pad right now:

New Glenn

Starting things off, Blue Origin rolled out its GS-1 booster — Never Tell Me The Odds — to Launch Complex 36 on October 8th. This is a sure sign of the impending second flight of Blue’s New Glenn, a 320-foot tall behemoth of a rocket that the company will use to power the multiple missions it is currently working on.

The rollout from Blue’s factory on Exploration Way kicked off final pad integration for the flight. Following completion of that and culminating in a static firing of GS-1, it’s fair to say that the launch campaign has kicked off for NG-2, carrying NASA’s EscaPADE dual spacecraft, bound for Mars orbit to study solar wind interactions, plus a secondary payload for Viasat.

The static fire is expected in the next 7–10 days according to unofficial sources, and that will be the final greenlight before range clearance. The company already has a launch license, so there will be no need to wait for any FAA approvals.

While Blue Origin hasn’t publicly confirmed a date, multiple launch tracking sites now list November 9, 2025, as the likely target. That may change, of course, so stay tuned.

Falcon Heavy In December?

Assuming a November New Glenn flight, eyes will turn from one end of The Cape to the other, for a rare SpaceX Falcon Heavy mission, this time flying Astrobotic’s Griffin Mission One under NASA’s CLPS program. The lander will ferry the VIPER lunar rover to the south pole of the Moon.

The mission is notable not just for its science payload and is a critical mission for Astrobotic, the mission’s operator. Their first attempt at a lunar landing was not successful, but after applying lessons learned from its Peregrine Mission One, which launched in January 2024 but experienced an anomaly that prevented it from reaching the Moon.

The window opens in early December, though final pad dates haven’t been published.

Frankly, a delay into 2026 would not be terribly surprising. Nothing on Astrobotic’s or NASA’s websites indicates the lander is in Florida for final launch preparation and payload integration. Add in the current shutdown state of the federal government and you can see this mission shifting right on the calendar fair easily.

Artemis II

With the recent transportation of the Orion capsule stack to the VAB and the SLS rocket that awaits it there, things are literally coming together nicely for America’s first crewed mission beyond low-Earth orbit in over fifty years.

NASA is saying that Artemis II is now tracking toward a no-earlier-than February 2026 launch, with an official “no later than” window of April 2026. The mission will send four astronauts around the Moon aboard Orion and riding atop the SLS Block 1 rocket. This will be the first crewed flight of Orion and will raise the count of crewed American spacecraft systems to three, if one includes the Starliner program.

Photo: NASA

Artemis II will bring the excitement and the crowds that go along with it, so this is a launch to watch closely.

Starship – Mid 2026 If All Goes Well

While Starship continues testing from Boca Chica, SpaceX is working feverishly at LC-39A and is progressing to bring full-stack launches to the Cape.

No launch license yet for Florida flights, and no integration tower ready for Super Heavy booster ops. That said, groundwork is active.

Expect a first Florida-based Starship no earlier than mid-2026, contingent on pad completion and FAA approval. That launch would be key to fulfilling the Artemis HLS lander contract. After Artemis II, all eyes will turn to Artemis II, and there are going to be literally dozens of Starship launches from here and in Boca Chica to the support that mission.

First though, a lot has to happen here at The Cape: Starship must gain approval from the FAA, and secondly, the construction at LC-39A and at Hangar X must be completed. Flight hardware will be manufactured in Texas and transported to the Cape by water, and after all of that, all of the pieces need to be put together into an integrated flight system. Sounds daunting, with a lot of potential potholes, but it is foolish to ever bet against SpaceX and their capability to get things done.

So, mid-2026 optimistically. If there are delays, any time after that. Time will tell, but be sure of this: Starship is coming as NASA and the DoD both want it.

Mixed In With It All

Falcon 9, Atlas V and Vulcan will all stay busy with constellation-building, government missions and commercial missions.

They may be overshadowed for a time by the big missions set to fly from here in Florida, but the bread-and-butter rocket launches will continue apace and will be increasing: SpaceX is looking to raise its Falcon 9 pace from The Cape and launching more Starlink satellites thereby, Vulcan is now operational and with a notable backlog of flights, and New Glenn is not far behind. Let’s not forget the venerable Atlas V, it will be carrying Kuiper Project satellites to orbit at a fair steady pace as well.

So if you like rocket launches, this is going to be like Christmas for you. Good thing it’s almost Christmas!

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Starlink 10-17 lifting off.

SpaceX added to its roster of Starlink satellites today when it launched the Starlink Group 10-17 mission from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral. Liftoff was at 1:39 PM ET and into partly cloudy skies on a day in the low 80s.

Aboard the rocket was another group of Starlink V2 Mini satellites, which will join the company’s Starlink network of more than 8,400 similar units in low-Earth orbit. Using Starlink satellites, the company provides Internet connectivity to over seven million customers in 130 countries and territories worldwide.

Launch Replay

Next Launch

Details
Mission Falcon 9 Block 5 | SpainSat NG II — Go for Launch!
Organization SpaceX
Customer / Payload Provider Hisdesat / Spanish Government
Location Cape Canaveral SFS, FL, USA
Rocket Falcon 9
Pad Space Launch Complex 40
Status Go for Launch
Status Info Current T-0 confirmed by official or reliable sources.
Window Opens Wednesday, 10/22/2025 9:30 PM
Window Closes Thursday, 10/23/2025 1:19 AM
Destination Geostationary Transfer Orbit
Mission Description Second of two next-generation satellites built by Airbus to provide secure communications for the Spanish government, its allies, and international organizations.
Broadcast Start Time Coverage typically begins ~15 minutes before launch.
SpaceX Streaming Coverage Watch Live on SpaceX.com
Spaceflight Now YouTube Coverage Watch on YouTube – Spaceflight Now Live Stream

As of 11:48 AM Friday October 10, 2025. Launch times are subject to change or cancellation at any time. Consult SpaceX.com for more information.

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