1826
Weather in the recovery area continues to be unfavorable so team is now targeting Monday, January 27 for launch of Starlink, pending Range availability
1827
The three departure burns to move Dragon away from the @Space_Station are complete; Dragon will re-enter Earth's atmosphere in ~5 hours and splashdown in the Pacific Ocean around 7:40 a.m. PST twitter.com/NASA/status/12…
1828
Seven years ago today, Dragon orbited Earth twice before re-entering the atmosphere and splashing down in the Pacific Ocean, becoming the first private vehicle to return from space → instagram.com/p/Bcct7JxFr1S/
1829
Liftoff! spacex.com/webcast
1830
Watch Falcon 9 launch 51 spacecraft to orbit → spacex.com/launches twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…
1832
Watch Falcon 9 launch the @INTELSAT IS-40e mission to orbit → spacex.com/launches twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…
1833
Fairing separation confirmed
1834
Static fire test of Falcon 9 complete—targeting June 12 launch of RADARSAT Constellation Mission from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California
1835
Liftoff! spacex.com/webcast
1836
Targeting Sunday, February 12 at 12:10 a.m. ET for Falcon 9’s launch of 55 Starlink satellites; team is keeping an eye on weather which is 20% favorable for liftoff → spacex.com/launches
1837
Nominal fairing deployment
1838
Standing down from tomorrow’s launch attempt of Spaceflight SSO-A: SmallSat Express to conduct additional inspections of the second stage. Working toward a backup launch opportunity on December 3.
1839
Starlink is now available across all of Australia, enabling customers to order service country-wide starlink.com/map
1840
Watch live as Falcon 9 launches 60 Starlink satellites to space twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…
1841
Deorbit burn is complete
1842
Webcast of Falcon 9 launch is now live → spacex.com/webcast
1843
Dragon is headed to port for a cargo handover to @NASA. instagram.com/p/BR1Vh9oFtDD/
1844
Successful deployment of BulgariaSat-1 to a Geostationary Transfer Orbit confirmed.
1845
Watch Falcon 9 launch 105 spacecraft to orbit → spacex.com/launches twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…
1846
Now targeting 10:30 a.m. EST; teams are continuing to track weather in the recovery area
1848
Tonight's launch is an especially exciting one. It’s SpaceX’s first polar orbit launch from the Cape – meaning that on its way to space, Falcon 9 will fly south along the eastern coast of Florida
1849
Standing down today due to strong upper level winds. Team is proceeding with the count until T-30 seconds for data collection. Next launch attempt is tomorrow at 8:51 a.m. EST, 13:51 UTC.
1850
T-30 minutes until Falcon 9 launch of Dragon. Weather is over 90% favorable for today’s launch attempt → spacex.com/webcast