2101
Standing down today due to upper altitude winds and high winds at sea creating dynamic conditions around the Of Course I Still Love You droneship – next launch opportunity is tomorrow at 12:29 p.m. EST, 17:29 UTC
2102
Falcon 9 and Dragon are vertical ahead of today’s resupply mission to the @Space_Station. Launch is targeted for 12:51 p.m. EST, 17:51 UTC → spacex.com/webcast
2103
2104
Falcon 9 static fire test complete — targeting December 4 launch from Pad 40 in Florida for Dragon’s nineteenth resupply mission to the @Space_Station
2105
2106
2109
Successful deployment of 60 Starlink satellites confirmed!
2110
Back live for satellite deploy → spacex.com/webcast
2111
Second stage engine restart and cutoff nominal; webcast will return in ~15 minutes for satellite deploy
2112
Back live → spacex.com/webcast
2113
Second stage engine cutoff confirmed, now in coast phase; webcast will return in about 35 minutes for second stage engine restart
2114
Falcon 9 first stage has landed on the Of Course I Still Love You droneship – the fourth launch and landing of this booster
2115
Fairing has deployed—second time for this particular fairing
2116
Main engine cutoff and stage separation confirmed; second stage engine burn underway
2117
Liftoff!
2118
Watch live as Falcon 9 launches 60 Starlink satellites to space twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…
2119
All systems are go ahead of this morning’s launch of 60 Starlink satellites; webcast will go live at ~9:41 a.m. EST → spacex.com/webcast
2120
2121
Falcon 9 first stage supporting this mission previously launched Iridium-7, SAOCOM-1A, and Nusantara Satu
2122
Falcon 9 and Starlink are vertical on Pad 40 ahead of tomorrow’s launch opportunity at 9:56 a.m. EST, 14:56 UTC. Weather is 80% favorable → spacex.com/webcast
2123
The fairing supporting this mission previously flew on Falcon Heavy’s Arabsat-6A mission
2124
Static fire test of Falcon 9 complete—targeting 11/11 for launch of 60 Starlink satellites from Pad 40 in Florida
2125
SpaceX team has completed 13 successful tests in a row of upgraded Mark 3 parachutes for Crew Dragon. Most recent test demonstrated the parachute system’s ability to land the spacecraft safely in the unlikely event that one of the four main parachutes fails.