SpaceX Falcon 1 Flight 4 . . . Still Flying
Just an update regarding the successful launch of Flight 4 of the Falcon 1 that occurred on Sunday, September 28 from the Reagan Test Site (RTS) on Omelek Island at the U.S. Army Kwajalein Atoll (USAKA) in the Central Pacific, about 2,500 miles southwest of Hawaii. We watched the live
webcast and
enjoyed the cheers that went up from the control room. You could sense the nervous excitment in the two webcast hosts and once all went well, the tension disappeared from their body language. The Falcon 1 becomes the first privately developed liquid fuel rocket to orbit the
Earth.
"This is a
great day for SpaceX and the culmination of an
enormous amount of work by a great team," said
Elon Musk,
CEO and CTO of SpaceX. "The data shows we achieved a
super precise orbit insertion—middle of the bull's-eye — and then went on to coast and restart the second stage, which was
icing on the cake."

Preliminary data indicates that Falcon 1 achieved an
elliptical orbit of 500 km by 700 km, 9.2 degrees inclination—exactly as targeted. Falcon 1 carried into orbit a
payload mass simulator of approximately 165 kg (364 lbs), designed and built by SpaceX, specifically for this mission. Consisting of a hexagonal
aluminum alloy chamber 1.5 meters (5 feet) tall, the payload remains attached to the second stage as it orbits Earth.
This was the
fourth launch of the Falcon 1 launch vehicle and second flight for the new SpaceX-developed
Merlin 1C regeneratively-cooled engine. A
"hold before liftoff" system was used to enhance reliability by permitting all launch systems to be verified as functioning nominally before launch was initiated. A single SpaceX-developed
Kestrel engine powered the Falcon 1 second stage.
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