Spacex Launch Schedule Highlights Crew Flight And Multiple Starlink Missions

A tall white tower with a red and white stripe on it (Photo by Jan Huber on Unsplash )

A tall white tower with a red and white stripe on it (Photo by Jan Huber on Unsplash)

Summary
  • RocketLaunch.org lists over 100 planned Falcon 9 missions on its live manifest
  • Crew‑12 appears as a four‑person ISS flight with a successful update from RocketLaunch.org
  • Multiple Starlink V2 Mini Optimized batches are scheduled with repeated booster reuses noted
  • Launch Schedule lists Ariane 64, Vulcan, Proton‑M, New Glenn and other global missions

The spacex launch calendar has a dense cluster of Falcon 9 missions, led by a crewed Crew‑12 flight and a series of Starlink deployments, as reported by the Launch Schedule and RocketLaunch.org.

RocketLaunch.org notes a live manifest of more than one hundred planned Falcon 9 missions and marks the Crew‑12 entry as having a successful update, while the Launch Schedule provides launch times, pads, crew names, and delay notices.

The Falcon 9 Crew‑12 mission is listed by the Launch Schedule as a four‑person flight to the International Space Station, commanded by Jessica Meir with pilot Jack Hathaway and mission specialists Sophie Adenot and Andrey Fedyaev, and it targeted a return to Landing Zone 40 at the Cape Canaveral complex.

Launch Schedule entries for Falcon 9 Starlink missions list multiple batches of V2 Mini Optimized satellites, with individual missions described by launch site, payload counts, first stage booster tail numbers, and planned drone ship or return‑to‑launch‑site recoveries.

The schedules record several booster reuse notes, including boosters listed for their 22nd, 26th, 31st and beyond flights, and they record multiple prior delays for some Starlink missions, according to the Launch Schedule updates.

Other Launchers And Broader Manifest Details

Beyond Falcon 9 activity, the Launch Schedule lists an Arianespace Ariane 64 mission carrying 32 Amazon Leo satellites on the vehicle's first flight in its four‑booster configuration, and a United Launch Alliance Vulcan vehicle carrying a USSF multimanifest payload to geosynchronous orbit in a four‑booster VC4L configuration.

The manifest also shows a Roscosmos Proton‑M mission bearing an Elektro‑L weather satellite to geostationary orbit, an Isar Aerospace Spectrum test flight carrying CubeSats, and a Firefly Alpha return‑to‑flight effort with a company test demo payload, as recorded by the Launch Schedule.

Longer‑range items on the list include a Blue Origin New Glenn launch for AST SpaceMobile, NASA's Space Launch System crewed Orion mission to conduct a lunar flyby as described by the Launch Schedule, and later commercial resupply and test flights on Atlas 5, Vulcan Centaur, and Falcon Heavy platforms.

The schedules explicitly note changes and delays for several missions and identify primary launch sites such as Cape Canaveral, Vandenberg, Kourou, Baikonur and Andøya, providing planners and observers with pad, configuration and payload information, as reported by the Launch Schedule and RocketLaunch.org.

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