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Blue Origin • New Glenn • Launch Complex 36A (FL)

Blue Origin • New Glenn • LC-36A
AST SpaceMobile’s Block 2 BlueBird satellites are designed to deliver up to 10 times the bandwidth capacity of the BlueBird Block 1 satellites, required to achieve 24/7 continuous cellular broadband service coverage in the United States, with beams designed to support a capacity of up to 40 MHz, enabling peak data transmission speeds up to 120 Mbps, supporting voice, full data

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AST SpaceMobile’s Block 2 BlueBird satellites are designed to deliver up to 10 times the bandwidth capacity of the BlueBird Block 1 satellites, required to achieve 24/7 continuous cellular broadband service coverage in the United States, with beams designed to support a capacity of up to 40 MHz, enabling peak data transmission speeds up to 120 Mbps, supporting voice, full data
The New Glenn is a privately funded orbital launch vehicle in development by Blue Origin. New Glenn is described as a 7-meter-diameter (23 ft), two- or three-stage rocket.
Blue Origin is an American privately funded aerospace manufacturer and spaceflight services company set up by Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos with its headquarters in Kent, Washington. The company is developing technologies to enable private human access to space with the goal to dramatically lower costs and increase reliability. Blue Origin currently launches its New Shepard sub-orbital vehicle from its West Texas launch site, they are currently constructing a launch pad for their orbital vehicle New Glenn at Cape Canaveral LC-36.
7a6cb5fc46fec897447e962699ead79d3b0f257f0504157d0cb098b33472eef3Premium keeps the launch-by-launch change log visible so you can review slips, window edits, and status changes without waiting for an error-driven upgrade prompt.
Provider, rocket, pad, and booster history tied to this launch.
Linked via Spaceflight News API (SNAPI).
ArticleNew Glenn's third mission achieved the first reflight of a booster, but was marred by the loss of the mission and its payload.
ArticleBlue Origin launched the company's third New Glenn rocket Sunday, re-flying and successfully recovering a previously used first stage. But the rocket's paylo...
ArticleFollowing Blue Origin’s milestone of successfully landing a previously flown first-stage booster for the first… The post AST SpaceMobile’s BlueBird 7 declar...
ArticleBlue Origin plans to launch its third New Glenn rocket from Cape Canaveral Sunday during a two-hour window that opens at 6:45 a.m. EDT (1045 UTC). It will ca...
ArticleJust over five months after the launch of its second mission, Blue Origin’s partially reusable… The post New Glenn set to launch on third mission, reuse boo...
ArticleThe engine test, called a static fire, saw the company ignite all seven of its BE-4 engines for less than half a minute. Local maritime and aviation hazards...
Temporary flight restrictions and NOTAM matches tied to this launch.
Advisory data is informational. Confirm operational constraints with official FAA publications.
Launch-stage and landing context surfaced from LL2 when it exists.

Second New Glenn first stage booster. Named "Never Tell Me The Odds". Used for the second New Glenn launch with EscaPADE, becoming the first New Glenn Stage 1 booster (GS1) to be recovered. Currently it's slated for re-use on New Glenn's third launch with AST SpaceMobile's BlueBird Block 2 FM2.
New Glenn booster GS1-SN002 will land on Jacklyn after its 2nd flight.
JEP works from the launch-area reference point until you choose a viewing location.
0-100 score for how likely the jellyfish effect is to be visible from your location.
Some pieces line up, but at least one major visibility factor is limiting the view.
0 = very unlikely to see it. 100 = best setup.
The setup is mixed right now. Some parts of the visibility chain work, but important pieces are still limiting it.
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