SpaceX launched its subsequent batch of Starlink V2 Mini satellites on a Falcon 9 rocket launch from Cape Canaveral House Drive Station shortly earlier than midnight on Tuesday. The Starlink 10-29 mission added one other 28 satellites into the low Earth orbit megaconstellation. A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifted off at 11:37 p.m. EDT (0337 GMT on July 30) from House Launch Complicated 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral House Drive Station in Florida.
After a 9 minute climb into house, the 28 Starlink broadband web satellites (group 10-29) have been on observe to be deployed into their supposed orbit. After payload deployment, the Falcon 9 first stage separated and efficiently landed on the ocean-going droneship “Simply Learn the Directions”, positioned within the Atlantic Ocean.
This mission notably marked the twenty sixth flight for the Falcon 9’s first stage, booster B1069, which has been part of missions embody numerous payloads akin to CRS-24, Eutelsat HOTBIRD 13F, OneWeb 1, SES-18 and SES-19, alongside 22 different Starlink deployments.
Implications for Starlink and SpaceX
In keeping with satellite tracker Jonathan McDowell, the Starlink constellation now contains over 8,050 lively satellites (out of greater than 9,300 launched since 2018). The rising fleet is meant to offer high-speed web worldwide, and every launch like this one provides capability and protection. The mission additionally highlights SpaceX’s extraordinary launch cadence and technical progress.
It was the corporate’s 96th launch of 2025, reflecting a packed schedule and intense operational tempo. Two extra missions have been scheduled later that week — one other Starlink launch from California and NASA’s Crew-11 flight to the International Space Station. The repeated reuse of boosters (as evidenced by B1069’s 26 flights) is central to reducing prices and sustaining this bold cadence.