Just some statistics'SpaceX is using a fleet of 18 boosters.Since they fly every 2 days, it means the boosters cycle every 36 days, on average. Actual turn-around time has to be better than that since there are bumps in the schedule.At 20 flights/booster, they're good for roughly 2 years. At 40, they're good for 4 years.A good fraction of this fleet is therefore going to last till F9 retirement, certainly the new ones.
Quote from: meekGee on 07/12/2025 05:27 pmJust some statistics'SpaceX is using a fleet of 18 boosters.Since they fly every 2 days, it means the boosters cycle every 36 days, on average. Actual turn-around time has to be better than that since there are bumps in the schedule.At 20 flights/booster, they're good for roughly 2 years. At 40, they're good for 4 years.A good fraction of this fleet is therefore going to last till F9 retirement, certainly the new ones.Nearly four boosters have 25-29 launches, and another 4 have 20-24 launches. That accounts for nearly half the current fleet that could see retirement within 18 months. While I agree that some of the current fleet might reach F9 retirement, that is no guarantee. The number of F9 that in theory could reach the retirement will actually depend on how fast the issues with Starship are resolved, and Starlink launches (which has comprised roughly 2/3s of F9 launches since 2022) is completely transferred over to Starship.
Congrats @SpaceX team on 500 orbital spaceflight missions!
We missed the most important poll of them all. At what year and month will everybody just stop caring about how many flights Falcon had in the previous month? I mean, we can't even maintain mission updates with properly anymore.
We missed the most important poll of them all. At what year and month will everybody just stop caring about how many flights Falcon had in the previous month?
That was #100 for 2025. (Starlink 17-5)Worthy milestone on it's own. Rare albeit not unprecedented
Quote from: meekGee on 08/01/2025 09:46 pmWe missed the most important poll of them all. At what year and month will everybody just stop caring about how many flights Falcon had in the previous month? I mean, we can't even maintain mission updates with properly anymore.100% agree. I tend to check every few months. The cadence now is so high that my interest has waned. I still find it interesting, just not as interesting as it once was.
Quote from: Brigantine on 08/19/2025 05:10 amThat was #100 for 2025. (Starlink 17-5)Worthy milestone on it's own. Rare albeit not unprecedentedThis is only the second time an orbital launch vehicle has launched 100+ times in a calendar year.The first time Falcon 9 launched 100 times in 365 days was in December 2023.Not sure the last time a Falcon 9 launched less than 100 times in 365 days - but that likely was early 2024.