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Preparations to launch a U.S. Navy communications satellite have kicked off in Alaska three weeks before a souped-up Minotaur rocket will pilot the spacecraft to an orbit 7,500 miles above Earth.
Technicians began transferring the three lower stages of the Minotaur 4 rocket to Launch Pad No. 1 at Kodiak Launch Complex on Monday, kicking off assembly of the solid-fueled launcher ahead of its Sept. 27 blastoff.
The Minotaur's first stage, a decommissioned SR118 Peacekeeper missile motor, was placed atop the launch pad's pedestal Monday. The second and third stages of the Minotaur 4 will be stacked Tuesday, according to Alaska Aerospace Corp., which operates the oceanfront launch complex.
The launch site is positioned on the southern shore of Kodiak Island in southern Alaska.
Launch is scheduled for September 27th, 11:45 a.m. EDT, 15:45 UTC
Spaceflight Now: Minotaur launch campaign begins at Alaska spaceport
Technicians began transferring the three lower stages of the Minotaur 4 rocket to Launch Pad No. 1 at Kodiak Launch Complex on Monday, kicking off assembly of the solid-fueled launcher ahead of its Sept. 27 blastoff.
The Minotaur's first stage, a decommissioned SR118 Peacekeeper missile motor, was placed atop the launch pad's pedestal Monday. The second and third stages of the Minotaur 4 will be stacked Tuesday, according to Alaska Aerospace Corp., which operates the oceanfront launch complex.
The launch site is positioned on the southern shore of Kodiak Island in southern Alaska.
Launch is scheduled for September 27th, 11:45 a.m. EDT, 15:45 UTC
Spaceflight Now: Minotaur launch campaign begins at Alaska spaceport
