Massive plans are in place for SpaceX's launches in the upcoming months. Elon Musk, the company's CEO, specifically mentioned that Falcon 9 launches every five days, giving Starlink consumers access to additional satellites.

SpaceX And NASA Prepare To Launch SpaceX's Crew-3 Mission To The International Space Station
(Photo : Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon capsule on launch Pad 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center on November 09, 2021 in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Elon Musk Says SpaceX Would Launch its Falcon 9s Every 5 Days Ahead of 2023 Flight Goals

By launching six times this month, SpaceX reached a milestone for its August missions. Elon Musk said in a tweet that SpaceX is launching its Starlink project every five days.

This only serves to highlight how capable SpaceX's spaceships are at carrying heavy loads and showcasing important skills for spaceflights.

SpaceX conducts launches at an unheard-of rate in the industry, and the firm has a high success rate while masterfully using its spacecraft.

It simply demonstrates that the company's Falcon 9 is an experienced pro with the ability to fly several missions quickly back to back.

Another batch of Starlink satellites were placed in orbit by SpaceX's 39th rocket from an earlier mission, which it then delivered to the region for connections.

In this tweet, Musk mentioned SpaceX is preparing to launch a sizable number of flights this year, with many more planned for the future.

 Nevertheless, Musk states in this post that SpaceX intends to conduct 100 flights in 2019, with its 2023 ambitions calling for an unprecedented number of launches.

ALSO READ: SpaceX Rockets 'To Replace' Roscosmos' Soyuz, ESA Says

More SpaceX, NASA Plans

As part of a US $1.4 billion contract order, NASA revealed earlier this week that SpaceX will launch 5 additional astronaut missions to the International Space Station for NASA at the end of the decade.

This would bring the company's total number of contracted missions for its Crew Dragon astronaut capsule to 14, Transcontinental Times wrote.

The new extension of SpaceX's NASA contract is part of the agency's effort to maintain a steady flow of astronaut missions to the space station because Boeing, the other company with a contract for similar crew transportation, has been unable to complete the development of its Starliner space capsule.

The reusable Crew Dragon spacecraft has completed five crewed journeys for NASA since it was crew-certified in 2020, when SpaceX became the first commercial company to send people into orbit and revived NASA's manned human spaceflight program after the US shuttle programme ended in 2011.

Boeing's CST-100 Starliner capsule, troubled by software flaws and valve concerns, expects to fly its first crew of astronauts in February of next year before NASA can approve the spacecraft for routine astronaut missions.

After giving each firm six crew missions originally, NASA ordered three extra from SpaceX in early 2022 in response to Boeing's technical issues.

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