The next SpaceX 160ft Starship prototype, known as SN20, will be launched into orbit as early as next month strapped to the massive Super Heavy booster.
Starship requires the booster stage to reach orbit and combined the two reach a whopping 394ft tall, much larger than the Statue of Liberty with its full plinth, which reaches 305ft. Without the plinth Lady Liberty is closer is 151ft, closer in size to the upper stage of Starlink, which stands at 160ft.
SN20 will launch for low Earth orbit once construction has finished of the orbital launch tower at the SpaceX Boca Chica facility in Texas later this month.
According to a filing with the FCC, the prototype will launch from Texas and make a ‘soft ocean landing’ off the coast of Hawaii after 90 minutes in orbit.Â
The Elon Musk-owned space firm hasn’t confirmed when they will launch the prototype, but experts predict it could be as soon as early August.
Once the booster gets Starship into orbit it will come back to Earth making a landing in the Gulf of Mexico about 20 miles from shore, ready to fly again in future.
SpaceX has completed a number of tests on the 160ft Starship upper stage, with the most recent, SN15, landing on the launch pad after a short high-altitude flight, but this will be the first test of the full Starship system, including the booster stage.
The fully re-usable Starship rocket will be able to carry a payload of more than 220,000lb into low Earth orbit, and even send humans to Mars in future.
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Starship requires the booster stage to reach orbit and combined the two reach a whopping 394ft tall, larger than the Statue of Liberty and its full plinth
An artist’s impression reveals what the Starship SN20 and Super Heavy booster will look like on SpaceX’s Orbital Launch Mount
The Super Heavy booster is required to give the 160ft Starship the lift necessary to get into orbit, once it performs its service it will come back to Earth making a landing in the Gulf of Mexico about 20 miles from shore
According to SpaceX, Starship is both the Super Heavy and the upper stage combined, with the upper stage the only portion so far tested by the firm.Â
The Super Heavy Booster BN4 prototype is currently being built and when finished it will be moved to the launch pad where a massive orbital launch tower is currently under construction.
The seventh section of the tower was lifted into place last week, and final construction is due for completion by the end of the month.Â
Musk shared photos of the earlier BN3 prototype on July 1, showing the mammoth booster towering over Starbase.Â
Alone, the booster stands at 230ft and when the Starship is added it will reach almost 400ft – the tallest rocket ever made.Â
SpaceX had originally hoped to launch this month, but Elon Musk said he’d be happy to have Starship stacked on top of the Super Heavy by the end of the month, with a launch the following month.Â
For the next test, once launched into orbit, Starship will perform a powered, targeted landing after achieving orbit, coming down 60 miles off the Hawaii coast.
The FCC filing explains: ‘The Starship Orbital test flight will originate from Starbase,’ the home of SpaceX in Boca Chica, Texas, then the booster stage will separate 170 seconds into the flight.
‘The Booster will then perform a partial return and land in the Gulf of Mexico approximately 20 miles from the shore,’ the filing says.
‘The Orbital Starship will continue on flying between the Florida Straits.Â
‘It will achieve orbit until performing a powered, targeted landing approximately 100km (~62 miles) off the northwest coast of Kauai in a soft ocean landing.’Â Â
A year ago, Elon Musk announced to SpaceX employees that Starship progress was a top priority, with progress accelerating ‘dramatically and immediately.’Â
When Super Heavy and Starship are combined they stand 394ft tall, and will be able to carry a payload of more than 220,000lb into low Earth orbit and be fully reusable. Making it the largest rocket ever created
The Super Heavy Booster BN4 prototype is currently being built and when finished it will be moved to the launch pad where a massive orbital launch tower is currently under construction
The orbital part of Starship, the portion tested so far, will perform a powered, targeted landing after achieving orbit, coming down 60 miles off the Hawaii coast
A map provided as part of SpaceX’s FCC filing shows how the Starship rocket would launch from Texas before reaching orbit
That resulted in a rapid increase in Starship prototypes being built, often with a new prototype ready before the previous one had even been tested.
The test flights have ranged from static firing the engines, to launching up to six miles into the air and attempting to land back down on the launch pad.
The first time SpaceX achieved a landing without blowing up was on May 5, when the SN15 rocket flew six miles up then returned safely to the landing pad.Â
SpaceX has completed a number of tests on the 160ft Starship upper stage, with the most recent, SN15, landing on the launch pad after a short high-altitude flight, but this will be the first test of the full Starship system, including the booster stage
 When Super Heavy and Starship are combined they stand 394ft tall, and will be able to carry a payload of more than 220,000lb into low Earth orbit and be fully reusable
SpaceX is working with the FCC, US Air Force, NASA and the FAA for the flight to arrange the safest time to launch.Â
One of SpaceX’s key goals is to ensure that the Starship rockets are reusable, and future tests will see both stages return to the launch pad, rather than the ocean. Â
Musk has calculated that to put one million humans on Mars by 2025, his Starship rockets would need to conducted around three flights a day and a total of 1,000 flights a year.Â