SpaceX postpones first commercial launch due to strong wind
SpaceX has postponed what would have been its first commercial launch with the Falcon Heavy rocket, citing strong wind in the upper atmosphere.
The next window for the mission is Thursday, the company said Wednesday.
The rocket is to carry a Saudi satellite operated by Arabsat, a year after sending founder Elon Musk's red Tesla roadster into orbit as a test.
The Falcon Heavy had been scheduled to lift off from the Kennedy Space center in Florida at 6:36 pm (local time) and place the six-ton Arabsat-6A satellite into geostationary orbit about 22,500 miles (36,000 kilometers) above the Earth.
Because of the winds, this was later pushed back by about two hours, to the very end of the launch window.
Now it has been scrapped until Thursday.
SpaceX has two operational rockets: the Falcon 9, which with 21 launches in 2018 dominates the US market, and the Falcon Heavy, which as its name suggests is designed to lift much heavier payloads into more distant orbits.
It consists of the equivalent .
