Skip to main content

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket just flew straight into the record books

Falcon 9 booster B1067 at the start of its 24th flight on December 4, 2024.
Falcon 9 booster B1067 at the start of its 24th flight. SpaceX

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket took its 24th flight on Wednesday, a record for the first-stage booster.

Lifting off from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 5:13 a.m. ET, SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket launched 24 Starlink satellites to low-Earth orbit. About eight minutes after launch, the rocket’s first stage performed a flawless landing on a drone ship waiting off the coast of Florida, paving the way for a 25th flight once it’s been checked over and refurbished.

Recommended Videos

Previous flights for the booster, listed by SpaceX as B1067, involved the CRS-22, CRS-25, Crew 3, Crew 4, TelkomSat-113BT, Turksat-5B, Koreasat-6A, Eutelsat HOTBIRD-F2, Galileo L13, mPOWER-A, and PSN MFS missions, along with 13 Starlink mission deploying internet satellites to low-Earth orbit. Before Wednesday’s record-breaking flight, B1067 last launched on November 11, while its first flight took place in June 2021.

Two other first-stage Falcon 9 boosters have taken 23 flights to date, while many others have also taken multiple flights, so B1067 now leads the pack.

Reusing the rockets in this way allows SpaceX to cut the cost of space missions and operate launches more frequently, a setup that makes orbital missions affordable for a greater number of companies and organizations than before.

SpaceX first achieved an upright landing of a 41.2-meter-tall Falcon 9 first-stage booster in 2015, and following a few mishaps during subsequent landing attempts, it soon managed to perfect the procedure.

SpaceX engineers are now eyeing a much bigger challenge — bringing home the considerably larger Super Heavy booster, which forms the first stage of the Starship rocket. At 71 meters tall, it’s much harder to land on the ground, so the company added giant mechanical “chopstick” arms to the launch tower that secure the booster as it returns to base, just before the vehicle touches the ground.

SpaceX achieved the feat in spectacular fashion on its first attempt during the rocket’s fifth test flight in October, but it was unable to repeat the maneuver on its sixth test last month. Still, with more practice, SpaceX is expected to perfect the landing of the Super Heavy as it prepares the rocket for launches toward the moon, Mars, and beyond.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
SpaceX’s recent Starship rocket launch captured in space station video
The sixth Starship mission captured from the ISS.

Views of Starship Flight 6 from International Space Station

NASA has shared a cool snippet of video captured from the International Space Station (ISS) that shows the recent SpaceX launch of the Starship, the world’s most powerful rocket.

Read more
SpaceX to launch NASA’s Dragonfly drone mission to Titan
Caption: Artist’s concept of Dragonfly soaring over the dunes of Saturn’s moon Titan.

Over the last few years, the Ingenuity helicopter on Mars made history by proving it was possible to fly a rotorcraft on another planet. And soon NASA will take that concept one step further by launching a drone mission to explore an even more distant world: Saturn's icy moon of Titan.

The Dragonfly mission is set to explore Titan from the air, its eight rotors keeping it aloft as it moves through the thick atmosphere and passes over the rough, challenging terrain below. The aim is to look for potential habitability, studying the moon to work out if water-based or hydrocarbon-based life could ever have existed there.

Read more
SpaceX wants to significantly boost number of Starship launches in 2025
The Starship launching from Starbase in October 2024.

SpaceX could be targeting as many as 25 launches of its Starship rocket for 2025 as it readies the massive vehicle for crew and cargo trips to the moon, Mars, and possibly beyond.

The targeted launch cadence for the Starship, which comprises the first-stage Super Heavy booster and the upper-stage Starship spacecraft, appears in a Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) draft environmental assessment for Starship missions from Boca Chica, Texas. The document primarily addresses the environmental considerations and regulatory processes linked to SpaceX's desire to increase the frequency of its Starship test flights from its Starbase facility in Boca Chica.

Read more