Watch Live: NASA, SpaceX try again to launch Crew-11; sonic boom possible

Watch Live: NASA, SpaceX try again to launch Crew-11; sonic boom possible

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER — SpaceX is back one day after a weather-related scrub to send the Crew-11 mission to the International Space Station.

A Falcon 9 rocket topped with the Crew Dragon Endeavour is slated to lift off from KSC’s Launch Pad 39-A at 11:43 a.m. carrying NASA astronauts Zena Cardman and Mike Fincke, JAXA astronaut Kimiya Yui and Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Platonov to space.

The first-stage booster for this mission is making its third flight and will aim for what will be SpaceX’s final use of Landing Zone 1 at nearby Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.

SpaceX warns of the possibility that one or more sonic booms could be heard across parts of Central Florida including Brevard, Orange, Osceola, Indian River, Seminole, Volusia, Polk, St. Lucie, and Okeechobee counties. The last use of the landing zone during the Axiom Space Ax-4 launch had reports of the boom heard as far as Lake County.

The quartet were sitting in Endeavour with one minute and seven seconds on the countdown clock Thursday when a storm cell forced a scrub of the mission’s first launch attempt.

Space Launch Delta 45’s weather squadron has forecast an 60% chance for good conditions on Friday. A backup to Saturday at 11:21 a.m. has similar launch conditions with cumulus clouds at the launch pad the same concern. Rough seas, though, could be an issue along the ascent corridor off the U.S. East Coast, which needs to be clear in case the crew has to abort for an emergency.

The quartet, who arrived to KSC on Saturday, were back Friday getting prepped for launch, donning their spacesuits after 7 a.m. at the Neil Armstrong Operations & Checkout Building. They made their walkout after 8 a.m. to ride over to launch pad in black Teslas with license plates that read “Live,” “Laugh” and “Launch.”

By 9 a.m. the had made their way up the launch tower to climb back on board their spacecraft.

When it does launch, NASA Commercial Crew Program manager Steve Stich said it will be groundbreaking for NASA use of a commercial spacecraft.

“We worked very hard with SpaceX to complete all the reuse activities for this vehicle. We had certified the vehicles – the Dragons – for only five flights. Now, we’ve completed all that work, and we’re really ready to go,” he said.

It was the same Crew Dragon that flew the first astronauts for SpaceX back in 2020, now part of a stable of five crew-capable Dragons. With Crew-11’s launch, SpaceX will have flown 74 humans across 19 missions in just over five years.

The mission will relieve the Crew-10 members who have been on board the space station since mid-March, but won’t undock until they complete a short handover period during with the space station population will grow from seven to 11.

Crew-11 will be on the station for at least six months, but NASA could stretch the mission to as long as eight months.

A support helicopter flies by the Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center accompanying the Crew-11 astronauts being driven to KSC's Launch Pad 39-A on Friday, Aug. 1, 2025. (Richard Tribou/Orlando Sentinel)
A support helicopter flies by the Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center accompanying the Crew-11 astronauts being driven to KSC’s Launch Pad 39-A on Friday, Aug. 1, 2025. (Richard Tribou/Orlando Sentinel)

For its members, Cardman and Platonov are rookies while Yui is making his second trip having flown to the station a decade ago, and Fincke is making his fourth trip to space having last flown to the station as part STS-134, the last flight of Space Shuttle Endeavour, as well as two previous missions on Soyuz spacecraft.

Cardman had originally been tapped to command the Crew-9 mission, but was bumped after NASA needed space on board to allow for the return flight to the two Boeing Starliner astronauts that were left behind on the station when their spacecraft was sent home without crew because of safety concerns.

Fincke and Yui had both been training to fly future crewed missions of Starliner, but were shifted to this SpaceX mission as Boeing’s beleaguered spacecraft continues to face delays.

With their arrival to the station, the orbiting laboratory will have welcomed 290 people from 26 nations. The station will mark 25 years of continuous human presence in November having began Expedition 1 in 2020. The Crew-11 crew will become of Expedition 73 when they arrive and continue on as part of Expedition 74 that begins in November when the next replacement crew from Russia arrives.

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