Flight 11
Starship
SpaceX
Rocket Launch Videos
Weather Forecast During Launch
According to weather officials, there's a 80% chance of favorable weather conditions at the time of the launch. The forecast calls for a temperature of 87°F, clear skies, 0% cloud cover and a wind speed of 11mph.
Trajectory
View comprehensive details including the rocket's trajectory, velocity, altitude, thrust, and more at FlightClub.io.
Rocket Launch Timeline
Enhance your rocket launch experience with a detailed timeline! From pre-launch preparations to post-launch milestones, a well-structured schedule ensures every step—payload prep, safety checks, and liftoff—runs smoothly. Stay informed and follow the action with precision.
T- 01 : 15 : 00 | GO for Prop Load Launch director verifies go for propellant load |
T- 00 : 53 : 00 | Stage 2 LNG Load Start of liquid methane loading in the second stage |
T- 00 : 46 : 10 | Stage 2 LOX Load Start of liquid oxygen loading in the second stage |
T- 00 : 41 : 15 | Stage 1 LNG Load Start of liquid methane loading in the first stage |
T- 00 : 35 : 52 | Stage 1 LOX Load Start of liquid oxygen loading in the first stage |
T- 00 : 19 : 40 | Engine Chill Start of engine chilling |
T- 00 : 03 : 20 | Stage 2 Propellant Load Complete End of propellant loading in the second stage |
T- 00 : 02 : 50 | Stage 1 Propellant Load Complete End of propellant loading in the first stage |
T- 00 : 00 : 30 | GO for Launch Launch director verifies go for launch |
T- 00 : 00 : 10 | Flame Deflector Activation Activation of the flame deflector ahead of engine ignition |
T- 00 : 00 : 03 | Ignition Start of the engine ignition sequence |
T+ 00 : 00 : 00 | Excitement Guaranteed Excitement guaranteed |
T+ 00 : 00 : 02 | Liftoff First upwards movement of the rocket |
T+ 00 : 01 : 02 | Max-Q Maximum dynamic pressure |
T+ 00 : 02 : 37 | MECO Cut-off of the main engine |
T+ 00 : 02 : 39 | Stage 2 Separation Separation of the second stage from the first |
T+ 00 : 02 : 49 | Booster Boostback Burn Startup Start of the booster boostback burn |
T+ 00 : 03 : 38 | Booster Boostback Burn Shutdown End of the booster boostback burn |
T+ 00 : 03 : 40 | Booster Hot Stage Jettison Separation of the hot stage from the booster |
T+ 00 : 06 : 20 | Stage 1 Landing Burn Start of the first stage landing burn |
T+ 00 : 06 : 36 | Stage 1 Landing Landing of the first stage |
T+ 00 : 08 : 58 | SECO-1 First cut-off of the second engine |
T+ 00 : 18 : 28 | Payload Deployment Sequence Start Start of the payload deployment sequence |
T+ 00 : 25 : 33 | Payload Deployment Sequence End End of the payload deployment sequence. |
T+ 00 : 37 : 49 | SEB-2 2nd burn of the second engine |
T+ 00 : 47 : 43 | Atmospheric Entry Start of the atmospheric re-entry |
T+ 01 : 03 : 30 | Starship Transonic Starship passing through the transonic regime |
T+ 01 : 03 : 52 | Starship Subsonic Starship reaches a subsonic velocity |
T+ 01 : 05 : 58 | Starship Landing Burn Start of the Starship orbital stage landing burn |
T+ 01 : 06 : 00 | Landing Flip Flip maneuver to set the orientation for landing |
T+ 01 : 06 : 09 | Starship Landing Landing of the Starship orbital stage |
T+ 01 : 06 : 25 | Starship Landing Landing of the Starship orbital stage |
Location
Orbital Launch Pad 1
SpaceX Starbase, TX, USA
Orbital Launch Pad 1 has witnessed the launch of 11 rockets, including 0 orbital launch attempts. While SpaceX Starbase, TX, USA, has been the site for 20 rocket launches.
Starbase is an industrial complex for Starship rockets and the headquarters of the American aerospace manufacturer company SpaceX. Located near Brownsville, Texas, United States, it has been under construction since the late 2010s by SpaceX. Starbase is composed of a spaceport near the Gulf of Mexico, a production facility at the Boca Chica village, and a small structure test site along the Texas State Highway 4.
Rocket
SpaceX Starship V2
Second development version of the Starship reusable two-stage super heavy-lift launch vehicle.
Landing
Core Booster 15
The Super Heavy Booster 15-2 has made a planned splashdown near the launch site. Booster Booster 15 last launched 10/13/2025 and has seen 2 successful launches and landings. Super Heavy booster used for the 8th Starship flight test. Successfully caught by the launch tower. Reused on the 11th Starship flight test and completed a planned high speed water splashdown.
Gulf of Mexico - GOM
Gulf of Mexico
Ocean - Ocean
No recovery attempt
Agency
SpaceX
Space Exploration Technologies Corp., known as SpaceX, is an American aerospace manufacturer and space transport services company headquartered in Hawthorne, California. It was founded in 2002 by entrepreneur Elon Musk with the goal of reducing space transportation costs and enabling the colonization of Mars. SpaceX operates from many pads, on the East Coast of the US they operate from SLC-40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station and historic LC-39A at Kennedy Space Center. They also operate from SLC-4E at Vandenberg Space Force Base, California, usually for polar launches. Another launch site is being developed at Boca Chica, Texas.
Go STARSHIP
SOMETHING WONDERFUL IS GOING TO HAPPEN……….
GET US TO THE MOON ON TIME……..
Why aren’t they catching these heavy boosters? Are they trying to create Coral Reefs in the Gulf? They aren’t reusable unless Space X catch’s them.
They are testing other aspects of Starship first. They will get there.
I would think the want to selvage the at least the Raptors while practicing more than one catch.
These are version 2 boosters. Already been used and caught once. They are moving on to version 3 so they don’t need to risk damaging the tower with a booster that they won’t need again.
Do they try to salvage it from the ocean or just leave it there?
They need to test all the way to extreme failure… Failure mode analysis is key to longterm sucess!
Go Starship!
Go starship!!!