Launch startup Relativity Space has won approval from the U.S. Air Force to take over a disused launch pad at Cape Canaveral for the company’s methane-fueled Terran 1 rocket, a 3D-printed launcher that could carry small satellites into orbit by the end of 2020.
Read MoreRelativity Space to launch from historic Florida site. The company that aspires to 3D print almost the entirety of its rockets has reached an agreement with the US Air Force to launch from historic facilities at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. Relativity Space said Thursday it has a multiyear contract to build and operate its own rocket launch facilities at Launch Complex 16, Ars reported.
Read MoreRelativity Space, a small launch company founded in 2015, will invest more than $10 million to get Launch Complex 16 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station ready for lift off, CEO Tim Ellis tells us. The California-based company, which is aiming to build 3-D printed rockets in less than 60 days, expects to conduct its first orbital launch by the end of 2020.
Read MoreUntil now, the only major companies with permission to launch from Cape Canaveral were SpaceX, United Launch Alliance, and Blue Origin.
Read MoreIt is obvious to everyone that the spatial environment is making great strides. Well, after the reusable rockets , the next big revolution in this field could pass for 3D printing . In fact, a US company is performing well in this regard and now has the infrastructure to launch rockets .
Read MoreRelativity Space, which aims to cut costs of rocket production by 3D-printing its spacecraft, just earned a major thumbs up from the Air Force.
Read MoreA private company, Relativity Space, announced Thursday it plans to launch its fully 3D-printed rocket Terran 1 from Cape Canaveral as soon as next year.
Read MoreA three-year-old startup is trying to launch rockets into space that are almost entirely 3D printed. And it just got permission from the U.S. Air Force to launch from the historic Launch Complex 16 at Cape Canaveral in Florida.
Read MoreAerospace startup Relativity Space has been given permission to launch its rockets from Cape Canaveral, the company has revealed, paving the way for its anticipated launches into low-Earth orbit starting next year. The company will use Cape Canaveral’s LC-16 launch pad, which was previously used by the US Air Force into the 1980s.
Read MoreQ&A with Tim Ellis, CEO and co-founder of Relativity Space
Read MoreInglewood-based Relativity Space won approval to launch rockets from Cape Canaveral, the company announced Thursday.
Read MoreA startup developer of low-cost, 3D-printed rockets that could one day be made on Mars aims to join Cape Canaveral’s launch fleet at soon as late 2020
Read MoreRelativity, the startup developing a small launch vehicle using additive manufacturing technologies, announced Jan. 17 it has won approval from the U.S. Air Force to build a launch site at Cape Canaveral.
Read MoreRelativity Space, a startup that aspires to create 3D printed rockets, has secured a launch pad at Cape Canaveral. The company announced Thursday a five-year agreement with the US Air Force that will allow the company to operate out of Launch Complex 16 (LC-16) at the at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.
Read MoreRelativity Space, an aerospace startup based in Los Angeles, has secured a historic home in Florida from which to launch its 3D-printed rockets — and the site is sandwiched among the company's biggest competitors.
Read MoreA company that aspires to 3D print almost the entirety of its rockets has reached an agreement with the US Air Force to launch from historic facilities at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. Relativity Space said Thursday it has a multiyear contract to build and operate its own rocket launch facilities at Launch Complex 16.
Read MoreRelativity, a rocket-building start-up founded by alumni of Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin, has taken over a US government launch pad.
Read MoreRelativity Space, the California-based rocket startup that got its start in Seattle, has won Air Force clearance to build its Florida launch facility on a site that saw service during NASA’s Apollo and Gemini programs in the 1960s.
Read MoreLos Angeles-based Relativity Space, which is working to develop 3D-printed rockets, announced Thursday that it won a competitive bidding process with the United States Air Force to build and operate Launch Complex 16 (LC-16) at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. The company says it will launch its first rocket from the site in 2020.
Read More3D-printing the first rocket on Mars. That’s the goal Tim Ellis and Jordan Noone set for themselves when they founded Los Angeles-based Relativity Space in 2015.
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