Misja NG-4 może wystartować jeszcze w tym roku, prawdopodobnie z pierwszym operacyjnym ładunkiem dla Leo Amazon, tworzonym przez 48 satelitów.
Wyznaczenie daty startu zależy od wyników raportu związanego z badaniem anomalii, która zdarzyła się podczas NG-3
https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=6840.msg205240#msg205240BO
https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=416.msg205008#msg205008BM
https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=6430.msg205631#msg205631The other heavy-lift rockets on our manifest, Blue Origin’s New Glenn and United Launch Alliance’s (ULA) Vulcan Centaur, will fly our largest Leo payloads. Initial missions on New Glenn will accommodate 48 satellites in the rocket’s 7-meter-wide fairing, and initial missions on Vulcan Centaur will accommodate 40 satellites. As with Ariane 64, both vehicles have enough space to accommodate additional satellites, and we expect our payload sizes to increase over time as Blue Origin and ULA improve vehicle performance.
https://www.aboutamazon.com/news/amazon-leo/amazon-leo-plans-double-launch-rate-20-missionsŁadunek zostanie wyniesiony przez 3. egzemplarz boostera, który już opuścił fabrykę.
Lukas C. H. @GewoonLukas_ 10:37 AM · May 4, 2026
Blue Origin's 3rd New Glenn booster, GS1-7E03 "No, It's Necessary" is rolling out of the factory! GS1 is heading to LC-36, where it'll be prepared for launch on NG-4. Launch could be as little as a few weeks away, but this depends on the investigation into the NG-3 failure.
Max Evans @_MaxQ_
The space port that never sleeps starting off the week bright and early this morning!
Blue Origin has rolled GS1-3 "No, It's Necessary" out of their factory — it’s now heading to LC-36. This marks the company’s third New Glenn first stage booster built to date, and the next one scheduled to fly.
https://twitter.com/GewoonLukas_/status/2051219529095680239Kevin Chen @Defiantclient2 · May 4
I think New Glenn will be back on the pad sooner than most feared!
Lukas C. H. @GewoonLukas_·May 4
Oh yeah for sure. NG-2 took 4 to 5 weeks from rollout for launch, so it could be as little as 6 weeks after NG-3. It'll of course depend on when the investigation is done and what comes of that, but considering it appears Blue was able to deorbit GS2 I'm quite optimistic.