SpaceX’s Starlink Launch Faces Weather‑Related Delay

Cape Canaveral, USAThu Mar 19 2026
Florida’s cold front keeps the skies cloudy, pushing SpaceX’s Falcon 9 launch to no earlier than 10:20 a. m. on March 19 from Cape Canaveral’s Launch Complex 40. The rocket will ferry a new batch of Starlink satellites into orbit, heading northeast so that observers north of the Cape might spot it if clouds clear. The 45th Weather Squadron forecasts a 60‑75 % chance of favorable conditions during the launch window, but the cold front’s presence suggests clouds will linger. SpaceX has a 15‑minute window, ending at 10:35 a. m. , to secure liftoff. If the launch proceeds, the first stage will land on a drone ship in the Atlantic about eight and a half minutes after takeoff, sparing Brevard County from sonic booms.
Behind the scenes, the countdown follows a strict schedule: propellant loading starts hours before, engine chill begins seven minutes out, and final checks occur in the last minute. A “go” from the launch director triggers engine ignition, leading to lift‑off at T = 0. This mission is the Falcon 9’s 27th flight, having carried missions for NASA, GPS, Inmarsat, Intelsat, and multiple Starlink launches. Fans on the Space Coast have hopes of a “jellyfish” effect—a bright glow in the sky—if weather aligns with the early‑morning launch. SpaceX will provide updates as the window approaches, and observers should keep an eye on cloud cover for a possible sighting of the rocket’s ascent.
https://localnews.ai/article/spacexs-starlink-launch-faces-weatherrelated-delay-e4e58aa6

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