SpaceX's heavy-lift rocket Falcon Heavy to launch on Feb. 6

APD NEWS

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SpaceX said last Saturday that the first flight of heavy-lift rocket, the Falcon Heavy, is now scheduled for early February.

"Aiming for first flight of Falcon Heavy on Feb. 6 from Apollo launchpad 39A at Cape Kennedy," SpaceX founder Elon Musk tweeted. "Easy viewing from the public causeway."

Screenshot via Twitter.

Falcon Heavy completed its static firing test at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida on Wednesday after multiple delays.

Soon after the test, Musk tweeted that the rocket is ready for launch "in a week or so."

The tech billionaire has said the rocket will carry a red Tesla Roadster into space, eventually to a Mars orbit, where it should remain "for a billion years or so if it doesn't blow up on ascent."

The Falcon Heavy, a reusable super heavy-lift launch vehicle, is seen as the world's most powerful rocket since NASA's Saturn V moon rocket in the 1960s.

SpaceX's Falcon Heavy on its launchpad.

Its first stage is composed of three Falcon 9 nine-engine cores whose 27 Merlin engines together generate more than five million pounds (2.3 million kilograms) of thrust at liftoff, equal to about eighteen 747 aircraft.

Only the Saturn V moon rocket, last flown in 1973, delivered more payload to orbit.

Falcon Heavy was designed to carry humans into space and restores the possibility of flying missions with crew to the Moon or Mars, according to SpaceX.

(ASIA PACIFIC DAILY)