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Blue Origin successfully re-uses a New Glenn rocket for the first time ever
Blue Origin's New Glenn achieved a successful first-stage landing and first attempted reuse on its third launch, but failed to place AST SpaceMobile's BlueBird 7 into its intended orbit. The satellite separated and powered on, but ended up in a lower, off-nominal orbit that its onboard propulsion cannot correct, so AST plans to de-orbit it and expects insurance to cover the loss. Blue Origin has not yet explained the second-stage anomaly or how this affects its upcoming manifest, which includes Amazon’s Project Kuiper launches, further AST missions, and the Blue Moon lunar lander demonstrator. The boating landing and reuse milestone is overshadowed by the costly payload loss, raising questions about reliability for customers and partnerships.
Blue Origin’s New Glenn mission on its third launch delivered a customer satellite into the wrong orbit, according to reports. The deviation means the customer — whose identity hasn’t been publicly confirmed — received a payload in an orbit that differs from the contracted insertion, potentially affecting satellite operations and mission timelines. Blue Origin will need to explain the anomaly, assess any damage or service impact, and determine whether corrective maneuvers by the satellite can recover the intended orbit. The incident raises questions about New Glenn’s reliability and quality control as Blue Origin seeks commercial market share against SpaceX and other launch providers. Regulators, insurers and customers will watch how the company responds.
Blue Origin successfully landed and re-used the first stage of its heavy-lift New Glenn rocket for the first time, marking a milestone for orbital-class booster reusability. The booster, named Never Tell Me The Odds, completed a second flight and recovered on Blue Origin’s ship after two braking burns; new engines were installed on the booster but the company plans to reuse engines from earlier flights. However, the mission suffered a major setback when New Glenn’s two-engine upper stage failed to place AST SpaceMobile’s direct-to-cell broadband satellite into its planned 460 km, 49° orbit; the payload was powered on but in an orbit too low to sustain operations and will be de-orbited, with AST expecting to claim insurance. The mixed outcome highlights progress on reusable hardware but raises concerns about upper-stage reliability and commercial launch credibility.
Blue Origin successfully refl ew the first stage of its heavy-lift New Glenn rocket, landing the booster named Never Tell Me The Odds after a second flight — a milestone for orbital-class booster reuse. However, the mission suffered a major setback when New Glenn’s hydrogen-fueled upper stage failed to reach its planned orbit and released AST SpaceMobile’s cellular broadband satellite into an orbit too low to sustain operations. AST confirmed the satellite will be de-orbited and insurance will cover the loss; Blue Origin said it is assessing the anomaly. The mixed outcome highlights progress on reusability for launch-scale vehicles but raises concerns about upper-stage reliability for commercial and NASA payloads.
Blue Origin achieved its first successful reflight of an orbital-class New Glenn booster during the rocket's third flight, marking a milestone for reusable heavy-lift launchers. The 321-foot New Glenn lifted off from Cape Canaveral with seven BE-4 methane engines, reached supersonic speed in roughly 90 seconds, and successfully jettisoned its booster. However, the mission suffered a setback when the upper stage—powered by two BE-3U liquid hydrogen/liquid oxygen engines—experienced a failure after booster separation, undermining the flight's full success and raising questions about payload delivery and reliability for future missions, including Blue Origin’s role in NASA’s Artemis program. The event matters for launch economics, competition with SpaceX, and confidence in reusable heavy-lift systems.
Blue Origin’s New Glenn put a customer satellite in the wrong orbit during its third launch
Blue Origin successfully re-uses a New Glenn rocket for the first time ever