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Viasat’s ViaSat-3 Flight 2 (VS-3 F2) satellite, built by Boeing, has completed its flight from Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) to Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
Customers of Beyond Gravity include Viasat/Inmarsat, SES/Intelsat, Lockheed Martin, and Thales.
Equatys is being formed by Space42 and Viasat.
Boeing and Viasat teams, together with launch partner United Launch Alliance (ULA), are preparing VS-3 F2 for launch in late October 2025.
Dave Abrahamian is the Vice President of Space Systems at Viasat.
The ViaSat-3 F2 satellite will launch on a United Launch Alliance Atlas V 551 rocket.
The ViaSat-3 satellite weighs 6 metric tons (13,228 pounds).
Viasat implemented corrective actions and testing for the reflectors on the second satellite.
Boeing built the ViaSat-3 satellite bus based on its 702MP+ platform.
United Launch Alliance (ULA) will provide the launch services for ViaSat-3 F2.
ViaSat-3 F2 was transported on board an Antonov aircraft.
The ViaSat‑3 F2 satellite was delivered to Viasat.
The launch of ViaSat-3 F2 will provide critical capacity after the first ViaSat-3 satellite suffered a reflector deployment anomaly in 2023.
VS-3 F2 is expected to add more than 1Tbps capacity to Viasat’s network over the Americas.
The ViaSat-3 F2 satellite has arrived in Cape Canaveral ahead of launch.
The total bandwidth capacity of VS-3 F2 will exceed that of Viasat’s entire existing fleet.
The first ViaSat-3 satellite is in service but delivering only a fraction of its expected capacity.
The launch of the ViaSat-3 F2 satellite is planned for late October.
The third ViaSat-3 satellite, VS-3 F3, is in the assembly, integration, and test phase.
Boeing completed delivery of the ViaSat-3 F2 satellite to Viasat.