The company is ditching the Series-2 design for the Apex 1.0, which will now launch in 2026.
to the surface of the Moon. ispace also announced that it was establishing its U.S. headquarters in Denver, Colorado,The company’s upcoming mission has been delayed by a year in order to make time for the development of the lunar lander, which will replace the company’s Series-2 lander. Compared to Series-2, Apex 1.0 has a larger payload capacity, with the ability to carry up to 660 pounds to the lunar surface.
The reason ispace scrapped its original design was to accommodate the primary customer for its upcoming mission: NASA. The private space company signed a $55 million contract with NASA for Mission 3, which will use Apex 1.0 to deliver approximately 210 pounds of scientific payloads to near the lunar south pole. ispace joined a team led by Draper Laboratory to deliver the NASA payloads as part of the space agency’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services.“The updated schedule enables Team Draper and ispace – U.S. to accommodate sensitive payloads by harnessing APEX 1.
. Hakuto-R M1 was carrying both commercial and government-owned payloads, including a tiny, two-wheeled transformable robot from the Japanese space agency. With its lunar landers, ispace wants to initiate a new era for commercial space ventures by delivering payloads to the Moon on a regular basis.ispace wants to launch its second mission to the Moon in 2024, hoping to stick the landing this time.
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