SpaceX has picked the launch date and time for the next Starship Flight Test, FT-11 is preparing to launch as soon as Monday, October 13. The launch window will open at 6:15 p.m. CT. This mission is being talked about as the last Version 2 Starship that will fly, so it's a combination of things they want to get "one last look" at and things they'll need for what the next test flights will be like.
The upcoming flight will build on the successful demonstrations from Starship’s tenth flight test with flight experiments gathering data for the next generation Super Heavy booster, stress-testing Starship’s heatshield, and demonstrating maneuvers that will mimic the upper stage’s final approach for a future return to launch site.
The booster on this flight will be reused, having flown on Flight 8. Of its 33 Raptor engines, 24 have flown before. Its primary test objective will be demonstrating a unique landing burn engine configuration planned to be used on the next generation Super Heavy. The booster will not return to the launch site to be caught by the Mechazilla arms but will land in the Gulf of America, as some previous flights have done.
Super Heavy will ignite 13 engines at the start of the landing burn and then transition to a new configuration with five engines running for the divert phase. Previously done with three engines, the planned baseline for V3 Super Heavy will use five engines during the section of the burn responsible for fine-tuning the booster’s path, adding additional redundancy for spontaneous engine shutdowns. The booster will then transition to its three center engines for the end of the landing burn, entering a full hover while still above the ocean surface, followed by shutdown and dropping into the Gulf of America. The primary goal on the flight test is to measure the real-world vehicle dynamics as engines shut down while transitioning between the different phases.
The Starship itself will be the last Version 2 ship to fly. A highlight of flight 10 was finally getting the "Pez dispenser" to eject a handful of simulated Starlink satellites during the tests of the Ship itself. The same things are planned for this mission. They're also planning a relight of one Raptor engine, something that has been talked about many times but apparently never was achieved.
The flight test includes several experiments and operational changes focused on enabling Starship’s upper stage to return to the launch site on future flights. For reentry, tiles have been removed from Starship to intentionally stress-test vulnerable areas across the vehicle. Several of the missing tiles are in areas where tiles are bonded to the vehicle and do not have a backup ablative layer. To mimic the path a ship will take on future flights returning to Starbase, the final phase of Starship’s trajectory on Flight 11 includes a dynamic banking maneuver and will test subsonic guidance algorithms prior to a landing burn and splashdown in the Indian Ocean.
Again, October 13 at 7:30 PM EDT. That's under two weeks away and, as always, best available guess.
Now essentially a stock photo - Starship test in April of 2023. Image credit: SpaceX