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Hispasat 30W-6 (formerly Hispasat 1F) is a Spanish communications satellite by Hispasat that launched on a Falcon 9 on March 6, 2018.[ 3] It is replacing Hispasat 1D at 30° West longitude and will provide service for television, broadband, corporate networks and other telecommunications applications.[ 2] The satellite features 4 × SPT-100 plasma propulsion engines .[ 2]
This mission also carried a small (90 kg) technology demonstration satellite called Payload Orbital Delivery System Satellite (PODSat), which was deployed from its mothership when still in a sub-geostationary transfer orbit.[ 4]
Satellites
Communications Earth observation Science & technology
Rockets
Tracking and launch sites Other facilities Institutions Commercial space industry Astronauts
SpaceX missions and payloads
Launch vehicles Falcon 1 missions Falcon 9 missions
Demonstrations ISS logisticsCrewed Commercial satellites
SES-8
Thaicom 6
Orbcomm OG2 × 6
AsiaSat 8
AsiaSat 6
ABS-3A / Eutelsat 115 West B
TürkmenÄlem 52°E
Orbcomm OG2 × 11
SES-9
JCSAT-14
Thaicom 8
ABS-2A / Eutelsat 117 West B
JCSAT-16
AMOS-6 †
Iridium NEXT 1–10
EchoStar 23
SES-10
Inmarsat-5 F4
BulgariaSat-1
Iridium NEXT 11–20
Intelsat 35e
Iridium NEXT 21–30
SES-11
Koreasat 5A
Iridium NEXT 31–40
Hispasat 30W-6
Iridium NEXT 41–50
Bangabandhu-1
Iridium NEXT 51–55
SES-12
Telstar 19V
Iridium NEXT 56–65
Telkom 4 (Merah Putih)
Telstar 18V
Es'hail 2
Iridium NEXT 66–75
Nusantara Satu / Beresheet
Amos 17
JCSAT -18
SXM 7
Türksat 5A
SXM 8
Türksat 5B
Nilesat-301
SES-22
Galaxy 33 ,34
Hotbird 13F
Hotbird 13G
Galaxy 31,32
Eutelsat 10B
OneWeb #15
O3b mPOWER 1,2
OneWeb #16
Amazonas Nexus
OneWeb #17
SES 18,19
Intelsat 40e
O3b mPOWER 3,4
Iridium NEXT 76-80 and OneWeb #19
ArabSat 7B
SATRIA
Galaxy 37
O3b mPOWER 5,6
Ovzon -3
Merah Putih 2
Eutelsat 36D
Galileo FOC FM25,27
WorldView Legion 1,2
Astra 1P
Türksat 6A
ASBM 1,2
WorldView Legion 3,4
BlueBird Block 1
Galileo FOC FM26,32
OneWeb #20
Scientific satellites Military satellites Starlink Rideshares
Falcon Heavy missions Starship missions
Flight tests Crewed Commercial satellites
Ongoing spaceflights are underlined
Future missions and vehicles under development in italics
Failed missions† are marked with dagger †
January
USA-280 / Zuma
BeiDou-3 M7 , BeiDou-3 M8
Cartosat-2F , ICEYE-X1 , Microsat-TD , Arkyd-6A , Carbonite-2 , Flock-3p' × 4 , Fox-1D , Landmapper BC 3 v2 , Lemur-2 × 4 , PicSat , SpaceBEE × 4
USA-281 / Topaz-5
Jilin-1 Video-07 , Jilin-1 Video-08 , Kepler 0 KIPP
USA-282 / SBIRS-GEO-4
Humanity Star , Dove Pioneer , Lemur-2 × 2
Yaogan 30-04 (3 satellites)
SES-14 , Al Yah 3
GovSat-1 / SES-16
February March April May June July August September October November December
Soyuz MS-11
SHERPA , Blacksky Global 2 , Capella 1 , ESEO , Eu:CROPIS , FalconSAT 6 , ICEYE X2 , SkySat 14 , SkySat 15 , STPSat 5 , ENOCH , Flock-3s × 3 , IRVINE02 , Landmapper BC 4 , MinXSS-2 , Orbital Reflector , PW-Sat 2 , SpaceBEE × 3
GSAT-11 , GEO-KOMPSAT 2A
SpaceX CRS-16 (TechEdSat 8 , UNITE )
Chang'e 4 (Yutu-2 )
CubeSail , RSat-P , STF-1
GSAT-7A
CSO-1
Kosmos 2533 / Blagovest -13L
USA-289 / GPS IIIA -01
Kanopus-V No. 5, No. 6, Flock-3k × 12 , Lemur-2 × 8 , Lume-1
Yunhai-2 01 (6 satellites)
Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).