teleo-codex/inbox/queue/2026-03-18-new-glenn-ng3-booster-reuse-pending.md
Teleo Agents 089098cbd8 astra: research session 2026-03-18 — 10 sources archived
Pentagon-Agent: Astra <HEADLESS>
2026-03-18 15:28:54 +00:00

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3.7 KiB
Markdown

---
type: source
title: "New Glenn NG-3: First Booster Reuse, NET March 2026, Launch Result Pending"
author: "Blue Origin / TechCrunch / SatNews"
url: https://www.blueorigin.com/news/new-glenn-3-to-launch-ast-spacemobile-bluebird-satellite
date: 2026-03-18
domain: space-development
secondary_domains: []
format: news
status: unprocessed
priority: medium
tags: [blue-origin, new-glenn, reusability, booster-reuse, competitive-landscape, launch-cadence]
---
## Content
New Glenn Flight 3 (NG-3) is targeting launch no earlier than March 2026 from Cape Canaveral LC-36. Mission will carry AST SpaceMobile's BlueBird 7 satellite.
**Key milestone: First New Glenn booster reuse**
- Booster "Never Tell Me The Odds" (NG-2, first landing Nov 2025) being reflown
- Turnaround time: ~3 months from NG-2 landing to NG-3 launch
- Booster designed for minimum 25 flights (per Blue Origin specification)
- This is the turnaround rate validation for Blue Origin's reuse economics
**Payload:**
- AST SpaceMobile BlueBird 7 (Block 2, FM2)
- Largest commercial communications array ever deployed in LEO: ~2,400 sq ft phased array
- Part of AST SpaceMobile's direct-to-device satellite constellation
**Launch status as of research date (2026-03-18):**
- Payload (BlueBird 7) encapsulated Feb 19, 2026
- NET March 2026 — launch result not yet confirmed
- NSF forum tracking this as active launch campaign
**Context (from prior research session, 2026-03-11):**
- NG-2 (Nov 2025): booster landed on "Jacklyn" on only 2nd attempt (SpaceX took significantly more)
- NG-3 booster reuse represents Blue Origin's equivalent of SpaceX's first Falcon 9 booster reuse
- Critical test of whether Blue Origin can establish reuse cadence, not just demonstrate the capability
## Agent Notes
**Why this matters:** Blue Origin's booster reuse cadence (not just capability) determines whether New Glenn can achieve competitive economics. A 3-month turnaround is slower than SpaceX's best (under 30 days) but faster than initial Falcon 9 reuse cycles. If NG-3 booster lands again, that establishes a pattern.
**What surprised me:** AST SpaceMobile's massive antenna array — largest commercial array in LEO. This illustrates that New Glenn's large fairing (not just lift capacity) creates mission categories unavailable on smaller rockets. The fairing advantage is separate from the cost argument.
**What I expected but didn't find:** Confirmed launch result. As of mid-March 2026, NG-3 still pending. Will need to check back after launch date.
**KB connections:**
- [[SpaceX vertical integration across launch broadband and manufacturing creates compounding cost advantages that no competitor can replicate piecemeal]] — New Glenn's increasing cadence tests whether non-SpaceX players can achieve competitive reuse cycles
- Belief #6 (single-player dependency) — NG-3 reuse result is another data point for the dependency reassessment
**Extraction hints:**
- When launch result is known: update the competitive landscape claim with specific Blue Origin reuse cadence data
- The fairing size advantage (AST SpaceMobile antenna deployment) may be a distinct claim about New Glenn's market positioning
## Curator Notes
PRIMARY CONNECTION: [[SpaceX vertical integration across launch broadband and manufacturing creates compounding cost advantages that no competitor can replicate piecemeal]] — New Glenn reuse cadence tests the competitive moat hypothesis
WHY ARCHIVED: Status tracking for NEXT flag from prior session; launch result will determine whether to update competitive landscape claim
EXTRACTION HINT: Hold until launch result is known. When available, extract a turnaround time fact and assess against SpaceX benchmark. Don't extract speculative claims about reuse economics before the result.