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Bermuda Rocket Tracker

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SpaceX

Falcon Heavy | Griffin Mission One

Possible visibility
TBD
Countdown

Liftoff
08:00 PM
AST · Nov 29, 2026
Bearing
259°
West

Mission

Demonstration flight of the Astrobotic Griffin lander and its engines, initially contracted for the cancelled NASA VIPER (Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover) mission. The vacated payload spot will now host the FLIP (FLEX Lunar Innovation Platform) lunar rover from Astrolab.

Target orbit: Lunar Orbit

How to watch from Bermuda

Possible visibility from Bermuda, conditions permitting.

Face west (258.9865840268977°) and sweep along the trajectory. Start scanning the sky about six minutes after liftoff.

Sweep order (approximate)

  1. 01southwest
  2. 02west
  3. 03northwest
  4. 04north
  5. 05northeast

You are standing at the amber dot in the middle. The solid cyan arrow is where to aim your eyes — roughly where the rocket will appear highest in the sky. The dotted cyan arc traces the rocket's motion across the sky, with the arrow showing which way it travels.

Lighting note

At night, look for the faint glow of the exhaust plume rather than the rocket itself. Let your eyes adjust for several minutes before liftoff, and avoid looking at phone screens.

Bermuda weather

Checking conditions…

Falcon Heavy mission profile

Typical stage events

Illustrative timings from published Falcon Heavy press kits. Actual events vary by mission profile, payload, and recovery method. Telemetry-accurate per-mission events coming in v1.x.

Bermuda viewing window

Appears above horizon

08:07 PM AST

T+7:15

Fades (engine cutoff)

08:08 PM AST

T+8:32

Visible for

~1 min 17 sec

The rocket rises low in the SW, arcs across the sky toward W, and fades in the WNW when engines cut out. Under clear skies and with minimal light pollution, the rocket plume is typically visible as a slow-moving bright star between these times.

Times assume on-time liftoff. Add ~30–90 sec uncertainty for typical per-mission timing variance; launch delays move the whole window.

  1. T+0Liftoff
  2. T+1:07Max-Q
  3. T+2:29Side boosters MECO
  4. T+2:32Side-booster separation
  5. T+2:48Center-core MECO
  6. T+2:52Center-core separation
  7. T+3:17Fairing jettison
  8. T+8:32Side-booster RTLS landing (approx.)

Launch details

Vehicle
Falcon Heavy
Pad
Launch Complex 39A, Kennedy Space Center, FL, USA, USA
Pad coordinates
28.60822681, -80.60428186
Mission type
Lunar Orbit
Launch window
08:00 PM → 08:00 PM
Lighting at NET
Night