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#PlayalindaBeach

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: The first launched from LC-39A at Kennedy Space Center. Crowds gathered across the to watch, including at Playalinda Beach.
In this , the rocket has risen above a hill, covered with eager viewers, while the three-cored rocket rising on three, firey exhaust plumes, and smoke billowing off to the left.
The views (and Fox, the ) had waited hours in the hot Sun to see this. The in the crowd is . One person has thrown their arms in the air, celebrating the rocket’s victory.
This carried an electric vehicle mounted on its upper stage as a test payload.
There is a sea grape bush in the foreground on the left.
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A United Launch Alliance lifts up over the at the of Cape Canaveral National Seashore CCNS, at Playalinda Beach, where it meats Kennedy Space Center property.
The newly-built Crew Access Tower at SLC-41 is visible in front of the flame column.
, , , , , , , , , Photography.
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The modern , designed by and operated by the United Launch Alliance or , has been called the for its ability to add capacity by adding solid rocket boosters like increasing steps on a .
The “Dial” next goes up to 3 with the V 431, with a 4 meter fairing, 3 , and 1 engine on the upper stage.
The private launched to on a ULA Atlas V 431.
This shows it rising over the at .
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A of a United Launch Alliance in its 431 configuration, with a 4 meter diameter fairing, 3 solid rocket boosters , and a single engine on its upper stage climbs up from its pad.
This was taken from in the Cape Canaveral National Seashore , where a mile’s hike on the beach can bring you directly against the decrepit wire fence that marks the boundary between the parts of open to the public, and ’s Kennedy Space Center’s operational area.
The perspective in this image makes one of those fraying wires seem like an obstacle to the approaching from below.
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