
The Cape Gigabay is getting closer to being ready for Starship! Teams recently installed the 420-ton crane – which we’ll use to break over and move Starships and Super Heavy boosters preparing for flight. One step closer to the Moon and Mars 🚀🚀🚀
Ryan Sofranko
860 posts

@ryan_sofranko
Sr. Manager - Cape Starship @SpaceX, Father, Avid @Phillies Baseball Fan ⚾️, Data Lover 🧮, Veteran

The Cape Gigabay is getting closer to being ready for Starship! Teams recently installed the 420-ton crane – which we’ll use to break over and move Starships and Super Heavy boosters preparing for flight. One step closer to the Moon and Mars 🚀🚀🚀








The Portugal crowd FINALLY got to cheer after Cristiano Ronaldo scored his 1st goal of the 2026 World Cup, making Portugal the favorites on Kalshi to win Group K. What are some of the greatest crowd pops in sports history?

NEWS: SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell is now worth $1.3 billion. She joined SpaceX in 2002 as its 11th employee. Today she runs the company's day to day operations as President and COO. Forbes just placed her on its 2026 list of America's Richest Self-Made Women. Employee number 11 to billionaire.





This was one of the most interesting conversations I’ve had in a while. Michelle Thaller a wealth of fascinating information about space, time and all things the cosmos. And she’s an incredibly compelling speaker. These kinds of podcasts are some of my favorites open.spotify.com/episode/46MudX…



Onboard views from Starship and Super Heavy V3, which are equipped with upgraded cameras capable of streaming 4K video through every phase of flight via @Starlink


Starship’s twelfth flight test will debut the next generation Starship and Super Heavy vehicles, powered by the next evolution of the Raptor engine and launching from a newly designed pad at Starbase. The launch is targeted as early as Tuesday, May 19 → spacex.com/launches/stars…

Three years since the first flight of Starship, the next generation is here. New ship. New booster. New engines. New pad and new test site. SpaceX engineers are working to solve one of the most difficult engineering challenges in history: developing a fully, rapidly reusable rocket