SpaceX has been working for years towards recovering and reusing payload fairings. Fairing is a two-piece protective shell made of aluminum and carbon composite at the tip of the Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rockets. Its purpose is to protect the payload from acoustic and atmospheric effects during launch. A Falcon fairing is almost 14 meters tall. Due to its size and the materials used, fairing production is time-consuming and costly (SpaceX produces the fairings in-house and the total cost for two fairing halves is 5 or 6 million dollars). So it is no wonder that the company would like to recover the fairings in order to use them repeatedly, just as it does with its rocket boosters.

Each fairing half is equipped with a steerable parafoil and small thrusters which allow the fairings to reenter the atmosphere intact and guide them toward a recovery zone. They then attempt to land in the ocean or on modified ships Ms. Tree and Ms. Chief equipped with large nets. Landing in the net is preferable because contact with salt water makes reusing the fairings harder (but still possible).

This list of fairing recovery attempts recognizes three generations of fairings: v1.0, v2.0 and v2.5. These are unofficial designations and there might actually be fewer or more fairing types. Version 1.0 was used until early 2018 with only one fairing half containing parachutes. Version 2.0 was used for most of 2018, was slightly wider and both of its halves could be recovered. Version 2.5 is the most recent type which added a metal thermal protection on the tip of the fairing.

» Much more detailed article about fairing recovery and the ships Ms. Tree and Ms. Chief «

Changelog:

Sep 4, 2020 – Added information about the unsuccessful catch attempt during the Starlink v1-11 mission

Sep 1, 2020 – Added information and photos from the SAOCOM 1B fairing recovery; added a pink color indicator for fairings that missed the net but were recovered from water afterwards; added a counter of successful fairing catches; added an indicator for missions with reused fairings (♺)

Aug 21, 2020 – Added a photo of both fairings recovered from the Starlink v1-10 mission

Aug 19, 2020 – New photo and video from the Starlink v1-10 fairing catch

Aug 18, 2020 – Added information about the catch attempt during the Starlink v1-10 mission

Aug 17, 2020 – Fairing halves from Starlink v1-3 will be reused on Starlink v1-10

Aug 10, 2020 – Additional photos of recovered fairings from the Starlink v1-9 mission

Aug 8, 2020 – Added photos of successfully recovered fairings from the Starlink v1-9 mission

Aug 7, 2020 – Added information and photos from the Starlink v1-9 recovery attempt

Jul 22, 2020 – Added photos of recovered fairings from the ANASIS-II mission

Jul 21, 2020 – Added link to video of the successful double catch during ANASIS-II

Jul 20, 2020 – Added information about the first successful double catch during the ANASIS-II mission

Jul 2, 2020 – Added photos of recovered fairings from the GPSIII-SV03 mission

Number of fairing halves that successfuly landed in the net: 6

Legend: YES means the fairing successfully landed in the net. YES means the fairing missed the net but was then recovered from the ocean intact. YES means the fairing was recovered intact after a PLANNED ocean landing. NO means that the fairing wasn’t recovered intact (regardless of planned landing method). ♺ indicates a reused fairing.