Trevor Mahlmann for Ars

SpaceX

12:20pm ET Wednesday Update: SpaceX says it has canceled Wednesday's launch attempt due to high winds over the launch site, as well as rough seas in the vicinity of its drone ship, which may have precluded a safe first stage landing.

Fortunately the company has a back-up launch attempt on Thursday, set for 12:29pm ET (17:29 UTC). Weather conditions are expected to be more favorable at that time.

Original post: A twice-flown Dragon spacecraft is ready to be launched on Wednesday to the International Space Station. The mission, which will ferry nearly 2.6 tons of supplies to the orbiting laboratory for NASA, will remain in orbit for about a month before returning to Earth with more than 50 science experiments.

Liftoff is scheduled for 12:51pm ET (17:51 UTC) from Space Launch Complex-40 in Florida. Surface weather conditions are fine, but there are concerns about upper-level winds reaching as high as 120 knots later today. Before launch, meteorologists will release a weather balloon to determine whether upper atmospheric conditions are acceptable for the rocket to navigate through. A back-up launch opportunity is available at 12:29pm ET on Thursday.

New rocket

SpaceX has built a new Falcon 9 rocket for this mission—hence, no soot in the launch pad photos. However, it will be flying a different profile for this space station supply mission. Typically, the newest variant of the Falcon 9 rocket has enough lift capacity to loft the Dragon spacecraft into orbit before using its remaining fuel to steer it back to a landing site on the Florida coast.

In this case, however, the Falcon 9 rocket's first stage is slated to land on the Of Course I Still Love You drone ship more than 100 miles offshore. Asked about this, SpaceX's director of Dragon mission management, Jessica Jensen, said Tuesday that the rocket's upper stage is slated to fly a "thermal demonstration" for another, unnamed customer. To put this second stage into the proper orbit for this demonstration, the first stage will need to burn longer and will not have the fuel needed to return to the coast.

Asked for more information about the second stage's six-hour coast, Jensen said she could not provide much additional detail. This suggests the mission may be demonstrating some capability to the Air Force to put classified payloads into a special orbit.

Used spacecraft

This particular Dragon spacecraft has completed two missions already, and this will be its last. The first version of the Cargo Dragon spacecraft, developed between 2006 and 2010, was qualified to fly up to three missions before being disposed.

SpaceX plans to fly one more mission with the original run of Dragons—which will be the 20th resupply mission for NASA—before transitioning into a "Cargo Dragon 2" vehicle. This newer vehicle will have 30% more cargo volume, twice as many powered lockers for storage, and the capability for autonomous docking. Additionally, the vehicle will be capable of up to five missions before retirement. It should debut in the third quarter of 2020, Jensen said.

Listing image by SpaceX