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NASA’s 11-Million-Pound Artemis II Moon Rocket Begins Epic Crawl to Launchpad, Igniting Final Countdown to Crewed Lunar Return

Last updated: January 17, 2026 4:20 pm
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NASA’s 11-Million-Pound Artemis II Moon Rocket Begins Epic Crawl to Launchpad, Igniting Final Countdown to Crewed Lunar Return
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NASA’s 11-million-pound Artemis II stack is moving to the pad at 1 mph—slow, deliberate, and irreversible—marking the last major ground milestone before four astronauts ride around the moon this spring.

What Just Happened

Engineers inside Kennedy Space Center’s Vehicle Assembly Building closed the final access platforms around the 322-foot Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion crew capsule on Friday. At dawn Saturday, Crawler-Transporter 2—a 6.6-million-pound, tank-tracked behemoth—will lumber out with its 11-million-pound passenger, kicking off a rollout that can last up to 12 hours over four miles to Launch Complex 39B.

Why This Rollout Changes Everything

Rollout is the point of no return. Once the stack leaves the VAB, any major repair means a month-long rollback, tanking delays, and a cascade of launch-window slips. NASA managers therefore treat the event as a de-facto acceptance review: every booster battery, every pyrotechnic, every life-support line must be signed off before the crawler moves. A clean arrival at the pad locks the agency into a Feb. 6–11 launch window; if weather or hardware balks, March and April slots are still available, but political pressure and the looming Chinese 2030 moon-landing goal make February the bull’s-eye.

From Apollo to Artemis: 39B’s Second Act

Pad 39B last sent humans skyward during Skylab in 1973 and later hosted 53 shuttle launches. NASA stripped it to bare steel after STS-116, then rebuilt it for SLS: new 1.4-million-gallon liquid-hydrogen tank, explosion-proof communications, and a 380-foot lightning tower system. Saturday’s rollout will be the first time a crew-rated vehicle sits atop the refurbished pad since 2011’s final shuttle flight.

The Wet Dress Rehearsal: Launch Day Without Liftoff

After the rocket is secured, teams will spend two weeks connecting propellant, electrical, and environmental systems. Then comes the wet dress rehearsal—a full 46-hour countdown culminating in a halt at T-29 seconds while 730,000 gallons of super-cooled liquid hydrogen and oxygen flow through the core stage and twin boosters. Launch Director Charlie Blackwell-Thompson notes the only procedural differences on launch day will be the presence of four astronauts and the continuation of the count past 29 seconds.

Who Rides Artemis II

  • Reid Wiseman, commander—former ISS expedition chief who commanded the first Starliner crewed test in 2015.
  • Victor Glover, pilot—SpaceX Crew-1 veteran and the first Black astronaut to live aboard ISS for a long-duration mission.
  • Christina Koch, mission specialist—holds the record for longest single spaceflight by a woman (328 days).
  • Jeremy Hansen, mission specialist—Canadian Space Agency rookie who will become the first non-U.S. astronaut to leave Earth orbit.

10 Days That Redefine Deep-Space Human Flight

Artemis II’s free-return trajectory will sling the crew around the moon’s far side, reaching an altitude of 6,400 miles—farther than any humans since Apollo 17. Orion’s life-support loop, radiation sensors, and manual docking software will be stressed in real time. Success validates both the spacecraft’s European Service Module solar arrays and the heat shield’s 5,000 °F re-entry that must protect the crew during a 25,000-mph Pacific splashdown.

What Could Still Go Wrong

  1. Leak check failures in the quick-disconnect arms that feed cryogenic propellant; a single faulty seal forced a three-week rollback during Artemis I.
  2. RS-25 engine controller timing—each of the four refurbished shuttle-era engines must sync within micro-seconds.
  3. Eastern Range availability—Space Force radars and down-range recovery ships are double-booked with Falcon Heavy and ULA missions this spring.
  4. Hurricane season creep—Atlantic storm forecasts push the launch window earlier to avoid late-summer cyclones.

Why Developers and Engineers Should Care

SLS software is built on Green Hills INTEGRITY RTOS and NASA’s Core Flight System (cFS), open-source frameworks already ported to CubeSats. The Orion display uses Qt Commercial running on hardened PowerPC chips—an architecture legacy that influences radiation-tolerant avionics for lunar surface habitats. Telemetry downlinks at 150 Mbps Ka-band will feed cloud pipelines on AWS Ground Station, giving startups a live firehose to test AI anomaly-detection models at lunar distances.

China vs. Clock: The Geopolitical Subtext

President Trump’s National Space Council has directed NASA to “beat China to the surface” after Beijing’s 2024 robotic sample-return success and announced 2030 crewed landing goal. Artemis II is therefore a gatekeeper mission: delay it past April and the next SLS core stage won’t be ready until 2027, handing China narrative momentum. A February launch keeps Artemis III—the south-pole landing—on track for September 2027 and preserves U.S. congressional funding headroom.

Your Next Countdown Starts Here

Saturday’s crawler crawl is more than spectacle; it is the moment hardware meets destiny. If the 11-million-pound stack arrives at 39B without incident, NASA enters the final lap of a race that began with Apollo 17’s last footsteps in 1972. Stay locked to onlytrustedinfo.com for the fastest, most authoritative breakdown of wet-dress results, launch-window confirmation, and live mission graphics—because when Artemis II lights the night sky, every second of analysis will count.

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