| SpaceX just completed a full-duration static fire of its brand new Starship V3. It's the final major test before the rocket's maiden flight in May. And it's happening just weeks before the SpaceX IPO. Claim your shares in the hidden SpaceX IPO plays — before the listing. A static fire is when SpaceX ignites the engines on the rocket while it's still anchored to the launch pad. The goal is to test engine performance, fuel flow, and overall systems without actually launching. On April 14, SpaceX successfully ran the first-ever full-duration static fire on Starship V3's upper stage. It's the last major gate before Flight 12, the maiden voyage of the new rocket. And Elon Musk confirmed the launch is targeted for early to mid May. Starship V3 is a ground-up redesign of the most powerful rocket ever built. It uses the new Raptor 3 engines, which deliver roughly twice the thrust of the current generation. Its payload capacity jumps to more than 100 tons, which is 2 to 3 times higher than the previous version. And both the Super Heavy booster and the Starship upper stage are designed to be fully reusable for the first time. That matters because reusability is what makes SpaceX's economics work. Until Starship V3, no rocket in history has been fully reusable. Every launch has meant throwing away expensive hardware, costing tens or hundreds of millions of dollars per flight. Starship V3 is designed to be refueled and flown again, dramatically cutting launch costs over time. It's also the rocket NASA is counting on to return astronauts to the Moon. And it's the rocket SpaceX needs to deploy the next generation of Starlink satellites, which will deliver faster speeds and larger capacity. The biggest rocket launch in history is happening the same month SpaceX files its public IPO prospectus. A successful flight would boost the company's valuation even higher. That's why I'm securing these under-the-radar companies that will benefit most from the SpaceX IPO — weeks before the launch event and weeks before the IPO. Here's how you can do the same for as little as $100. Ian Wyatt |
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