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Proton Booster Cleared For Another AST Mission


Washington, DC March 13, 1998 -

Washington, DC March 13, 1998 - AST, the Hong Kong-based telecommunications company has selected the Proton launch vehicle to lift its replacement satellite to the Asiasat 3, SpaceCast has learned from U.S. launch industry sources.

The decision by the firm in essence redeems the rocket from the upper stage failure last Christmas that doomed the satellite. Launch insurance for the lost spacecraft, believed to be in the neighborhood of $200 million, will be used to pay for the replacement that will also ride the Proton.

The new satellite, Asiasat 3C, will also be built by Hughes, which made Asiasat 3. The 3C will be an identical copy of the spacecraft lost in 1997, so assembly should not take more than 15 months, space industry sources suggested. Launch of the replacement aboard the Proton from the same pad as Asiasat 3 will take place in the fall of 1999, AST officials confirmed.

The action by AST serves to help Lockheed Martin and International Launch Services Inc. to maintain an aggressive marketing campaign for the Proton, whose failure in the Asiasat 3 in December was its only mishap in 1997. Proton M, an improved variant, will begin flying in late 1998, competiting against the Boeing Sea Launch Zenit 3 and French Ariane 4 series in the hotly contested international medium lift launcher market.

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X-38 Passes 1st Flight Test
Washington, DC March 13, 1998 -

Washington, DC March 13, 1998 - Dropping down from a sun-washed sky over the Mojave Desert in California, the X-38 test vehicle landed on Edwards Dry Lake Thursday morning after its first flight test. NASA space officials declared the test a success, opening the way to some 20 additional flights in which a series of three scale models of what will eventually be a piloted rescue craft for the International Space Station will be verified.























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