Details of the SpaceX ‘Starlink home router’, that will allow users of the satellite broadband network to get online have been revealed by regulators.
The device has been given approval by the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) with people expected to start using it to get online in the coming weeks.
Plans released as part of the regulatory process show that an external dish will receive the broadband signal, and then connect to the Starlink Router that will provide WiFi signals to internet enabled devices around the house.
According to Elon Musk the dish will come equipped with motors enabling it to automatically adjust itself to the best view of the satellites currently overhead.
Elon Musk’s satellite-broadband firm has been given approval by the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) with trials expected this summer. These plans show the base of the router that will send signals from the satellite around a users home
Plans released as part of the regulatory process show that an external dish will receive the broadband signal, and then connect to the Starlink Router that will provide WiFi signals to internet enabled devices around the house
Users won’t have a ‘smooth’ service from the start but apart from a $1 shipping fee, the beta service will be offered for free to those trying it out
In a tweet Musk said: ‘No expert installer required. Just plug in and give it a clear view of the sky. Can be in garden, on roof, table, pretty much anywhere, so long as it has a wide view of the sky.’
SpaceX has been launching a constellation of broadband providing devices since 2019 and now has 540 satellites in low Earth orbit.
According to the firm this is enough to provide a limited service to the northern US and lower parts of Canada in areas with a clear view of the Northern Sky.
The Starlink kit is being manufactured in Taiwan by Wistron NeWeb Corp, according to the FCC filing, which left out some details due to confidentiality concerns.
People given access to the beta test of the Starlink service will be sent the kit via FedEx and it will include a pre-assembled dish, router, power supply and mount.
In an email to people who registered interest in the service, SpaceX said a private beta will begin this summer with select users and a public test will launch later.
Users won’t have a ‘smooth’ service from the start but apart from a $1 shipping fee, the beta service will be offered for free to those trying it out.
The firm estimates it will need at least 800 satellites to offer a full service, but will have 600 in orbit later this year providing broadband to selected areas.
SpaceX plans to launch at least 2,200 satellites over the next five years in order to offer a global broadband service covering even the most remote areas of the world.
They have accelerated efforts over the past few months, sending dozens of Starlink satellites into orbit every week to create a global internet network.
The firm says it hopes to be able to start offering a wider public beta of its internet service when it has a constellation of at least 800 satellites.
This early beta, with just 540 to 600 satellites is expected to open up in the coming weeks to people living in the northern US and lower parts of Canada.
‘Private beta testing is expected to begin later this summer, followed by public beta testing, starting with higher latitudes,’ SpaceX said in an email.
Now the FCC has approved the router and other equipment needed to connect people to the satellite network, the first kits are expected to be shipped soon.
SpaceX is set to send its tenth batch June 26, but forecasts show the Falcon 9 has just a 40 percent chance of taking off from Kennedy Space Center
SpaceX has been experimenting with ways to make the craft less visible from Earth, and the Jun 4 batch included one experimental craft with an inbuilt sun visor CEO Elon Musk said in April: ‘We have a radio-transparent foam that will deploy nearly upon the satellite being released, and it blocks the sun from reaching the antennas’
The firm has warned connectivity will be intermittent while it builds up its constellation to minimum capacity but the system will be free for testers.
Poor weather conditions postponed SpaceX’s tenth launch of Starlink satellites into orbit for the second time earlier in July but the firm is still on target.
The launch of these satellites would have brought SpaceX’s Starlink constellation to very nearly 600 total spacecraft in low-Earth orbit.
This is now expected to happen later this summer with the rest of the 800 ‘pre-launch’ satellites put into low Earth orbit later in the year.
SpaceX has permission to put 12,000 LEO satellites into space for its Starlink constellation but has asked for permission to put up to 30,000 into orbit.
This would be for a second generation system not yet announced or confirmed.