This includes 1,721 kg (3,794 lb) of pressurised cargo with packaging bound for the International Space Station, and 926 kg (2,041 lb) of unpressurised cargo. CRS-14 carried a total of 2,647 kg (5,836 lb) of material into orbit. NASA contracted for the CRS-14 mission from SpaceX and therefore determined the primary payload, date/time of launch, and orbital parameters for the Dragon space capsule. No attempt was made to recover the first stage booster instead, the booster was used to conduct experimental maneuvers designed to test the limits of its flight trajectory. Dragon splashed down in the Pacific Ocean at 19:03 UTC to be retrieved by a SpaceX recovery crew and transported to the Port of Los Angeles, returning 1,743 kg (3,843 lb) of cargo to Earth. The spacecraft was released at 13:23 UTC and autonomously backed away from the station to a safe distance before firing its thrusters for a deorbit burn at 18:06 UTC. It remained there for just under 31 days before being unberthed by Canadarm2 on, scheduled for 05:30 UTC.
![crs 14 cenon crs 14 cenon](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/O-Cu2D6rtGo/hqdefault.jpg)
The Dragon spacecraft rendezvoused with the ISS on 4 April it was captured by Canadarm2 at 10:40 UTC and was berthed to the Harmony module at 13:00 UTC.
Crs 14 cenon full#
Launch occurred on 2 April 2018 at 20:30 UTC on a Falcon 9 Full Thrust rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station Space Launch Complex 40.
![crs 14 cenon crs 14 cenon](https://www.archi-guide.com/PH/FRA/Bor/MerignLogClosCapeyronLe.jpg)
The flight had been delayed from 9 February and 13 March 2018.
![crs 14 cenon crs 14 cenon](https://www.cenon.fr/sites/default/files/old-images-blog/2017/11/Commemoration-14_18-Jeunes-sapeurs-pompiers-CENON-com-2017-11-11-1blog.jpg)
As of June 2016, a NASA Inspector General report had this mission manifested for February 2018. In early 2015, NASA awarded a contract extension to SpaceX for three additional CRS missions ( CRS-13 to CRS-15).