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Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Kennedy Space Center

As a follow up to my last post about the "Then and Now Tour" of Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, I'll show you some photos from my trip to Kennedy Space Center. I took a business trip to Orlando last year and since I was in the area I visited the Space Center.

I arrived a little early that morning. In fact, they were not even open yet! So, I sat in the car and waited. The rockets in the Rocket Garden were towering over the trees and buildings. I could see their noses from the parking lot. I couldn't wait to go in and get a closer look!

At the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) Rocket Garden you are able to get up close to rockets and replicas of rockets that made space exploration history. There was a Mercury/Redstone, Mercury/Atlas, a Saturn 1b and several others.







Very tight quarters for three men to share on their trip to and from the Moon.

If you go to KSC, take the bus tour! If you don't you will miss most of the exhibits.
Here are some of my photos from the tour that stopped at the Saturn V building, the International Space Station Center and several more areas of interest.



This is the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) from four miles away!


Launch Complex 39A - Where the Space Shuttles were launched.

Alan Shepard's 1968 Corvette

Five first stage engines of the Saturn V rocket

This is a bad photo of the Saturn V. But, I wanted to show just how big this monster is!

Lunar Module



This is in the International Space Station Center. The workers here are preparing these modules to go to the ISS.

I suppose some, if not all, of these modules may be in space by now!

Shuttle Explorer - a mock up of a Space Shuttle

Space Mirror Astronaut Memorial


Monday, May 16, 2011

Temporary Insanity

I have been interested in model rocketry since I was a kid. My dad bought a rocket kit from Sears back in 1975. We built it. Launched it and never saw it again. I was hooked! This hobby was on again, off again over the years. Each time I got back into it my rockets were bigger than the last.

Enter Temporary Insanity. I designed and built this rocket for my National Association of Rocketry High Power Level Three Certification. The plan was to launch it at the 2008 Florida Winter Nationals launch in West Palm Beach. So, over the course of about a year I planned, designed and built the rocket in our spare bedroom which is now my rocket/hobby room.

I named the rocket Temporary Insanity because one day my wife, Laresa, came into the hobby room as I was working on parts of the rocket and asked what I was doing. After I explained to her the details, including how big it was going to be she responded

"Are you insane?"
"Yeah, but just temporarily" I replied.
My Insanity is nine feet - ten inches tall and seven and a half inches in diameter. It weighs about 50 pounds when ready for launch. It has electronics onboard to control deployment of three parachutes to safely return it to the ground for more flights. I used an "M" class motor to fly it to five thousand feet.

The flight in West Palm Beach was a complete success. The field we flew from was perfect and so was the weather. This is why we drove all the way there from Panama City to fly. There was nothing but sod and cut sugar cane for miles. Completely flat terrain.












Yep, it's purple!


Later that year, I launched Temporary Insanity at our club launch in Samson, AL. This time I attached a video camera to record the flight looking back at the ground. Below is the video shot from the rocket and from the ground.



This one is from a camera mounted on the launch tower.


Thanks to Greg Lane for putting these videos together.



Sunday, May 15, 2011

"Then and Now" Tour of Cape Canaveral Air Force Station

Back in November 2007, I had the opportunity to join some friends for a "Then and Now" tour of Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. The tour went to the now defunct launch sites used in the early days of space flight in the United States. Plus, we were able to visit an active launch facilty with a rocket being prepared for launch. There were several memorable sites that I thought would be of interest for this blog.


One of these sites was the final resting place of Space Shuttle Challenger. As you may remember Challenger exploded just seconds into its launch killing everyone onboard. After Challenger was recovered and the investigation was complete it was sealed in an old minuteman missile test silo located on the Cape.
 The site was not marked at the time of my visit. But, as I understand, there were several organizations that were petitioning the Air Force to allow them to place a marker showing this as a historical site.


Launch pad 17A was an active U.S. Air Force launch facility. We were given the opportunity to get out of the tour bus and take a few photos. However, the group was under the constant watchful eye of security personnel and we were not allowed to venture more than a few yards from the bus. The rocket on the pad was an Air Force Delta II that was scheduled for launch later that month.


If you look closely at the photos, you can see the rocket in the middle of the service structure.


The next stop on the tour was Launch Complex 26. This was the site of the first satellite launched into orbit by the United States. It was also the site of many other launches that paved the way for manned space filght.

And this was one of the computers that controlled the launches!

One of the coolest sites we stopped at was the site that Alan Shepard, the first American in space launched from, Launch Complex 5/6. Shepard launched into space for 15 minutes in a spacecraft named Friendship 7 atop a Mercury Redstone rocket.




The next coolest place we visited was Launch Complex 14. The site from where the first American, John Glenn launched into orbit. There is not much of the actual launch pad left. Most of it was sold as scrap. The rest is wasting away in the Florida weather.




The last site I'll mention here is the remains of the pad where the Apollo 1 fire occurred. The crew of Apollo 1 was killed when fire broke out in the spacecraft during a "routine" test. This caused NASA to change a great deal of its procedures and a near complete rebuild of the Apollo spacecraft. The plaque pictured below is fastened to what remains of Launch Complex 34 in memory of the crew of Apollo 1.


If you ever get the opportunity to visit the Cape, do it! There is a great deal of American History there.