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They were something to see when they went up. Even during the Mercury missions we could watch them at school. Everyone would be gathered into the gym/auditorium/ cafeteria room to sit on the floor to watch the launches on the school's B?W tv. By the time the Saturn rockets were going up many people had gotten teh new color tvs and I had a chance to see one at my Grandmother's house. There's a star trek episode where they go back to the 1960s and they show fome film from a launch. NASA had their part in the show and i used to have a picture of GEne Roddenbury in the control room at the cape.
Yep. My company (McDonnel Douglas) didn't have a supercomputer, but it was a facility with a couple of top of the line mainframes,
Eaglecash867 ...and they did it with a slide rule, pencil, and paper instead of "super computers".
...and they did it with a slide rule, pencil, and paper instead of "super computers".
They had computers. Not personal desktop computers, but mainframes.
We went to Florida to watch one of the Apollo launches. Wow, the feeling was awesome- it really shook the guts. I was stationed at Vandenberg for three years and saw and felt the shaking (even got to launh an ICBM myself). I was familiar with the gut and lung shaking, but the first stage of the S-V was something else again!
"You can have my illegal fireworks when you pry them from my cold, dead fingers...which are...over there somewhere."
Back when NASA got things done in a timely manner...
F is for FIRE, That burns down the whole town!
U is for URANIUM... BOMBS!
N is for NO SURVIVORS...
- Plankton
LSM
What a ride that would've been!
OK. In the stash: Way too much to build in one lifetime...
1.5 million lb thrust from EACH of the five Rocketdyne F-1 engines at liftoff.
“Ya ya ya, unicorn papoi!”
Frozen liquid oxygen and frozen condesation formed on the outer skin of the stages. WOW that was cool.
we're modelers it's what we do
Abso-friggin-lutely amazing
What are all those white pieces falling off?
Check out this video of a Saturn 5 lifting off. Great sound and picture quality. It is amazing that a hairless, talkative primate could have the imagination and creativity to build such an amazing machine.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ViNcBQ8cDA0
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