- Member since
June 2012
- From: Anniston, AL
|
Posted by GAF
on Monday, December 31, 2018 10:15 PM
Gamera> Blowing things up is for the young!
Happy New Year to everyone! Hope you're all safe and sound.
Project Report:
Got a bit of work done. The LES is essentially done, waiting for a coating of gloss and some paint. It looks a little rough, but is very nice considering it's all scratch-built by me. The harness conduits are on and the nozzles turned out fairly nice. The CM is awaiting work. At the moment, I'm detailing the LM area of the S-IVB. I'm only going to do the outside, as this model never had interior detail, although I do have some nice shots of the instrument ring. I've went ahead and painted the outside of the instrument ring as I need to add some external antenna and tower umbilical connection. These following 3d photos show what I'm planning to add. Nice if anyone ever wants to really detail a larger model.
Information from "Apollo Maniacs" website.
Mission Director (GAF)
Today in Space History:
1966 December 31 - . Launch Vehicle: N1.
- 18 cosmonauts in lunar training - . Nation: Russia. Related Persons: Artyukhin, Belousov, Bykovsky, Dobrovolsky, Gagarin, Gorbatko, Gubarev, Gulyayev, Khrunov, Kolesnikov, Kolodin, Komarov, Nikolayev, Popovich, Volynov, Voronov, Zholobov. Program: Lunar L1. Class: Manned. Type: Manned spacecraft. Spacecraft Bus: Soyuz. Spacecraft: Soyuz 7K-LOK. Gagarin, Komarov, Nikolayev, Bykovsky, Khrunov, Gorbatko, Voronov, Kolodin, Popovich, Gubarev, Artyukhin, Gylyayev, Belousov, Kolesnikov, Volynov, Doborvolsky, Zhobolov.
1968 December 31 - .
-
After two days of snow, family, and rest at this dacha, Kamanin is called to a General Staff meeting - the issue - how to answer the Americans? Attending are Generals Kutakhov, Moroz, Ponomarev, Kustanin, Yoffe, Frolov, Kartakhov, and others. It is agreed that the only proper answer is a Soviet lunar landing - but that is two to three years away. The 1964 resolution authorising the lunar program required a lunar flyby to be conducted by 1967 and a landing by 1968. But Ustinov, Serbin, Smirnov, and Pashkov hindered the attainment of this order. They were always requiring meetings, analyses, reports. The result - now many volumes of reports, but no action. The VPK proposes to land a Ye-8-5 robot on the moon and return lunar soil to earth in a 50 cm diameter, 38 kg capsule. The capsule will descend under a parachute and transmit on two VHF beacons in order to be located. But this still does not exist in metal, just in mock-up form. Considered logically, it could not be available earlier than the second half of 1969. The existing schedule for it to fly in the first half of the year is illogical and unachievable. Kamanin looks back with bitterness on the year of 1968 -- they have lost the moon race, they have lost Gagarin. His only consolation is his family.
1968 December 31 - . Launch Site: Baikonur. Launch Complex: Baikonur LC110L. Launch Vehicle: N1.
- N1 launch pad 110 west completed - . Nation: Russia. Program: Lunar L3.
1969 December 31 - .
-
Tereshkova is on a tour of Jordan and Syria. Kamanin muses over the year 1969. He is able to rationalise that it wasn't a bad year -- they flew 9 cosmonauts on five space missions. But of course they lost the moon to the Americans. He blames Mishin, Keldysh, Smirnov, and Ustinov for this. But he also blames the attitude of the Ministry of Defence and VVS. This is indicated by the total indifference to civilian space projects of Grechko and Kutakhov. They don't support the Gagarin Centre, or Kamanin's request for 10 additional Soyuz flights in earth orbit. Kamanin views the L3 spacecraft and mission scenario as unsafe. What is needed is a new spacecraft, launched by two N1 boosters, that will take a crew of 3 to 5 to the moon.
2018 December 31, 11:33 CT - New Horizons, launched on January 19, 2006, arrives at Ultima Thule, the farthest object ever visited by a spacecraft.
|