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Related: Culture Forums, Support Forums1st Ever SPACE SHUTTLE Landing - I was there for this one
By a colossal mistake, I turned right when I should have turned left.
Instead of watching this historic flight with the rest of the contractors, I was seated in the VIP section in Mission Control, surrounded by military brass and the families of the astronauts.
If I had to do it over, I'd screw up just the same.
PoliticAverse
(26,366 posts)Xipe Totec
(43,890 posts)I worked on shuttle, so I had clearance for the building
I saw the first launch from Orlando in '81,some 50-60 miles away.It was as bright as the sun.
shireen
(8,333 posts)That must have been an amazing experience.
Xipe Totec
(43,890 posts)Freshly graduated from college, this was just one month after joining the program.
Rhiannon12866
(206,006 posts)Awesome video and what terrific luck for you!
Xipe Totec
(43,890 posts)Cooley Hurd
(26,877 posts)The US had just done Skylab and Apollo/Soyuz and then the shuttle came along. Thanks for the clip!!
Diclotican
(5,095 posts)Xipe Totec
For some reason, or another I want to cry when I saw that clip.. What a wonderfull, gracefull bird she was Enteprise... (Named after the Star Trek Ship Enteprise by the way) When the ship was flying for the first time - I was just a little shild, not even in grade school, but I still understood what it was - and how marvelous it was, when I saw it first time.. And I even wrote a page, my first page I wrote after I learned to write that I wanted to came to USA, to be an astronaut... Oh well I never did that... But I still look at the stars and wonder how it would be to be up there...
Diclotican
Xipe Totec
(43,890 posts)I still feel a lump in my throat every time I see the Shuttle.
Diclotican
(5,095 posts)Xipe Totec
I have even been so lucky to be able to look at a space shuttle lunch in real life - it was early in the 1990s (I believe it was in 1992 or something like that) when I was with my family in Florida.. To put a long story short - it was an impressive sight to look the shuttle lunch from the pad (I believe it was from Lunch Pad 39) And rise to the air... The noise, the sound the speed - it was just impressive to look at... I had surly never seeing anything like that before.. And I guess I would never be able to look at something it for the rest of the life. But dam I was lucky to be able to se it (And the tour of Kennedy Space Center was also great - A lot the things I had been reading about for so many years - and now it was all there to look at (or at least as the tour was given us the right to do).. I was a fun place to be - and I guess I could have been there longer, if it was not for the fact we had to get to our motel - and then hit the road the wrong way - and was kind of lost for the next 25 mile (metric miles not the US one).. But we got to our motel - a motel called the red carped, even though it was not a red carped in sight anywhere ..
I remembered I got to sleep rather fast that night
Diclotican
whistler162
(11,155 posts)so was a little closer to the landing.
but, still a very cool seat.
Xipe Totec
(43,890 posts)That is awesome.
skydive forever
(445 posts)for 25 years. Worked in the VAB building the SRB's and attaching the ET (5A shop for anyone that knows what that means). It was an absolute dream job. Made it to lead position and AST ( Advanced Aerospace Technician, kind of a junior engineer position). Personally built over 100 sets of SRB's and ran the ET attaching to the stack. Saw probably 70+ launches right from the east side of the VAB, 3 miles from the pad. One night, just prior to the scheduled launch the next morning, I was out at Pad A about 10 hours prior to the launch. To say it was incredible is the understatement of the year. If you're ever in Florida around here, hook up with me and I can tell stories that would blow you away. May even show you some souveniers you wont see anywhere else. I was so blessed. Got laid off last July, still looking for work, but I'll never top that experience. On the political side, this is DU afterall, I was amazed how many people even at the cape blamed Obama for ending the shuttle program, when it was Bush back in 2004. I saw firsthand the willful ignorance of republicans right in our own shop. Unbelievable.
Xipe Totec
(43,890 posts)I worked at JSC, on-board nav on the simulators and SAIL, the Shuttle Avionics Integration Laboratory. It was my dream job, but I had to leave the program after STS-4. My wife worked on Project LACIE, the Large Area Crop Inventory Experiment. She got laid off during Regan's turn as "Fool on The Hill". Could not afford to live on one salary, so I had to prostitute myself to the oil companies. LACIE was the program that told us how much wheat was going to be produced each year by Russia, China, Australia, Argentina, and the US. When Regan shut it down we went blind. The Russians gamed the system, caused the price of wheat to crash, and then bough it all at below market. That year we paid more in the US for Wheat produced in the US than Russians did for the same grain. And they used it as cattle feed. Thanks again, Repugs.
Ready4Change
(6,736 posts)The student union had several of these tiny, 15" screens that they used to display information about the days events. On that day, they all were switched to a feed of this landing. There were probably several sets of about 100 students clustered around each screen to get a view. And when the shuttle touched down the entire building erupted in applause and cheers.
Thanks for the memories.
Xipe Totec
(43,890 posts)GreenPartyVoter
(72,381 posts)due to being completely inept at math and science I can only be a groupie. (I have a son who is interesting in engineering, but more of the buildings and bridges type, which is also cool.)
Xipe Totec
(43,890 posts)Aerospace engineers build missiles.
Civil engineers build targets...
Just teasing! I hope your son becomes a fantastic engineer or scientist. Lord knows we need more builders.
GreenPartyVoter
(72,381 posts)some great courses for a high school!