STS-2 - Full Count/Launch/Orbit 1 - Full Mission 1
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- Опубликовано: 26 ноя 2023
- STS-2 Full Count/Launch/Orbit 1 - Full Mission 1
For the first time since 1981, experience all of the countdown, launch and first orbit of the STS-2 mission
Onboard are astronauts Joe Engle and Dick Truly. 14th November 1981.
Thanks to:
Mike Fried without whom this would not have been possible
Phil C for help with the audio
Ed Hengeveld for photos
All media courtesy NASA and the NA
There is a Patreon for anyone interested in supporting my channel - All donations go to enhancing future content - thanks in advance and it would be great to have you onboard. Patrons often receive pre-launch video access and media content
www.patreon.com/user?u=549799... Наука
R.I.P Richard Truly (1937-2024) you will be missed by the whole space community!
Such sad news indeed
My condolences to Dick Truly’s friends and family. He was a great astronaut not only for NASA, but also the U.S. Air Force when he was selected for the cancelled Manned Orbiting Laboratory program in the 1960s.
I was 12 at the time, in 7th grade first hour science class on 4/12/1981 we got to watch the replay of the launch (which happened at 5am Arizona time).
I was 11yrs old in 1981. I was space-crazy but wast too young for Apollo. These early Shuttle flights were so exciting at the time. Thank you. foryour hard work bringing all of this back.
Thanks for the comment and, like you, these were my first experience of live spaceflights.. awesome time
At this point in time I lived in California with my new wife and new baby. Great stuff watching this lift off. Now, I'm an old widower enjoying memories of this wonderful time. Marvelous, thank you.😊🙏💥💫💯
WIKI:- STS-2 was the last shuttle flight to have its external fuel tank (ET) painted white. In an effort to reduce the Shuttle's overall weight, STS-3 and all subsequent missions used an unpainted tank, saving approximately 272 kg (600 lb) of launch weight.[13] This lack of paint gave the ET a distinctive orange-brown color, which eventually became emblematic of the Space Shuttle.
Decades later, in 2006, some in the spaceflight community questioned whether the white paint would have prevented the ice-soaked foam shedding issue that led to the loss of Columbia. NASA consensus was that it would not.
To my knowledge, Columbia was lost due to a jet of burning propellent shooting out from a ring joint in one of the solid rocket boosters when the O-ring failed due to cold weather. By the way they were warned that very morning by Morton Thiokol not to launch because of that cold weather for that very reason, and their reaction was to angrily force Morton Thiokol to retract that. They never mentioned that in Congressional hearings.
Correction- That was Challenger, not Columbia. You are citing Columbia, I was at cross purposes citing Challenger.
I always thought one of the coolest part about being a NASA astronaut is having your own T-38 to commute to the cape from Houston. I guess from Edwards AFB too!
Talk about cool ... Truly's heart rate 86 BPM at liftoff.
I was at the crew walkout from the O&C Building. It begins 44.26 and PAO Hugh Harris says: "We expect to hear a hearty rendition of Happy Birthday." Before the walkout Jean String of KSC Security (the lady in white) came out and asked us to sing as the crew walked to the Astrovan, but we objected. We agreed that one man would play Happy Birthday on his electronic watch (state-of-the-art in 1981). You can see him at 44.56 keeping his watch at the NASA mike on the left and we made our photographs!
Must have been great to be there
Thank you LM5 for providing us with this video.
Welcome as always Fox
21:33 STS-51L's commander Dick Scobee on far left (RIP Col Scobee). I think that's Fred Gregory at center, backup capcom during STS-51L's sad demise. John Young at right.
LM5 merits the Congressional Medal of Freedom for his/their outstanding contribution to man's exploration of space.
Not sure they give a Brit that medal !
Have to admire Joe Engle. Arguably the best stick and rudder pilot pilot astronaut. He flew more X-15 flights than any other astronaut. He had his Apollo 17 LMP position given to Harrison Schmitt. But, he hung around and flew 2 shuttle missions.
Pure gold !
Thank you soooooo much Simon ! ❤🖖
Welcome!
This flight was truly an historic moment as it marked the first time a spacecraft had been reused. I wasn’t born at this time but from the moment I could walk and talk space flight has been a huge fascination for me.
Agree and ditto to all your comment
There she is, looking like a beautiful cathedral of the space age. I really liked the white paint... Hail, Columbia! And again thank you very much for the great memories. 🖖
Yeah, and the shuttle was pretty nice too (oops, thought you were talking about Sally Ride 😉1:57:50).
😉👍@@yes_head
The timing! Just when I finished Apollo 13.
Knew you needed something to watch!
This is gonna be amazing!
Among astronauts, always had great respect for Joe Engle in particular…as a shuttle astronaut , he wasn’t one of those Apollo old timers assigned to fly Apollo 28Z that was never gonna be funded in a million years…in 1969 this guy had been named to the right seat on Apollo 17, as in, he not only had a ride to the moon, he would/should have *walked on the moon* on that last mission. Spent 2 years getting ready to be the 14th…er…12th man to put his boots in the dust.
But NASA pushed him aside in favor of geologist Jack Schmitt with less than a year to go before Apollo 17…ugh…swallowing that pill…getting that phone call. I can’t imagine. Not only that, but then *staying* with NASA rather than becoming disgruntled and leaving like so many other astronauts did when they felt they weren’t getting assigned fast enough...Then waiting a decade for his ride…what a badass.
Love the pre-launch video pictures showing the FSS of Pad 39B in the background. Pads A and B were about 1.5 to 2 miles apart from each other on the Atlantic coast, but Pad B's FSS looked as if it were a mere few feet away from Pad A's FSS in these unique video perspectives. Several flights featured this breathtaking camera angle.
Watching the crew van go past the Saturn V outside in the elements before they built the Mission Control simulation and indoor museum. I literally had tears in my eyes when I saw those F1 engines for the first time. We went down to see the STS-129 Atlantis launch for my birthday and took the KSC tour a couple of days before. I'll never forget the tour and the launch as long as I live.
I anticipate this!
I was in college attempting to navigate life as an adult and this was such an exciting program. Remember it well. Thank you LM5 for all your hard work. You bring so many of us joy and your comprehensive work will be treasured by archivists for generations.
You are more than welcome, thank you for the comment
I have to say that Hugh Harris (the spokeperson for NASA) had a voice that I became very familiar with and enjoyed hearing. He was very iconic for me when watching the shuttle launches.
Yeah agree he was the voice of NASA from STS-1 onwards in that era
For me STS footage never loses its fascination and the additional scenes like the tiles inspections or close-ups of the assembly are completely new to me! ❤ (the rarely seen setup with the white painted external tank is the icing on this cake, thx a lot, @ LM5!)
Welcome thanks for the comments
STS-2 was the only shuttle mission in the whole program that was flown back manually from re-entry to landing.
I am reading up on the PTIs that Joe did on the sentry so I can try and show them on screen when I do the 3rd day coverage
Whoa! You really found some great clips I’ve never seen before edited in. Especially like the flightdeck view of the Shuttle Training Aircraft.
Amazing video, as always.
Thank you from France !
Thank you so much! Love the text / info on the right end of the screen. Hugh Harris, absolute pro. “At the present time”
I would be able to see it on the moment :(
Missed the live stream but enjoying now. Thank-you.
Hi lunar module5 appreciate all you do it cool how you make of these video from the past and I enjoy that because I’m to manned Spaceflight and Astronomy so this is something I enjoy so thank you for providing it👍👍👍👍👍👍
Great coverage Simon - many thanks.
46:55 - A great shot of Mobile Launch Platform-1 in the distance. I was lucky enough to see it up-close during a visit to KSC the following April (a month after STS-3).
Richard Truly made 2 flights, this one and STS 8, the first Shuttle launch and landing at night. He was NASA administrator, the first former astronaut to be appointed to the position, for 3 years (I think) but left the job after what I believe was a row with the administration of the first George Bush.
We have now reached the point where many pioneering astronauts have died - of the first 43 U.S. astronauts only 12 are still alive and of the 24 astronauts who went to the Moon or orbited or flew around it, only 7 are still alive - James Lovell, (the oldest astronaut ever at 96) William Anders, Buzz Aldrin, the pioneering Apollo 11 astronaut who has now outlived his Commander Neil Armstrong by 12 years, Fred Haise, David Scott, Charles Duke and Harrison Schmidt, one of the last 2 astronauts to walk on the Moon.
Former Astronauts who have died in the last few months are Ken Mattingly, Frank Borman, Shuttle astronaut Mary Cleave, Tom Stafford and now Richard Truly.
All the shuttle flights before the Challlenger tragedy, except for STS 61 C, the flight that preceded the disaster, now have at least one crew member who has since passed on.
Rest in peace to all those astronauts who have left us.
M
Beautiful production, really nice to see how this all came together, thanks for your hard work!
Thanks Mike, couldn't have done this one without your help. Thank you
These kinds of videos are just so freaking awesome. All these authentic clips from development and tests and crew training and clips from the launch day with the crew. It just adds to that excitement leading up to the actual launch. All these PAO updates and radio recordings. All at the right time. And those awesome high res photos.
Wow! You are doing an amazing work with all this
Thanks for these kind words...it's nice to know that you get the point of these productions
@@lunarmodule5 I am a true fan of your videos. I think this STS2 video is now my new top favourite with Apollo 11 and STS1. I am looking forward to more from sts2 and also from Apollo 17. Can i also ask if there are video material from the launch of the Voyagers and the pioneer?
@@rickardandreasson5095 thanks again...and no I don't have that footage sorry
She was a beautiful machine of great capability. Never thought I'd see the USA revert to 1950s-era capsule design.
Another great job Lemmy!! Thanks for all the hard work.
I never really noticed until I watched these videos how slow the early Shuttle roll program was! Later on, it turns quite dramatically faster in comparison!
A work of art. ⭐️
Gotta say, going into space on your birthday is beyond ridiculous. I wouldn't celebrate another one again, cos this would never be topped!!
Space shuttle Columbia decollo primo, il 12 aprile 1981, ho assistito a questo lancio!! Durata missione 3 giorni, purtroppo è andato distrutto nel 2003, per un pannello di protezione durante la partenza e il rientro si è disintegrato per enorme foro causato dal pannello di protezione distaccatosi al lancio
Awesome, thank you! :D
FANTASTIC!!!!!!!!
❤ thank you a true treasure
1:29:28 ..for me one of the never fulfilled dreams in The Shuttle Program was that the Enterprise never made it into space...🙄🙄🙄
Too heavy with sensors and too expensive to “convert”. Yes, sad.
I like that engineering footage of the launch. Slow motion just as the shuttle is about to launch. I saw a video about the challenger disaster. Now i wonder, on the day of the STS2 launch was it as cold as when the day of the challenger disaster? They were not worried about those Orings in the boosters. After the challenger disaster they redesigned the Orings to withstand more temperature variations.
I was at the launch of STS-2. The forecast from the the Air Force Weather Service on day before launch says 63 degrees.
From the Rogers ‘Report of the Presidential Commission on the Space Shuttle Challenger Accident’ (page 19): The ambient air temperature at launch was 36 degrees Fahrenheit measured at ground level approximately 1,000 feet from the 51-L mission launch pad 39B. This temperature was 15 degrees colder than that of any previous launch.
Even there was ice on the pad and yet the launch constraints were waved the night before launching Challenger.
What a nice birthday gor Dick
They don^t build that kind of dangerous steampunk machinery anymore 🤩. It's like RBMK nuclear reactors. (Waves around an original copy of "Communications of the ACM", Sept. 1984 - "Design, development, integration: space shuttle primary flight software system")
I love how at the 5:20 mark, the narrator begins to tell that they were at the T-minus 3 hours, 39 minutes 20 second mark, and meanwhile they're showing a guy still glueing tiles on the booster fairings. Better get moving on that, Bob.
2:33 I wonder who had this idea and who the pilot was. Imagine having a billion dollar cargo.
Anyone know where the first replacement of the MDM was destined for or was it a flight “spare” ? I know the 2nd replacement was destined for Challenger but was wondering about the first replacement (that also failed).
I guess it was a flight spare at the west coast. From the STS-2 status bulletin of November 11: A replacement was flown in by NASA jet about 4 a.m. this morning (…) The PCM was installed by 8 a.m. this morning, but also failed its retest.
@@keesvanamsterdam5103 thank you
Good
The PAO is being unnecessarily savage to Truly on his birthday! 🤣What a jackass! 😂
So are we not going to talk about the fact that they found a GD hat hanging off the tank before lunch.😂
Not sure if that's better or worse than the wrench they found inside the Apollo 1 capsule.
That capsule had worse issues than a mislaid wrench.
@@TheGrumpyEnglishman it did?
White tank 😍
🇺🇲⚖️🗽🍻