My dad took my brother and I to a limited public viewing of The Enterprise at an airstrip at Cape Canaveral. We got to meet some of the astronauts and engineers. I was around 10 years old. There was a set of stairs leading up to one of the ports of the shuttle. I looked up at one of the astronauts and asked if I could go up the stairs. At the time I didn't know how crazy security was, but the pilot said it was OK and he took me up to peek inside. When we were up there, several security people saw me and got upset. The pilot realized he was in trouble and told me "we better get down before they pop a gasket" and we went down the stairs. My brother was so jealous of me. It was so cool to see the inside of the ship.
Enterprise was just a Boilerplate or test model... Surprised they would freak out over an unofficial craft. I visited Johnson back in the 1980s after my USAF Basic Training. The gentleman ( family friend ) who showed me around there pointed out the simulator building, but couldn't take me in, because it was off limits. I hadn't obtained my Secret clearance yet. Still, I imagine it would have taken some Extra Uber Secret Top clearance to get in there!
When I was six I seen the ship on the launchpad then watched it launch a few days later it was just pure luck because it was the first time I had been to Florida and it just happened to line up with the launch date
So many dials and switches they had to verify and prep work before the shuttle was reprocessed and strapped to the tank for another flight! Mind-blowing.
Woulda coulda shoulda. Buran flew once, then got abandoned and crushed in a hanger collapse. End of story. Sadly, AspireaRL is correct. The Shuttle never delivered on the promise of reliable, routine spaceflight. There is no way it ever could once the Department of Defense got a say in it’s design requirements.
For some reason I am amazed that people wear normal clothing and shoes when working in the shuttle. Always assumed they had to wear some special coveralls to keep it perfectly clean.
When readying for launch, the interior was a clean area with all of the precautions you mentioned and more. But when it returned, as in this video, there was no need to worry about FOD, as the interior would be scrubbed and vacuumed prior to the next flight.
Drink Bleach The Challenger disaster was due to a O-ring seal that was never intended for a cold launch. Columbia was due to heat shield tile damage from a 2 lb. piece of foam that came off the fuel storage tank at liftoff. Both were brought up as concerns and ignored by the “powers that be”, not from clothing lint or dust.
Jeep Dude It’s still hard to think of the Challenger disaster being the 34th anniversary today and the Columbia disaster as we approach their 17th anniversary this Saturday. Seems like yesterday when 14 great people lost their lives.
I thought this was a museum/airshow staff playing around and preparing it for display...I definitely had to rewind a bunch when I realized this IS REAL PREP for a flight.
This was an excellent and interesting video. Got a look at at the highly trained people that it took to support the orbiters let alone the whole shuttle system. These are the people that help make the U.S Space program as great as it is. ..Verified!
Really cool to watch engineers run post mission checklist and install -21 “REMOVE BEFORE FLIGHT” equipment. So my question is were the fuel cells running during the tow or did they have some kind of external ground power for engineers to have A/C? It took an army of guys and gals to put up a Space Shuttle and this video showcases some of those Americans…a real gem of a video!
The wonder of this is not knowing what every switch does, but to know the procedures on how/when/why to operate them in a beautiful ballet called Flight procedures! I fly an A320. I can only dream of flying this air/space craft.
I wouldnt mind Space Shuttle 2.0. Shuttle that would actually did fulfill its intention of cheap and rapid reusable transportation. Vertically landing rockets are cool but nothing beats a space plane or rather proper looking space ship.
Wow its amzing to see a shttle up close.. Although we see helicoptrs airplanes etc but we do not amaze.. But its really pleasure that what we humans did in the last 100 years.. shuttle is the most complex flying object humanity ever made.. Thanx to the person who uploaded this video .. I m eager to watch this video again again and again
Threw me when I saw them lift the door up from the floor. Thought it swung to the left. But the only time I have seen them close the door is on the pad when the Shuttle is vertical.
The amount of similarities to the Apollo CM is a new discovery for me. The switches, the labeling conventions and systems for the switches, and the fuel cell and OMS gauges all the same style as the Apollo CM.
an incredible piece of tec... navigator of the stars, once at the earth atmosphere, another day rolling next to a lake... fantastic carrier of dreams, i love these machines.
1st part: hooking up towing equipment to tow the orbiter back to OPF (Orbiter Processing Facility) 2nd part: ground team verifying post-landing configuration on various switches and indicators, shutting down the unnecessary systems
I don't miss it. It was a horrible hunk of technology. It should have been better and it _could_ have been better. It was fat, heavy and expensive. If the CIA didn't want to have a method to covertly retrieve satellites; If it had only a single mission to perform; If it's countenance wasn't corrupted by back-door politics... She could have been fantastic.
Kinda weird to see random normal folks in street clothes casually working in a billion dollar vehicle where only hours before famous ASTRONAUTS floated around while the whole thing was in earth orbit.
They're trained nasa employees or engineers, these shuttles are heavily used and manned by a ton of astronauts so there's no point wearing fancy pancy white overalls to work inside it (the stuff nasa engineers wear when they're building sattelites and stuff)
I watching this video in 2024 and for me the space shuttle in terms of shape or look still the best space craft that i've could possibly imagine if i wanna go to travel the space...
@hackneysaregreat The space shuttles were primarily built for constructing and developing the ISS. Now when the space station's construction is basically completed, there are no further uses for those space shuttles.
This is the kind of video I've been trying to find: what are all the little buttons and switches on most surfaces? Most videos don't actually show them
Very interesting video. I supported the Shuttle Mission Simulator complex at JSC for 38 years, so the Shuttle Crew Station environment was very familiar to me. I was a little surprised to see the towback was done with a "live" vehicle, power still on, GPC displays active, etc. I guess I had not really thought about that. Were the fuel cells still active or was external power supplied? Thanks for posting this!
Ten years ago...(2020/05). It's like a star ⭐✨in Earth. That's a pity they stopped working on this. The most beautiful and wonderful human made thing. Bye Space Shuttles.🤓⭐✨🚀💨
No climate control after it landed? Didn't they still need fresh cooled air inside even while rolling it back to the processing facility? It looks like it had power, though i wonder if it was ground power or still on the APU's. Also didn't some experiments get offloaded and need to stay at a particular temperature? Was that done on the runway or after it got back to the processing facility? I would think with the Florida humidity those guys would be sweating a ton if the inside of the shuttle was not cooled. I could see sun shades over some of the windows, I assume to keep the heat down, and glare off equipment. Were those put in in orbit, or on ground? Such a cool machine, glass cockpit with switches for everything and not a touch screen in sight! Tactile feedback is what I would think you want flying something like this that shakes with g-forces on the way up, and even on the smoother way down.
NASA. I love you guys. I have had the privilege of knowing someone who worked for you and he graduated from the same small town high school that I did. Keep fighting the good fight. Please do not invest any money in to debunking the flat Earth people because those of us with sound mind know we live on a beautiful blue marble.
Aloan Moreira the astronauts get a whole guide book for every button on different sections of the cockpit.. of course they have to remember many of these button locations and stuff like that, but still, as far as I know, they don't have to remember like, EACH AND EVERY BUTTON or something...
I would be so happy to get the simulator in which every switch works as it should, and with emulated GPCs and OFC fully featured orbital physics. It would be nice to have full real space shuttle for orbiter simulator....
*WHAT* did the old Apollo space capsules *sound* like inside??? Was it similar to this??? Where can I get an answer to this??? And what did the capsules *smell* like inside? I remember seeing one of the old Mercury capsules on display and even though it had plexiglass barrier to the outside world, it smelled like the inside of an old transistor radio, I guess from the electronics.
JungleYT the shuttles all had what was described as a funky lived in smell by nearly every astronaut who flew in them and the support crew. Space itself is said to have a harsh metallic smell.
Did dragon v2 took all the buttons and instrument panels and put it all in a touch screen? I can imagine if his touch screen fail you should be able to connect your smartphone to the shuttle via Bluetooth
Agreed. They could have redesigned some of the electronic systems to make the user interface simpler to expand the range of people who could have flown the shuttle to accomodate commercial crews, maybe they could have upgraded the main engines so they didn't need to be serviced after every flight, and upgraded the SRB's so they could have covered the whole orbiter in RCC instead of using those tiles which caused so many problems.
@hackneysaregreat I disagree, the main problem with the shuttle is that it isn't safe. There was major problem with the foam breaking hole in the wings plus there is no way to escape the shuttle if the orbiter explode. Blow up on take off? Die. Blow up on reentry? Die They only way to escape is jump in parachute. To do that, the shuttle has to fly level, at a good altitude (not too low, not too high) and the crew have to be concious.
did they do this right after landing? how long do they let a space shuttle sit outside? i wouldn't think rain would be good for it? did the shuttles ever get rained on?
I bet it lacks wipers. I am preatty sure that no wipers could survive the reentry heat and drag. And the payload bay was not water tight, only the crew compartment was.
Technology is advancing at a pace that is sometimes difficult to keep up with however, the conquest of space, ever since the Apollo missions, has evolved to the most beautiful machine ever designed and built by mankind: The Space Shuttle. Now that the Shuttle is retired and stand in a prominent place in history, it is difficult to imagine that other extraordinary spacecrafts such as the Hubble telescope are not ever going to take their proper place (the Smithsonian comes to mind) in the history of mankind conquest of the universe. I think they (Hubble & Shuttle) were the cream of the cream to come out of NASA. Let's see what the future has is store for us to see.
verify aft,on the top,verify grow ,latch,screen is green,b is 83,came offafter open contact you see the full potential of its internals,the video stops here,I guess it is shift.
5:15 “Sorry, what was that, sir?” “You want some water?” Good to know that even professionals will assume that the simplest of questions are serious. 😂
In addition to what SweetBearCub said, an auxiliary power unit (APU) (3 of them) was started just before reentry to power the the avionics (flaps, rudder, etc.) once it got below a certain altitude. The APU was fueled by a very nasty fuel called hydrazine.
No wonder these space x pilots are so chill and happy. This ship looks like the most complicated machine to operate
C. Sum its not really complicated some aircrats have more stuff then that
With it having a couple million moving parts it's safe to say it's the most complicated vehicle ever produced.
I'm a helicopter
Couldn't even play mp4s... Not even mpg files!
@ALXXX It's true, when you think the smart phone in your pocket is 100,000 times more powerful than Apollo's flight computers!
My dad took my brother and I to a limited public viewing of The Enterprise at an airstrip at Cape Canaveral. We got to meet some of the astronauts and engineers. I was around 10 years old. There was a set of stairs leading up to one of the ports of the shuttle. I looked up at one of the astronauts and asked if I could go up the stairs. At the time I didn't know how crazy security was, but the pilot said it was OK and he took me up to peek inside. When we were up there, several security people saw me and got upset. The pilot realized he was in trouble and told me "we better get down before they pop a gasket" and we went down the stairs. My brother was so jealous of me. It was so cool to see the inside of the ship.
I bet you reminded him of himself when he was your age☺☺☺☺☺☺☺. Kids have that effect on adults.
I received news from LHMH , olrd 20 % ,. Twop ISS am are? How's another dimension data rst ⛎
Enterprise was just a Boilerplate or test model... Surprised they would freak out over an unofficial craft. I visited Johnson back in the 1980s after my USAF Basic Training. The gentleman ( family friend ) who showed me around there pointed out the simulator building, but couldn't take me in, because it was off limits. I hadn't obtained my Secret clearance yet. Still, I imagine it would have taken some Extra Uber Secret Top clearance to get in there!
When I was six I seen the ship on the launchpad then watched it launch a few days later it was just pure luck because it was the first time I had been to Florida and it just happened to line up with the launch date
Inspiring story. Thabks man
I never get tired of watching these videos. I miss our Space Shuttle program, cost not withstanding.
So many dials and switches they had to verify and prep work before the shuttle was reprocessed and strapped to the tank for another flight! Mind-blowing.
Was thinking a similar thing, the crews must have gone through so much training just to familiarise themselves with the control panels.
@Thinker , what?
@@guitarrerist698 Not a good design. Proven twice, and twice too many, hence, no longer around ;)
imagine responsibility.
yeah, absolutely mind blowing 👍🏼
Rockwell: "How many buttons should we put in the space shuttle?"
Nasa: "Yes"
😂😂😂😂
And thats a fact
I d fit in a PS2 controller connector :>
Imagine if they don’t even need to press most of the buttons and they’re all there for show or to make the ship look difficult to operate
I just adore Space Shuttle!!! One of the best inventions ever!!!
Aivar Andressoo Technologically, yes. Economically, hell to the no
Buran would have been better.
Woulda coulda shoulda. Buran flew once, then got abandoned and crushed in a hanger collapse. End of story.
Sadly, AspireaRL is correct. The Shuttle never delivered on the promise of reliable, routine spaceflight. There is no way it ever could once the Department of Defense got a say in it’s design requirements.
The next Space Shuttle must take off to orbit on its own. That will mark new generation of space vehicles.
For some reason I am amazed that people wear normal clothing and shoes when working in the shuttle. Always assumed they had to wear some special coveralls to keep it perfectly clean.
When readying for launch, the interior was a clean area with all of the precautions you mentioned and more. But when it returned, as in this video, there was no need to worry about FOD, as the interior would be scrubbed and vacuumed prior to the next flight.
Ilikebeaversandeaglesupyourass
Tell that to challenger and Columbia
Drink Bleach The Challenger disaster was due to a O-ring seal that was never intended for a cold launch. Columbia was due to heat shield tile damage from a 2 lb. piece of foam that came off the fuel storage tank at liftoff.
Both were brought up as concerns and ignored by the “powers that be”, not from clothing lint or dust.
Jeep Dude It’s still hard to think of the Challenger disaster being the 34th anniversary today and the Columbia disaster as we approach their 17th anniversary this Saturday. Seems like yesterday when 14 great people lost their lives.
Probably the only place this shuttle was going after this was a museum.
Great to see the interior systems in such detail.
That would be me in the Commanders seat on my last recovery with Ron Delaney
What do you work on now?
summerrr1 bit late don’t you think
Imagine being the guys who have to test every single switch, and confirm every test of every switch.
That is patience beyond what I can imagine.
The whole Space Shuttle recovery program is massive, not to mention the pre check ready launch preparation.
What a complicated machine. Just amazing really.
Awesome video. These recent behind the scenes videos are really fun to watch.
I thought this was a museum/airshow staff playing around and preparing it for display...I definitely had to rewind a bunch when I realized this IS REAL PREP for a flight.
This wasn't Preparing for flight. This was Preparing the shuttle to take into the processing building, readying it for a museum
@@philiplettley not for museum, it had 1 more mission after this
It is mind blowing to think that when the ground crew closed the hatch and locked it that they were completely isolated from the outside environment.
FanTASTIC video! Thank you so much for posting this. Absolutely a space geek's dream.
This was an excellent and interesting video. Got a look at at the highly trained people that it took to support the orbiters let alone the whole shuttle system. These are the people that help make the U.S Space program as great as it is. ..Verified!
Really cool to watch engineers run post mission checklist and install -21 “REMOVE BEFORE FLIGHT” equipment. So my question is were the fuel cells running during the tow or did they have some kind of external ground power for engineers to have A/C? It took an army of guys and gals to put up a Space Shuttle and this video showcases some of those Americans…a real gem of a video!
The wonder of this is not knowing what every switch does, but to know the procedures on how/when/why to operate them in a beautiful ballet called Flight procedures! I fly an A320. I can only dream of flying this air/space craft.
It's sad to see the end of such an amazing and icon ship. It defined the 80s! I love the attention to detail and overengineering!!!!
I wouldnt mind Space Shuttle 2.0. Shuttle that would actually did fulfill its intention of cheap and rapid reusable transportation.
Vertically landing rockets are cool but nothing beats a space plane or rather proper looking space ship.
Wow its amzing to see a shttle up close..
Although we see helicoptrs airplanes etc but we do not amaze..
But its really pleasure that what we humans did in the last 100 years.. shuttle is the most complex flying object humanity ever made..
Thanx to the person who uploaded this video ..
I m eager to watch this video again again and again
Needs more switches
The more I see, the more inquisitive I become...this is so interesting !
20 000 000 parts in this ship
"excuse me sir, would you like some water?"
"Verified."
Threw me when I saw them lift the door up from the floor. Thought it swung to the left. But the only time I have seen them close the door is on the pad when the Shuttle is vertical.
I said lunch not launch!:)
The amount of similarities to the Apollo CM is a new discovery for me. The switches, the labeling conventions and systems for the switches, and the fuel cell and OMS gauges all the same style as the Apollo CM.
an incredible piece of tec... navigator of the stars, once at the earth atmosphere, another day rolling next to a lake... fantastic carrier of dreams, i love these machines.
They should re-release this with commentary about what is happening.
1st part: hooking up towing equipment to tow the orbiter back to OPF (Orbiter Processing Facility)
2nd part: ground team verifying post-landing configuration on various switches and indicators, shutting down the unnecessary systems
Anyone who doesn't miss the shuttle has no soul. Anyone who wants shuttle back has no mind.
I don't miss it. It was a horrible hunk of technology. It should have been better and it _could_ have been better. It was fat, heavy and expensive. If the CIA didn't want to have a method to covertly retrieve satellites; If it had only a single mission to perform; If it's countenance wasn't corrupted by back-door politics... She could have been fantastic.
No. It was an unreliable POS. Awful rocket, the only thing it has going is it looks beautiful and the noise is cool.
Thank you guys, for a wonderful video!
Amazing how much room they had in the cockpit compared with the sojus.
Kinda weird to see random normal folks in street clothes casually working in a billion dollar vehicle where only hours before famous ASTRONAUTS floated around while the whole thing was in earth orbit.
They're trained nasa employees or engineers, these shuttles are heavily used and manned by a ton of astronauts so there's no point wearing fancy pancy white overalls to work inside it (the stuff nasa engineers wear when they're building sattelites and stuff)
It's amazing how they managed to find a style for their "Flight Crew System" logo from the word art. Kudos, Nasa
Wow! What an amazing insight. Thank you!
Beautifully engineered
I watching this video in 2024 and for me the space shuttle in terms of shape or look still the best space craft that i've could possibly imagine if i wanna go to travel the space...
At 4:01 I noticed an SRB separation MAN/AUTO... I was always under the impression that the SRBs couldn’t be jettisoned manually, is that not the case?
@hackneysaregreat The space shuttles were primarily built for constructing and developing the ISS. Now when the space station's construction is basically completed, there are no further uses for those space shuttles.
6:39 - lol
Made me laugh too😂
Secret Launch codes just in case.
Most valuable piece of doc to boot.
HAHAHA
LOL !!!
Apparently half of the weight of the orbiter is buttons, switches and lights.
I've been waiting for a video like this for a long time. Great vid!
Ok
Challenger
Endeavour
Atlantis
Colombia
Discovery... Which other??
I would be sitting in the pilot’s seat making rocket sounds.
This is the kind of video I've been trying to find: what are all the little buttons and switches on most surfaces? Most videos don't actually show them
SpaceX is all smart and stuff, but this is the expression of human ambition.
Im supprised they let people video the inside of the shuttle but what an amazing machine.
Very very , I mean, extremely cool vid. I like these in depth views and details.
Very interesting video. I supported the Shuttle Mission Simulator complex at JSC for 38 years, so the Shuttle Crew Station environment was very familiar to me. I was a little surprised to see the towback was done with a "live" vehicle, power still on, GPC displays active, etc. I guess I had not really thought about that. Were the fuel cells still active or was external power supplied? Thanks for posting this!
Var och tittade på Atlantis i går, fantastiskt häftigt👍
Love those very "Apollo" looking control panels.
Great Video. it's disgusting that the shuttle program is being closed.
Ten years ago...(2020/05).
It's like a star ⭐✨in Earth. That's a pity they stopped working on this. The most beautiful and wonderful human made thing.
Bye Space Shuttles.🤓⭐✨🚀💨
Microsoft Word "word art" in full effect for the flight crew systems lmao
i noticed that too. 😂
5:23 high tech ship designed to go into space, wire duct taped to wall. Proves never go anywhere with out duct tape
Low earth orbit... not exactly space
@@ahuman9864 it's still above the karman line
@@ahuman9864 Earth orbit IS space.
I'd like to see the invoice on THAT duct tape... 💲
6:45 * REMOVE BEFORE FLIGHT *
*YoU dOnT SAy?!*
Old shuttles" never die. They just fade away"
Very cool. Funny to see a few places where duct tape was used. 👍👍 Would love to see more videos like this!
We need to know details about shuttle
2:26: Were locked in now, no turning back.
Hot as heck in there that day. But it was worth it!
No climate control after it landed? Didn't they still need fresh cooled air inside even while rolling it back to the processing facility? It looks like it had power, though i wonder if it was ground power or still on the APU's. Also didn't some experiments get offloaded and need to stay at a particular temperature? Was that done on the runway or after it got back to the processing facility? I would think with the Florida humidity those guys would be sweating a ton if the inside of the shuttle was not cooled. I could see sun shades over some of the windows, I assume to keep the heat down, and glare off equipment. Were those put in in orbit, or on ground? Such a cool machine, glass cockpit with switches for everything and not a touch screen in sight! Tactile feedback is what I would think you want flying something like this that shakes with g-forces on the way up, and even on the smoother way down.
@@marcusdamberger it had both cooling and power hooked up all the time during transfer to the OPF (via those 2 vehicles in the back, with arms)
That was AWESOME! Thank you!
We need to check of the body of shuttle well
I got a question non-related. If we retired the shuttle how do we send people to the ISS space station back and forth?
@Kit Canyon
I predict Boeing won't fly astros before 2022, at the earliest.
NASA. I love you guys. I have had the privilege of knowing someone who worked for you and he graduated from the same small town high school that I did. Keep fighting the good fight. Please do not invest any money in to debunking the flat Earth people because those of us with sound mind know we live on a beautiful blue marble.
Nose and brake rear pull back check
greatest spacecraft of its time
wow, I would be lost with so many buttons and switches etc! :O
Aloan Moreira the astronauts get a whole guide book for every button on different sections of the cockpit.. of course they have to remember many of these button locations and stuff like that, but still, as far as I know, they don't have to remember like, EACH AND EVERY BUTTON or something...
Random Guy hahaha, I swear I am not related to that guy in any way though! XD
I would be so happy to get the simulator in which every switch works as it should, and with emulated GPCs and OFC fully featured orbital physics. It would be nice to have full real space shuttle for orbiter simulator....
Imagine if motor vehicles were designed like this..not many people would be on the road..lol
*WHAT* did the old Apollo space capsules *sound* like inside??? Was it similar to this??? Where can I get an answer to this??? And what did the capsules *smell* like inside? I remember seeing one of the old Mercury capsules on display and even though it had plexiglass barrier to the outside world, it smelled like the inside of an old transistor radio, I guess from the electronics.
JungleYT the shuttles all had what was described as a funky lived in smell by nearly every astronaut who flew in them and the support crew. Space itself is said to have a harsh metallic smell.
Did I see ductape onboard the shuttle?
The cockpit looks cool. Reminds me of an Airbus
Take everything from the insideee
And just throw it alll awaaayyy !
Just feeling if it still working properly ?
Did dragon v2 took all the buttons and instrument panels and put it all in a touch screen? I can imagine if his touch screen fail you should be able to connect your smartphone to the shuttle via Bluetooth
Dragon has buttons for essential functions like chutes.
To me external is more interesting than internal, amazing stuff.
I made my play room as a Space Shuttle! I called it Triumph!
Why do many switches? In Kerbal Space program I only need about ten buttons to operate my shuttle duh!
We need to know everything in details
Agreed.
They could have redesigned some of the electronic systems to make the user interface simpler to expand the range of people who could have flown the shuttle to accomodate commercial crews, maybe they could have upgraded the main engines so they didn't need to be serviced after every flight, and upgraded the SRB's so they could have covered the whole orbiter in RCC instead of using those tiles which caused so many problems.
don't forget the space shuttle's is run on a computer currently able to compare to a Raspberry Pi
All sounds very easy when you can just throw around the word “upgrade.”
@hackneysaregreat
I disagree, the main problem with the shuttle is that it isn't safe. There was major problem with the foam breaking hole in the wings plus there is no way to escape the shuttle if the orbiter explode.
Blow up on take off? Die.
Blow up on reentry? Die
They only way to escape is jump in parachute. To do that, the shuttle has to fly level, at a good altitude (not too low, not too high) and the crew have to be concious.
Mike Mullane (shuttle astronaut) said that shuttle emergency procedures are just something to read while you wait to die. That says it pretty well.
did they do this right after landing? how long do they let a space shuttle sit outside? i wouldn't think rain would be good for it? did the shuttles ever get rained on?
If rain was forecast for landing day they would have chosen a backup landing site, or delayed landing for another day.
I bet it lacks wipers. I am preatty sure that no wipers could survive the reentry heat and drag. And the payload bay was not water tight, only the crew compartment was.
I’d like to actually see what happens when any of the buttons is pushed
We need to clear up all the details machine
Strange to see network cables duct taped to the consoles and routed various ways.
It's been upgraded so many times over the years. Easier to run cables externally.
Temporary lines for coms and data when the team turns off the the power switches, but still working in the craft.
Shuttle Atlantis is awesome 🌏😉👏👑🇺🇸💕
(During the Job interview)
Interviewer: Are you able to say the word "Verified"?
Probably top class in his field. Probably understands everything he is verifying as well. :)
We need to go details
Technology is advancing at a pace that is sometimes difficult to keep up with however, the conquest of space, ever since the Apollo missions, has evolved to the most beautiful machine ever designed and built by mankind: The Space Shuttle. Now that the Shuttle is retired and stand in a prominent place in history, it is difficult to imagine that other extraordinary spacecrafts such as the Hubble telescope are not ever going to take their proper place (the Smithsonian comes to mind) in the history of mankind conquest of the universe. I think they (Hubble & Shuttle) were the cream of the cream to come out of NASA. Let's see what the future has is store for us to see.
Man I wish I had that job!!! Amazing!!!!
7:09 panel held together with duct tape.
I wish there were more videos like this of Columbia.
verify aft,on the top,verify grow ,latch,screen is green,b is 83,came offafter open contact you see the full potential of its internals,the video stops here,I guess it is shift.
The shuttle was ahead of its time and should not have been scrapped.
Aren't they supposed to float in that thing?
5:15
“Sorry, what was that, sir?”
“You want some water?”
Good to know that even professionals will assume that the simplest of questions are serious. 😂
What powers the shuttle in space. How many batteries does it operate on
The Space Shuttle Orbiters were powered by fuel cells, with re-entry/backup batteries, much like how the Apollo CSM was powered.
In addition to what SweetBearCub said, an auxiliary power unit (APU) (3 of them) was started just before reentry to power the the avionics (flaps, rudder, etc.) once it got below a certain altitude. The APU was fueled by a very nasty fuel called hydrazine.
As simple as driving a car😊🚘💯
Nice to ride a bit that space plane
Was that bucket loads of pale blue velcro patches I was seeing?
yes
We need to observe details
Best flight deck in the world.