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The last of the Shuttle Launches.....

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    #31
    Originally posted by frankenbeemer View Post
    1.The shuttle was never designed for deep space.
    2. No viable abort mode for the shuttle, unlike Mercury, Gemini, Apollo.
    3. Originally envisioned costs of $118 per pound of payload in 1972 dollars ($1,400/kg, adjusting for inflation to 2011, actual cost about $60,000/kg. Expendable launcher cost about $5000/kg
    4. As the Russians demonstrated, capsules and unmanned supply rockets are sufficient to supply a space station.

    I'll agree with the overused relic part. The shuttle technology is impressive, just not the right tool for the job it was given, which was not exactly the job it was designed for. It reminds me of this technology:

    [ATTACH]44547[/ATTACH]
    1. Never stated that. :p
    2. The in-flight abort modes for the previous spacecrafts were a joke.
    3. Since when has government program budgeting ever gone under?
    4. We're already bored of that damn thing(ISS) and capsules are simply unimpressive chore material... We want deep space travel!
    Originally posted by StereoInstaller1
    Do you feel like something is trying to penetrate your butthole?

    Comment


      #32
      Originally posted by E-Thirty View Post
      1. Never stated that. :p
      2. The in-flight abort modes for the previous spacecrafts were a joke.
      3. Since when has government program budgeting ever gone under?
      4. We're already bored of that damn thing(ISS) and capsules are simply unimpressive chore material... We want deep space travel!
      Disconcerting.


      Anyone see the picture taken from the space station of the landing?


      Click image for larger version

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      sigpic
      Originally posted by JinormusJ
      Don't buy an e30

      They're stupid
      1989 325is Raged on then sold.
      1988 325 SETA 2DR Beaten to death, then parted.
      1988 325 SETA 4DR Parted.
      1990 325i Cabrio Daily'd, then stored 2 yrs ago.

      Comment


        #33
        Originally posted by NitroRustlerDriver View Post
        ^^^That's a good point. I wonder where all that now unused stuff is going?

        Also, is there a replacement for the current shuttle, or do they no longer have funding?

        Edit:

        http://jalopnik.com/5805152/this-is-...-space-shuttle
        The program is "on hold" would be the best way to describe it. The Orion program was taken out of the budget this year. So technically it doesn't have direct funding so it is slowly being scrapped. However, the main issue is with the rocket technology. In short, NASA decided to try to build their own rocket instead of using current, proven, designs. They went way over budget and didn't get very far. Recently, ULA and NASA agreed to share engineering details on the ULA Atlas V rocket, which can be adapted to use a capsule already. Orion is designed to replace the shuttle, go to the moon, and mars. It is still being worked on even though the funding is "gone". The future of the program is unknown right now.

        - E30, DSM, Golf R, Mazda 3 Skyactiv

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          #34
          Thanks for the pics George and after seeing them I feel sad that I never got a chance to go see a shuttle launch in person.

          I guess after growing up with the NASA space program going on and a kid I just took it for granted that it would be there for a long, long time. I still remember being awestruck by some of the cool things that they do over there.

          Maybe I will hit a small jackpot sometime in the future and buy a ticket on one of the Virgin shuttles to get a glimpse of what those astronauts saw with my own eyes.


          My 1989 e30 s52 Touring... this is Betty

          My 1989 325i vert (sold)...this is Nina

          My 1991 M5 (sold)... this is Veronica

          Photo comparison: OEM vs aftermarket windscreen for a convertible

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            #35
            Originally posted by frankenbeemer View Post
            Disconcerting.


            Anyone see the picture taken from the space station of the landing?


            [ATTACH]44564[/ATTACH]
            Disconcerting truth. :p

            Originally posted by StereoInstaller1
            Do you feel like something is trying to penetrate your butthole?

            Comment


              #36
              I figure I'll attempt to contribute something. It's the closest I've ever gotten for a launch, thanks to a friend with an internship at SpaceX. I wish I had an actual camera with an actual zoom and tripod, but the cell phone was better than nothing.

              Comment


                #37
                Originally posted by AlpineE30M52 View Post
                I missed it. :( It'll be on youtube... I have seen one in person from about 75 miles north. Got some great shots of it too.









                Beautifull pics man! thanks for sharing it.
                no more boosted m20, 91 318i...

                Comment


                  #38
                  Thought I'd bump this one up
                  The irony kills me.

                  An unidentified failure causes the crash of a supply vessel carrying three tons of supplies to the space station, but the six astronauts aboard the ISS are in no immediate danger.


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