General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsSome photos of the Apollo 11 Spacecraft you might not have seen.(Orig. posted 2009) *VERY Pic heavy*
I originally posted the following 10 years ago (and again 5 years ago) in honor of the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 mission. I thought the 50th anniversary might be a good time to repost. The original thread can be seen here.
What follows is that same OP with no changes;
In light of all the Apollo 11 threads and the 40th anniversary of the first lunar landing coming up, I thought some on DU might enjoy this.
I've always been fascinated by our spaceflight programs and came across these images today. They offer a behind-the-scenes glimpse of the assembly process of "the stack". Bear in mind while you look at these photos that all of this was built before the age of complex computers and CAD/CAM by engineers whose most capable calculating device was the slide rule. (Link added for those younger DU'rs who have never seen one)
Apollo 11 S-IC first stage in the Vehicle Assembly Building transfer aisle.
A crane lifts the Saturn first stage.
Workers prepare the S-IVB for mating of the Instrument Unit (pictured left), which houses guidance, control and other Saturn V systems. The ring is the same diameter as the stage the workers are standing on, but it is closer to the camera, thus distorting the perspective.
The S-II second stage is moved into position for mating with the S-IC first stage
This photo shows the S-IVB third stage being hoisted into position for mating with the second stage.
The S-IVB third stage is moved into position for mating
Apollo 11 CSM (Command Service Module) being moved from its work stand for mating
The Apollo 11 Command/Service Module (CSM-107) being readied for transfer to the Vehicle Assembly Building.
This photo shows the Apollo 11 Command-and-Service Module being mated to the spacecraft adapter.
Apollo 11 Saturn V rollout from the Vehicle Assembly Building. 20 May 1969.
Aerial view of the Apollo 11 Saturn V rollout from the Vehicle Assembly Building. 20 May 1969
This photo is a ground-level view of the Apollo 11 Saturn V during transport. The vehicle is 363 feet (111 meters) tall.
Apollo 11 Saturn V on the Crawler as it begins to go up the ramp to Pad 39-A. This photo clearly shows the hydraulic jacking capabilities of the Crawler, keeping the vehicle perfectly straight up as it climbs the grade. Note the diesel smoke as the crawler moves it's multi-million pound load up the hill.
This photo is an aerial view of the Apollo 11 Saturn V moving to the firing position on the pad at the Kennedy Space Center.
Many MANY more photos of this series and the Apollo 11 mission as well as technical data, video, audio and transcripts can be found here
Similar image libraries and data for all the Apollo missions can be found here
As I said at the beginning, I first posted this thread ten years ago! My, how time flies.
We lost Neil Armstrong in 2012, Michael Collins is 88 and Buzz Aldrin is 89.
We need (and I know we have) many more like these men.
littlemissmartypants
(22,839 posts)Time really does fly.
A HERETIC I AM
(24,380 posts)And yes, it sure does.
pdxflyboy
(678 posts)A HERETIC I AM
(24,380 posts)Demonaut
(8,931 posts)SergeStorms
(19,204 posts)I've always been fascinated by the early Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo space programs. Astronauts were my childhood heroes, and I have quite a collection of magazines, newspapers, and T-shirts from the era. The T-shirts are a little tight on me now, I've grown a little in the 50+ years.
Great pictures, and I'm going to save them on my hard drive. Thanks again!
NBachers
(17,149 posts)Yes, as a 20 year old hippie in 1969, I was painfully aware of the dis-unity of the times. But our fractures have deepened as republicans and unfriendly nations have driven wedges between ourselves. I believe it's time to cast out the wedge-drivers, and unite against the threat of planetary collapse.
Thanks for posting these timely shots.
Dem2theMax
(9,655 posts)Right now, I'm falling asleep. Want to be wide awake to read this. Thank you so much for posting it.
I was outside tonight, looking at the full moon and remembering back to that glorious night in July of 1969. As a little girl who grew up wanting to be an astronaut, in the days when girls were not allowed to be astronauts, I was awed beyond belief that I could look up at the moon and know that there were human beings on it.
I still look up in awe. I'm too old now to be an astronaut, but I'm glad that the little girls of today who dream big can actually make that dream come true.
KT2000
(20,593 posts)Never realized how huge it was. The whole thing is just amazing.
A HERETIC I AM
(24,380 posts)spanone
(135,902 posts)Calista241
(5,586 posts)RobinA
(9,898 posts)when we could still accomplish stuff.