Episodes Tagged with "Lm 2"
Posted on July 23, 2015
Toward the end of January 1967, it was revealed that Lunar Module 1 would not reach the Cape in February, as expected. This meant, the moon landing might be delayed because the lander was not ready. But the mission planners could not wait for the Apo...
3- 1230_Lunar_module_LTA-2_R
2-Disher_John_
1-Lunar_Module_diagram
Tagged:Apollo, Ascent Stage, Bell, Bethpage, Block I, Block Ii, Decent Stage, Deke Slayton, Donald Sullivan, Exploration, Gemini, George Mueller, George Titterton, Gerorge Skurla, Gilruth, Ground Support Equipment, Grumman, Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, Gse, Hamilton Standard, History, Hjornevik, Houston, Hugh Dryden, Hughes Aircraft, Huntsville, James Webb, John Rubel, Joseph Shea, Langley, Llewellyn Evans, Lm 1, Lm 2, Lm 3, Lm 4, Lm 5, Lm 6, Lm7, Lta, Lunar, Lunar Module, Manned Space Flight, Manned Spacecraft Center, Marshall Space Flight Center, Max Faget, Mockup, Moon, Msc, Msfc, Nasa, North American Aviation, Office Of Manned Space Flight, Optical Tracker, Pintle, Project Apollo, R Wayne Young, Rca, Rendezvous Radar, Richard E Mayo, Robert Brader, Robert Seamans, Rocket, Russell Schwickart, Saturn V, Seamans, Space, Space Technology Laboratories, Spacecraft Technology Division, Thomas J Kelly, Trw, William Lee, William Rector
Posted on February 18, 2016
“The fire-in-the-hole abort was the most critical test of the mission and one we had to accomplish successfully prior to a manned mission.” Gene Kranz – Flight Director Apollo 5
6-Apollo5 Launch
5-Apollo_5_on_pad with Saturn 1B
4-Lem inside adapter hoisted
3-Lunar Module 1 being mated to the Spacecraft Lunar Module Adapter in preparation for launch as Apollo 5
2-LM1Delivered to the Cape
1-Apollo 5 Mission Patch
Tagged:Aero Spacelines, All Up, Apollo 1, Apollo 11, Apollo 4, Apollo 5, Apollo 6, Apollo 9, Ascent Propulsion System, Commandservice Module, Csm, Decent Propulsion System, Deputy Administrator Seamans, Downey, Eugene F Kranz, Fire In The Hole, Florida, Gene Kranz, Grumman, Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, Houston, Huntsville, James Webb, John F Kennedy Space Center, John Hodge, John J Williams, Launch Complex 34, Lm 1, Lm 2, Lm 3, Lm 5, Lox, Lunar Module, Marshall Space Flight Center, Merritt Island, Michoud, Mississippi Test, Mueller, Naca, North American Rockwell, Pregnant Guppy, Rocco Petrone, Rp 1, S Ii, S Ivb, Saturn 1b, Saturn Ib 204, Saturn V, Scimitar, Supper Guppy, Vab, Walter Cronkite, Wernher Von Braun, William C Schneider
Posted on February 25, 2016
The success of Apollo 4 gave good reason to believe that the Saturn V could be trusted to propel men into space. But NASA pushed on with its plans for a second unmanned booster flight, primarily to give the Pad 39 launch team another rehearsal before...
5-Apollo-6-1968-04-04
4-Apollo 6’s interstage falling away
3-Apollo6fireyExhaustPlume
2-Apollo_6_launch
1-The Lunar Module Test Article (LTA-2R) is being moved for mating with the spacecraft Lunar Module Adapter
0-apollo-6-final_0
Tagged:Aerospace Corporation, All Up, Apollo 1, Apollo 11, Apollo 4, Apollo 5, Apollo 6, Apollo Stack, Arnold Engineering Development Center, Arthur Rudolph, Baja, Clifford E Charlesworth, Commandservice Module, Csm, Direct Return Abort, Donald Slayton, Downey, Eberhard Rees, Edwards Air Force Base, F 1, Florida, Gemini, George H Hage, Grumman, Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, Houston, Huntsville, Instrument Unit, J 2, John F Kennedy Space Center, John Hodge, John J Williams, John Mayer, Kleinknecht, Launch Complex 34, Lee B James, Lm 2, Lm 3, Lox, Lta 2r, Lunar Module, Marshall Space Flight Center, Martin Luther King, Memphis, Merritt Island, Michoud, Mississippi Test, Mueller, Naca, North American Rockwell, Phillips, Pogo, President Johnson, Resonance, Rocco Petrone, Rocketdyne, Rp 1, S 1c, S Ii, S Ivb, Saturn 1b, Saturn Ib 204, Saturn V, Schneider, Scimitar, Sheldon Rubin, Spacecraft 012, Supper Guppy, Tennessee, Translunar, Tullahoma, U S S Okinawa, Vab, Wernher Von Braun
