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View Full Version : Last NASA Launch


mlee49
Jul 8, 2011, 01:23 PM
Today NASA will launch it's last space shuttle, you can watch this event live from NASA's website:

http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/nasatv/

I'd encourage you to watch this event as it may be a while before events like this occur again.

mlee49
Jul 8, 2011, 02:02 PM
Bump, 30 minutes till count down.

digibucc
Jul 8, 2011, 02:03 PM
this is sad

Mussels
Jul 8, 2011, 02:21 PM
20 minute countdown just started

FordGT90Concept
Jul 8, 2011, 02:27 PM
It lanches in an hour at earliest. Countdown is on the right:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/main/index.html

Mussels
Jul 8, 2011, 02:27 PM
what was the 20 minute countdown they just showed for then?

FordGT90Concept
Jul 8, 2011, 02:28 PM
They have like a dozen countdowns (http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/launch/countdown101.html) (T-20 minutes and counting now, T-9 minutes and holding, T-9 minutes and counting are left). XD

Launch time is set for 11:26 AM EDT (http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/launch/index.html) (15:26 GMT).

Mussels
Jul 8, 2011, 02:33 PM
ah right, the hold the countdown once it reaches 9 minutes, so its got 53 minutes left on the clock

mlee49
Jul 8, 2011, 02:33 PM
Yeah, they are holding for 40 minutes just now.

Still quite a bit to take in while the launch counts down.

Mussels
Jul 8, 2011, 02:34 PM
i've closed the feed for now, you beaches better post here to remind me when its T minus 5 or so

Frick
Jul 8, 2011, 02:35 PM
Which means ... 9 minutes ago??? I'm confused. :X

Goodman
Jul 8, 2011, 02:36 PM
this is sad

No! this is a very good thing

Think about it in , private company's = competition , competition = better tech & lower prices

That is the only way for us normal people that we'll ever go into space , it is like in the beginning of airplane without private company's & competition we probably would still not use airplane to go to other country or would be paying 5 times or more the price of what we are paying right now for a airplane ticket , imagine that...:eek:

Like everything else in life , private company's + competitions = Good for all of us period ;)

Frick
Jul 8, 2011, 02:38 PM
Good for all of us period ;)

Capitalistic pig.

http://media.comicvine.com/uploads/3/34475/731937-mot7_large.jpg

I'll leave the feed on, I like the chatter.

FordGT90Concept
Jul 8, 2011, 02:39 PM
Here's what's left:
T-9 minutes and holding
This is the final built-in hold, and varies in length depending on the mission (estimated to be 40 minutes for this mission).
-Final launch window determination
-Activate flight recorders
-Final "go/no-go" launch polls conducted by NASA Test Director, Mission Management Team and launch director

T-9 minutes and counting
-Start automatic ground launch sequencer
-Retract orbiter access arm (T-7 minutes, 30 seconds)
-Start auxiliary power units (T-5 minutes, 0 seconds)
-Arm solid rocket booster range safety safe and arm devices (T-5 minutes, 0 seconds)
-Start orbiter aerosurface profile test, followed by main engine gimbal profile test (T-3 minutes, 55 seconds)
-Retract gaseous oxygen vent arm, or "beanie cap" (T-2 minutes, 55 seconds)
-Crew members close and lock their visors (T-2 minutes, 0 seconds)
-Orbiter transfers from ground to internal power (T-50 seconds)
-Ground launch sequencer is go for auto sequence start (T-31 seconds)
-Activate launch pad sound suppression system (T-16 seconds)
-Activate main engine hydrogen burnoff system (T-10 seconds)
-Main engine start (T-6.6 seconds)

T-0
-Solid rocket booster ignition and liftoff!


Private companies often don't have $15 billion a year to spend on research. How is there better tech and lower prices when there's little/no money to be made yet? Space craft design has to come a very long way before ventures to space become profitable.


If you have the NASA channel, they provide constant coverage of this stuff. I wouldn't be surprised if major news networks break away from their regular programming to cover the final launch as well.

Frick
Jul 8, 2011, 02:41 PM
Aww man now they're showing some footage with dramatic music. Bleh. :(

Goodman
Jul 8, 2011, 02:43 PM
Here's what's left:



Private companies often don't have $15 billion a year to spend on research. How is there better tech and lower prices when there's little/no money to be made yet? Space craft design has to come a very long way before ventures to space become profitable.


If you have the NASA channel, they provide constant coverage of this stuff. I wouldn't be surprised if major news networks break away from their regular programming to cover the final launch as well.

http://scaled.com/projects/tierone/

Beside rocket engine are way overdue...

pantherx12
Jul 8, 2011, 02:45 PM
Meh!

Someone else will launch rockets at some point.

W1zzard
Jul 8, 2011, 02:45 PM
No! this is a very good thing

Think about it in , private company's = competition , competition = better tech & lower prices

That is the only way for us normal people that we'll ever go into space , it is like in the beginning of airplane without private company's & competition we probably would still not use airplane to go to other country or would be paying 5 times or more the price of what we are paying right now for a airplane ticket , imagine that...

Like everything else in life , private company's competitions = Good for all of us period

apple should build a space elevator .. iElevator
or google and in return they will scan and search-index your body

Goodman
Jul 8, 2011, 03:00 PM
apple should build a space elevator .. iElevator
or google and in return they will scan and search-index your body

So? if they got the money for it & can make a profit they will do it...;)

I am talking about Private company's like this one http://scaled.com/projects/tierone/

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNXahIoXMw8

Lots of other compagnies are researching for space tech & way to get ordinary people in to space & that all i care about period

mlee49
Jul 8, 2011, 03:01 PM
Meh!

Someone else will launch rockets at some point.

Your right, someone will launch a rocket. Sadly NASA has peaked and practically died off in less than a generation. It's memorable to some who remember space travel as historic.

Edit, still holding at 9 minutes.

HossHuge
Jul 8, 2011, 03:15 PM
Wow, Thanks for this......:toast:

I remember watching the first one.

Everybody take a drink of what ever it is you've got at launch......:toast:

Did that guy say "Call me back?

FordGT90Concept
Jul 8, 2011, 03:17 PM
They are within 1 minute of starting T-9 countdown. 11:26 AM EDT is still the target launch time.

Mussels
Jul 8, 2011, 03:20 PM
T minus 6 minutes now

HossHuge
Jul 8, 2011, 03:21 PM
I'm drinking a Sapporo!! What are ya drinking!!!!

This would be sweet for the Super Bowl.

Mussels
Jul 8, 2011, 03:24 PM
I'm drinking a Sapporo!! What are ya drinking!!!!

This would be sweet for the Super Bowl.

pepsi max with jack daniels :P

Mussels
Jul 8, 2011, 03:26 PM
cheers to nasa, thanks for all the fun stuff in space.


edit: or not, failure at T-31s :S

mlee49
Jul 8, 2011, 03:26 PM
If your not watching now, get on the feed.

brandonwh64
Jul 8, 2011, 03:26 PM
THIS IS SO FREAKING AWESOME! I love space shit

FordGT90Concept
Jul 8, 2011, 03:27 PM
Failure at 31 seconds.

Frick
Jul 8, 2011, 03:28 PM
"STD failure" I heard. :(

FordGT90Concept
Jul 8, 2011, 03:29 PM
Resuming countdown... launching right about now.

streetfighter 2
Jul 8, 2011, 03:30 PM
This is so bittersweet.

plugugly
Jul 8, 2011, 03:31 PM
Visibility Sucks, I work about an hour south of the Cape and I can't see a thing.

mlee49
Jul 8, 2011, 03:33 PM
3600 miles per hour and already 20+ miles away from only after a couple minutes of flight.

Feed froze for me :(

Fourstaff
Jul 8, 2011, 03:34 PM
The next US people carrier will be Falcon Heavy + SpaceX Dragon?

Frick
Jul 8, 2011, 03:34 PM
3600 miles per hour and already 20+ miles away from only after a couple minutes of flight.

Feed froze for me :(

Same here. It's on now though. No video yet.

HossHuge
Jul 8, 2011, 03:34 PM
This is something Obama should have gone to.

blu3flannel
Jul 8, 2011, 03:34 PM
3600 miles per hour and already 20+ miles away from only after a couple minutes of flight.

Feed froze for me :(

Likewise. I Frapsed from T-minus 1:30 until the feed froze. :(

Mussels
Jul 8, 2011, 03:35 PM
feed just crapped out on me too (constant stuttering), but i got to watch it take off and the boosters seperate with the view of distant clouds in the background


(video is playing for me now)

Mussels
Jul 8, 2011, 03:35 PM
oooh its rotating now


so now its facing 'right way up'

Frick
Jul 8, 2011, 03:35 PM
I see the light.

BTW, so cool how you see earth moving away. Crazy speeds.

Mussels
Jul 8, 2011, 03:36 PM
god damn, look how fast those clouds are moving away...


edit: i'm just impressed how we're getting live feeds FROM A GOD DAMNED SPACE SHIP AS IT LEAVES EARTH. thats some impressive effort there.


edit 2: nooooo shuttle, you are leaving our camera.....

streetfighter 2
Jul 8, 2011, 03:38 PM
edit: i'm just impressed how we're getting live feeds FROM A GOD DAMNED SPACE SHIP AS IT LEAVES EARTH. thats some impressive effort there.
What you didn't hear? This is all faked. It's done in a studio in Hollywood. ;):laugh:

Unlike everyone else the feed hasn't had the slightest hiccup for me. Clear as day.

HossHuge
Jul 8, 2011, 03:39 PM
15 000 miles an hour. 4 miles a second. hard to comprehend

Goodman
Jul 8, 2011, 03:39 PM
feed just crapped out on me too (constant stuttering), but i got to watch it take off and the boosters seperate with the view of distant clouds in the background


(video is playing for me now)

Watching live at CNN no problems at all...:D

mlee49
Jul 8, 2011, 03:39 PM
Watching live at CNN no problems at all...:D

link it

Goodman
Jul 8, 2011, 03:40 PM
link it

Cable TV

Mussels
Jul 8, 2011, 03:41 PM
Watching live at CNN no problems at all...:D

i'm in australia remember, a few more bounces on the signal.



so is that it for images of the shuttle?

HossHuge
Jul 8, 2011, 03:42 PM
looks like it's headed toward Europe

FordGT90Concept
Jul 8, 2011, 03:42 PM
The delay was to verify complete retraction of the gaseous vent arm from the shuttle. Except that, the launch went according to plan. Atlantis is approaching orbit.

mlee49
Jul 8, 2011, 03:42 PM
Damn, no sound from the NASA.tv feed :(

I'll try a refresh

edit, it's not the feed it's mee.

Goodman
Jul 8, 2011, 03:43 PM
The delay was to verify complete retraction of the gaseous vent arm from the shuttle. Except, the launch went according to plan. Atlantis is approaching orbit.

They already are in orbit...lol!

streetfighter 2
Jul 8, 2011, 03:43 PM
I was about to phone NASA and be like, "biatches, do a barrel roll!" But they beat me to it. :D

FordGT90Concept
Jul 8, 2011, 03:46 PM
And there you have it, launch number 135 a success and the end of an era.

Atlantis will dock with the ISS Sunday morning and will land on July 20.

Goodman
Jul 8, 2011, 03:47 PM
They were replaying the launch at CNN & than came the commercials... :mad:

Mussels
Jul 8, 2011, 03:48 PM
yeah the feed is replaying the launch now, guess its time for me to get to bed

FordGT90Concept
Jul 8, 2011, 03:59 PM
http://scaled.com/projects/tierone/

Beside rocket engine are way overdue...
a) That's rocket powered (liquid, not solid, but same concept).
b) The shuttle with tank and boosters weighs 4 million pounds--that can't even come close to the same lifting power (up to 8 passengers and 50,000 lbs of cargo vs 7,000 lbs), speed (17,500 mph), nor altitude (385-mile-high orbit--2,032,800 feet vs "above" 53,000 ft).
c) It's basically just a tourist trap for a short, low-orbit space flight. It isn't like the shuttles which are a research vehicle as well as cargo transport.

All we have now are what we had back in the 1970's: big ass un-reusable rockets. And "we" don't even have them. If memory serves, ISS will only be serviced by Russian rockets now. In other words, the USA just lost the space race.

Oh, and Hubble is all by its lonesome. There's no practical way to service it anymore with the shuttles gone.

mlee49
Jul 8, 2011, 07:22 PM
http://s3.amazonaws.com/twitpic/photos/large/341184807.jpg?AWSAccessKeyId=AKIAJF3XCCKACR3QDMOA&Expires=1310153923&Signature=jUNfUHW9k3IO4nHgbI5y9RSt5Z8%3D

DaedalusHelios
Jul 8, 2011, 08:06 PM
a) That's rocket powered (liquid, not solid, but same concept).
b) The shuttle with tank and boosters weighs 4 million pounds--that can't even come close to the same lifting power (up to 8 passengers and 50,000 lbs of cargo vs 7,000 lbs), speed (17,500 mph), nor altitude (385-mile-high orbit--2,032,800 feet vs "above" 53,000 ft).
c) It's basically just a tourist trap for a short, low-orbit space flight. It isn't like the shuttles which are a research vehicle as well as cargo transport.

All we have now are what we had back in the 1970's: big ass un-reusable rockets. And "we" don't even have them. If memory serves, ISS will only be serviced by Russian rockets now. In other words, the USA just lost the space race.

Oh, and Hubble is all by its lonesome. There's no practical way to service it anymore with the shuttles gone.

The space race was over when the cold war ended. We were doing it for purely scientific reasons afterwards. We all won the cold war IMO. No World War was the goal and proxy wars were just countries testing the waters.

FordGT90Concept
Jul 8, 2011, 08:34 PM
I look at it from the perspective of how much space there is and how little of it we explored. Now the only program that put a major dent in that exploration (landing on the moon) is virtually dead while the Russian program is still going. We can't win a race if we don't have a race car, yeah?

Easy Rhino
Jul 8, 2011, 08:38 PM
fuck space. who needs it.:eek::wtf::o:ohwell::cry:

SK-1
Jul 8, 2011, 08:39 PM
I saw the Hubble launch back in the 80's. Very memorable moment in my life...

FordGT90Concept
Jul 8, 2011, 08:40 PM
An interesting read:
http://www.space.com/11363-nasa-space-shuttle-replacement-30-years-anniversaries.html

dank1983man420
Jul 8, 2011, 08:44 PM
I look at it from the perspective of how much space there is and how little of it we explored. Now the only program that put a major dent in that exploration (landing on the moon) is virtually dead while the Russian program is still going. We can't win a race if we don't have a race car, yeah?

We still have the one current Mars rover as well. I haven't heard of any other country come close to doing something like that yet iirc. Plus we have a new nuclear powered one launching in November sometime apparentlyhttp://news.yahoo.com/nasa-narrows-next-mars-rovers-landing-two-choices-110201051.html

It almost seems like NASA is like "been there, done that" attitude with the moon and space station work and is hopefully trying to get ready for landing on Mars next or whatever the next step is when the next fleet is ready.

FordGT90Concept
Jul 8, 2011, 08:55 PM
According to the article I linked, it sounds like their next focus is landing something on an asteroid then getting to Mars and beyond. They make it sound like the only way for NASA to look beyond the moon was to kill the shuttle program for financial (too expensive to operate the shuttles and research at the same time), political (the concepts that got close didn't get the necessary support to continue to the next phase), and stigma reasons (had a reputation of being "good enough" so why research?).

mlee49
Jul 8, 2011, 09:02 PM
fuck space. who needs it.:eek::wtf::o:ohwell::cry:

If I was a Mod I'd give you an infraction for this.

but this will have to do: :slap:

btarunr
Jul 9, 2011, 04:50 AM
This is so cool: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-13877321

HossHuge
Jul 9, 2011, 05:32 AM
This is so cool: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-13877321

It's not working for me...:(

HammerON
Jul 9, 2011, 06:46 AM
This is so cool: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-13877321

That is pretty cool:)

SK-1
Jul 9, 2011, 07:00 AM
It's not working for me...:(

give it a few...

bostonbuddy
Jul 9, 2011, 08:25 AM
Meh, nows the time for R&D not actual space travel.
Going to mars now isn't gonna have alot of returns.
The big resource in our solar system is going to using Jupiter for fuel.
We won't need ftl to get there but we are going to need some very big very efficient drives to move heavy machinery there.
A Jupiter mission is at least 50 years away, really no reason to visit space in the meantime, just funnel all the money you would have spent into r&d.

Easy Rhino
Jul 9, 2011, 05:37 PM
A Jupiter mission is at least 50 years away,

more like 150 years.

closest distance from earth to the moon: 363,104 km (225,622 miles)

closest distance from earth to jupiter: 628,743,036 km (390,682,810 miles)

that's 1,731 times farther!!!!!

KainXS
Jul 10, 2011, 12:36 AM
I think it really comes down to resources if there was a valuable rare resource on europa we would be pushing hard for jupiter but the drive just isn't there and it dosen't happen. Its not that it can't be done its just that theres not enough interest in it.

its sad to see the shuttle program go though, theres not much to replace it or what it did right now(as in right now)

The Witcher
Jul 24, 2011, 10:06 AM
I'm unaware of NASA situation but could someone tell me why did they close the program ?

I suppose budget problems ?

Why can't the American government cut a few billions from it's weapons race and research budget ?

Man, just imagine how much would we advance if somehow these bloodsucking politicians disappeared and all this budget went into education and researching. I can already see StarTrek technology O_O !!!

FordGT90Concept
Jul 24, 2011, 10:27 AM
Supposedly, the Shuttles are costing too much to allow research on future vehicles. Every time NASA came up with a proposal to replace them, no one (especially Congress) wanted to fund it. So the only way they can advance their technology is to stop the Shuttle program.


Why can't the American government cut a few billions from it's weapons race and research budget ?
You're guess is as good as mine although I am sure it comes down to elections. Taking peoples money and giving them "free" healthcare gets more votes than a space program does.

Personally, I think the Department of Defense and NASA budgets should be combined. Their research often coincides but only the public aspects of it should be done under the NASA brand. NASA's budget is only some $15 billion a year where DoD gets over $600 billion. Some of the research DARPA does though could be applied to space combat with great effect though (like the Airborne Laser).