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Happy birthday Nasa

LEGEND ,
Oct 25, 2018 Oct 25, 2018

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I feel bad for missing this event so wanted to make it up to them

NASA: 60th Anniversary 3D Celebration | Adobe Blog

p.s, love the new look shuttle guys... will have to think up something to use it on

NASA: 60th Anniversary 3D Celebration inspirational stock assets | Adobe Stock

p.s, here is one I made earlier

Screenshot (1531).png

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Community Expert ,
Oct 25, 2018 Oct 25, 2018

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Nice. I used to take crude 3D renderings of satellites and make them look more realistic. I've been inside the cockpit of the space shuttle the day before a launch. Spent a lot of time at the Cape.

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Community Expert ,
Oct 26, 2018 Oct 26, 2018

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How fun to be in the cockpit, Chuck, you must have known the right people!

I saw the space shuttle when it was in the air from the window of an airplane in the Spring of 1998. I had just finished a business trip in Panama and was on the way home when it was announced that our flight path was directly overhead of the shuttle as it would be taking off. We had to make a detour to circle away from it, and the pilot made sure that all of us got a really good view as the shuttle went up and we crossed not so very far away. It was truly spectacular and is forever seared in my memory.

We then didn’t have enough fuel to land at JFK and had to refuel in Richmond, eventually landing just two minutes before that last flight to DC, which I was unable to get on. The spectacular view of the space shuttle caused a 24-hour delay in retuning home and was totally worth every minute of it.

For those who ever expect to fly into Dulles, it’s worth it to plan a side trip to the Udvar-Hazy Center, the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum's annex at Washington Dulles International Airport in Virginia to see The Discovery and so much more.

Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center | National Air and Space Museum

Thanks, Graham, for posting this link to NASA’s 60th!

3BFD026A-D837-4B31-8125-8CFD11D0EBDF.jpeg

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Community Expert ,
Oct 26, 2018 Oct 26, 2018

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Jane, it was cool, but the job I had to shoot was a PIA! I had to map the payload bay through the cockpit window, so that the astronauts and ground control had similar photos that they could refer to if something went wrong in the deploying of the satellite. There was a platform in the cockpit that was about 3 feet above the payload bay window with just a small gap. I had to bend over the edge and shoot blindly through the window. Shooting film back then, so I was a bit unsure if I got enough coverage. My stomach hurt so much after that shoot. We had a trailer on base with a darkroom, where we had to process and print the images and get them on a plane to ground control in TX before the launch the next day. Sure wish I had digital stuff back then. I was working covertly, and was told I wasn't to be seen with a camera on base, as they hired contract photographers, but they didn't have the clearances needed. So when I went to the launch at the press box, I didn't bring my camera, and everyone else did! I was so pissed. It was a beautiful morning shot, and I was as close as they would allow anyone to be to see the launch.

Another time, they were moving the shuttle to the pad on the creeper. I drove pass and all my co-workers were taking photos in front of it. Again, I didn't have my camera, so I drove back to the office to get it. By the time I got there, everyone had left, but I got out and took a shot, then got stopped by the MPs for being too close to the shuttle. I've been stopped and picked up by the MPs many times! Here's the shot that I did get:

shuttle.jpg

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Community Expert ,
Oct 26, 2018 Oct 26, 2018

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Oh, wow, Chuck Uebele​, just wow! That’s a great picture, and I love your stories, too.

Back when my plane was diverted and I was 24 hours delayed getting home, I remember feeling annoyed. But now that two decades have passed, I no longer miss those 24 hours and am still left with the incredible experience and memory of seeing the space shuttle from an airplane window.

The only thing that could have made it better would have been to have been in it and gone into space.

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Community Expert ,
Oct 26, 2018 Oct 26, 2018

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Oh, I have no desire to go into space. We had a few astronauts come talk to us that were going to be in charge of handling our satellite. There were commenting on how you stomach shots down during a launch and that it takes a while for it to adjust to weightlessness. They said except for one of them, who could eat during a launch. He didn't seem to have any difficulty.

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Community Expert ,
Oct 26, 2018 Oct 26, 2018

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I got another shot of the VAB from a helicopter when I was about to photograph a launch.

VAB.jpg

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Community Expert ,
Oct 25, 2018 Oct 25, 2018

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Awesomeness!!

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Community Expert ,
Oct 26, 2018 Oct 26, 2018

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I can't see a way to "Like" an original post. But I do like it - thumbs up from me

Dave

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Community Expert ,
Oct 26, 2018 Oct 26, 2018

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  wrote

I can't see a way to "Like" an original post. But I do like it - thumbs up from me

Dave

It's not on the post itself, it's to the right at the top of the page (with Follow and Bookmark)

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Community Expert ,
Oct 26, 2018 Oct 26, 2018

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It's not on the post itself, it's to the right at the top of the page (with Follow and Bookmark)

How long have I been in these forums and not noticed that

Thanks

Dave

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Community Expert ,
Nov 02, 2018 Nov 02, 2018

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LATEST

The Canadian rock group Rush wrote the song Countdown. Its lyrics are about the first launch of the Space Shuttle Columbia which the band members watched from a VIP area called "Red Sector A". The song incorporates audio from voice communications between astronauts John Young and Robert Crippen and ground control along with commentary from the Kennedy Space Center Public Affairs Officer leading up to the launch. Lot´s of video clips from that launch in their video. Yes, i love Rush!

The video: Rush - Countdown - YouTube

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