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T O P I C R E V I E WKC StoeverWas reading over at the http://www.thespacereview.com/article/550/1 where Jim Oberg, BTW, has a good retrospective on Walter Cronkite. There Dwayne Day tackles an urban legend regarding John Glenn's flight, which some books say, erroneously, was supposed to go seven orbits--but a supposed malfunction of his heatshield (never happened) meant he could only go three. Whoa. Both MA-6 and MA-7 pilots were told after liftoff, "We have a Go, with a 7-orbit capability."Carpenter explains that this merely indicated an optimal trajectory, at launch. Go for 7 was "the best report you could get. The injection trajectory could only be measured [by 1962 computers] downstream for 7 orbits. This was the best," Carpenter explains, "the programmed computer could do."Friendship 7 and Aurora 7 were always meant to be three-orbit flights.HawkmanBut...but...in the movie The Right Stuff we see 'Shepard' say that ' You are go, at least seven orbits''I mean..they couldn't put something like that on film if it weren't true, could they? BlackarrowHawkman, That simply meant that the orbit was stable enough to allow seven orbits. The mission was never intended to last more than three orbits. Hawkman quote:Originally posted by Blackarrow:Hawkman, That simply meant that the orbit was stable enough to allow seven orbits. The mission was never intended to last more than three orbits. Note the smile at the end of the post. I was kidding. BlackarrowHawkman, Point taken - it was late at night and my intellectual powers were on the slide!
where Jim Oberg, BTW, has a good retrospective on Walter Cronkite. There Dwayne Day tackles an urban legend regarding John Glenn's flight, which some books say, erroneously, was supposed to go seven orbits--but a supposed malfunction of his heatshield (never happened) meant he could only go three. Whoa.
Both MA-6 and MA-7 pilots were told after liftoff, "We have a Go, with a 7-orbit capability."
Carpenter explains that this merely indicated an optimal trajectory, at launch. Go for 7 was "the best report you could get. The injection trajectory could only be measured [by 1962 computers] downstream for 7 orbits. This was the best," Carpenter explains, "the programmed computer could do."
Friendship 7 and Aurora 7 were always meant to be three-orbit flights.
I mean..they couldn't put something like that on film if it weren't true, could they?
quote:Originally posted by Blackarrow:Hawkman, That simply meant that the orbit was stable enough to allow seven orbits. The mission was never intended to last more than three orbits.
Note the smile at the end of the post. I was kidding.
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