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[i]The Launch Pad Tour will run through the end of 2012 with a limited number of daily tours.[/i]
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T O P I C R E V I E WRobert PearlmancollectSPACE Next stop, the launch pad: NASA's Apollo, shuttle launch site opens for toursThe NASA launch pad from which Apollo 11 lifted off for the first manned moon landing and Atlantis left Earth to fly the last space shuttle mission is now open to the public for tours.Launch Pad 39A at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Florida is the latest, limited-time tour stop being offered by the NASA spaceport's visitor complex. The tours — which also include separate trips to KSC's 52-story tall Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) and the Launch Control Center (LCC) — are now being offered as part of the center's 50th anniversary celebration."These are very rare opportunities that NASA has worked with us to provide to our visitors from Florida, across the United States and overseas," Bill Moore, chief operating officer of NASA's Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, said in a statement. "With exciting new space exploration programs coming to the Kennedy Space Center, we may never have access to such historic places like this again." For more about the KSC Up-Close: Launch Pad Tour or to purchase tickets, see the visitor complex's website.stsmithvaI got an e-mail about this from KSC this morning. It looks great, but is anyone else having trouble with the links to buy tickets? Neither the ones in the e-mail, nor the ones you can get to in the above post, are working for me.Robert PearlmanThe tickets site is takes a while to load but is still online.YankeeClipperAnyone know if the KSC Up-Close Launch Pad Tour is time-limited to 30 September 2012?It doesn't come up on the KSC Special Tours ticket page as being available in October or November.Robert PearlmanAccording to the visitor complex: The Launch Pad Tour will run through the end of 2012 with a limited number of daily tours.stsmithva quote:Originally posted by YankeeClipper:Anyone know if the KSC Up-Close Launch Pad Tour is time-limited to 30 September 2012?I just called KSC about getting tickets, and was told that the Launch Pad 39A tours stop on September 30.contraAccording to The New York Times: The tour is the latest of three behind-the-scenes guided looks inside the highly secure Launch Complex 39, all of which will run through the end of 2012. Would be nice to know if the tour will be running until the end of the year or not.xlsteveI just got off the phone with KSCVC and I was told that, as of now, the launch pad tour is only running through 9/30, but that they may extend that date, and to check back later to see if they have.Edit 8/27: They have extended the dates for the launch pad tour.Robert PearlmanThe limited KSC Up-Close: The Launch Pad Tour has been extended through (at least) March 31, 2013.Neil AldrinHas anyone done the pad tour?I'm trying to understand if you are let off of the bus once you get to the pad. The KSC link doesn't detail that.Robert PearlmanAccording to information released earlier by the Visitor Complex (and cited from our article): Near the pad, visitors will be able to exit the bus for photo opportunities, including close-up views of the 350 foot high (107 meter) fixed service structure (FSS), rotating service structure (RSS), propellant and water tanks, flame trench and other aspects of the launch pad complex.Tony GuidryMy wife and I took the Launch Pad 39A Tour last August and, yes, we were allowed to get off the bus for a few minutes for a photo opportunity near the pad. If I recall correctly, our tour guide mentioned that we were standing about 450 yards from the base of the pad. After reboarding the bus, we continued to slowly circle the pad area, passing just a few yards from the Liquid Oxygen and Liquid Hydrogen Storage Tanks, which are located some distance apart, for safety reasons. We also passed directly in front of the Hydrazine storage and processing area and the bunker area where the emergency escape basket cables come in from atop the service structure to ground level. Our tour guide convinced our bus driver to take a slight detour off the official tour route to get us in a bit closer to the pad so we could get a better view of the flame deflector at the base of the pad. We were not allowed to get off the bus at this brief unofficial detour, but I would estimate we were no more than 200 to 300 yards from the base of the pad, so I was able to get a couple of fairly decent pictures of the base of the pad and the flame trench. Our guide also pointed out a few things in the pad area that were left over from the Apollo days and no longer used by the Shuttle program. I asked our tour guide what NASA's future plans were for Pad 39-A and he replied that (as of last August) no final decision had been made as to future uses for the pad. We also passed by Pad 39-B but did not go inside the perimeter fence area. All in all, we were very satisfied with the Launch Pad tour and found it to be well worth the time and money.cycleroadieDid the tour in November '12 you get off "near" (about 450 yards sounds about right) the side of the pad for stop one, and right at the Flame Trench for stop two (I have pics of me standing ALMOST in the trench and near one of the 2 foot diameter pipes headed to the pad). Everything else is seen from the bus.
Next stop, the launch pad: NASA's Apollo, shuttle launch site opens for toursThe NASA launch pad from which Apollo 11 lifted off for the first manned moon landing and Atlantis left Earth to fly the last space shuttle mission is now open to the public for tours.Launch Pad 39A at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Florida is the latest, limited-time tour stop being offered by the NASA spaceport's visitor complex. The tours — which also include separate trips to KSC's 52-story tall Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) and the Launch Control Center (LCC) — are now being offered as part of the center's 50th anniversary celebration."These are very rare opportunities that NASA has worked with us to provide to our visitors from Florida, across the United States and overseas," Bill Moore, chief operating officer of NASA's Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, said in a statement. "With exciting new space exploration programs coming to the Kennedy Space Center, we may never have access to such historic places like this again."
The NASA launch pad from which Apollo 11 lifted off for the first manned moon landing and Atlantis left Earth to fly the last space shuttle mission is now open to the public for tours.
Launch Pad 39A at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Florida is the latest, limited-time tour stop being offered by the NASA spaceport's visitor complex. The tours — which also include separate trips to KSC's 52-story tall Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) and the Launch Control Center (LCC) — are now being offered as part of the center's 50th anniversary celebration.
"These are very rare opportunities that NASA has worked with us to provide to our visitors from Florida, across the United States and overseas," Bill Moore, chief operating officer of NASA's Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, said in a statement. "With exciting new space exploration programs coming to the Kennedy Space Center, we may never have access to such historic places like this again."
For more about the KSC Up-Close: Launch Pad Tour or to purchase tickets, see the visitor complex's website.
It doesn't come up on the KSC Special Tours ticket page as being available in October or November.
The Launch Pad Tour will run through the end of 2012 with a limited number of daily tours.
quote:Originally posted by YankeeClipper:Anyone know if the KSC Up-Close Launch Pad Tour is time-limited to 30 September 2012?
I just called KSC about getting tickets, and was told that the Launch Pad 39A tours stop on September 30.
The tour is the latest of three behind-the-scenes guided looks inside the highly secure Launch Complex 39, all of which will run through the end of 2012.
Edit 8/27: They have extended the dates for the launch pad tour.
I'm trying to understand if you are let off of the bus once you get to the pad. The KSC link doesn't detail that.
Near the pad, visitors will be able to exit the bus for photo opportunities, including close-up views of the 350 foot high (107 meter) fixed service structure (FSS), rotating service structure (RSS), propellant and water tanks, flame trench and other aspects of the launch pad complex.
After reboarding the bus, we continued to slowly circle the pad area, passing just a few yards from the Liquid Oxygen and Liquid Hydrogen Storage Tanks, which are located some distance apart, for safety reasons. We also passed directly in front of the Hydrazine storage and processing area and the bunker area where the emergency escape basket cables come in from atop the service structure to ground level.
Our tour guide convinced our bus driver to take a slight detour off the official tour route to get us in a bit closer to the pad so we could get a better view of the flame deflector at the base of the pad. We were not allowed to get off the bus at this brief unofficial detour, but I would estimate we were no more than 200 to 300 yards from the base of the pad, so I was able to get a couple of fairly decent pictures of the base of the pad and the flame trench.
Our guide also pointed out a few things in the pad area that were left over from the Apollo days and no longer used by the Shuttle program. I asked our tour guide what NASA's future plans were for Pad 39-A and he replied that (as of last August) no final decision had been made as to future uses for the pad.
We also passed by Pad 39-B but did not go inside the perimeter fence area.
All in all, we were very satisfied with the Launch Pad tour and found it to be well worth the time and money.
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