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Author
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Topic: 50th anniversary of Skylab orbital workshop
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Robert Pearlman Editor Posts: 50496 From: Houston, TX Registered: Nov 1999
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posted 05-14-2023 12:05 AM
collectSPACE Astronaut now on space station recalls Skylab launch 50 years agoStephen Bowen remembers seeing Skylab fly overhead. At eight years old, Bowen's experience watching the United States' first space station cross the night sky fueled his interest in spaceflight. Little did he know then, it would also play a big part of his future.  |
Space Cadet Carl Member Posts: 305 From: Lake Orion, MI Registered: Feb 2006
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posted 05-14-2023 07:57 PM
50 years... wow. I participated in the Skylab Student Project in high school and that kept me on the NASA periodicals mailing list for a long time. |
randyc Member Posts: 867 From: Denver, CO USA Registered: May 2003
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posted 05-14-2023 08:45 PM
Skylab was the first launch I saw in-person. I was a high school senior and had planned a trip to Georgia Tech to see the campus and scheduled it the week of the Skylab launch. I wrote to my state's Congressman and was able to get a car pass so my parents and I could watch the launch just north of the VAB, directly across from LC-39A. I remember seeing the engines ignite, and the Saturn V slowly rising from the pad, but no sound! After a few seconds the sound 'hit' us, and it was loud. I had a 35mm camera and was taking almost continuous photos, but every few seconds I paused so I could look at the Saturn V as it rose into the partly cloudy sky. It wasn't until we returned to the motel and watched the news that we learned about the anomaly and that the launch of the first crew would not occur the next day. To say I was disappointed would be an understatement! But I was fortunate to have had the opportunity to see the last Saturn V launch. As fate would have it, four years later I was working for McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Company in Huntington Beach, CA which was the company, and location, where the main part of Skylab, the S-IVB, was designed, integrated and tested. And 15 years after the launch of Skylab, in 1988, I began working on the next United States Space Station, which at the time was called Space Station Freedom, leading the teams that designed the Airlock and Segment S2 of the Integrated Truss Assembly. Although Segment S2 was cancelled in 1993 and the Quest Airlock is different from the one I worked on my five years on the Space Station program were some of the most interesting, and challenging years of my aerospace career. |
oly Member Posts: 1450 From: Perth, Western Australia Registered: Apr 2015
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posted 05-22-2023 05:08 AM
These Skylab 50th anniversary posts have stimulated my interest of the program. Prior to the launch of the Orbital Workshop, what was the official expected duration of the program?Is there any documents published before the launch that states this information that can be referenced? |
Henry Heatherbank Member Posts: 310 From: Adelaide, South Australia Registered: Apr 2005
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posted 05-22-2023 08:07 AM
The duration of the program was, if I recall correctly, only ever going to be three flights; one to last 28 days and two for 56 days, although the third and final flight (SL-4) ended up being 84 days (a decision made in the planning phase; i.e, the mission was not extended 'on-orbit'). I recall there was a lukewarm plan for a final fourth manned mission (to be crewed by the SL-3/4 backup crew) but the duration would only have been in the region of 56 to 59 days (i.e., the originally anticipated maximum mission duration). |
Blackarrow Member Posts: 3603 From: Belfast, United Kingdom Registered: Feb 2002
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posted 05-22-2023 08:09 AM
I am writing a series of articles on Skylab for a local magazine and have found it remarkably difficult to trace more than a small sample of high-definition Skylab images. I got there in the end (helped by my own collection of 50-year-old NASA photographs and lithographs) but why is it so hard to find a proper archive of Skylab images? I know this has been discussed before, but why would NASA not have a decent archive (at least a few hundred images)? If they do, and if I haven't found it, could someone let me in on the secret? |
Dwight Member Posts: 613 From: Germany Registered: Dec 2003
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posted 05-27-2023 09:43 AM
Geoffrey, please email me. | |
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Ultimate Bulletin Board 5.47a
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