Astronaut Bruce McCandless has Died aged 80.

Astronaut Bruce McCandless has Died aged 80.

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Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,029 posts

265 months

Saturday 23rd December 2017
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Well known for this -


Beati Dogu

8,891 posts

139 months

Sunday 24th December 2017
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Quite a guy & what an epitaph that photo is for him.

Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,029 posts

265 months

Sunday 24th December 2017
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McCandless also acted as the Capcom during Armstrong and Aldrin's Apollo 11 moonwalk.

He was recruited as an astronaut in 1966 but he never got the chance to fly any Apollo missions. He decided to stay with NASA and wait for the Shuttle but didn't get his first flight until 1984 - so an 18 year wait.

jmorgan

36,010 posts

284 months

Sunday 24th December 2017
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Worth it though.

Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,029 posts

265 months

Sunday 24th December 2017
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NASA over recruited in the mid 1960s. In addition to their own astronaut intake, in 1969 they were also "donated" a bunch of USAF astronauts when the Manned Orbiting Laboratory programme. NASA didn't really want these guys because, by 1969 they knew that they already had too many astronauts.

As it happened, it was these MOL guys who made up some of the key crews for the early Shuttle flights.

Halmyre

11,194 posts

139 months

Thursday 28th December 2017
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Beati Dogu said:
Quite a guy & what an epitaph that photo is for him.
Yes, 'iconic' is an overrated term but that picture is iconic. But I do like this one


Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,029 posts

265 months

Friday 29th December 2017
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It's a pity they abandoned the MMU after the Challenger accident.

Today, they do have a limited thrust device attached to current NASA EVA backpacks which allow an astronaut to make it back to the Space Station if they drift off - but it's nothing like as versatile as the MMU.

AshVX220

5,929 posts

190 months

Wednesday 3rd January 2018
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Halmyre said:
Beati Dogu said:
Quite a guy & what an epitaph that photo is for him.
Yes, 'iconic' is an overrated term but that picture is iconic. But I do like this one

yikes Balls of steel, that must have really got his heart racing!!

Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,029 posts

265 months

Wednesday 3rd January 2018
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They used it a few more times - but abandoned it after Challenger.

peterperkins

3,151 posts

242 months

Wednesday 3rd January 2018
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Your are certainly on your own out there... No tether no problem..

ninja-lewis

4,241 posts

190 months

Thursday 4th January 2018
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Eric Mc said:
They used it a few more times - but abandoned it after Challenger.
Partly because they learned on the same mission that the Orbiter itself was just as manoeuvrable as the Manned Manoeuvring Unit.

During the mission, one of McCandless' foot restraints floated away. Rather than risking it becoming space debris, the crew simply used Challengers' Reaction Control System (the small thrusters that enable precise manoeuvring in orbit) to fly McCandless' hand to the loose restraint until he reached out and grabbed it from the safety of the payload bay.

On the next mission, an attempt to use a MMU-equipped astronaut to grapple a satellite almost ended in disaster as the satellite began to tumble out of control. Instead Canadarm was used to grapple the satellite and bring it back under control. This together with experiments to strap an astronaut to the end of Candarm proved that the MMU did not offer many benefits compared to the risks involved vs manoeuvring the Orbiter or Canadarm.

FourWheelDrift

88,516 posts

284 months

Saturday 6th January 2018
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So too now has John Young (87) the only person to have piloted and been commander of Gemini, the Apollo Command/Service Module, the Apollo Lunar Module, and the Space Shuttle.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-42592057

Beati Dogu

8,891 posts

139 months

Sunday 7th January 2018
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Yes, another incredible man.


Former astronaut Richard F. Gordon Jr. died back in November as well. He was 88.

He first went into space as pilot of Gemini 11 in 1966, alongside Pete Conrad. They'd previously been roommates on the aircraft carrier USS Ranger.

They'd both fly together again (with Al Bean) on Apollo 12. Conrad and Bean landing on the moon, while Gordon stayed on the Command Module.

He was slated to command Apollo 18 and get a chance to walk on the moon himself, but of course the Apollo program was cancelled at 17.

He later worked on the design of the Space Shuttle.

Matt Harper

6,618 posts

201 months

Sunday 7th January 2018
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Probably Orlando's most famous son.
His pioneering accomplishments are pretty incredible for a single person.


Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,029 posts

265 months

Sunday 7th January 2018
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Young also carried out some important aircraft test flights as well. He was involved in early testing of the Phantom.

Warmfuzzies

3,984 posts

253 months

Sunday 7th January 2018
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Matt Harper said:
Probably Orlando's most famous son.
His pioneering accomplishments are pretty incredible for a single person.

I pass there reasonably regularly, makes you think about our older “heroes “ I wonder how we are going to shake off the malaise the public has with space exploration today. It’s certainly not the same as my younger days.

Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,029 posts

265 months

Sunday 7th January 2018
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I think interest in space exploration is reviving. There is more space activity going on now than at any time, ever (and that includes the peak of the Space Race era).

The mainstream media is pretty disinterested (as you might expect) but the internet is awash with enthusiast bloggers, youtubers, programme makers etc.

All US and European launches are all available to watch on the internet and even the Russians, Japanese, Indians and Chinese put theirs up on youtube to watch - many of these also live.

We are literally on the verge of a new Golden Age of space exploration.


Yipper

5,964 posts

90 months

Sunday 7th January 2018
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Someone recently offered me a ticket into space, scheduled for 2020-2022, for ~£140k.

The next few years are going to be interesting for consumer space travel.

Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,029 posts

265 months

Sunday 7th January 2018
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Yipper said:
Someone recently offered me a ticket into space, scheduled for 2020-2022, for ~£140k.

The next few years are going to be interesting for consumer space travel.
They certainly are.

At the moment, there are two options - Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin.

VG is well behind its original timetable so its likely that Blue Origin will beat them to the punch.