
July 21st 03, 05:15 PM
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No Evidence Crew Survived -- Till When?
what's the link to those pictures please ?
Thanks
Lou
"Moe Blues" a écrit dans le message de
...
In article , "John Maxson"
wrote:
From Jesse Moore's 4:15 pm press briefing on 1/28/86:
"I regret that I have to report that based on very
preliminary searches of the ocean where the
Challenger impacted this morning, these searches
have *not* [his emphasis] revealed *any* [my
emphasis] evidence that the crew of Challenger
survived."
Survived until when? Moore did not say! Did anyone ask?
Over four and one-half hours had elapsed since the main
blast at the time of Moore's delayed press briefing. Surface
searches had been conducted by helicopter, plane, and sea.
Surely the large floating pieces of forward fuselage had been
examined by then. If they had been considered evidence of
crew survival until ocean impact, it seems logical that Moore
would have (or should have) mentioned that. He did not!
Jesus wept! You really are an idiot, aren't you? Does it occur to you
that *CONTEXT* of the quoted statement is in reference to finding any
SURVIVING (as in still alive) shuttle crew? Nitwit!
The tiles on those floating pieces certainly looked damaged
to me (in Av Week's excellent color photos), despite the fact
that they were designed to withstand very high heating.
Yeah, I guess having several tons of LOX and liquid hydrogen detonate
mere feet away, then fall miles to the ocean should result in no damage
whatever.
And you wonder why nobody ever takes your comments seriously?
Moe
--
John Thomas Maxson, Retired Engineer (Aerospace)
Author, The Betrayal of Mission 51-L (www.mission51l.com)
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