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Did anyone ever do a study post Apollo 13 to determine what state the main
propulsion engine on the service module was in? They did have some pictures after CM separation of the SM with the side panel blown away. Were any conclusions drawn from that, other than being able to nail down the cause of the problem in the first place? Would the engine have worked if they tried to start it? -- bp Proud Member of the Human O-Ring Society Since 2003 |
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In article ,
Bruce Palmer wrote: Did anyone ever do a study post Apollo 13 to determine what state the main propulsion engine on the service module was in? ... Would the engine have worked if they tried to start it? It seems likely -- with the reservation that, of course, you need electric power in the SM to do that -- but nobody is entirely certain. The tank burst *probably* did not damage anything related to the propulsion system. -- MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec | Henry Spencer pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well. | |
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![]() "Bruce Palmer" wrote in message t... Did anyone ever do a study post Apollo 13 to determine what state the main propulsion engine on the service module was in? They did have some pictures after CM separation of the SM with the side panel blown away. Were any conclusions drawn from that, other than being able to nail down the cause of the problem in the first place? My understanding is that some of the photos did indicate some possible damage to the main engine. Would the engine have worked if they tried to start it? -- bp Proud Member of the Human O-Ring Society Since 2003 |
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Am Sun, 23 Nov 2003 21:32:47 GMT schrieb "Greg D. Moore (Strider)":
Did anyone ever do a study post Apollo 13 to determine what state the main propulsion engine on the service module was in? They did have some pictures after CM separation of the SM with the side panel blown away. Were any conclusions drawn from that, other than being able to nail down the cause of the problem in the first place? My understanding is that some of the photos did indicate some possible damage to the main engine. But thas was not to be revealed until jettisoning the SM. Even a possible EVA by an astronaut would not have cleared up all doubts, if the engine would have worked or not. So NASA used the safest option to not rely on any SM ressources, as long as the SM was not an absolutely necessary source. So they used only the remaining oxygen and maybe water - all other was provided by CM reserves and Aquarius' (LM'S) ressources. And the SM was not jettisoned shortly after the explosion for weight reduction by two main causes: It could provide SOME oxygen, and it was not known, how the heat shield would behave, when it was exposed over some days to the open space - so hey left it attached. And, (afair) even if it _would_ have been safe to ignite the SM engine, it would not have been possible to steer (gimbal and switch on/off) it in the right manner without electric energy, because that would have to be provided by fuel cells, that relied on the ruptured SM tankage, so the fuel cells had starved. So there were MANY factors and not only a single one affected by the LOX tank loss... cu, ZiLi aka HKZL (Heinrich Zinndorf-Linker) -- /"\ ASCII Ribbon Campaign \ / http://zili.de X No HTML in / \ email & news |
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Henry Spencer wrote:
In article , Bruce Palmer wrote: Did anyone ever do a study post Apollo 13 to determine what state the main propulsion engine on the service module was in? ... Would the engine have worked if they tried to start it? It seems likely -- with the reservation that, of course, you need electric power in the SM to do that -- but nobody is entirely certain. The tank burst *probably* did not damage anything related to the propulsion system. Fascinating. I guess they would have considered lighting it up *only* if the LM descent engine failed. A very high pucker factor there. Oh wait... that would have required CM systems to be running for navigation and control and they weren't available. Never mind. -- bp Proud Member of the Human O-Ring Society Since 2003 |
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In article ,
Alan Erskine wrote: ...nobody is entirely certain. The tank burst *probably* did not damage anything related to the propulsion system. I seem to remember seeing one of the photos showing a nice big dent in the bell. The photos weren't very good, and I think that was conjecture rather than a definite conclusion. -- MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec | Henry Spencer pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well. | |
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