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#2
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![]() Kieran A. Carroll wrote: Thanks *very* much, Gene and Jeff and Pat, for those links! (Wouldn't it be nice to find one of those old kits?) They show up on E-bay all the time: http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...sPageName=WDVW http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...sPageName=WDVW They made a scad of them, and they had all the sales success of a Ford Edsel. Two of them are twelve feet from me at the moment, making up the basis of the crew quarters of my six-foot long Saturn exploration spacecraft design. (I can send you jpegs of the thing if you are interested- the origin of some of the parts is "unique", to say the least: "That may look like a spun-wood milk can to you...but it looks like a fission reactor housing for onboard power to me." Then there are the HO scale garbage dumpsters and bicycle safety reflectors). This does indeed closely match the big 1962 drawing that I was looking at the other day. I'll have to compare both of them in detail, when I have some spare time. Owen said that he got a patent for this design, so there may be some more info available from the US Patent Office database. Figure out where the propellant for the three J-2s was going to go...the model has enough on board for a good five second engine burn. Pat |
#3
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![]() Pat Flannery wrote: "That may look like a spun-wood milk can to you...but it looks like a fission reactor housing for onboard power to me." Whoops... the milk cans are the reactor housings for the three big nuclear-thermal motors; the spun-wood _oil drums_ are the basis for fission onboard power supply. Pat |
#4
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On Tue, 14 Dec 2004 13:26:54 -0600, Pat Flannery
wrote: Figure out where the propellant for the three J-2s was going to go...the model has enough on board for a good five second engine burn. ....What's needed is for someone to: 1) Correct the issue regarding the J-2 fuel supply. 2) Construct a more logical interior kit. 3) Produce a photo-etch replacement for the NERVA boom. 4) Produce a lander and docking adapter, because common sense and past precedence makes it perfectly ****ing clear that any manned mission to Mars will carry a lander and not be just a flyby. Venus, perhaps... 5) Produce a better "Apollo-M" design. 6) The proper adapter to mate it on a Saturn V kit. ....The kit is also a kitbasher's dream for raw resources. OM -- "No ******* ever won a war by dying for | http://www.io.com/~o_m his country. He won it by making the other | Sergeant-At-Arms poor dumb ******* die for his country." | Human O-Ring Society - General George S. Patton, Jr |
#5
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![]() OM wrote: ...What's needed is for someone to: 1) Correct the issue regarding the J-2 fuel supply. That would mean adding a tank structure between the upper part of the spacecraft and the NERVA area... and that is a mighty heavy ship to set on such tanks...we're talking about something in the Saturn V S-2 stage; I suggest a alternative- strengthen the first and second stage on the Saturn V, put Shuttle SRB sized solids on the Saturn V's first stage, and lose the three J-2's on the Pilgrim. 2) Construct a more logical interior kit. One of the crew quarters would be interesting in cutaway; obviously the spiral staircase on the bridge has to go. 3) Produce a photo-etch replacement for the NERVA boom. Yeah, the kit one is pretty clunky. 4) Produce a lander and docking adapter, because common sense and past precedence makes it perfectly ****ing clear that any manned mission to Mars will carry a lander and not be just a flyby. Venus, perhaps... My massive kit bash goes to Saturn, puts two manned landers on "surfboard" heatshields down on Titan, sends manned expeditions to the airless moons, and drops unmanned probes of various types all over the atmosphere of Saturn itself. 5) Produce a better "Apollo-M" design. I'm still trying to make heads or tails of what the corrugations on the command module are all about...especially considering all the trouble the kit's designers went to to put them on the spacecraft, as they are very petite. 6) The proper adapter to mate it on a Saturn V kit. Been there, done that...the kit is in 1/130th scale; the Saturn V is in 1/144th scale... the base is wider than the diameter of the second stage. Which sucks. The kit has the top cone for liftoff, but I think it needs some jettisonable covering over the three folding rotator arms. ...The kit is also a kitbasher's dream for raw resources. Ranks right up there with the AMT 1/200 scale rocket set, which is rocket nozzle central for scratchbuilders. Another great one is the Revell "Space Operations Center" space station. There was also strange Monogram (?) release of a Japanese model "what's-it" that could transform from a space shuttle into a super space taxi that had a mess of good parts to play with. My big ship used one of those, two Pilgrim Observers, and four Space Operation Centers as its main source of parts. Pat |
#6
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Pat Flannery wrote:
...The kit is also a kitbasher's dream for raw resources. Ranks right up there with the AMT 1/200 scale rocket set, which is rocket nozzle central for scratchbuilders. Is that the one that has the A-3/C-3/C-4 all the same size? I had that one as a kid, but discarded it later over that detail. (Not to mention all three were simple cylinders, which the C-3 and C-4 are decidedly not.) D. -- Touch-twice life. Eat. Drink. Laugh. -Resolved: To be more temperate in my postings. Oct 5th, 2004 JDL |
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