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If Liberty bells hatch hadnt blown?



 
 
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  #1  
Old August 20th 03, 01:06 PM
Hallerb
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Default If Liberty bells hatch hadnt blown?

And Apollo wouldnt of adopted the hard to open hatch that doomed apollo one,
Gus and the crew would of got out OK, perhaps a bit singed, from the fire. Then
who would of been first man on the moon?
  #2  
Old August 20th 03, 07:11 PM
Scott Hedrick
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Default If Hallerb answered a simple question about something that meant so much to him?

And, of course, what if he "would of" learned some grammar as well?

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  #3  
Old August 21st 03, 05:07 PM
RDG
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Default If Liberty bells hatch hadnt blown?

It is generally assumed that Deke Slayton would have assigned Gus to the rotation
so that a Mercury astronaut would have been the first man on the moon. To make
that prophecy come true, all successive missions would have had to have been clean
of problems and the LEM would have had to have been finished on time.
It's really a fruitless point to speculate on, however. The sad reality is that
the Apollo 1 fire extended the timeline making Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, the
first men to land on lunar soil. Sad in that three men died horribly in order to
prove that the system was going awfully astray.

RDG

  #4  
Old August 21st 03, 05:54 PM
MasterShrink
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Default If Liberty bells hatch hadnt blown?

Didn't Gus get a bit screwed in rotations somewhere due to the hatch
incident? Would he have still be CDR for Apollo 1 if he hadn't blown the
hatch (or had it blow, whichever)


Not really. Grissom had been originally slated for the long duration Gemini
mission (what became Gemini 7) because he had spent such a great deal of time
working at McDonnel on Gemini, Deke Slayton figured he knew the craft very well
and could tought out any problems that may crop up on a 14 day flight.

When Shepard was removed from flight status (and any consideration for
commanding Gemini 3), Grissom was bumped up.

What I find interesting is when discussing the Apollo 1 crew assignments in his
book, Slayton mentions his first choice would have been Al Shepard had he not
been grounded, since he was not an option Grissom recieved the command.

There is an interesting what-if scenario. Shepard moving to Apollo 1 after GT
3...Schirra would probably still first command the cancelled Apollo 205 then
become Shepard's backup. Grissom could have ended up with either with the first
lunar module flight or maybe what became Apollo 8.

Of course there is the fire which would then have claimed Shepard...

-A.L.
  #7  
Old August 23rd 03, 08:14 AM
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Default If Liberty bells hatch hadnt blown?

(MasterShrink) wrote in message ...
Didn't Gus get a bit screwed in rotations somewhere due to the hatch
incident? Would he have still be CDR for Apollo 1 if he hadn't blown the
hatch (or had it blow, whichever)


Not really. Grissom had been originally slated for the long duration Gemini
mission (what became Gemini 7) because he had spent such a great deal of time
working at McDonnel on Gemini, Deke Slayton figured he knew the craft very well
and could tought out any problems that may crop up on a 14 day flight.

When Shepard was removed from flight status (and any consideration for
commanding Gemini 3), Grissom was bumped up.

What I find interesting is when discussing the Apollo 1 crew assignments in his
book, Slayton mentions his first choice would have been Al Shepard had he not
been grounded, since he was not an option Grissom recieved the command.

There is an interesting what-if scenario. Shepard moving to Apollo 1 after GT
3...Schirra would probably still first command the cancelled Apollo 205 then
become Shepard's backup. Grissom could have ended up with either with the first
lunar module flight or maybe what became Apollo 8.

Of course there is the fire which would then have claimed Shepard...

-A.L.


what you don't understand is that a. shepard was dogging the
work assignments with an operable ear problem. he could have had the
operation, but was playing the "christian science" game. that's a
fact.
  #8  
Old August 22nd 03, 07:37 AM
Simon Bradshaw
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Default If Liberty Bell's hatch hadn't blown?

In article ,
(Hallerb) wrote:

And Apollo wouldnt of adopted the hard to open hatch that doomed apollo
one, Gus and the crew would of got out OK, perhaps a bit singed, from
the fire. Then who would of been first man on the moon?


Let's make the following assumptions:

- There is substantially the same redesign of Apollo as in our timeline,
similarly delaying the next manned Apollo until late 1968.

- Lunar Module development also follows the same path as in OTL, with the
first man-rated LM available for flight in early 1969.

- None of the Apollo 1 crew are seriously injured and are thus available
for future flights.

It seems to me that the sequence of flights would have gone pretty much
the same as in OTL. There would have been a C mission flown in late 1968,
a C-prime mission to lunar orbit at the end of 1968, and so on with a
landing in mid-1969. As to who would have flown them, it depends if the
Apollo 1 crew would have been rescheduled onto the first Block II flight,
or if an alternate crew flew.

If the former, then I cannot see that Grissom would have been CDR of the
first landing. He would have had to cycle from commanding an LEO checkout
in late 1968 straight to command of the first landing only four flights
and nine months later. Now, if Apollo 1 had flown on schedule, then
although there would not in all likelihood have been any more flights than
this, there would have been a two and a half year interval, which is a
more credible amount of time for Grissom to train for commanding a landing
mission. But not nine months.

If, though, Grissom had been taken off the C mission (flown by the Apollo
1 backups but in late 1968, as in OTL) then he could well have been
assigned to backup command of either the D or E missions, putting him in
line to command either the first or second actual landing. Slayton is on
record as saying that had Grissom lived he would have been the first man
on the moon. It is very tempting to conclude that as the compressed
timescale for the flights became clear, Slayton would have taken Grisson
off the C mission (and probably given it to the backup crew as actually
happened) and put him into a position where he could be nominated to
command the first landing.

What isn't clear is what would have happened to White and Chaffee. White,
as an astronaut with flight experience, could well have been named as CMP
for a later mission. However, Slayton states that Chaffee was one of the
'weaker' astronauts in his group (although this is of course a relative
term) and he was named to Apollo 1, initially alongside Eisele, to "try
him out" on a relatively undemanding flight. I can see him either being
named as LMP for a later mission or maybe moving straight to Apollo
Applications.

One interesting thought: what if Slayton had assigned Grissom to backup
command of the D mission on the assumption that there was a strong chance
that this would rotate him to command of the likely first landing? Now,
what would have happened when a combination of LEM delays and the prospect
of a manned Zond mission round the moon led to the plan to swap the D and
E mission and fly the latter as a LM-less C-prime mission to lunar orbit?
In OTL, the crews and their backups were swapped with the missions, which
is why Conrad (originally backup CDR for Apollo 8, then backup CDR for
Apollo 9) ended up flying Apollo 12. If there was a Master Plan for
Grissom to command Apollo 11 though (by then a strong but not certain
candidate for First Landing), might there have been a temptation not to
swap the crews? We might have ended up with the following sequence:

Apollo 7: Schirra/Eisele/Cunningham, backups Stafford/Young/Cernan

Apollo 8: McDivitt/Scott/Schweickart, backups Grissom/White/?

Apollo 9: Borman/Lovell/Anders, backups Armstrong/Aldrin/Haise

Now, does Cooper even get a backup CDR slot? It's hard to avoid the view
that Slayton was using him to fill a hole that wouldn't have been there
with Grissom in the rotation. Ditto Eisele, but what about Mitchell? I
wonder if he might have been named straight to the Apollo 8 backup crew,
so the above becomes:

Apollo 7: Schirra/Eisele/Cunningham, backups Stafford/Young/Cernan

Apollo 8: McDivitt/Scott/Schweickart, backups Grissom/White/Mitchell

Apollo 9: Borman/Lovell/Anders, backups Armstrong/Aldrin/Haise

Apollo 10: Stafford/Young/Cernan, backups Conrad/Gordon/Bean

Apollo 11: Grissom/White/Mitchell, backups Scott/?/?

Apollo 12: Armstrong/Collins/Aldrin, backups Lovell/?/?

Apollo 13: Conrad/Gordon/Bean, backups Young/?/?

And now, what about Shepard? If he comes in for A14, he either displaces
Scott, or stretches the rotation by an extra mission.

Apollo 14: Shepard/?/?, backups White/?/?

Apollo 15: Scott/?/?

Apollo 16: Young/?/?

Apollo 17: White/?/?

This all gets *extremely* conjectural, and I haven't so far tried to guess
who lets into the CMP and LMP slots from the Apollo 11 backups onwards.
But it is I think a credible idea of the sequence of CDRs if Grissom had
lived.

--
Simon Bradshaw

http://www.cix.co.uk/~sjbradshaw
*** The Science Fiction Foundation ***
http://www.sf-foundation.org
  #9  
Old August 22nd 03, 05:52 PM
MasterShrink
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Default If Liberty Bell's hatch hadn't blown?

Simon Bradshaw Wrote:
(be advised...lot's of snipage)

Now, if Apollo 1 had flown on schedule, then
although there would not in all likelihood have been any more flights than
this, there would have been a two and a half year interval, which is a
more credible amount of time for Grissom to train for commanding a landing
mission. But not nine months.


Mind you...Deke was willing to break rotation for the first landing.

If Grissom had flown the C-Mission in the Fall of 1968 Slayton would have
probably removed him from the flight rotation temporarily, keeping him on hold
for the landing flight.

He might have simply bumped whoever was the backup commander for Apollo 8 when
it came time to assign a prime crew for 11 and replaced him with Grissom.

Keep in mind also Slayton strongly considered giving Frank Borman's Apollo 8
crew Apollo 11 as well. He figured since they had done an orbital mission they
would now just need to focus on landing proceedures. However since Borman was
retiring after 8 he stuck with the rotation and assigned Armstrong, Collins and
Aldrin to 11.

This all gets *extremely* conjectural, and I haven't so far tried to guess
who lets into the CMP and LMP slots from the Apollo 11 backups onwards.
But it is I think a credible idea of the sequence of CDRs if Grissom had
lived.


It really is a pain in the neck to figure out what crews after the landing
would have been had Deke broken rotation and put Grissom on the crew. For one
thing, if Grissom survived, the Schirra, Eisele, Cunningham would have done
basically nothing...Wally probably would have moved on, never getting an Apollo
flight. Eisele and Cunningham might have landed slots on later landing mission.
Or on an outside chance, considered for Apollo 8 (since they had focused on a
solo-CSM flight they could be contenders). Heck, Eisele's work ethic went
downhill after he re-married so he might have NEVER flown.

Armstrong and Aldrin would have flown a later mission, either together or
seperatly since they weren't put on an Apollo crew till after the fire. And a
number of the Group 5 guys would not have gotten seats on Apollo flights and
after Skylab and ASTP a few more in addition to Engle, McCandless and Lind
would still have never flown and have to wait for the Shuttle.

Also, if the 204 crew survived then Deke's rotation for Apollo would not be:
backup crew, skip two, prime crew...but backup crew, skip one, prime crew.
Schirra's crew were not in line for the dress-rehersal, nor the first landing
attempt because the CMP, Eisele had no flight experience, so either Stafford or
Conrad's crew would get that mission after backing up the second Apollo flight.

-A.L.

 




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