![]() |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
According to "Chariots for Apollo", at least one unused/partially
fabricated LEM was to be sent to New Zealand, but instead, was buried in a trash landfill in Oceanside, Queens, New York. I have yet to uncover any confirmation of this, or any documentation that affirms that this order was given by anyone in authority. Is this confirmable, and why has nobody attempted to salvage this spacecraft or parts? At least one LEM was nearly completed for a mission that never flew. Were there others? Are the remains of the incomplete LEMs in existence? Does anyone have reliable or first-hand information regarding the fates of uncompleted Lunar Modules? |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
RDG wrote in message ...
According to "Chariots for Apollo", at least one unused/partially fabricated LEM was to be sent to New Zealand, but instead, was buried in a trash landfill in Oceanside, Queens, New York. I have yet to uncover any confirmation of this, or any documentation that affirms that this order was given by anyone in authority. Is this confirmable, and why has nobody attempted to salvage this spacecraft or parts? At least one LEM was nearly completed for a mission that never flew. Were there others? Are the remains of the incomplete LEMs in existence? Does anyone have reliable or first-hand information regarding the fates of uncompleted Lunar Modules? This link may help... http://www.fi.edu/pieces/schutte/LMintro2.html |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() This link may help... http://www.fi.edu/pieces/schutte/LMintro2.html I'm a little dubious that the LM at Franklin institute is actually LM-14. Has any regular gone and seen it? It seems to me that the LM is sufficiently fragile that it wouldn't have managed to survive outdoors for very long. I'm also a little dubious about the disposition of the un-numbered LMs cited in "Chariots for Apollo", there seem to be a few too many, and again, I don't understand how they could stand the weather outside. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
LEM expert, Frank O'Brien, tells me that the piece at Franklin Institute is
probably a training article. The reason is that it lacks the in depth plumbing that is apparent on other units. For awhile, the piece stood out in the open of Philidelphia, and was heavily vandalized. It was eventually moved to it's present location. Chicago's LEM is a mockup as well. For those familiar with the movie "Fly Away Home", about the girl and the gesse, you might be interested to know that the father in the film is a real person. He's an artist in Canada, and built his own LEM from sheet metal simply because he liked the geometry. It was later sold to finance his interest in ultralight aircraft. I'm told the buyers were from Japan. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 18 Nov 2003 19:56:23 -0500, RDG wrote:
LEM expert, Frank O'Brien, tells me that the piece at Franklin Institute is probably a training article. The reason is that it lacks the in depth plumbing that is apparent on other units. For awhile, the piece stood out in the open of Philidelphia, and was heavily vandalized. It was eventually moved to it's present location. Chicago's LEM is a mockup as well. What about the LM that used to be in the JSC Visitor's Center (bldg 2) and is now in Space Center Houston? It's not on that list, is it another training article? And why did LM-4 (Apollo 10) go into heliocentric orbit rather than crash into the moon? -- Michael R. Grabois # http://chili.cjb.net # http://wizardimps.blogspot.com "People say losing builds character. That's the stupidest thing I ever heard. All losing does is suck. " -- Charles Barkley, 9/29/96 |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Michael R. Grabois ... change $ to \"s\" wrote: And why did LM-4 (Apollo 10) go into heliocentric orbit rather than crash into the moon? The ascent stage did a final burn, unmanned, after separation. Unlike the ones from the landing missions, it had a significant amount of fuel left. -- MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec | Henry Spencer pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well. | |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
My understanding is that LM 4 is actually designated LTA-4, Lunar Training Article.
This would be the unit hanging overhead in Space Center Houston. It was never intended for man-rating as a flight article. Still every Apollo Commander and Lunar Module Pilot no doubt practiced on it. With the number f simulators and Training Articles still around or on record, one gets the idea that the Astronauts were supposed to train no matter where they were or traveled to for briefings. If any participants get to New York City or Long Island, you have to get out to the Cradle of Aviation Museum in Garden City. The greatest display of LEM artifacts in the country resides therein. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|