Discussion
Nice clean take off, none of that horrible poisonous dense cloud you get from the Shuttle's SRBs.
In fact the only trail was a faint brown one - no doubt from the kerosene fuel being burned (just like a Saturn V).
It was nice to see the brief (about 5 seconds) vapour trail - something you don't see with the Shuttle because it is smothered by the SRB exhaust smoke.
In fact the only trail was a faint brown one - no doubt from the kerosene fuel being burned (just like a Saturn V).
It was nice to see the brief (about 5 seconds) vapour trail - something you don't see with the Shuttle because it is smothered by the SRB exhaust smoke.
PD9 said:
Only 2 astronauts?
Three. The Soyuz is small and cramped. The crew module is much smaller than an Apollo capsule.
Crew details from Spaceflightnow.com below:
Edited by PD9 on Wednesday 27th May 11:39
Thirsk, Romanenko and De Winne. Credit: Energia
The Soyuz TMA-15 spacecraft, mounted atop the same launch pad used by Yuri Gagarin at the dawn of the space age, is scheduled for takeoff from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 6:34:49 a.m. EDT.
Soyuz commander Roman Romanenko, son of a Russian cosmonaut, will be strapped into the center seat, flanked by European Space Agency astronaut Frank De Winne of Belgium and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Robert Thirsk, a shuttle veteran.
Edited by Eric Mc on Wednesday 27th May 11:45
Eric Mc said:
I like the hi-tech solution to the fact that they can't reach the instrument panel from their couches - a long stick
.
Maybe it floated out of reach? They're well prepared though eh?
.Could you reach your wireless keyboard if it floated up to the ceiling and you were strapped into your seat?

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