by Subjectivist » Fri 18 Oct 2013, 20:32:13
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('KaiserJeep', 'T')he technological milestones of space:
First un-tethered hot air balloon - 1783, Paris, France
First powered airplane flight - 1903, Kittyhawk Beach, USA
First manned rocket (ME-163 Komet) - 1944, Peenemünde West, Germany
First satellite in orbit - 1957, Baikonur, USSR
First man in space - 1961, Baikonur, USSR
First lunar mission - 1969, Cape Canaveral, USA
First private space launch (Ariane-1), 1979, Centre spatial guyanais, French Guiana
First reusable spacecraft (Shuttle) - 1981, Cape Canaveral, USA
First space station (Mir) - 1986, Baikonur, USSR
First successful Mars landing - 1997, Cape Canaveral, USA
First private manned space launch (Ansari X-Prize) - 2004, Mohave, USA
First private paid space excursions - 2014?
You see, aside from the first three, I remember them all. I am hoping to see the first industry in space and the first permanent space habitat before I die. Because we have not even slowed down, by my standards. You can invest in space business ventures today if you wish.
Never say never, it's not very smart.
First manned lunar mission, December 1968, Apollo VIII, second flight May 1969, Apollo X. Apollo IX HEO March 1969 LEM test.
First space station 1973 Skylab. Also first in flight repair spacewalk.
First multinational mission 1975 Apollo-Soyuz.
First Mars landing Viking I June 1976, Viking II August 1976.
I remember Apollo XIV and beyond. Skylab was great, the STS was a disaster created by the Nixon Administration as a barely useable piece of crap that could never live up to its hype. Nixon had three basic plans to pick from, manned Mars mission, permanent manned space station, or some form of space launch system to replace the Saturn IB/Saturn V combination. The Shuttle should have been designed with the same philosophy as the private enterprise launchers are, reuse the first stage and replace the orbital stage. Once you prove he system you can or on making the upper stage reusable. The Shuttle as designed had to be stripped apart and rebuilt after every mission getting new tiles and new engines, replacing thruster components and on and on. The SRB's were selected because of politics, not cost, safety or reusability. That cost us the Challenger in 1986, I know exactly where I was and how I felt that morning and ho disgusted I was when the official reports cam out about causes and careers. If the STS had lived up to its hype it would have launched in 1978 and refueled Skylab putting the USA back into the space station business.