How Did the Saturn V End Up in Florida?

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  • Опубліковано 27 лис 2016
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    More here: Stages to Saturn: history.nasa.gov/SP-4206/conte...
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 554

  • @johnnyj540
    @johnnyj540 7 років тому +46

    Every time I see Amy riding the Saturn V I think of Slim Pickens riding the bomb down, it just doesn't get old.

    • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
      @Allan_aka_RocKITEman 7 років тому +5

      "YAAAAAA-HOOO! YAA-HOOO!"
      {Kaboom}
      ;~)°

    • @rwboa22
      @rwboa22 7 років тому +6

      A classic pin-up gal with brains to boot!

    • @arguspanoptes9510
      @arguspanoptes9510 7 років тому +5

      Johnny J I get Samantha Stevens from Bewitched riding the broomstick

  • @lancehatch4475
    @lancehatch4475 7 років тому +253

    my daughter loves your videos. we watch them alk the time. She's 9 and wants to be a physicist. Her great grandfather was an engineer and worked on the Saturn 5.

    • @upandatom
      @upandatom 7 років тому +6

      +Lance Hatch I just started a physics UA-cam channel your daughter might be interested in. It's small at the moment but growing fast! Let me know if she likes it :)

    • @AmyShiraTeitel
      @AmyShiraTeitel  7 років тому +42

      Thanks so much for passing that on! I love hearing parents getting young kids (especially girls!) into science, and I'm so honoured to be a part of her science education! Also, so super cool to have family that worked on the Saturn V!!! Any family stories?

    • @lancehatch4475
      @lancehatch4475 7 років тому +17

      Vintage Space my daughter is such a big fan of yours. she will think it's cool that you responded (dads have to prove they are cool every once in a while). I was my ex-wife's grandfather that worked on the Saturn V. He didn't work for NASA. He worked for an engineering company the NASA contracted with. He lived in Dallas. That's all I know.

    • @lancehatch4475
      @lancehatch4475 7 років тому +12

      miss physics I just checked out your page. I'll show it to my daughter. She is interested in time. It would be interesting to see a video on time dilation.

    • @upandatom
      @upandatom 7 років тому +5

      Lance Hatch The video I'm working on right now is about time! It's about whether the way we perceive time (remember the past, don't remember the future) is dependent on the way time is physically defined (low entropy=past, high entropy=future). I know this seems obvious but the implications are actually quite interesting and get a bit complicated when you think about time reversal. Anyway, should be out in about a week :) also that's very impressive she is able to understand or even be interested in time dilation at such a young age. I don't think I was even introduced to it til my 20s. I think she's got a bright future ahead :)

  • @Nilguiri
    @Nilguiri 7 років тому +79

    My uncle was a contractor who made some parts for the Saturn V in his garage/workshop. I seem to remember that they were some sort of valves made from aluminium but I couldn't be sure. I was always proud of him for that!

    • @atpg5
      @atpg5 7 років тому +19

      And you should be. Without the Saturn we don't go to the moon.

    • @Nilguiri
      @Nilguiri 7 років тому +5

      Art S
      Aye, cheers.

    • @joeyplayzgaming6556
      @joeyplayzgaming6556 6 років тому +2

      Nilguiri i

    • @earlkentsucalit1082
      @earlkentsucalit1082 6 років тому +3

      Tell that to flat earthers

    • @yamiomo7392
      @yamiomo7392 6 років тому +3

      Whats A moon? dondald trumput says the moon is a rapist, but if the earth isant flat then where do all the round people come from?

  • @francoislacombe9071
    @francoislacombe9071 7 років тому +31

    "I mean, who wouldn't love this beautiful marvel of engineering?"
    Pete ^_^

  • @FlyingSavannahs
    @FlyingSavannahs 3 роки тому

    Question answered. Amy's T-shirt reveals the inspiration for her newest hairstyle. I hope she's equally enthusiastic about the wardrobe, too.
    Thanks for putting the pieces of this rocket puzzle together for us.

  • @parttroll1
    @parttroll1 7 років тому +1

    I'll never forget the trip to the Space Centre and actually seeing the Saturn V rocket that's on display there. Truly an impressive piece of Engineering

  • @johnpescatore7968
    @johnpescatore7968 7 років тому +6

    Hey, vintage space! You were such an inspiration to me. You made me love rockets and really appreciate the hard work that goes into making them and to honor the brave people who flew in them. If it weren't for you I might not be nearly as interested in space. In fact, I actually want to become an aerospace engineer!

  • @dskyyksd
    @dskyyksd 7 років тому +3

    I grew up about 30-35 miles as the crow flies from Stennis. I loved the sound of those stages being tested. It meant another moon landing was on the way.

  • @upandatom
    @upandatom 7 років тому +9

    You know a lot about rockets... I'm new to your channel and I love it! Cool hairdo btw ;)

  • @Xatzimi
    @Xatzimi 7 років тому +1

    When I discovered this channel, I almost all of the back catalogue within like two days. It's to the point where 80% of my suggested videos are these. I have no regrets, and I hope my AdSense helped a little.

  • @jerrysmith4272
    @jerrysmith4272 6 років тому

    It was great to see mention of Stennis, the old photos show a different time. Growing up near the "Test Site", as we call it, I still remember the walls shaking and windows rattling. Come and take the free tour...watch out for deer.

  • @SPACETVnet
    @SPACETVnet 7 років тому +11

    Saturn V was awesome! I built a model one when I was about 10 years old. It was around 1m tall with a lander and everything :-)

    • @mjw1955
      @mjw1955 7 років тому

      Is that the old Revell kit in 1/96 scale?

    • @SPACETVnet
      @SPACETVnet 7 років тому

      Maybe, I have no idea. Were they around 25 years ago?

    • @mjw1955
      @mjw1955 7 років тому

      More like 45 years ago, though it was reissued as part of their "Heritage" series sometime in the '80s. Nowadays they're at least $100US if you can find one.

    • @SPACETVnet
      @SPACETVnet 7 років тому

      Wow you sure know your space models! I don't think it was a special edition or anything, but it was special to me :-)

    • @EricIrl
      @EricIrl 7 років тому +2

      Airfix and Revell both issued a 1/144 Saturn V as well. I built the Airfix kit way back in 1980 and built a newer release only a couple of years ago.
      All of these fairly old kits (40 plus years) are not 100% accurate. However, when AIrfix re-released their V in 2009, they corrected the main inaccuracies (which was the Lunar Module adapter section and the Command/Service Module. It is now the best 1/144 plastic kit of the Saturn V.
      They have also released it in a Skylab version too.
      If you want REALLY big, Dragon do a 1/72 Saturn V kit.

  • @furyiiiplate
    @furyiiiplate 7 років тому

    I love your videos. I was born at a time when I followed the entire space program from Gemini on. We watched launches in school and I became hooked. I never grew out of it and now with Private Space companies I have that 1960's feel all over..... "Go Fever!"

  • @truetex1175
    @truetex1175 7 років тому +64

    Congrats! You've reached 100k subs, Vintage Space! Greetings from Germany. Love your content :)

  • @bjmullan
    @bjmullan 7 років тому

    Fantastic. Great to see the younger generation excited about Apollo and space travel. Go girl!

  • @karlmahlmann
    @karlmahlmann 7 років тому +4

    That was very well done and informative. It's also a very interesting story as to how places like Huntsville, Houston and Cape Canaveral became such key places in the space program.

  • @smacdiesel
    @smacdiesel 7 років тому

    I grew up next to the Seal Beach Facility, it's still there but its fenced in now and its supposed to be torn down soon. I do remember seeing the super guppy flying as well, incredible logistics. Cool video.

  • @ThatBoomerDude56
    @ThatBoomerDude56 4 роки тому

    The Guppy was used regularly to carry DC-10 fuselage sections from Convair in San Diego up to Douglas in Long Beach. I used to watch it fly out about every week.

  • @MattWinacott
    @MattWinacott 7 років тому

    It's amazing that all these NASA contractors worked together and shared information like that too get the Saturn 5 built. All the different pieces had to fit together and work together perfectly. Amazing

  • @paulgracey4697
    @paulgracey4697 7 років тому

    Old enough to remember seeing the barge that was loaded at Seal Beach, I thank you for getting these things right. The Pregnant Guppy aircraft is another of the amazing ideas that the moon program inspired, sometimes on spec that it might be needed.

  • @MEugeneDavis
    @MEugeneDavis 7 років тому

    I was a child when the Saturn 5's were being built. I lived in Woodland Hills and there were various contractors spread out around the valley. My father worked for North American Rockwell at Rocketdyne in Canoga Park. He was a leadman of a crew that built F-1 engines. The first stage engines that put out 31 million horsepower, or 1.5 million pounds of force each. There were five on the rocket. When there was a launch I was in rapt attention to the news broadcasts. Usually after the launch they would give us a Richter reading from New York City. The engines my dad built actually rattled, very minor, the whole east coast. You could not feel it, but the instruments would pick up a Richter reading of a 1 or so.
    At 10 years old, in 1967, I was at the factory and got to touch an F-1. All three stage engines, F-1, J-2 and H-1 were built in the same part of Canoga Park. My dad told me once that they built 65 engines that were never used and were in some storehouse. There were 13 more flights planned when we just stopped.
    In 1968 he got laid off and we moved to Florida. I was personally at the launch of Apollo 17, the last Moon mission. I was 11.

  • @pauljones3017
    @pauljones3017 7 років тому +64

    I haven't watched the video, but *Super Guppy*.

    • @HelepodGTech
      @HelepodGTech 7 років тому +4

      Love that plane XD

    • @swinde
      @swinde 7 років тому +3

      I have seen the "Super Guppy" in flight and on the ground when I was stationed at NAS Pt. Mugu, California. It is sort of like a modified C-130 aircraft. The first model used reciprocating avgas engines, while the later model used turbo fan jet engines. In flight it seems similar to a blimp, but faster.

    • @beanacomputer
      @beanacomputer 7 років тому +6

      Swinde Super Guppy is a modified C-97, cargo variant B-29

    • @neilwilson5785
      @neilwilson5785 7 років тому

      Yeah, Super Guppy!

    • @JANICKGMO_
      @JANICKGMO_ 7 років тому

      Paul Jones for fun. So theres where the beluga plane comes from

  • @OldManFire
    @OldManFire 7 років тому +2

    that phallic reference at the 5 second mark made me have to watch the video twice so i wasn't laughing and could actually listen. nice one, Amy. hilarious.

  • @markbrandenburg7910
    @markbrandenburg7910 6 років тому

    Just a hobbyist here....but i have had this hobby a long time...You make the best most informative videos on the subject ive seen. Despite your pretty face :)

  • @antoninbesse795
    @antoninbesse795 5 років тому

    Really great channel, fantastic research and engaging presentation. You answer all the questions I never knew I wanted to ask about those amazing early years of space exploration. Keep ‘em coming.

  • @ChrisMichelFamily
    @ChrisMichelFamily 7 років тому

    One of the fun facts about the boosters moving from Mississippi to Florida was the issue of getting past Interstate 10. Part of the roadway was made of steel grid. They were removed by crane to allow the barge and booster to pass. The roadway was made solid not too many years ago since no more rocket barges are passing.

  • @bareknuckles2u
    @bareknuckles2u 6 років тому

    That was fascinating! The ingenuity of figuring out logistical problems like this is simply amazing! Also, it is one of the aspects of the space program that I suspect many, including myself, would not consider. I find it inspiring.

  • @ryanlunde575
    @ryanlunde575 7 років тому

    I love crazy logistics like this! Thanks Amy. I had no idea about the Panama Canal transit.

  • @CharlieTechie
    @CharlieTechie 7 років тому

    Thanks for putting together Vintage Space, it is a fascinating channel. I will be a regular subscriber starting today. I grew up during the Space Race and still have an interest in the American space program, even if is has been rolled back so much. I was really looking forward to the Orion and Constellation programs.

  • @robertnichols2283
    @robertnichols2283 7 років тому

    I remember the Super Guppy.
    One of the awesome things about growing up in San Diego in the '60s was the variety of unusual aircraft in the air.
    How many times did we look up and seem another plane we'd never seen before?
    Keep up the good work Amy!

  • @mholt
    @mholt 7 років тому +1

    Nice Adam Young Scores posters in the back!!

    • @AmyShiraTeitel
      @AmyShiraTeitel  7 років тому +2

      I'm so in love with both those scores! Ans super stoked I can have the artwork in the background!

  • @robheusd
    @robheusd 7 років тому +13

    Suggestion for a topic:
    - why does US assemble spacevehicles and transport them to the launchpad vertically, and Russia horizontally. What are the pro/cons?

    • @fadlya.rahman4113
      @fadlya.rahman4113 6 років тому +6

      US only started using the vertical transport crawler during the Saturn V because the rocket is so tall, it was more difficult to design a vehicle with erector mechanism rather than creating a vehicle to transport it already erected. After that, they kept using it because it's already there. FYI, only NASA use the vertical transport system. All other countries use horizontal transport, even SpaceX.

  • @BenPearson_kd7uiy
    @BenPearson_kd7uiy 7 років тому

    I used to drive by the Super Guppy on a regular basis, in the Pima Air and Space Museum in Tucson, AZ. It sure is ungainly, but is perhaps my favorite aircraft.

  • @brucewaynemd1270
    @brucewaynemd1270 7 років тому

    Amy,
    you are absolutely awesome.....
    my daughter and I love your videos and you are the prettiest host ever.

  • @StressfulGengar
    @StressfulGengar 7 років тому

    Awesome Vids, Awesome Channel, Awesome person. Thank you Tom for finding awesome channels for me.

  • @KlunkerRider
    @KlunkerRider 7 років тому

    When I lived in Lakewood Ca as a kid I can remember seeing the Guppies at Long Beach Airport and seeing them flying overhead, it was quite a site!

    • @GSMSfromFV
      @GSMSfromFV 7 років тому

      Same here. Because of their size, the Guppies looked like they were moving very slow. I lived a half block from Lakewood High School, just north of Carson Street. I have friends who worked on the building of the C-17 at the Boeing plant there at the airport.

  • @GODandGODDESS
    @GODandGODDESS 7 років тому

    I wish that you would do a video on the Vehicle Assembly Building and perhaps a separate video on crawler-transporters. Thanks for all you do.

  • @ecampvet1
    @ecampvet1 7 років тому

    Love your knowledge and your bangs!

  • @zhubajie6940
    @zhubajie6940 6 років тому

    Always loved the Super-Guppy

  • @Tiisiphone
    @Tiisiphone 5 років тому

    This channel is chock full of info I've never heard about before. I love it!

  • @supertalon2424
    @supertalon2424 7 років тому

    Just got back from the KSC yesterday. Took the fam for the first time. Got to see the magnificent Saturn V and all of the new additions. I got to see the Shuttle Atlantis when they towed it over to the Visitor's Center prior to permanently mounting it in its new home. Great day, but the Saturn V was my main reason for going. ;)

    • @AmyShiraTeitel
      @AmyShiraTeitel  7 років тому

      The first time I saw that Saturn V I just stared at it for two hours. I couldn't get enough. I hated leaving that space! I do f-ing love that rocket.

    • @supertalon2424
      @supertalon2424 7 років тому

      I go in the building and I just stare at the enormous engines and try to imagine them lighting up and feeling the rumble and hearing that crackling sound. Then I walk under it like I'm in a trance until I get to the front and then it's all about the capsule and what goes on in there. F-ing love my big baby!

  • @Q3ark
    @Q3ark 7 років тому

    That's amazing, I had never considered how far the stages had to travel in order to make it to Florida.
    Love the videos Amy, there's something very special about the Gemini and Apollo era!

    • @pauljones3017
      @pauljones3017 7 років тому

      I guess that it's the boost of funds that they received to counteract the soviets.

  • @Angel12345678
    @Angel12345678 7 років тому

    Great topic. I never thought about how the various pieces of the spacecraft got to the cape. It's amazing to think of a Saturn rocket going through the Panama Canal.

  • @Huntracony
    @Huntracony 7 років тому

    I was once late for school due to an open bridge because a boeing 747 was sailing by. It was being transported to a museum, and although the museum was at an airfield, the landing strip wasn't big enough for a 747, so they disassembled it, moved it by barge, and reassembled at the museum. Unfortunately I was too young to remember anything from it.

  • @lonestar3433
    @lonestar3433 7 років тому +1

    Hi Amy.... another cool video. I like the t-shirt. Hoping your Thanksgiving was a good one.

  • @carabela125
    @carabela125 7 років тому

    I went to the Museum of Flight in Seattle. Thanks for showing it on your video.

  • @Sammy197
    @Sammy197 7 років тому

    yay! go PTY! I live in Panama and I would've loved to live back then to see one of the stages passing through the canal.

  • @domeshining5473
    @domeshining5473 7 років тому +2

    Congrats on breaking the 100K subscribers mark....keep up the good work....

  • @4subvoid4
    @4subvoid4 6 років тому

    Great vid! Very informative.

  • @dstarling61
    @dstarling61 7 років тому

    I took a tour of the VAB in the 70's and they said that it was so big that it actually had it own weather. It would occasionally rain in the building. They had to make some design changes to solve this issue.

  • @zhubajie6940
    @zhubajie6940 6 років тому

    As a kid I always loved the Super-Guppy.

  • @ChronoGamerOne
    @ChronoGamerOne 7 років тому

    this is wonderful information. thank you for sharing!

  • @C4XGT
    @C4XGT 5 років тому +1

    Hi vintage space I’m a big fan from east London keep up the good work

  • @Renatodonadio
    @Renatodonadio 5 років тому

    Shuttles ships were recovered from landing point by attaching them on the back (top side) of a modified 747, solid boosters were recovered in the Atlantic Ocean by two tugs and towed to Cape Canaveral, and liquid tank was built from scratch and sent to Cape Canaveral by barge, the "grandsons" of the Guppy are still used today by Boeing to transport plane sections to building facilities ;-D

  • @orionred2489
    @orionred2489 5 років тому +1

    That explains something... in one of the other NASA documentaries, they talk about getting help from "surfer dudes" to learn how to get some sort of coating on the skin of the rockets. They used the same material for their surfboards. The guy being interviewed said they worked out great, unless the surf was up, and the dudes didn't show for work!

  • @not-kate2639
    @not-kate2639 7 років тому +3

    i keep expecting the old intro, and then i have little moment of suprise every time :)

  • @ModanoTheBest
    @ModanoTheBest 7 років тому

    The Super Guppy was stored at the NASA training facility here in El Paso, TX for many years. I remember seeing it all the time as a kid and laughing at how funny it looked. Never knew it was part of the Apollo Program.

  • @MrChief101
    @MrChief101 7 років тому

    A crazy pair of planes only a mother could love-- but hard workers!
    NICE Nyoka -- or is that Sheena?-- Jungle Queen T-shirt!

  • @stridermt2k
    @stridermt2k 7 років тому

    If I hadn't seen it on another video I wouldn't have recognized them for what they are, but in the photo at 1:37 the silver structures on the barge carrying the S-1C are the ends of the rocket nozzles mounted on frames. They would bolt onto the larger structure of the rocket nozzles themselves.
    I saw an engine on display in a video and it had one of these nearby. I had no ide what it was until the narrator of the video pointed it out.
    I love this channel.

  • @markholm7050
    @markholm7050 7 років тому

    One afternoon, ca 1972, I stepped out the front door of my high school to see a Super Guppy flying, south to north, probably headed for McDonnell Douglas at Lambert St. Louis Airport.

  • @billflanigin9231
    @billflanigin9231 7 років тому

    Those things are just massive!

  • @bretstauffer3923
    @bretstauffer3923 7 років тому

    Hi,
    A wonderful video. I think it would be interesting to denote the evolution of the V2 to the Redstone to the the 1st stage of the Saturn 1B. As I recall, the Redstone was basically a refined V2 that used Kerosene rather than Alcohol as the fuel. And as I recall, the 1st stage of the Saturn 1B basically ganged together 8 Redstone engines with an elongated fuel tank.
    Very very cool! I like!
    Bret

  • @TheLowArmor
    @TheLowArmor 7 років тому

    congratulations to 100.000 subscribers :* and as always a nice and informative Video :)
    Greetings from germany, keep it up!

  • @hglasier
    @hglasier 7 років тому

    100k + subs! Rad! Good for you Amy.

  • @rodteutsch4037
    @rodteutsch4037 7 років тому

    Amy - I love your enthusiasm about space. Could you do a piece on your favorite space museums in the USA. I loved the Stafford museum in Weatherford OK. Also the Cosmospere in Hutchinson KS. There I was able to stick my head into the Apollo 13 capsule after it first arrived before they put it behind plexiglass. A huge ego trip for me. Sometime I want to travel from museum to museum and see them all.

  • @planetsoccer99
    @planetsoccer99 7 років тому

    this is an amazing video. thank you!!

  • @QuintDrumAway
    @QuintDrumAway 7 років тому

    Thank you for this! I learned something new! You have a new subscriber!

  • @zonereyrie
    @zonereyrie 7 років тому

    If you notice the photos there is a key difference between the Pregnant Guppy and the Super Guppy. In the PG the entire tail was *removed* to allow loading. It worked, but was very complex to remove and reconnect. The SG instead has the hinged nose - still a pain (all of the control cables need to be disconnected first, for example), but still simpler and easier.
    There is one Super Guppy still flying - and NASA operates it.

  • @EpicStonerAdventures
    @EpicStonerAdventures 7 років тому

    very informative as always

    • @EpicStonerAdventures
      @EpicStonerAdventures 7 років тому

      I look forward to more public broadcast. I hope to see in the not-too-distant future news speaking at a podium in a museum

  • @TehWRXWgn
    @TehWRXWgn 7 років тому +3

    Hey Amy I just watched The Right Stuff (AMAZING movie btw) and they showed a montage of all the redstone and mercury crashes. Could you go into more details on crashes and failures and then ultimate learnings from failures?
    Also after watching you and Scott play KSP...I just kinda want to see more rocket explosions. For science.

  • @Bossmagnum1
    @Bossmagnum1 7 років тому

    You should do a video on satellites because there's not much out there on them. How big are they? What type of orbits do they normally use (polar/equatorial etc) what types of rockets do they normally fly up on? What happens to old outdated sattelites? There's so much stuff to talk about lol! Keep the great vids coming!

  • @haydenoneil4975
    @haydenoneil4975 7 років тому

    I had the opportunity to see the Super Guppy at the Andrews Airforce base 2015 air show, it's certainly a beautiful aircraft :)

  • @kuy3796
    @kuy3796 7 років тому +7

    You reached 100.000 subscribers! yay!

  • @Bob3519
    @Bob3519 7 років тому

    I remember seeing the "Guppy" aircraft flying by while growing up in Southern California. They were obviously easy to identify since nothing else looked like them.

  • @kd1s
    @kd1s 7 років тому

    One other thing about the Apollo program - pretty much every state contributed something to the project. For instance the seals on the spacecraft were engineered in Providence, RI.

  • @Spacevoyager-yi3gg
    @Spacevoyager-yi3gg 7 років тому

    I am a 10 year old boy who uses my moms acount and my grandpa was a engneer on the lunar module and I love your videos

  • @PankajSingh-qc5mq
    @PankajSingh-qc5mq 7 років тому

    LOVED THE VIDEO A LOT

  • @maxwellmondo4857
    @maxwellmondo4857 7 років тому

    love your videos. You're really smart.

  • @PapiDoesIt
    @PapiDoesIt 7 років тому

    I read where one of the prototype Guppies suffered a forward bulkhead failure that was almost catastrophic. The only thing that saved it was the back door blowing off, which allowed the wind to blow through the fuselage. Otherwise, it would have shaken itself apart.

  • @stephanmantler
    @stephanmantler 7 років тому

    Came via Tom Scott. Thanks for many super interesting videos!

  • @gerardgerard8344
    @gerardgerard8344 7 років тому

    Love the Purple!! :D

  • @ntk2610
    @ntk2610 7 років тому

    Congratulations on 100,000 subscribers!

  • @captainalant
    @captainalant 7 років тому

    Love the hair. My wife Gypsy had me color hers blue with purple streaks.

  • @gevmage
    @gevmage 7 років тому

    I believe I've now seen all of the extant Saturn 5's on public display; at Kennedy in Florida, at Huntville, and in Houston.
    Rumor has it there's another S-1C outside somewhere in Louisiana, maybe? It's just sitting in a field or something, but rumor has it you can see it from the highway. I'm tempted to fly down sometime and fly over it and see if you can see it from the air.
    Anyway, such details might be interesting to your subscribers sometime.
    Keep up the good work!

  • @hkitm
    @hkitm 6 років тому

    Interesting and informative.

  • @pdc023
    @pdc023 7 років тому

    Amy, I'm interested to learn a bit about the fueling process for the Apollo Lunar Module. Specifically when and how the hypergolic fuels were loaded for the descent and ascent stages, and for the RCS. Were these able to be fueled and unloaded on the pad, were they fueled prior to stacking, and what contingencies were in place if a fueled rocket had to be returned to the VAB? It might make an interesting subject for a future video. Thanks.

  • @fry140
    @fry140 7 років тому +5

    Got to see the Super Guppy flying around El Paso, TX a few months ago. Reminded me of a graceful flying whale.

    • @piranha031091
      @piranha031091 7 років тому +3

      Was there a bowl of petunia alongside the flying whale?

    • @meZeusta14
      @meZeusta14 7 років тому

      *Steve Rogers Meme*
      I understood that reference!

    • @fry140
      @fry140 7 років тому +2

      piranha031091 That would have been a very improbable appearance.

    • @KayoMichiels
      @KayoMichiels 7 років тому +4

      Hence that's why Airbus has called their version "Beluga".

  • @asdfasdf825
    @asdfasdf825 7 років тому

    Amy! That t-shirt! My my! ;)

  • @linmajon
    @linmajon 7 років тому +1

    This was intreresting stuff i have never heard of.

  • @Pixelmotivator
    @Pixelmotivator 7 років тому

    Wow that is amazing! I never thought of how the rocket stages were moved around & from where in the USA they had to come from. Being in another country & at the time I was very young, it was assumed it was all assembled within some nearby rocket factory. Very interesting. keep the cool facts coming Amy :)

  • @willrun4fun
    @willrun4fun 7 років тому

    I have seen a Guppy at the Pima Air Museum in Tucson. Very cool place.

  • @hamhamilton26
    @hamhamilton26 6 років тому

    love your videos

  • @taylor1038
    @taylor1038 7 років тому +2

    Congrats in advance for 100K!!!! And I know space shuttle stuff isn't strictly vintage, but it's still interesting. Any plans to go over any of that?

    • @AmyShiraTeitel
      @AmyShiraTeitel  7 років тому +7

      I'm not the biggest shuttle fan, but there are a few elements of its early history that I'm interested in so one of these days I'll get to that! Time. Time's always the thing I need more of to dig into these topics!

  • @michaeldavis9774
    @michaeldavis9774 7 років тому +1

    My father was a leadman at Rocketdyne building the F-1 engines. He told me before he died that there were 65 of them built that were never used.

    • @theholderscock
      @theholderscock 5 років тому

      If that's true then thats fucking awesome. Besides the unused parts of course

  • @gabe1465
    @gabe1465 6 років тому

    Interesting. I have actually been to the Stensin Space center, they have a Saturn 5 lower stage booster on display, and needless to say, it was massive in size. I knew that the spacecraft were large, but you don't really grasp the full size of it until you see it in person.

  • @kerrykrishna
    @kerrykrishna 6 років тому

    You, are one rocking historian!

  • @jluck2001
    @jluck2001 7 років тому +1

    The Saturn 5= the most beautiful rocket ever! So awesome that it ev n made a cameo appearance on Star Trek!Congrats on 100k Amy! 👍

  • @retrofan42
    @retrofan42 7 років тому

    Congrats on getting 100K subscribers!

  • @jungleb
    @jungleb 7 років тому

    beautiful t shirt!

  • @bendeleted9155
    @bendeleted9155 6 років тому

    Interesting note rarely mentioned anywhere is that the S-IVBs flew to Mather AFB then trucked down the street to Douglas' Sacramento Test Site for rocket burn tests. One blew up on the stand the week before the Apollo 1 crew died. The testing prevented three more astronauts from dying in earth orbit. The stands were still there with civilization growing around them until only a few years ago. Hardly anyone living there now even knows about it.