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Does anyone know if CNN carried it? I'd just like to know before I arrive home to crushing disappointment (I taped from 9:15amET-12:15pmET).

I know they had web coverage (via RealPlayer subscription I don't have and can't access through work anyway). I just don't know if CNN itself showed much.
 
javabear90 said:
it worked!!!! Space Ship one has landed and it went 62 miles high! :cool: :D Now when can I go? :rolleyes:

Congratulations on a job well done. It's great that the private sector has actually entered into space. Will look forward to hearing about future plans.
 
i really hope this gets through to ordinary people...i would love to see space once...just seeing the earth from that height must be fantastic
 
It's a baby step but sub-orbital transport looks like a doable reality than just a pipe-dream.
Imagine, New York to Tokyo in 30 minutes instead of 8 hours.
It's got to happen. This is the 21st century; it's got to happen.

Also, there is something seriously wrong when a bunch of dreamers can do a goal with a fraction of the money that it took the government to do the same thing.
Why aren't people like Burt Rutan in charge of NASA? A maverick, pioneer, genius. Not god damn corporate 'yes men'.
 
It's great news. Living in the same godforsaken desert, I thought about going out to see it. But I work swings. And I've been to things like this before (Shuttle landings at Edwards AFB), and the dust and traffic didn't sound worth it to me. I wasn't sure if I would see much anyway. But I'm glad it was successful.
 
Wonder what's up with the buckle in the frame by the nozzle. Rutan's always worked on the edge of engineering/elegance. You'd really hate to err on the side of weakness and have something go wrong that could cause someone to lose his life.

I wonder how it's going to do with increasing the payload by 200%... - j
 
Private Spaceship Encounters Glitches In Record-Setting Flight

MOJAVE, CALIFORNIA*-- There were tense times during the sky-blistering flight of SpaceShipOne here this morning. Fighting control problems, pilot Mike Melvill wrestled with several anomalies that cut short a pre-planned altitude mark.

However, the first non-governmental rocket ship did succeed in flying to the edge of space, earning the craft’s pilot, Mike Melvill, the first set of Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)-issued commercial astronaut wings.

At a post-landing press briefing, the 63-year old Melvill described a series of technical snags that haunted his record-setting flight. Right after motor ignition, the pilot said the craft rolled 90 degrees to the left, then 90 degrees to the right. "It has never ever done that before," he explained.

Technical snags

Melvill said he leveled out the rocketship, but then experienced trim problems during his climb outside the Earth’s atmosphere*-- an issue that he dealt with as he made his way to a desert runway landing.

During SpaceShipOne’s climb, Melvill said he also heard a surprising bang, coming from the engine area where a fairing holding the craft’s nozzle buckled.

While an altitude of 360,000 feet was targeted, the rocket ship fell short of that mark, attaining 328,491 feet, reported Burt Rutan, head of the Scaled Composites team that designed and built the vehicle.

"It was not a smooth flight from the standpoint of trajectory," Rutan reported at the press briefing. "This was not a perfect flight," he said, although the overall performance of the rocketship was right on the money.

Rutan said the anomaly Melvill experienced was*"the most serious flight safety systems problem that we’ve had in the entire program."

Back up hardware on SpaceShipOne worked and the craft made a beautiful landing, Rutan said. "Even though we really didn’t go where we were planning to go today…makes me feel very good because I felt it’s important to put those kind of backup systems in…and they worked," he added.

"The backup saved the day," Melvill noted.

Free-floating chocolates

Rutan could not discount the possibility that another flight might be needed before committing pilot and hardware to fly back-to-back flights within a two-week period to win the $10 million Ansari X Prize.

How long the vehicle’s hybrid rocket motor operated is not clear, with data from the flight still being assessed. Whether the rocket motor was shut down by Melvill or stopped on its own is not known, Rutan said.

Melvill said his rocket flight was all very exciting. "I wasn’t scared…not afraid all the way up. But I was a little afraid on the way down."

At apogee -- the highest point of the rocket ship’s flight*-- Melvill pulled out of a flight suit pocket handfuls of chocolate-coated candies. He marveled at them as they floated free in the cockpit.

Awesome view

As SpaceShipOne arched over and headed toward Earth, Melvill said he began to hear sounds. "The noises you hear are like somebody talking to you very sharply. You begin to believe, wow, should I really be doing this?"

"The sky was jet black above," Melvill said. "The Earth is so beautiful ... It was like nothing I’ve ever seen before. You really do get the feeling that you’ve touched the face of God when you do something like this, believe me."

Touching down at the Mojave Airport, the SpaceShipOne made a three-point landing, on two wheels, and nose-mounted skid.

"I was so glad to get it back down and make a decent landing that didn’t break anything," Melvill said. "I had to land with what I had," he added.

Upon touchdown and climbing out of the SpaceShipOne’s cockpit, Melvill was greeted by Apollo moonwalker, Buzz Aldrin.

"It meant a lot," Melvill said. "To have him come up and shake my hand and congratulate me and tell me that I’ve joined the club…that was serious stuff."

=====
Target altitude is 360Kfeet or 68.18 miles
Actual altitude reached is 328,491 feet, or 62.21 miles.

Sounds like they need to figure out why the fairing buckled and get that fixed, and make sure the fix doesn't break anything.
 
JesseJames said:
It's a baby step but sub-orbital transport looks like a doable reality than just a pipe-dream.
Imagine, New York to Tokyo in 30 minutes instead of 8 hours.
It's got to happen. This is the 21st century; it's got to happen.

Also, there is something seriously wrong when a bunch of dreamers can do a goal with a fraction of the money that it took the government to do the same thing.
Why aren't people like Burt Rutan in charge of NASA? A maverick, pioneer, genius. Not god damn corporate 'yes men'.

Actually, that'd be damn government 'yes men'. And the answer is that government does nothing well. Including govern.
 
However, the first non-governmental rocket ship did succeed in flying to the edge of space, earning the craft’s pilot, Mike Melvill, the first set of Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)-issued commercial astronaut wings.
hehe, "rocketship" sounds like on old b-movie. or a radio program. :)

"come on, space cadet. we'll hop in our rocketship and head off those martians before they can attack earth!"

when do they start selling tickets? (he says as if he had the money to burn)
 
Thanatoast said:
when do they start selling tickets? (he says as if he had the money to burn)
Haven't NASA been selling tickets for about 30 years? Surely these guys will have a waiting list as long as your arm by now, especially after this latest jaunt. Billionaire oil Sheikhs and the like...
 
Private rocket lands spot in space history


Launch boosts hopes of would-be tourists


By John Antczak, Associated Press *|* June 22, 2004


MOJAVE, Calif. -- An ungainly looking rocket plane punched through the earth's atmosphere and then glided home to a desert landing yesterday in history's first privately financed manned spaceflight -- a voyage that could hasten the day when the final frontier is opened up to paying customers.

Pilot Mike Melvill took SpaceShipOne 62.2 miles above the earth, just a little more than 400 feet above the distance considered to be the boundary of space. The flight lasted just 90 minutes.

The spaceship was carried aloft under the belly of a carrier jet. The jet then released the spaceship, and its rocket engine ignited, sending it hurtling toward space at nearly three times the speed of sound. It left a vertical white vapor trail in the brilliant blue sky. SpaceShipOne touched down in the Mojave Desert at 8:15 a.m. to cheers and applause.

Melvill, 63, said seeing the curvature of the earth was ''almost a religious experience."

''It was really an awesome sight," he said. ''It was like nothing I'd ever seen before, and it blew me away."http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2004/06/22/private_rocket_lands_spot_in_space_history/
 
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