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Monday, February 29, 2016

Prometheus Squadron Is Named Top Squadron for the 2014-2015 Long Duration Mission. Space News. The Imaginarium.


Prometheus Squadron Wins Top Squad for the 2014-2015 Long Duration Mission

     The Prometheus Squadron was named Top Squadron for last year's Long Duration Mission at the February Voyager Club meeting. Several members of the squad were on hand to acknowledge the occasion and accept the club's congratulations.  Bradyn Lystrup and BJ Warner were the team's two coaches. Bradyn was at the meeting to hear the news.
     The final scores were close:

1.  Prometheus: 304.27 
2.  Scorpio: 294.64
3.  Phoenix: 292.79
4.  Nautilus: 286.05
5.  Kraken:  280.55

     Remember, what you see represents a full year of missions - forty total with each team getting eight rounds.
     The second round of this year's Long Duration Mission starts this Saturday with Scorpio Squadron.  My impressions so far are that this will be an even closer competition. We have many returning cadets who've mastered the strategies for running a perfect mission. 
     Congratulations Prometheus!  We'll have a reunion dinner for the squadron once the Voyager opens. 

Space News

50 Years Ago: The Flight of AS-201


By Mark Daymont
Spacerubble.blogspot.com


The Saturn 1b clears the tower.
 
On February 26, 1966, NASA launched the first test of a Saturn 1b rocket carrying the unmanned Block 1 Apollo command and service modules. Block 1 modules were not designed with the forward hatch necessary for docking with the newly-designed Lunar Excursion Module, so they would be relegated to Earth-orbit-only missions. The purpose of this mission was to test the Saturn 1b vehicle integrity, the connections to the CM and SM, rocket guidance and propulsion, and to test the CM on re-entry. This would also include a test of the vehicle recovery plans and ships.


Recovery divers ensure the safe retrieval of the command module.
 
On the 26th, there was an abort command at four seconds before launch when the fuel tanks in the S-IVb stage fell below expected levels. Quick checking by the engineers and a launch simulation showed that the flight could proceed with the lower pressures, so the countdown resumed and the rocket lifted off from Launch Complex LC-34 at Cape Kennedy. The launch went well, with the Command and Service module separation at 425 miles from the Earth. The SM then fired its engine twice to propel the modules back to the Earth. This proved that the Service module engines could be restarted in space. There were only a few problems with the engine and the control of the CM, mostly dealing with wiring problems and an unexpected leak of helium into the SM fuel.  The command module re-entered the atmosphere and safely made a water landing 37 minutes after launch. The recovery ship USS Boxer found the CM about 70 km from where it was supposed to be. Today the CM is on display to the public at the Strategic Air and Space Museum in Ashland, Nebraska.


USS Boxer (CV-21). USN photo.
 

Mission patch for flight AS-201.

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