sts60
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jul 19, 2007
- Messages
- 4,107
Northrop Grumman also planned to use the VAB and rest of the Launch Complex 39 infrastructure with its Omega rocket (including the Mobile Launcher, Crawler, and Pad 39B), but canceled the program after not winning a launch services competition. That leaves SLS as the sole user, as it was with Shuttle and Saturn before that. As was pointed out, SpaceX stacks their Falcon horizontally at Pad 39A and raises it up in the manner familiar from Soyuz launches.
I’ve been in the VAB a number of times for work, or more accurately to play glorified tourist while at KSC/CCAFS for work in other facilities. It’s really almost indescribably huge. Attached is a picture I took of one of the Orbiters waiting to be stacked. It was the middle of the night and I was just wandering around snooping in places for which I had numbers on my badge and nobody was bothering to kick me out, even though I had no particular business there at the moment. (The historic abandoned pads on the Cape side were especially good for this.) On a subsequent midnight visit I watched it dangling from the crane while the lift crew waited for the DC-9 sized pendulum’s swaying to damp out.
A few years ago, while supporting work in the LCC, I had a more somber visit to the VAB. The Columbia Recovery Room is now located there, and workers are brought there to inspect the remains of the Orbiter, contemplate the energies involved, and receive a forceful reminder of what is at stake working human space flight programs.
I’ve been in the VAB a number of times for work, or more accurately to play glorified tourist while at KSC/CCAFS for work in other facilities. It’s really almost indescribably huge. Attached is a picture I took of one of the Orbiters waiting to be stacked. It was the middle of the night and I was just wandering around snooping in places for which I had numbers on my badge and nobody was bothering to kick me out, even though I had no particular business there at the moment. (The historic abandoned pads on the Cape side were especially good for this.) On a subsequent midnight visit I watched it dangling from the crane while the lift crew waited for the DC-9 sized pendulum’s swaying to damp out.
A few years ago, while supporting work in the LCC, I had a more somber visit to the VAB. The Columbia Recovery Room is now located there, and workers are brought there to inspect the remains of the Orbiter, contemplate the energies involved, and receive a forceful reminder of what is at stake working human space flight programs.