Trekkie07 - 21/4/2008 8:56 PMGood article.
Rocket Ronnie - 21/4/2008 9:14 PMVery interesting read. Is there a high res of the image at the top of the article?
Hi,How come the numbers are all out of sync and it's STS-119 instead of STS-127?ThanksIan
Quote from: ichilton on 06/15/2008 01:18 pmHi,How come the numbers are all out of sync and it's STS-119 instead of STS-127?ThanksIanI don't think there's any large theory behind it, other than the way the manifest panned out via changes to the running order, delays, RTFs etc.etc.I'm sure one of the guys on here will be able to give a specific answer.
Quote from: Chris Bergin on 06/15/2008 02:33 pmQuote from: ichilton on 06/15/2008 01:18 pmHi,How come the numbers are all out of sync and it's STS-119 instead of STS-127?ThanksIanI don't think there's any large theory behind it, other than the way the manifest panned out via changes to the running order, delays, RTFs etc.etc.I'm sure one of the guys on here will be able to give a specific answer.They name the missions in the order they plan them. So, at the time of the Columbia accident, missions STS-114 through STS-120 had been planned out in detail and had their names. When the word came in that a second return to flight mission was needed, it was planned out as STS-121. So even though it was planned after STS-120, it flew first.And remember that STS-119 was scheduled to fly right after STS-118 up until 2005. The schedule at the time looked something like this - STS-114 - LF1 - RafaelloSTS-121 - ULF1.1 - LeonardoSTS-115 -12A - P3/P4STS-116 - 12A.1 - P5STS-117 - 13A - S3/S4STS-118 - 13A.1 - S5STS-119 - 15A - S6STS-120 - 10A - Node 2STS-122 - 1E - ColumbusWhen NASA management decided to revamp the manifest that year, they decided to give the international partners priority in a sort of 'thank you for waiting' scenario. It was determined that the S6 truss could wait until later so they moved STS-119 back a ways. They just didn't change the designation of the mission.
QuoteTrekkie07 - 21/4/2008 8:56 PMGood article. Yeah, he's a very promising writer! I'll send on your note
To add to that, this would also answer a more broader question over the history of the shuttle missions over the years on why they the mission numbers weren't in the order of their flight when first planned. For example, in late 1998, there was STS-95 with space shuttle Discovery (the flight that Sen. John Glenn flew on), in which it was the 92nd flight of the shuttle since STS-1. Right after that mission, it was STS-88, the first assembly mission of the ISS with Endeavour, and being the 93rd flight of the shuttle since STS-1.
When NASA management decided to revamp the manifest that year, they decided to give the international partners priority in a sort of 'thank you for waiting' scenario. It was determined that the S6 truss could wait until later so they moved STS-119 back a ways. They just didn't change the designation of the mission.
STS-119 will be the last mission to fly out of numerical order. It's all normal from STS-127 to STS-133.
Quote from: nathan.moeller on 06/16/2008 05:55 amSTS-119 will be the last mission to fly out of numerical order. It's all normal from STS-127 to STS-133.... as currently planned. But with the talk of mandating Nasa to fly an extra mission for AMS, I imagine that mission would become STS-134 but might conceivably be shuffled to before 132 and 133.
Quote from: Chris Bergin on 04/21/2008 08:09 pmQuoteTrekkie07 - 21/4/2008 8:56 PMGood article. Yeah, he's a very promising writer! I'll send on your note It was a good article. This sentence near the end caught my eye though:"differential acceleration of the crewmember and the seat in the forward and backward X, Y, and Z axes"Technical speak for "any direction", right?