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#340
by
madmardy
on 19 Jun, 2007 22:56
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#341
by
Chris Bergin
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:00
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madmardy - 19/6/2007 11:56 PM
http://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/forums/get-attachment-big.asp?action=view&attachmentid=24647
Is it me or does there seem to be something missing in the bottom right hand corner of this shot
Hard to know. It could be just attach areas for the truss. Then again, it could be where they saw something leaving the payload bay.
At the same time, I know checking these inspection images from the NASA TV feed is nothing like what they'll get back on the ground. I know a few of us turned into babbling fools from thinking we were seeing things out of place during earlier missions
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#342
by
Ford Mustang
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:04
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#343
by
Chris Bergin
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:20
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They aren't getting the four latch lights to stay on, so 10 degrees back up and then back down again.
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#344
by
Chris Bergin
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:23
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And that worked. Nicely latched.
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#345
by
Chris Bergin
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:26
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One hour until the NC5 burn, at one foot per second.
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#346
by
DaveS
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:26
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End effector has released the FWD grapple fixture.
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#347
by
Ford Mustang
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:27
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#348
by
sts1canada
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:33
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This is a beautiful shot of the ISS in the distance as the shuttle and ISS following each other into a night pass!
Richard
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#349
by
Ford Mustang
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:36
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Orbit Night. Seems I missed the sequence due to STSPLUS being 5 minutes behind.
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#350
by
Ford Mustang
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:41
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Bringing the Canada Arm down into latch.
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#351
by
Ford Mustang
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:43
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#352
by
DaveS
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:44
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#353
by
Ford Mustang
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:45
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#354
by
sts1canada
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:45
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Ford, your times will be slightly off today because of the different orbital burns the shuttle is performing today after undocking. The elements on the web are only updated once or twice a day and the orbiter has made some burns today since these elements were released that have changed the orbital information slightly. Don't worry, this lag is normal, tomorrow's elements should provide more accurate results as the shuttle will not be performing many burns tomorrow (other than the RCS hotfire test to check out the RCS jets). Make sure your computer's date and time is as accurate as possible, a small lag in the time displayed in the STSPLUS program is normal as it is a DOS program running inside WINDOWS and it has to share the brain of the computer (CPU) to do its work.
Back on topic and talking about orbital burns, we are expecting to have another small burn by the orbiter within the next hour called NC 5, this burn is to increase Atlantis' departure from ISS by 4.5 statue miles per orbit.
Richard
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#355
by
Ford Mustang
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:48
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Thanks, Richard. I just went to the world clock and made sure it was accurate, and I got it to the SECOND!
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#356
by
Ford Mustang
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:50
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#357
by
Ford Mustang
on 19 Jun, 2007 23:59
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#358
by
stockman
on 20 Jun, 2007 00:05
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#359
by
Ford Mustang
on 20 Jun, 2007 00:24
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Burn in progress.
Edit: Good burn!