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#12
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03-10-2012, 04:41 AM
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Re: Previously Unreleased Amateur Video of the Challenger Disaster
That is very interesting stuff, thanks for that. There are short film clips of different things, voice recorder transcripts, a report from a Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin who tried to determine cause of death. That was probably the most interesting read. I never thought about it before and didn't realize it took the crew compartment 2min 45sec to fall to the ocean. Hopefully they were all unconscious due to lack of oxygen.
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#13
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03-10-2012, 06:21 AM
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| ★ Legacy Member ★ Poster Rank:432 Join Date: Aug 2011 Posts: 2,644 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 36 Post(s)
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Re: Previously Unreleased Amateur Video of the Challenger Disaster
Yah. I searched high & low early last year for death pics from the ocean impact and could not find anything. Still on the lookout.
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#14
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03-10-2012, 08:24 AM
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Re: Previously Unreleased Amateur Video of the Challenger Disaster
They got the emergency oxygen on, the valves were open on the tanks. They died from the impact with the water. Long fall, plenty of time to think about it. |
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#15
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03-10-2012, 10:24 AM
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Re: Previously Unreleased Amateur Video of the Challenger Disaster
You're welcome. Sadly, as Zambini states, a couple of crew members likely endured the entire descent. Truly horrifying. If you are interested, NBC News Cape Canaveral Jay Barbree wrote an eight-part piece a few years back that highlights some supposed inside information, including the likely of survival after the initial explosion and the retrieval of the bodies from the ocean. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3077897/.../#.T1twEnm698F |
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#16
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03-10-2012, 12:42 PM
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| So Fucking Banned Poster Rank:307 Male ლ(ಠ益ಠლ) Join Date: Dec 2010 Posts: 4,187 Mentioned: 7 Post(s) Quoted: 631 Post(s)
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Re: Previously Unreleased Amateur Video of the Challenger Disaster
Great post |
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#17
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03-10-2012, 02:56 PM
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| So Fucking Banned Poster Rank:333 Male Join Date: Mar 2010 Posts: 3,852 Mentioned: 13 Post(s) Quoted: 750 Post(s)
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Re: Previously Unreleased Amateur Video of the Challenger Disaster
They were very good at suppressing info about what happened to the Challenger and its crew because NASA fucked up big time. It will always haunt those engineers who tried to stop it and were turned away. "ha! What does an engineer know?" - NASA politicos |
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#20
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03-11-2012, 06:49 PM
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Re: Previously Unreleased Amateur Video of the Challenger Disaster
It wasn't NASA managers who overruled the engineers who tried to stop the launch. It was a VP at Morton-Thiokol, the company that manufactured the SRBs (solid rocket boosters) that caused the explosion. The engineers got screwed. The VP got a big bonus that year. I watched this launch in front of NASA headquarters. (I was a contractor, not a NASA employee.) At 2:08 when you hear the launch controller say, "We lost the downlink" the entire crowd of NASA people around me gasped. I turned to the guy next to me and asked what that meant. He shook his head and said, "They're dead." And yeah, they most likely all survived the entire descent to the ocean. The crew capsule is the small object you see falling in a downward arc while the cameraman focuses on the SRBs spiraling out of control upwards. |