To: wolfpat
That’s one book I have not read, so your information may be more correct than mine. It obviously goes back aways because it is using the “old” numbering system for the manned missions, Apollo 1, 2, etc. After the fire, the unmanned missions filled in the numbering gap between Apollo 1 (the one that burned) and Apollo 7, the eventual first manned mission.
245 posted on
08/26/2012 7:40:38 AM PDT by
chimera
To: chimera
Thats one book I have not read, so your information may be more correct than mine. It obviously goes back aways because it is using the old numbering system for the manned missions, Apollo 1, 2, etc. After the fire, the unmanned missions filled in the numbering gap between Apollo 1 (the one that burned) and Apollo 7, the eventual first manned mission.
Apollo 4 was the first test of the Saturn V, an unmanned launch on November 9th, 1967. My grandfather died the same day in Florida and my uncle had to handle the situation until my father could get down there. It was a challenge for my uncle since he worked for NASA and could not get away from the mission until it was done.
252 posted on
08/26/2012 9:51:37 AM PDT by
Nowhere Man
(June 28th, 2012, the Day America Jumped The Shark.)
To: chimera
253 posted on
08/26/2012 10:00:46 AM PDT by
wolfpat
(Not to know what has been transacted in former times is to be always a child. -- Cicero)
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