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To: Justa
BY the time the orbiter readched the DFW area - the shuttle was already out of proper 'attitude' fo re-entry - it *did* not come down on account of a 'tail failure'.

The TIMELIME sheds some light on this: STS-107 was scheduled to be overhead in the DFW area at about 8:03 AM CDT.

By 8:00 AM CDT (straight up) NASA had already experienced comm (and telemetry) failure. The craft was already doomed when it reached the DFW area ...

STS-107 had already experienced catastrophic problems for 3 minutes by the time the video was captured by WFAA CH 8 in Dallas.

32 posted on 02/01/2003 7:12:07 PM PST by _Jim
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To: _Jim
"STS-107 had already experienced catastrophic problems for 3 minutes by the time the video was captured by WFAA CH 8 in Dallas."

Well, if accurate then the tail breaking off would be secondary to whatever initiated it. I'll take your word for it then. This may be the case, as in the same frame I'm referring to there is a large, star-shaped dark spot on the underside of the orbiter, approx 1/2 the way back and a little left-of-center.

Trust me, this video is not of an 'artifact'. It is the shuttle and its tail falling away from it. The frame I'm referencing is approximately 2/5s thru the sequence and is quite clear. The 3 main engines are visible, it's tail is missing and there's the large dark spot on it's underside. I wrote that one off as an artifact. Perhaps some damaged heat shields and a blown tire are the cause after all with the fuel tank insulation starting the whole thing. In any event you really do have to see the frame. It's quite something. Surely someone will grab it and enhance it and you'll see what I'm talking about.

44 posted on 02/01/2003 7:42:32 PM PST by Justa
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