September 8th, 1966.
I was five years old.
I was five years old.
Not only do I remember it, I remember unpacking and later repacking a crate filled with ceramic heat-shield tiles of the same kind which covered the shuttle. There had been a problem with some of them coming loose during the first few test flights of the Enterprise, and the people at Space Shuttle Division of Rockwell sent a bunch to my division, so that our mad scientists could develop a better adhesive to keep the tiles from coming unstuck.Who remembers watching the first flight of the shuttle Enterprise?
I watched it. My dad was a big NASA buff, I also watched moon missions with him as well, I think Apollo 15 is the earliest I can recall.Who remembers watching the first flight of the shuttle Enterprise?
I just realized that I was conflating the flight and the Star Trek cast seeing the shuttle at the rollout. Different days. The rollout was in September of 1976 and I think I only saw it in magazines. The flight was August 12th and I saw that on television.
Wow, both for "that's cool" and "you're much older than I thought you were".Not only do I remember it, I remember unpacking and later repacking a crate filled with ceramic heat-shield tiles of the same kind which covered the shuttle. There had been a problem with some of them coming loose during the first few test flights of the Enterprise, and the people at Space Shuttle Division of Rockwell sent a bunch to my division, so that our mad scientists could develop a better adhesive to keep the tiles from coming unstuck.
Tiles were about 4-5 inches square by about 2 inches thick, and surprisingly light.
Not only do I remember it, I remember unpacking and later repacking a crate filled with ceramic heat-shield tiles of the same kind which covered the shuttle. There had been a problem with some of them coming loose during the first few test flights of the Enterprise, and the people at Space Shuttle Division of Rockwell sent a bunch to my division, so that our mad scientists could develop a better adhesive to keep the tiles from coming unstuck.
Tiles were about 4-5 inches square by about 2 inches thick, and surprisingly light.
Well. We have a winner.Not only do I remember it, I remember unpacking and later repacking a crate filled with ceramic heat-shield tiles of the same kind which covered the shuttle.
Very light. Almost fluffy, which was part of what made it an effective insulator. But also very fragile.One of my friends at college was an aeronautical engineering major and there was a guest speaker from NASA (or maybe it was Rockwell) talking about the shuttle in general and the tile problem in particular. He passed around a broken tile. Yes, very light, almost like foam rubber. It was hard to believe it could work as a heat shield.
For me, don't remember the exact year but must have been in syndication in the early 1970s. No idea which episode it might have been.
what was the first episode you saw in color?
I think the first two are dated November, 1977. The rest came out over the next year. Most of the first 6 were reprinted once, in 1979. By 1980, they were all gone from US bookstores.Anyone know offhand when the Photonovels came out and how long they stayed in print? That might help me narrow this down.
I think the first two are dated November, 1977. The rest came out over the next year. Most of the first 6 were reprinted once, in 1979. By 1980, they were all gone from US bookstores.
By the mid-80's, convention vultures (uh, sorry, dealers) were asking 25 bucks a pop.
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