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94th? Wait a minute...if GR was 70 when he died in 1991, wouldn't he be 100 this year?Happy 94th birthday, Gene!
Gene Winfield. That man is like the Energizer bunny… he celebrated his 94th birthday two weeks ago with a car customization workshop. If I live another four decades (!) I can only hope to be 1/10th as active and vital as Mr. Winfield.94th? Wait a minute...if GR was 70 when he died in 1991, wouldn't he be 100 this year?
Or is this for Gene Winfield's 94th? I'm confused.
The engines turning on looked kewl. The shuttlecraft bobbing there like a party balloon, not so much.Becuz it looks kewl!![]()
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That feature has been there since at least October 2019. I figured that they look like vents, so if they are vents, they're openings to somewhere, so we might as well see what's going on (or at least get a glimpse!)Interesting that you have the ridges on the forward of the nacelles open to see the innards of the engines.
That feature has been there since at least October 2019. I figured that look like vents, so if they are vents, they're openings to somewhere, so we might as well see what's going on (or at least get a glimpse!)
Ahhhh... crap.
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It was a keyframing error... the port gear started retracting for the next sequence a little too early. This has been fixed in the Vimeo version of the video. I'll post some high-rez beauty shots of the Galileo and Winfield later this week.
Thanks for the feedback everyone!![]()
That was a great touch. It really helps to sell the idea someone is piloting the shuttlecraft.You mean the “wobbling” of the Galileo as the pilot lifts her to her pre-launch hover? I don’t know what you mean.![]()
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