Night launches are a little different. I never get tired of seeing it.Sgt.Gene wrote:
Im only about 20 minutes from the Cape. Its pretty cool watching it go up, but after seeing it so much its kinda just like, meh...
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Night launches are a little different. I never get tired of seeing it.Sgt.Gene wrote:
Im only about 20 minutes from the Cape. Its pretty cool watching it go up, but after seeing it so much its kinda just like, meh...
how come countdown in original post says 11h?VspyVspy wrote:
T minus 1hr!
http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/nasatv/index.htmlIm_Dooomed wrote:
what is the channel? Crap, I'm central time so that means it already happened right
http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/nasatv/index.htmlIm_Dooomed wrote:
what is the channel? Crap, I'm central time so that means it already happened right
yesMajor.League.Infidel wrote:
I've never seen one live. Even if its through the interbutts, this will be awesome.
to nothing?Im_Dooomed wrote:
Cool! First off, WHY do they have the camera mounted facing the rocket fire? You can't see anything...They should have it facing forward so you can see where the space shuttle is going.
How did it look? Did you get any pics?Kmarion wrote:
I guess I should go outside.
Last edited by Obiwan (2008-03-10 23:46:41)
Are you serious?Im_Dooomed wrote:
Cool! First off, WHY do they have the camera mounted facing the rocket fire? You can't see anything...They should have it facing forward so you can see where the space shuttle is going.
Too cloudy on my coast it was a faint light .. . figures, if i would have just went to bed it would have been perfect. There are 11 more launches, I hope there is another night launch.VspyVspy wrote:
How did it look? Did you get any pics?Kmarion wrote:
I guess I should go outside.
the camera is there so they can get a preliminary look at the shuttle during booster sep. one of the measures put in place to prevent another shuttle coming apart during re-entryIm_Dooomed wrote:
Cool! First off, WHY do they have the camera mounted facing the rocket fire? You can't see anything...They should have it facing forward so you can see where the space shuttle is going.
Also its night, and space is fucking blackZilla wrote:
the camera is there so they can get a preliminary look at the shuttle during booster sep. one of the measures put in place to prevent another shuttle coming apart during re-entryIm_Dooomed wrote:
Cool! First off, WHY do they have the camera mounted facing the rocket fire? You can't see anything...They should have it facing forward so you can see where the space shuttle is going.