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NASA 1963 PROJECT GEMINI FILM "ALL SYSTEMS GO" PROJECT MERCURY 79934 

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Presented by NASA, ALL SYSTEMS GO is a 26 minute film that was created in March, 1963 about the construction, testing, and documentation of the Gemini III Spacecraft. It also touches on the Project Mercury test launches and failures that resulted in the success of Gemini. The spacecraft shown in this film eventually culminated with the flight of Astronauts Gus Grissom and John Young. It ended up being the ninth manned United Space spaceflight under NASA's direct control, and was also the final manned flight that was controlled directly at the Cape Kennedy Air Force Station in Florida, before eventually Mission Control functions were changed to a new center that was opened in the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston, Texas.
The film opens up with a description of Gemini III's spacecraft, and how the rocket was ultimately designed to be fitted with 2 astronauts at the top of the rocket in the crew module (the module at the top of the rocket is Gemini III). Film footage can be seen of both Gus Grissom and John Young preparing to enter the capsules for flight. However the film at the 1:00 minute mark pulls back to the scene at Cape Kennedy, showing people preparing to watch the rocket launch, and then to last-minute footage of training before the official launch can begin.
At 1:50 however the film is predominately about the basic history of past rocket launches. The film starts by discussing the previous Mercury project, and how the failures and success have helped improve rocket technology. As the narrator explains in his silky smooth voice, paradoxically for each and every set back that the space program had suffered, NASA scientists have learned more and more about what went wrong with previous incarnations, and have prepared to study more and improve the technology, resulting in improvements before culminating in the Gemini project. This also shows that at the time NASA needed only the best in their fields to help improve America's Space domination. The best scientists, engineers, inspectors, and more were needed.
The 4:50 mark however is where the film truly get's it start in explaining the process that goes into the construction of the Gemini III module, starting with the majority supplier to NASA's space program when we view in on the "McDonnel Space Center" in St. Louis, which is owned at that point by the McDonnell Spacecraft Incorporate company. What follows after that small tour of the floor of the Space Center is a show that centers around the construction, testing, and inspection of the Gemini III module that's being developed for NASA as well as inspections to help improve the technology. In fact, at 6:40 mark, the film starts to show each separate component of the module being tested and developed as well as the technology behind it that went into the construction of the module. From there all the way to the 14:00 minute mark you can see all that goes into the module fully, and how for 1963 some of the most advanced, and technology complicated feats of engineering went into the Gemini III.
While the film doesn't delve into all of the systems that go into the module fully, by 14:40 though it does take a brief glimpse into just one system and shows fully the amount of work goes into making sure that it's constructed to meet or exceed NASA's qualifications. All of which includes documentation, leak testing, calibration of the system, more documentation of those calibration, and even more testing before it's fully prepared.
By 17:50 all of that testing, calibration, and documentation is complete, and is slowly loaded onto an aircraft carrier to be delivered to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, where it will currently continue to be tested and prepared for its eventual flight into Space. As soon as it lands though, NASA quickly gets to work in looking for any damages that might have occurred during the flight delivery before running the Gemini III module through its own battery of tests. The last Six minutes of the film (at the 20:00 mark) continue to show the full construction of the Gemini III module atop the rocket, where NASA continues to make sure everything is put together fully well, and functional including tests on the spacesuits that the astronauts will be using on their flight to space. By the end of the film though, we see that all of that work that was put into the Module comes together for a success flight off into space.
This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD and 2k. For more information visit www.PeriscopeFilm.com

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5 июл 2016

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Комментарии : 101   
@Patriotgal1
@Patriotgal1 3 года назад
What an incredibly talented and competent group of Engineers, Mechanics, and Technicians.
@MatthewWilliams-tm2ku
@MatthewWilliams-tm2ku 2 года назад
I love science and technology.
@danischeel4846
@danischeel4846 3 года назад
Now that's thorough testing!
@shadovanish7435
@shadovanish7435 Год назад
These aerospace contractor films cover so much more of the testing & operational details regarding the space vehicles (for orbital & Moon flights) than any of the media presentations "for public consumption" would have ever done. The type & depth of information in these films was probably mainly for engineers & technicians that were part of the space program, or engineering colleges.
@dansv1
@dansv1 4 года назад
What stands out to me is that so much more than the capsule and rocket had to be designed and built. What a gigantic effort had to come together to be successful .
@ryanvandoren1519
@ryanvandoren1519 2 года назад
Yeah, not alot of people think about the logistics and infrastructure that goes on "behind the scenes."
@thomthumbe
@thomthumbe 3 года назад
I occasionally watch the videos of the space program today. It is neat stuff and all. The US of A is really making good progress in many programs. The new manned capsules look like the first class cabin in a major airline. Even 2001-ish. But I can sometime spend hours binge-watching the 1950 and 1960 aerospace programs. There is something “romantic” about the X-15, Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs that we lost along the way.
@weebgrinder
@weebgrinder 2 года назад
Imagine if the USSR had made mini documentaries like these at all crucial junctures of their spaceflight program! Would have a lot more to learn about.
@dandeeteeyem2170
@dandeeteeyem2170 3 года назад
There is more said in this film than most will ever understand. It's a record, a tip of the hat to future generations of people who are privileged enough to be allowed to peel back all the layers of knowledge and reveal ultimate truth. RIP Gus Grisham. RIP Neil Armstrong. Buz Adrian is already being painted as senile as a precaution, even though that man is still as sharp as a tack. The truth always finds a way to reveal itself. And it will.
@danielgregory3295
@danielgregory3295 Месяц назад
Grissom..😊❤
@tobyharper9462
@tobyharper9462 6 лет назад
My grandpa was an engineer on the Gemini projects.
@tedpeterson1156
@tedpeterson1156 6 лет назад
Chip Olmstead looks to me at this late date that once skinny ties went away everything went to shit.
@karthickcharanbm8256
@karthickcharanbm8256 4 года назад
Great...
@MrMitchellw16
@MrMitchellw16 2 года назад
Mine as well! He was a mechanical engineer working on gyroscopes and guidance projects with Honeywell. His teams designed systems for Minute Man missiles, Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, and general aviation applications. He seemed to know the answer to any question I could think of as a kid!
@duncanmckenzie2815
@duncanmckenzie2815 16 дней назад
Awesome documentary and a wonderful description of how complex a program the pre-Apollo Gemini program was. From the perspective of the technology of today it is incredible to see how the technicians of those days used slide rules and all of the technical drawings were completed by hand. It is also incredible to see the extent and nature of the testing that took place. The one awful thing was to see tobacco pipes and cigars being smoked in meetings; that's one thing I don't miss regarding those days!
@altfactor
@altfactor 4 года назад
Since the March 23rd, 1965 flight of Gemini 3 is included, this film was produced in 1965, not 1963. But still, a very interesting film.
@allgood6760
@allgood6760 3 года назад
Wow!.. thanks fir for this... I saw Gemini 12 on tour here in NZ 👍🇳🇿
@redastrachan8978
@redastrachan8978 7 лет назад
Great. I'm so glad these films were made. Thanks!
@robertmcintire9776
@robertmcintire9776 2 года назад
The final American astronaut to travel into space alone was Leroy Gordon Cooper, Jr.
@jamesanderton344
@jamesanderton344 4 года назад
Two guys in flammable space suits, soaking in pure oxygen for a couple of hours pre launch. The Titan 2 oxidizer was red fuming nitric acid....and no escape tower. If they had resorted to the ejection seats, you have to think that they would have come out of the capsule like flaming fireballs. Courage? You needed a ton of it in those days....
@miguelmouta5372
@miguelmouta5372 Год назад
They will soon learn with Apollo1.
@robertmcintire9776
@robertmcintire9776 2 года назад
The final Project Mercury flight was that of Leroy Gordon Cooper, Jr.
@NTRSN-Archive
@NTRSN-Archive 2 года назад
I love the voice recordings now today everything is in scene with overdrive background music .
@ryanvandoren1519
@ryanvandoren1519 2 года назад
Yep, the soft static behind the narration is what makes it for me. Can't stand today's over the top editing eith crazy audio and out of plane music.
@gerrittenberkdeboer7763
@gerrittenberkdeboer7763 7 месяцев назад
love these contents.
@zapfanzapfan
@zapfanzapfan 2 года назад
Maybe Boeing management should be forced to watch this film... :-)
@JackF99
@JackF99 Год назад
Amazing how similiarly things are run today, aircraft or spacecraft.
@dougcase7545
@dougcase7545 7 лет назад
It would have been a thrill to be a technician who got to sit in the spacecraft during the checkout, knowing it was going to carry astronauts shortly.
@rikspring
@rikspring Год назад
How beautiful, this gives a nice picture of the development of space travel. very interesting
@Johnny7051MC
@Johnny7051MC 7 лет назад
I still find it incredible that a man can sit in that tiny capsule for 14 days, such as Borman & Lovell did on Gemini 7, and not go completely insane, haha!! Holy shit that's a long time!! At least in Apollo, one could move around a little.
@TheAiurica
@TheAiurica 7 лет назад
Patience is a virtue... :D
@jamesanderton344
@jamesanderton344 4 года назад
Ya gotta think that is why they paired them again on Apollo 8
@lukestrawwalker
@lukestrawwalker 3 года назад
Now imagine trying to take a dump in there, floating just off the seat trying to tape a ziplock bag to your @ss, with another guy sitting 6 inches away from you, and of course anything that "got away" would be drifting around in there for days, and of course you gotta eat in there, sleep in there, and breathe in there... Why they said, "it was like living in a trash can for two weeks"... Later! OL J R :)
@almostfm
@almostfm 3 года назад
About 15 years ago, I got to sit in a boilerplate Gemini at Goddard. I'm 6' 2", and even with me in my street clothes and the seat padding removed, they could not have closed the hatch without my head getting in the way. It's why all the early astronauts were fairly short.
@robertcampbell6349
@robertcampbell6349 2 года назад
All astronauts were psychologically screened to ensure they could endure such a mission.
@JeffreyOrnstein
@JeffreyOrnstein 8 лет назад
Great film. Thanks.
@jsfbr
@jsfbr 6 лет назад
Impressive!
@douglasarcher199
@douglasarcher199 3 года назад
Super video! I applauded for $5.00 👏👏
@PeriscopeFilm
@PeriscopeFilm 3 года назад
Wow, thanks. This will help us continue to preserve rare films...
@johneddy908
@johneddy908 6 лет назад
McDonnell Aircraft, the prime contractor for Gemini, later merged with Douglas Aircraft Company and became McDonnell Douglas, today a Boeing heritage company.
@nicholasmaude6906
@nicholasmaude6906 4 года назад
Yup! And the McD corporate culture corrupted Boeing shortly afterwards.
@billenright2788
@billenright2788 Год назад
Born in '60, watched all the space race stuff. true space cadet.
@JeffGR4
@JeffGR4 7 лет назад
Okay, you guys are going to have to correct the year you noted of this NASA movie from 1963 to *1965*. The corrections need to be made in both the video title and video description. The movie made reference to the Gemini 3 flight in the past tense-that flight was on March 23, *1965*.
@brianhaygood183
@brianhaygood183 3 года назад
Also, they took the Gemini capsule to Cape Kennedy in this video. It was Cape Canaveral until after Kennedy's assassination in November of 1963, and it wasn't officially renamed until January 1964, so even that footage narration was at least 1964.
@jaminova_1969
@jaminova_1969 Месяц назад
I noted a similar discrepancy!
@agena6594
@agena6594 5 лет назад
The space industry has plenty of big balls. This is proof 6:32
@kellyweingart3692
@kellyweingart3692 4 года назад
lol
@marmaly
@marmaly 4 года назад
In summary, they test everything.
@MrZhefish
@MrZhefish 3 года назад
... a lot of times over and over again
@dandeeteeyem2170
@dandeeteeyem2170 3 года назад
And yet overlook the common knowledge that sparks cause fire in oxygen rich environments? 😅 You don't feel like this film reeks of over competition? Excusing a mistake before deliberately allowing it to happen? 🙄
@booklover6753
@booklover6753 2 года назад
@@dandeeteeyem2170 That fire was a result of engineering arrogance and an improperly calculated risk.
@dandeeteeyem2170
@dandeeteeyem2170 2 года назад
@@booklover6753 yeah I guess.. I'm pretty pessimistic when it comes to things the cia (oss) were capable of back then... 😏
@dandeeteeyem2170
@dandeeteeyem2170 2 года назад
@@booklover6753 plus the families have all said there were cia (oss?) personnel all over the facility, according to nasa staff who were there that day.
@therichieboy
@therichieboy 3 года назад
I always watch the titan Gemini launches and think they look like a backwards step in technology from the mercury atlas. Not sure why. Anyway, wonderful footage. So happy we have these archives available.
@PeriscopeFilm
@PeriscopeFilm 3 года назад
Love our channel? Help us save and post more orphaned films! Support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/PeriscopeFilm Even a really tiny contribution can make a difference.
@howiedewin3688
@howiedewin3688 3 года назад
I think Atlas had reliability issues.
@robertmcintire9776
@robertmcintire9776 2 года назад
The first American two person space flight was Gemini Three on March twenty third, nineteen sixty five.
@robertmcintire9776
@robertmcintire9776 2 года назад
The sixth and final manned Mercury spaceflight happened in May, nineteen sixty three.
@miguelmouta5372
@miguelmouta5372 Год назад
Cape Kennedy in march 1963? Isn’t it Cape Canaveral then?
@billruss6704
@billruss6704 2 года назад
A modern version would go like this, Big touch screen monitors are installed and the astronaut plugs in a usb with all flight information after entering the capsule.
@jaminova_1969
@jaminova_1969 Месяц назад
The official name change from Cape Canaveral to Cape Kennedy didn't occur until November 28, 1963, by an Executive Order by LBJ. 6 days after JFK's assassination. If the film was created in March 1963, perhaps the narration was changed after that date?
@minirock000
@minirock000 3 года назад
Besides the title problems you were able to synch the time stamps! Well almost synched.
@taketimeout2share
@taketimeout2share 7 лет назад
This is the absolutely most exciting times of the space race. Anything could happen in the next 10 seconds era. We were really going to go and visit the vastness of everywhere else in existence, frightening, fascinating and totally unknown, maybe see god far far off. Or something worse. Who knew? Now we just walk around looking at our frigging phones. Dull dull dull. The worse was always here. Religion.
@peglegnoid6139
@peglegnoid6139 7 лет назад
Analog , what could possibly go wrong.
@firestar7188
@firestar7188 3 года назад
Analog systems or digital systems it can all fail, nothing we built is 100% full proof
@stevennagley3407
@stevennagley3407 Год назад
@@firestar7188ummm nope you have digital and analog…. And being that this is a space program with communication, analog will give you promise
@arthurmartins5495
@arthurmartins5495 4 года назад
3:49 maluco desenhando e personal cientistas em geral
@veronicalogotheti1162
@veronicalogotheti1162 Год назад
Inside the atmosphere in not going out
@rkornilo
@rkornilo 3 года назад
I've long been curious - back in that time, where would one see these films?
@lukestrawwalker
@lukestrawwalker 3 года назад
As either an industry, contractor, NASA, or government insider... these films really weren't for the general public, but were to inform stakeholders in those organizations of the details or plans for the program so they could get a wider and more informed view of how the program and systems and operations worked. Later (probably significantly later) these videos might have been made available to museums or for other such "public exhibitions". Later! OL J R :)
@rkornilo
@rkornilo 3 года назад
luke strawwalker Ah, alright. Thanks. 👍
@dansv1
@dansv1 2 года назад
Great question.
@jedi1357
@jedi1357 7 лет назад
Here's a drinking game. Every time he says the word "test"...breathe.
@guthyranker1724
@guthyranker1724 5 лет назад
I took your advise and did Tequila shots, and when he used the word testing I slammed a beer instead. I made it to 8;53 then passed out in my chair.
@TheCrossroads533
@TheCrossroads533 6 лет назад
1965!!!
@roninscholar4515
@roninscholar4515 4 года назад
how comprehensive?
@ardeladimwit
@ardeladimwit 4 месяца назад
then came Apollo 1 where they apparently forgot all the safety checks and testing -- NASA never quite learned its lesson regarding testing and safety.
@dougalan5614
@dougalan5614 7 лет назад
Tests were conducted. Tests! Tests! TESTS!!!!!
@lukestrawwalker
@lukestrawwalker 3 года назад
But do you think they tested it?? LOL:) This was the fallacy of the shuttle program-- they thought once you got the thing up and running, it'd be as simple as a brief checkout, mate everything up again, refuel and resupply it and do whatever minor refurbishment was needed, load up and go again a week later (which was the ORIGINAL plan for shuttle, back when they had 50 flights a year as goal, after they realized they'd have to pare that down from the original 70 flights a year they started off planning for, which was utterly and completely unrealistic...) They figured they could build a spacecraft like a Piper Cub-- dump some avgas in it, do a walk around, jump behind the stick and give all the controls a wiggle test, and then take off and go. Spacecraft are too complicated and too highly engineered and brittle for that type of approach to ever work... Later! OL J R :)
@rcpilot9963
@rcpilot9963 3 года назад
So they checked all systems before each of flight carefully but during Gemini missions there were dozens or even hundreds of bigger and smaller malfunctions.
@almostfm
@almostfm 3 года назад
That's the thing with bleeding edge technology-you can test everything you can think of but actually using it always brings up issues. Also, given the nature of the tech at the time, it's possible for things to work during testing, but not continue working for the entire flight.
@sblack48
@sblack48 Год назад
@@almostfm i was in the aircraft industry for 3 decades. It’s still like that. Humans are fallible. Airplanes crash. Elon’s rockets blow up occasionally.
@edwardlecore141
@edwardlecore141 3 года назад
The things a nation must do to keep its nerds busy.
@almostfm
@almostfm 3 года назад
Of course, nerds (of all kinds) are why we've had cool things like computers, manned spaceflight, and the 426 Hemi.
@veronicalogotheti1162
@veronicalogotheti1162 Год назад
We have internet Still dont know electricity
@illumencouk
@illumencouk 2 года назад
The 'German-i' programme.
@veronicalogotheti1162
@veronicalogotheti1162 Год назад
In 1958 they sent a satellite Very basic
@sblack48
@sblack48 Год назад
When you look at all the manpower and complexity that went into just gemini, which was nowhere near as complex as apollo, it makes the hoaxers claims seem laughable
@fritagogo1
@fritagogo1 6 лет назад
:-)
@veronicalogotheti1162
@veronicalogotheti1162 Год назад
The american nasa freud
@greenseaships
@greenseaships 5 лет назад
All this time, these guys are breathing that 100% pure oxygen that killed the Apollo Astronauts. :/
@schalkespringer
@schalkespringer 5 лет назад
Gus who killed in the Apollo 1 fire we actually heavily involved in Gemini design(the "Gusmobile") and flew Gemini 3 along with John Young. 100% O was used in the Apollo CMD module cabin still during Apollo after the fire but in flight not on the ground/during tests(pure O was breathed during the tests through the PGAs(suits) loops). The pressurization was changed to vent during lift off to eliminate N in the cabin by the time the crew would remove their launch suits- crews prebreathed O which is why you see them carrying an O supply out with them in 'suitcases' to the launch pad.
@veronicalogotheti1162
@veronicalogotheti1162 Год назад
Never went outside earth
@veronicalogotheti1162
@veronicalogotheti1162 Год назад
And now to the moon A joke
@stevennagley3407
@stevennagley3407 Год назад
Not the moon now mars
@frankgathers4174
@frankgathers4174 Год назад
lmao
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