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Saturn I Program - All Flights, SA-1 to SA-10, Historical Documentary, Rocket, Apollo, NASA, HD 

Retro Space HD
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Documentary about the Saturn I program, entirely based on historical narration and footage. Covers early development and all ten flights (SA-1 to SA-10), from 1961 to 1965.
________________________________________________________
CHAPTERS
00:00 Intro
01:00 Origins
07:00 Saturn Project
10:17 Original Saturn I Configuration
19:45 Launch Complex 34 and 37
22:27 SA-1 (dummy 2nd and 3rd stages)
25:11 SA-2 (Project Highwater, dummy 2nd and 3rd stages)
27:20 SA-3 (Project Highwater, dummy 2nd and 3rd stages)
29:30 SA-4 (dummy 2nd and 3rd stages)
31:00 Saturn I Block II
35:09 SA-5 (live S-IV second stage)
37:03 SA-6 (Apollo Boilerplate 13)
40:43 SA-7 (Apollo Boilerplate 15)
42:09 SA-9 (Pegasus 1, Apollo Boilerplate 26)
44:40 SA-8 (Pegasus 2, Apollo Boilerplate 16)
46:05 SA-10 (Pegasus 3)
46:50 Program Conclusion
______________________________________________________
The footage was AI upscaled (Topaz AI) on some segments, besides the usual color correction. Ambient audio was recreated based on historical elements.
Sequences are shown in proper mission context as much as possible.
Historical narration (from post-flight presentation and mission commentary) is used in an attempt to capture the feeling of the times. Language and attitudes should be seen in that context.
Research, cleanup, editing, and processing by Retro Space HD.
============================================
The Saturn I (pronounced "Saturn 1") was a rocket designed as the United States' first medium-lift launch vehicle for up to 20,000-pound (9,100 kg) low Earth orbit payloads. The rocket's first stage was built as a cluster of propellant tanks engineered from older rocket tank designs, leading critics to jokingly refer to it as "Cluster's Last Stand".
Its development was taken over from the Advanced Research Projects Agency in 1958 by the newly-formed civilian NASA. Its design proved sound and flexible. It was successful in initiating the development of liquid hydrogen-fueled rocket propulsion, launching the Pegasus satellites, and flight verification of the Apollo command and service module launch phase aerodynamics.
Ten Saturn I rockets were flown before it was replaced by the heavy-lift derivative Saturn IB, which used a larger, higher total impulse second stage and an improved guidance and control system. It also led the way to the development of the super-heavy lift Saturn V which carried the first men to landings on the Moon in the Apollo program.
President John F. Kennedy identified the Saturn I, and the SA-5 launch in particular, as being the point where US lift capability would surpass the Soviets, after being behind since Sputnik
=========================================
A special thanks to the channel supporters ( / retrospacehd ):
Asbjørn
Bathypterois
Drew Granston
Francis Bernier
Gary Smith
Gio Pagliari
Glenn W. Hussey
Jan Strzelecki
Jeff Pleimling
Jules E
Kevin Spencer
Martin J Lollar
Michael Pennington
Nathan Koga
Noah Soderquist
Rick Durr
Ryan Hardy
Scott Manley
========================================
#saturn #rocket #apollo

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29 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 120   
@thomasgreen3060
@thomasgreen3060 2 года назад
I'm going to sound like a drama queen and weirdo, but what the space program did in this era is probably one of the best, most pure things our Country has ever done.
@qetoun
@qetoun Год назад
Destroying the Empires of Japan and the German Reich and standing up to Global Communism wasn't bad either.
@nutsackmania
@nutsackmania Год назад
agreed
@RWBHere
@RWBHere Год назад
It was mostly motivated by politics, as it is today.
@TheSeeker1960
@TheSeeker1960 Год назад
@@RWBHere At least Ike made it non military
@chrisbolland5634
@chrisbolland5634 Год назад
Minus employing NAZIs to get it done... but yeah It's pretty... 'Americana'
@hifi6638
@hifi6638 5 месяцев назад
Just discovered this posting of Saturn I history! Fabulous, thank you! I can add a little backstory. My father was Launch Director for SA’s 8, 9, and 10. The Pegasus launches. Normally Von Braun was the LD. But the data needed from the Pegasus was so critical to Apollo that N.A.S.A. HQ removed VB and sent my dad down to the Cape from HQ in DC. He trained under Kurt Deebus who was Director of operations there. VB was not happy and insisted on being present. He was, but on a visitor pass. During launch countdown there was a problem getting Pegasus battery to full charge. During the long “Hold” VB began pressuring that it was good enough and to launch. Dad refused, saying he would not launch a dead satellite and reminded VB he was there as a visitor. The team decided to try something we all know today but was new back then. They drained the battery of all charge and started a new charge cycle. It went to full charge. The Hold was released, count resumed, launch successful of the working satellite. I have a picture collection made by mom from the official photographs telling the story of the activity at Launch Control in the blockhouse. After that launch VB never interfered again. I believe at 46:45 that is VB congratulating Dad on the completion of the successful launches.
@hakangustavsson3538
@hakangustavsson3538 Месяц назад
Thanks for sharing!
@hifi6638
@hifi6638 Месяц назад
@@hakangustavsson3538 Welcome! Later this month I’m starting a Substack with title “Tales from the Space Age”. A family level view of the 1950s through early 1970s, from NACA to NASA. A childs perspective growing up in an inner Space Agency family.
@HowToSpacic
@HowToSpacic 2 года назад
I always love the excited whoops of joy from the controllers when the Saturn 1 flew for the first time
@Valery0p5
@Valery0p5 Год назад
Me too, I remembered someone mentioned it in a documentary and came here it to hear it. While a documentary made with the voices of the era and this kind of editing is really interesting, the use of AI upscaling is really noticable; most of the images feel washed out, and you loose details instead of gaining them. I would have preferred the raw footage, maybe with a less heavy noise reduction algorithm applied. Those white and purple rockets, those faces that look like paintings, the drawing board with unrecognizable drawings, my eyes couldn't handle it.
@1959Edsel
@1959Edsel Год назад
I love the sixfold symmetry of the original S-IV, and the shots of its engines firing up are beautiful.
@topsecret1837
@topsecret1837 Год назад
Sure, although those RL10s sure were underpowered.
@wooferhound7571
@wooferhound7571 Год назад
Am working at the Space & Rocket Center in Huntsville Alabama. We have a Saturn 1 standing up in the Rocket Garden in the back of the Museum. I learned more about that rocket in this video than I learned working as a Guide over there for a year.
@dwmzmm
@dwmzmm 2 года назад
To this day, I'd say the Saturn SA-5 is the best looking, sexiest Saturn vehicle ever. Great footages and rundown on the Saturn history! Thanks for sharing.
@andreabindolini7452
@andreabindolini7452 Год назад
I completely agree! Finally I'm not alone anymore!
@maxwellwalcher6420
@maxwellwalcher6420 Год назад
@@andreabindolini7452 what Saturn rocket you like.
@andreabindolini7452
@andreabindolini7452 Год назад
@@maxwellwalcher6420 Generally speaking, the 1/1B family is very handsome
@harbingerdawn
@harbingerdawn Год назад
I'm partial to the 1B myself :) though nothing will ever top the sexiness of Gemini-Titan, that is the most beautiful LV/spacecraft combo of all time
@andreabindolini7452
@andreabindolini7452 Год назад
@@harbingerdawn Is neat. And those hypergolic exhausts are fascinating, albeit a little too toxic ;-)
@ohheyitskevinc
@ohheyitskevinc 2 года назад
Great footage as always! Thought I’d read and knew everything about the Saturn vehicles, but then you go and find yet more ~60 year old footage and I’m back to square 1 ;)
@RetroSpaceHD
@RetroSpaceHD 2 года назад
It takes a lot of time to sort the footage, but it's worth it. There's enough to recreate most of the flight in detail!
@ChatGPT1111
@ChatGPT1111 Год назад
Me as well. I knew about Saturn I coming before V (which my dad worked on as a physicist) but I had no idea the magnitude of the program and how advanced it was just a decade or so after WWII.
@dinofrangiamore
@dinofrangiamore Год назад
Great stuff, I was familiar with these early Saturn rockets but knew next to nothing about their tests and history and all they did to make the Saturn V a success. Thank you!
@TastyBusiness
@TastyBusiness 2 года назад
Wicked cool! I've never seen such in-depth detail about the early Saturn rocket family.
@fratercontenduntocculta8161
My dad got to witness the entire Apollo program on TV, now he gets to watch us go back to the moon with his grown 40 year old son!
@drmarkintexas-400
@drmarkintexas-400 Год назад
🏆🏆🏆👍🇺🇲🙏 I lived thru this time and missed school every morning if each launch. Thank you for sharing
@wirksworthsrailway
@wirksworthsrailway Год назад
Just a wonderful compilation, carefully done and with fascinating insights. Thank you!
@MrJackHackney
@MrJackHackney Год назад
Saturns were amazing. Had not seen much of this footage before. Thank you.
@jaycarlson927
@jaycarlson927 Год назад
Great job in bringing some history and video never before covered but still very interesting to us out here. Thank you
@tumbullweed
@tumbullweed 2 года назад
Out of this world again excellent video as always
@ABFerrelli
@ABFerrelli Год назад
Very well put together!
@ultrametric9317
@ultrametric9317 2 года назад
This is just fantastic!!!! Thanks!!!
@Rehash84
@Rehash84 5 месяцев назад
Outstanding upload, thanks
@denniscruz4991
@denniscruz4991 2 года назад
this was amazing!
@TarcisoVieiradeMelo
@TarcisoVieiradeMelo Год назад
Very good doc. Keep the good work!
@Andrew-13579
@Andrew-13579 Год назад
So, the last Apollo command module in orbit was apparently July 8th, 1989 !! Saturn 1, SA-8, mission AS-104. The Apollo BP-26 craft was launched into orbit on May 26, 1965 and ended with its reentry on July 8th, 1989. A 24-year flight! It was a derelict boilerplate CM for most of that time. The longest Apollo flight. 🙂
@russellg1473
@russellg1473 Год назад
Very useful light research for my rp-1/RO play through on kerbal space program. Thank you!
@basfinnis
@basfinnis Год назад
Funny seeing Eisenhower alongside Von Braun. Great video 😉
@andreabindolini7452
@andreabindolini7452 Год назад
SA-5 was a beauty.
@west-tek165
@west-tek165 6 месяцев назад
Bellissimo🤩!!
@nutsackmania
@nutsackmania Год назад
Excellent!
@3ccdmike
@3ccdmike Год назад
Thank you.
@RideAcrossTheRiver
@RideAcrossTheRiver Год назад
Interesting how the early flights had ignition at T+0 and then launch at T+5. Later on, ignition was moved up into the last seconds of countdown and T+0 became the moment of launch.
@eddjordan2399
@eddjordan2399 Год назад
this is great
@codyhilton1750
@codyhilton1750 Год назад
My all time favorite rocket = The Saturn.
@RCAvhstape
@RCAvhstape Год назад
41:12 that film of the astronauts watching the launch while leaning against the car with the top down is so cool.
@Paul1958R
@Paul1958R Год назад
Cooper, Shepard, White, McDivitt, Schweickart, Slayton. Perhaps others
@randy25rhoads
@randy25rhoads Год назад
5:40 I had no idea the satellite was spun up before it even launched!
@maxwellwalcher6420
@maxwellwalcher6420 2 года назад
all the Saturn rockets cool.
@maxwellwalcher6420
@maxwellwalcher6420 2 года назад
would you do all Saturn 5 launches.
@MrGlenbo357mag
@MrGlenbo357mag 2 года назад
Don't forget about Saturn IB as well.
@RetroSpaceHD
@RetroSpaceHD 2 года назад
It's on the to-do list ;)
@RetroSpaceHD
@RetroSpaceHD 2 года назад
It's on the to-do list, but Saturn V test flights deserve their own video ;-)
@maxwellwalcher6420
@maxwellwalcher6420 2 года назад
@@RetroSpaceHD what Did you like on the Saturn rockets.
@NOM-X
@NOM-X 6 месяцев назад
Just imagine if SpaceX was around back then, lol my email would come to me on the Moon or Mars. Space exploration is one of the best things that happend to this World, (besides the 20K + peices of garbage in LEO). I hope people watch this 40 years from now, they probably wount blink, or laugh their ass off. Love the episode! - Will
@leokimvideo
@leokimvideo Год назад
I did laugh how the reference to ICBM rockets are related to the Saturn, well let's not forget the actual daddy, THE WW2 V2 German rocket weapon.
@KayoMichiels
@KayoMichiels Год назад
love the thinking behind the the design of the Saturn I... can't built a rocket big enough? Take 1 Juno rocket, strap 8 Redstone rockets around it, add a support structure to the base.. add 8 RL-10 engines and you have the basis of the Saturn I!
@marktercsak9728
@marktercsak9728 Год назад
Saturn I and Saturn V are two different systems, the V is much larger, but the Saturn I just looks so cool.
@jacksons1010
@jacksons1010 11 месяцев назад
Not entirely different. The S-IVB, Instrument Unit and the upper shroud were common to both Saturn IB and Saturn V.
@kbarrett63
@kbarrett63 Год назад
IMO the BIGGEST step in rocketry was to go from 10k ..100K and then create > 1.25M thrust !!
@TheRealLaughingGravy
@TheRealLaughingGravy Год назад
It's interesting how they used TV cameras on these uncrewed rockets to monitor events in real-time, but the U.S. didn't broadcast live TV from a manned spacecraft until Apollo 7 in 1968.
@Valery0p5
@Valery0p5 Год назад
22:20 SA-1 Launch. "Go man! Go!"
@nicholasmaude6906
@nicholasmaude6906 8 месяцев назад
The Saturn S-I block I and block II rockets were missed opportunities for NASA, once they'd finished their contributions to project Apollo they could've been continued as satellite launchers with Saturn I block II with a live Centaur third-stage would've made an excellent interplanetary space-probe launcher.
@RYZ11659
@RYZ11659 5 месяцев назад
The U.S. SPACE PROGRAM in a short period of time did a lot from Mercury,Gemini,and finally Apollo. Now it's Artemis, and God Bless Those Brave Astronauts.
@PhillipMorton
@PhillipMorton 6 месяцев назад
Good work. My only minor criticism is that the up-scaling was a bit harsh in some spots.
@dougball328
@dougball328 8 дней назад
At about the 40 minute mark a camera just below the S-IV stage shows the Rl10-A3 engines. Upon staging, you can see what look like 'stools' that were beneath each nozzle? Were these part of the precooling process? Or some other reason? They certainly weren't structural in nature (I don't think)
@AlfieGoodrich
@AlfieGoodrich Год назад
Amazing to think that precisely one week after Kennedy's visit, he be dead.
@constellation982
@constellation982 3 месяца назад
If You are impressed with spacex pace, just look at this footage. What was possible if we only commit.
@foxmccloud7055
@foxmccloud7055 2 года назад
The difference between the Saturn I and Saturn IB lies in the second stage where the Saturn I had eight engines on the second stage whereas the Saturn IB had a single J-2 engine.
@andreabindolini7452
@andreabindolini7452 Год назад
Aside from the single J-2 instead of the six RL-10 engines, the S-IVB second stage on the Saturn Ib was also far larger than the S-IV in terms of propellant capacity. Also, the first stage was stretched (and the fins reduced) and the engines, that were made more powerful, were rearranged, with the turbopump exhausts of the inboard engines, that previously were on the side of the rocket, repositioned on the bottom. You can see the difference at launch: all Saturn I had those fancy "fountains of fire" externally to the main exhausts, while the Saturn Ib (except, I believe, for the first) didn't have them. The result was a launch vehicle that had over twice the payload of the previous version, though an hypotetical, current day, Saturn-Ib (if the production was never halted) would have probably returned to the RL-10 on the second stage, because of the higher efficiency of those engines.
@dubsy1026
@dubsy1026 Год назад
@@andreabindolini7452 I'd guess a modern S-IVb would have big TWR issues with RL-10s
@andreabindolini7452
@andreabindolini7452 Год назад
@@dubsy1026 Possibily, but with, let's say, five "Vinci" engines it would have the same total thrust with far better specific impulse.
@tvre0
@tvre0 7 месяцев назад
@@dubsy1026less than one twr is okay for upper stages.
@wrightmf
@wrightmf Год назад
All flights of Saturn were successful as compared to Atlas, Titan, others which were common to have explosions. While Saturn had its problems but nothing like the others. Which I wonder if Von Braun's team laid out a design that allows component and subsystem testing, along with resources (money and manpower) to test each item and combined systems. Maybe other rockets had certain inherent designs that didn't allow for that. Or maybe it's because Jupiter, Redstone, Atlas, Titan were urgent wartime rockets pressed into service. While Saturn was not intended as a weapons carrier so not the schedule pressures. Any comments about this?
@RetroSpaceHD
@RetroSpaceHD Год назад
Saturn was designed for human flight from the start, so it had to be very reliable. The previous rockets were basically mass-produced missiles with much higher failure rates (acceptable for military purposes).
@765kvline
@765kvline 5 месяцев назад
So much had been subsequently learned from the early development of the MX-774 program (the father of Atlas) and Thor/Jupiter programs, Redstone, so this gained technical experience and insight certainly helped guide Saturn development. It's truly amazing what had been learned from these earlier programs when knowledge was sparse and everything was a "first try" kind of progress.
@wrightmf
@wrightmf 5 месяцев назад
@@765kvline good mention, I read Atlas program was something like $40 billion (yes a B) in 1959 dollars. With that kind of money you can hire all sorts of engineers to do all sorts of stuff. Then take what worked.
@765kvline
@765kvline 5 месяцев назад
@@wrightmf I'm old enough to remember how the Titan program was criticized as a "duplication" of the Atlas ICBM program. However, the Titan program offered new experience in missile design, especially with the advance of being able to start and re-start a second stage in the vacuum of space. The young of today, have no concept of how everything was a pioneering effort with little experience. By the time the Saturn and (short-lived) Nova launch vehicle programs were inaugurated, technology was considerably advanced by Redstone (1953), Thor, Jupiter, Atlas and Titan vehicles, not to mention Agena and Centaur series (1962).
@wrightmf
@wrightmf 5 месяцев назад
@@765kvline There is a short YT video of film footage from 1960s showing collapse of an Atlas missile on a launch pad at Vandenberg, I don't remember details in description but it looked like pressurization of fuel tanks failed. As you know, that missile held its shape like a pressurized balloon. I was thinking a general would tell an airman to get a truck and drive down to the Convair plant in San Diego to get another Atlas. They were making them like sausages on an assembly line back then. So you lose a missile, just buy another one.
@RamblyRRR-ih4vz
@RamblyRRR-ih4vz День назад
SA-1 LAUNCH 22:50
@RamblyRRR-ih4vz
@RamblyRRR-ih4vz День назад
i ment 22:57
@andycampbell91
@andycampbell91 Месяц назад
@jollyjohnthepirate3168
@jollyjohnthepirate3168 Год назад
Most of the early rocketry work was designed to launch thermonuclear warheads at the enemies of the superpowers. Mercury used Redstone and Atlas rockets. Gemini us modified Titan rockets. The Soviets used their Vostock rockets but their inability to build something like Saturn doomed their Lunar missions.
@beenaplumber8379
@beenaplumber8379 10 месяцев назад
But their R7 rocket booster system is far, FAR more successful than anything we've ever launched. It launched Sputnik, and it's still sending crew and supplies to the International Space Station. They had their early problems, but they just kept improving their design instead of trying to design something new every few years.
@scottdevaney3928
@scottdevaney3928 10 месяцев назад
Only thing that comes close is space x bosters landing
@ssnoc
@ssnoc Год назад
The entire space program was based upon military defense - the programs were marketed as exploration/science for the public and easier funding, but in reality we were testing (as we still do today) the delivery systems for bombs. The program has grown into a Multi Billion dollar business for satellite communications and other surveillance deployment.
@RetroSpaceHD
@RetroSpaceHD Год назад
Early launches yes, but when you reach the point where a rocket need days of preparation at the pad, it becomes useless as weapon ;-)
@johngaltline9933
@johngaltline9933 8 месяцев назад
The Redstones and Titans used in Mercury and Gemini were repurposed ICBM rockets... the military didn't learn much from those programs as they were the ones that did the major development of the rockets in the first place. The multi stage version of the Titan used for Gemini didn't really offer any useful capability for military purposes. The Saturn rockets were far beyond useful for military purposes when they already had perfectly good ICBMs that could reach their targets at much lower cost and with much quicker launch times. You don't need to reach orbit to get wherever you need an ICBM to get to, never mind another stage on top of that. The Saturn program is completely useless for the military. A debate could be had about if the space program was backed more for the actual, stated, goals, or if it was just a good way to pump a lot of money in to companies that also provided for the military, but the Saturn/Apollo programs them selves didn't provide much of use for the military.
@brettbuck7362
@brettbuck7362 4 месяца назад
No. The military space program didn't use anything shown here, and the Titan II/Titan III/Titan 34/Titan IV were used instead of the Saturn1/1b, with similar capabilites but much less expensive.
@scottdevaney3928
@scottdevaney3928 10 месяцев назад
If Chrysler built some of the engines..how come nobody asked.. THAT THING GOT A HEMI IN IT?
@sproctor1958
@sproctor1958 Год назад
Ah... the heady early days of spaceflight where mistakes made, were lessons learned and applied. SpaceX is recreating that atmosphere once more with their Starship/Super Heavy work.
@maxieduardoapariciom.3181
@maxieduardoapariciom.3181 9 месяцев назад
So where is the V2 from the germans.
@johanvangelderen6715
@johanvangelderen6715 4 месяца назад
In museums
@harbingerdawn
@harbingerdawn 2 года назад
1:28 "First true space flight" such beautifully typical propaganda of the time :)
@the_jcbone
@the_jcbone 2 года назад
0:31 "free of gravity"… yeah…
@RideAcrossTheRiver
@RideAcrossTheRiver Год назад
When was there an intentional space flight before 1949?
@harbingerdawn
@harbingerdawn Год назад
@@RideAcrossTheRiver In 1944. The US also conducted numerous spaceflights with captured V-2s prior to 1949, including taking the first photo of Earth from space in 1946 and first panorama in 1947. 1947 also saw the first animals sent into space (fruit flies).
@RideAcrossTheRiver
@RideAcrossTheRiver Год назад
@@harbingerdawn Right, but why do you say "propaganda"?
@harbingerdawn
@harbingerdawn Год назад
@@RideAcrossTheRiver Because it was not the first spaceflight and they knew it, they themselves had conducted spaceflights prior to that. The only potentially unique thing they could have been referring to is first flight to space, or first scientific flight, using a domestically designed and built rocket. By calling it "the first true spaceflight" when the origin of the rocket is the only major milestone conveys the message that earlier spaceflights using foreign rockets or by foreign countries "don't count" as spaceflights. A government production knowingly marginalizing historical facts and inserting its own interpretation of history which attributes a historical event solely to its own efforts rather than efforts made by foreigners can quite reasonably be labeled as propaganda.
@coreyandnathanielchartier3749
Back in the days in America when they taught physics, chemistry, calculus and drafting in high school. It's all social-engineering garbage now.
@lazynow1
@lazynow1 Год назад
HaHA...now rockets are designed by women and EEOC hires....now NASA has no rockets...its all Space X
@robertoroberto9798
@robertoroberto9798 Год назад
SLS?
@lazynow1
@lazynow1 Год назад
@@robertoroberto9798 SLS....well everything said still applies , but the SLS has only launched once with crazy delays and cost over runs...Space X is killing it
@robertoroberto9798
@robertoroberto9798 Год назад
@@lazynow1 Delays are needed if you want to launch successfully 100% of the time. So far, Starship had 3 failed engines from the start because Musk didn’t think adding a water deluge or fire ramp was needed.
@lazynow1
@lazynow1 Год назад
@@robertoroberto9798 just keep talking because you sound foolish
@richardcosse2493
@richardcosse2493 Год назад
Excellent!
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