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Seconds From Disaster | STS-27 PART 2 And the STS-71 Missions | Hoot Gibson EPISODE 3 

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Hoot Gibson and the final part of the STS-27 Top Secret Mission and STS-71, the Space Shuttle and MIR space Station docking in space for the first time.
STS-71 was the third mission of the US/Russian Shuttle-Mir Program and the first Space Shuttle docking to the Russian space station Mir. It started on June 27, 1995, with the launch of Space Shuttle Atlantis from Launchpad 39A at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The Shuttle delivered a relief crew of two cosmonauts Anatoly Solovyev and Nikolai Budarin to the station and recovered Increment astronaut Norman Thagard. Atlantis returned to Earth on July 7 with a crew of eight. It was the first of seven straight missions to Mir flown by Atlantis, and the second Shuttle mission to land with an eight-person crew after STS-61-A in 1985.
For the five days the Shuttle was docked to Mir they were the largest spacecraft in orbit at the time. STS-71 marked the first docking of a Space Shuttle to a space station, the first time a Shuttle crew switched members with the crew of a station and the 100th crewed space launch by the United States. The mission carried Spacelab and included a logistical resupply of Mir. Together the Shuttle and station crews conducted various on-orbit joint US/Russian life science investigations with Spacelab along with the Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment-II (SAREX-II) experiment.
HOOT GIBSON SERIES SEASON 1:
EPISODE 01: • The Real TOPGUN | Robe...
EPISODE 01 EXTENDED: • The Man Who Can Fly An...
EPISODE 02: • Seconds From Disaster ...
EPISODE 03: • Seconds From Disaster ...
EPISODE 04: • Hoot Gibson's Hangar #...
EPISODE 05: • The Man Who Can Fly An...
EPISODE 06: • The Man Who Can Fly An...
EPISODE 07: • The Man Who Can Fly An...
EPISODE 08: • TRAINING AND COMBAT. H...
EPISODE 09: • Shooting MiGs In Vietn...
EPISODE 10: • From The F-14 Tomcat T...
EPISODE 11: • The Space Shuttle Chal...
EPISODE 12: • Investigating Accident...
EPISODE 13: • Fatal Accident | Hoot ...
EPISODE 14: COMING SOON
FULL PLAYLIST: • The Man Who Can Fly An...
The primary objectives of this flight were to rendezvous and perform the first docking between the Space Shuttle and the Russian Space Station Mir on June 29. In the first U.S.-Russian(Soviet) docking in twenty years, Atlantis delivered a relief crew of two cosmonauts Anatoly Solovyev and Nikolai Budarin to Mir.[1]
Other prime objectives were on-orbit joint United States of America-Russian life sciences investigations aboard SPACELAB/Mir, logistical resupply of the Mir and recovery of US astronaut Norman E. Thagard.
Secondary objectives included filming with the IMAX camera and the Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment-II (SAREX-II) experiment.[1]
STS-71 was the 100th U.S. human space launch conducted from Cape Canaveral, the first U.S. Space Shuttle-Russian Space Station docking and joint on-orbit operations; largest spacecraft ever in orbit; and the first on-orbit changeout of Shuttle crew.
The rendezvous sequence began at 15:32:19 EDT with a lift-off in-plane with Mir's orbit, at the opening of the 10 minute 19 second launch window. Ascent was nominal with no OMS 1 burn required.[1] The OMS 2 burn, initiated at 42 minutes 58 seconds Mission Elapsed Time, adjusted the orbit to 160 x 85.3 nautical miles. It was the lowest ever perigee altitude flown by an orbiter.[2] This facilitated a very rapid initial catch up rate with Mir of about 880 nautical miles per orbit.[3] Almost three hours later the orbit was raised to more typical values of 210 x 159 nautical miles by the OMS 3 burn.
Hoot Gibson’s Hangar, aviation’s premier podcast, hosted by America’s premier aviator, Hoot Gibson, “The Man That Can Fly Anything."
Don’t miss a single episode. Video podcast air exclusively on Air2AirTV and aviation’s premier RU-vid channel - Dronescapes, producing aircraft documentaries, exclusive stories and interviews from veterans, pilots and aces, in their own words. WWII missions, Vietnam's stories and much more!
Hoot Gibson’s Hangar audio podcast can be downloaded from all top podcast directories: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Amazon Music, iHeartRadio, TuneIn Alexa, Overcast, PocketCast, Castro, Castbox, Podchaser and many more.
You can also download the audio podcast on Air2AirTV by clicking on the RESOURCE tab below each episode.
00:00 Introduction
01:10 Secret Mission STS-27
01:39 The Pentagon
02:48 Top Secret Movie
08:58 STS-71 The MIR Docking
#spaceshuttle #nasa #spaceshuttle

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15 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 128   
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
Watch ALL Hoot Gibson's episodes at: ru-vid.com/group/PLBI4gRjPKfnO5CF3r1r0FHXLAytdsO-J-
@executivesteps
@executivesteps 2 месяца назад
Where did my comments go?
@Willysmb44
@Willysmb44 Год назад
I got to spend a week with Hoot at Space Camp. He's not only an amazingly accomplished pilot and astronaut, he's a very nice person and doesn't come across as full of himself, even though he's earned the right to be so. I asked him what he would have said on 27 if he felt the orbiter departing, and he wouldn't say, but he's said in the past he had some choice words for Houston before they all came apart if a hole burned in the orbiter as Columbia did years later....
@glenncooper3524
@glenncooper3524 Год назад
I can see him not revealing what he would of said as it wouldn't be as epic if it was really happening, plus a horrible thing to imagine, so Ican see him not wanting to do that. I really like Hoot
@djpalindrome
@djpalindrome Месяц назад
What a humble, down to earth guy. Famous astronaut hero goes to Space Camp and also accepts a post-retirement job with Southwest Airlines as a first officer (then captain)
@justinmurphy2227
@justinmurphy2227 Год назад
What a gift this story/interview is! I never thought we would be able to actually be told this amount of details. Thankfully Hoot it an AMAZING detailed and articulated storyteller. He literally makes me feel and understand that every movement and action was of the up most importance. And they were! Thank you sir, Hoot, for yours and your crews service not only to the US but to the! 🌎❤
@DashPar
@DashPar 8 месяцев назад
Hoot is a great pilot, and even a better stand up guy!
@citizenblue
@citizenblue Год назад
I wish I could give more thumbs up! This is not widely known, even among many shuttle fans.
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
👍🙏🙏
@brianvernon7754
@brianvernon7754 3 месяца назад
this man is just pure class
@tomstrum6259
@tomstrum6259 Год назад
Just a Fantastic, Shuttle Commander with the Right "Stuff" & professional Humbleness !!
@omarjohnson3411
@omarjohnson3411 Год назад
Met Hoot at Clover Field. The shenanigans back then were outrageous.! Mark L, Bruce B, etc and the letters from airport owner about aerobatics.... Man is a legend!
@EdWeibe
@EdWeibe 3 месяца назад
to think we all got along. Being former ground support for some of this stuff, this is pure gold to me. Thank you for this series. I mean it. As support we dont always get to see or appreciate the skills of the people in the mission itself. We know of them, but we never really get to hear how difficult this stuff really is or was. I had served in the program from just after Apollo Soyuz, Voyager flybys, STS 1 through to the last Shuttle flight safety stuff and so on. Its a thankless job. Your the only one who really see's what your doing is the neatest thing ever and you go home.
@lawrencestrabala6146
@lawrencestrabala6146 3 месяца назад
Hoot is one of the legends of space
@pranavsaxena4861
@pranavsaxena4861 Год назад
Need more astronaut stories. Cmdr. Chris Hadfield would be awesome
@neilhaas
@neilhaas Год назад
Love Space flight exploration. A journey into Space.❤😊
@57Jimmy
@57Jimmy Год назад
These two video interviews had me riveted! If anything I was hurling through space on was likely to fail…I would want ‘Hoot’ to be the one to see us through! Greatly appreciated! Thanks!🇨🇦
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
Glad you enjoyed it!
@theflyingfool
@theflyingfool Год назад
Excellent little series thank you!
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
Thank you 🙏
@JohnR3214
@JohnR3214 Год назад
I had the privilege of flying once or twice in Hoot's backseat in the F-14, fun to fly with and a great pilot.
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
Wow!
@bille9995
@bille9995 3 месяца назад
Big "SALUTE" to you Mr. Gibson and your crews! You are blessed with an intelligence level most of us don't have. And you used it for your country. BRAVO! THANK YOU FOR YOUR BRAVERY!
@awesomemcawesomeshorts9531
@awesomemcawesomeshorts9531 Год назад
The payload was USA-34, since identified as Lacrosse 1. It is the first of 5 intelligence satellites in the Lacrosse family. It's a reconnaissance satellite, using synthetic aperture radar. It has the ability to see through cloud cover, and may possess the ability to see through soil.
@jayrod9979
@jayrod9979 Год назад
"May" be able to see through soil
@awesomemcawesomeshorts9531
@awesomemcawesomeshorts9531 Год назад
@@jayrod9979 I said may because my resource wasn’t definitive. It wouldn’t surprise me though, what with all the secrecy surrounding the satellite and its capabilities.
@jayrod9979
@jayrod9979 Год назад
@@awesomemcawesomeshorts9531 I "may" or "may not" understand what you are saying ;)
@awesomemcawesomeshorts9531
@awesomemcawesomeshorts9531 Год назад
@@jayrod9979 ah. I possibly understand
@faktisletztenendes
@faktisletztenendes 3 месяца назад
He can tell beautiful stories in a very interesting way, I like his tone and his unpretentious narration. 👍
@tomandsamuel
@tomandsamuel Год назад
Absolutely loved these interviews. Fascinating guy and career! Thank you
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
👍👍🙏
@chumpster69
@chumpster69 Год назад
I could listen to this guy talk all day long... Great interview, and a fascintating set of stories. Thank you!
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
Glad you enjoyed it! Do not miss the other episodes on the channel and the upcoming ones as well
@James-kk8dw
@James-kk8dw Год назад
Had the pleasure of getting to know Steve Nagel after doing the annual on his 1946 Taylorcraft. Amazingly humble man. It seems to be a character trait of great pilots and astronauts, always giving credit to the rest of the crew no matter how invaluable they were to the mission. Teamwork at its finest.
@jamesrobert4106
@jamesrobert4106 4 месяца назад
If this was a story in a comic book, these recollections would seem impossible. 😮 What an extraordinary gentleman.
@rob737700
@rob737700 Год назад
I had the pleasure of getting to know Hoot at the airline that we both worked at. NIcest gentleman that you'd ever meet, and fascinating to chat with. One of our best, for sure.
@wpflesh6510
@wpflesh6510 Год назад
Look,Hoot is probably right behind Captain Crippen as my 2nd favorite shuttle astronaut but the way he says “we dont put weaponry in space” has me thinking we totally do have weaponry in space…..anyway great series here i enjoy hearing stories from all the shuttle astronauts
@JinKee
@JinKee Год назад
We don't put weapons in space... but we totally use any weapons we find up there!
@peterfireflylund
@peterfireflylund Год назад
There might be some anti satellite weapons up there but there isn’t much point in anything else. Spy sats, on the other hand, make a ton of sense.
@belvert1
@belvert1 Год назад
Hoot and Crip? What, no Massimino?
@knowsmebyname
@knowsmebyname Год назад
He has no idea. He was briefed on one mission 30 years ago.
@BCaldwell
@BCaldwell Год назад
Yes...... Man.......
@flyingfortressrc1794
@flyingfortressrc1794 Год назад
Such a fantastic interview. Thank you for your service to our country Hoot.
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
👍🙏
@craigfdavis
@craigfdavis Год назад
Let's give credit to Mustard for those great Buran cgi mockups. I love that channel!
@pcar928fan
@pcar928fan Год назад
My mom was good friends with Guy Gardner’s mom and I got to meet Guy and have lunch with him back in ‘98 in DC! What a cool guy and an amazing mission!
@glenncooper3524
@glenncooper3524 Год назад
Wow this is an awesome interview. I've seen a couple with Hoot Gibson before. They were great, this is even better. I really like Hoot, and to hear these missions with such great detail. I want to hit repeat, so I make sure I didn't miss anything. Definitely hitting watch later also!!
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
Cool, thanks!
@jude999
@jude999 9 дней назад
An interviewer who does not interurupt every five seconds, and makes it about the interviewee, not hiimself! What a concept! How can you rendevouz with a satellite traveling 17,000 miles an hour?? I wonder how the sense of speed is perceived with no atmosphere and no reference point. All of this is beyond my comprehension. And I can't even stay cool in coach. This guy is the best America has to offer.
@johnschaefer2238
@johnschaefer2238 Год назад
Boy would I like to have dinner with Mr. Gibson! I could listen to him talk for hours!
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
Same here. By the way, we have many more episodes coming!
@johnschaefer2238
@johnschaefer2238 Год назад
Looking forward to them instead of a short 60 seconds on a national newscast or perhaps 3-5 minutes on say CNN your interviews are so much more enjoyable and educational. Happy Easter to you and all the subscribers.
@oliob
@oliob Год назад
Exceptional if not historic content! Thank you Hoot, for letting us participate!
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
You are welcome. More episodes are coming. Here is the playlist: ru-vid.com/group/PLBI4gRjPKfnPZsK5m9hEalxr8GTyniBNf
@James-kk8dw
@James-kk8dw Год назад
Fascinating, wonderful interview. Thank you !
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
Thank you James
@dukenukem8381
@dukenukem8381 Год назад
This guy is cool! Thanks for the interview !
@vyironszenithx4197
@vyironszenithx4197 Год назад
Dronescapes! I watch most of the documentaries you post, love what you do. I think I speak for many when I make this polite request: More spaceflight and astronaut documentaries! 🇺🇲🇨🇵🇬🇧🇩🇪🇯🇵🇷🇺
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
👍🙏
@DeltaVeeMedia
@DeltaVeeMedia Год назад
I was lucky enough to see STS71 launch, then some years after was fortunate enough to meet Hoot and discuss the mission with him. A brilliant pilot and astronaut but in addition a thoroughly nice man who like many other astronauts is prepared to spend time discussing and sharing his experiences.
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
I envy you!
@anthonylynn1969
@anthonylynn1969 Год назад
Great listening to this fella, take my hat off to him a skilled and brave man👍
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
👍🙏 do not miss the other episodes on the channel, including the upcoming ones 🙂
@thomasboren3580
@thomasboren3580 Год назад
This astronaut and Atlantis Shuttle really are the ones to make true history be ever lasting
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
👍
@Tramseskumbanan
@Tramseskumbanan 2 месяца назад
I haven’t heard about that ASTP incident before. This was the first time.
@dougg1075
@dougg1075 Год назад
This gives me butterflies from the nostalgia for my country. Then
@skittou
@skittou Год назад
Brilliant video, brilliant stories about this awesome adventure of space exploration. Thank you so much for explaining us all this !
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
You are welcome, and that you
@karlsumner5594
@karlsumner5594 Год назад
Absolutely fascinating and riveting stuff! Thank you for posting this.
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
Our pleasure!
@josephstevens9888
@josephstevens9888 Год назад
What another excellent interview! Hoot Gibson is a very, very interesting man. I could listen all day to his remembrances of being a Shuttle astronaut - as well as Naval Aviator.
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
Thanks for listening
@Istandby666
@Istandby666 Год назад
I'd like to hear more about the MIR experience.
@dextermorgan1
@dextermorgan1 Год назад
What an amazing, humble man.
@rondech2920
@rondech2920 Год назад
I had the privilege of going to a dinner with an astronaut at each table at NASA (KSC). Hoot was the astronaut assigned to our table. He was fascinating! We asked him to tell us about his space shuttle missions, but he wanted to tell us about his experimental homebuilt aircraft. Later he got on stage and played guitar with his astronaut band. I hope to bump into him again someday.
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
👍👍👍
@axtonjcranston1064
@axtonjcranston1064 Год назад
Note: the RMS he speaks of is the CanadaArm, just FYI.
@freedom6919741
@freedom6919741 3 месяца назад
Great interview
@vincent-vega768
@vincent-vega768 Год назад
Ich könnte ihn denn ganzen Tag zuhören.😀
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
👍
@dookiebutt616
@dookiebutt616 Год назад
He a very soothing sounding voice, he would be good at story telling, maybe radio talk, maybe a literature teacher, acting.
@floridanews8786
@floridanews8786 Год назад
Great interview 😎
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
🙏👍
@JOEGUNN1990
@JOEGUNN1990 8 месяцев назад
This man ended the cold war.
@niosanfrancisco
@niosanfrancisco Год назад
What a legend
@sixter4157
@sixter4157 Год назад
Really great interview. The process he described for rendezvous and docking is pretty much the process I used in Kerbal Space Program game. Why change a tried and true thing? 😂
@leiflevin3479
@leiflevin3479 3 месяца назад
Respekt.
@bendeleted9155
@bendeleted9155 Год назад
Big storm moving through Murfreesboro TN. Stay safe, y'all.
@dunodisko2217
@dunodisko2217 Год назад
Be sure to give credit to Mustard for his included bits, same with Hazegrayart
@regularguy519
@regularguy519 Год назад
1 word. Heroes.
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
👍
@josephstevens9888
@josephstevens9888 Год назад
On ASTP, I know Tom Stafford performed the docking maneuver when Apollo docked do the Docking Module when it was still nested in the S-IVB 2nd stage of the Saturn 1B. Deke Slayton, on the other hand, flew the initial docking between Apollo and Soyuz - the "heavy handed" docking that the Russians remember so well. I know one more docking maneuver between Apollo and Soyuz took place - after all of the crew visits were complete, but I was of the understanding that was performed by Alexi Leonov with the Soyuz. I could be mistaken, but I believe that what occurred.
@georgekneeshaw9175
@georgekneeshaw9175 Год назад
Hoot was my neighbor in Mira Mesa during his f14 time at Miramar. He is the real deal and a super nice person. Hope if he sees this we can meet up soon. George K
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
👍😎
@lawrencestrabala6146
@lawrencestrabala6146 3 месяца назад
Hoot is right up there with Alan B shepard and Pete Conrad who were professionals obviously but were the class clowns of their astronaut classes. I was a submarine sailor and we were all clowns age we could be. And I’m sure Hoot was too. But when it’s balls to the wall all jokes wait till it’s over. Right Hoot?
@EmmettConrecode
@EmmettConrecode Год назад
TWA had a Hoot Gibson too.
@billpennock8585
@billpennock8585 2 месяца назад
What are the differences I don't know between docking the shuttle to Mir and air refueling? The obvious is you aren't getting bounced around by turbulence. I don't know how 17500 miles an hour would matter if you were both doing that. How accurate do you have to be with the boom compared to the docks? Closing speed difference? Controls are totally different of course but is one set easier than the other? What would I never think of?
@LuciFeric137
@LuciFeric137 Год назад
Subbed on this video
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
🙏👍
@Ryan-mq2mi
@Ryan-mq2mi Год назад
This is so rad. Thanks to you both for doing this. Don't always have much to add, but youtube's algorithm requires at least 5 word comments to get credit, which in turn helps this vid to be seen by others. I hate it, I really dislike google - it's un-American, but it's what we've got for now.
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
O
@BulletproofPastor
@BulletproofPastor 5 дней назад
High level security operations are the same for military and civilian. Basically, until you see it on public media, you can't talk about it.
@joshuabates7424
@joshuabates7424 Год назад
17,500 miles an hour and have to line up within three inches! OMG!
@Lifelessontowiseman
@Lifelessontowiseman 3 месяца назад
Lap tops 20 years before citizens. Such a shame we live ina world we dont all get along.
@dcs-web-editor
@dcs-web-editor Год назад
29:39 what is the outro music ?
@diptwo
@diptwo Год назад
interesting
@SisPackAbs
@SisPackAbs Год назад
if anybody is wondering it was a lacrosse radar satellite they where bringing up.
@christopherrasmussen8718
@christopherrasmussen8718 Год назад
I had to sign a 50 year NDA. I might have worked the bird. Funny , I got to sit into a brief kind of like it. I was an E6. So I never did that before. I sat at the table. The General asked me where do I think I should sit. I apologized and took a chair. 3 inches at Mach 5, hmm 😮
@LuciFeric137
@LuciFeric137 Год назад
If only our presidents were as careful with classified material..
@samuri1994
@samuri1994 Месяц назад
Im sure he was bummed when the declassified the payloads in 2008. But the whole, if i told you id have to kill you makes the story more interesting
@yurimig253
@yurimig253 Год назад
It would be nice if Russian and Ukrainian people could be docking shuttles for MIR /Peace ✌️🕊️
@Istandby666
@Istandby666 Год назад
I grew up around Edwards Air Force Base. I was in The Young Astronaut's program. We were at Edwards because my biological father worked on Government Black Projects at Edwards Air Force Base and Groom Lake aka Area 51. I grew up in the Above Top Secret sector of the government. Our vehicles didn't have license plates and if we were pulled over that person loss their job. I hear people talk about privilege over another. You haven't seen privilege until you grow up in the dark government projects. I don't care, If I know it's top secret or above. I'll tell anyone who wants to listen. Why? It's old technology and if the government wanted to do something about it. Then they would have to admit to what was said. Plus, people don't believe what I say anyways. I want people to open their minds. It's not some green skinned, big eyed visitor, but human technology.
@spencerhaabs
@spencerhaabs Год назад
And what did we get for our troubles? Well….definitely not a fuckin metal. That’s for sure
@montanasnowman3138
@montanasnowman3138 Год назад
It took him 8 minutes and 47 seconds to describe what top secret is.
@DJP-ph7yj
@DJP-ph7yj Год назад
Impressive. Nowadays we have the Chinese pulling satellites in and out of orbit. They're doing all kinds of funky moves up there, and pretending to tell us its actually NOT them and we don't know what's going on. - Well, they've more satellites up there than there is space junk. All this based on their paranoia.
@MaxRank
@MaxRank Год назад
Hilarious, here’s your medal, you can’t wear it, you can’t own it, and you can’t talk about it. So not really an award then. Lol. 😅
@MustangsTrainsMowers
@MustangsTrainsMowers 9 месяцев назад
I’m not calling Hoot a liar but I’d be surprised if the US Government doesn’t have weapons in space.
@TheRoguelement
@TheRoguelement Год назад
Blah Blah Blah Blah ...Remember folks give a Hoot & don't pollute .
@grahamherbert3612
@grahamherbert3612 Год назад
Nobody cares!
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
Perhaps you do not, nobody is a bit too wide and quite rude. I am sure you achieved great things in your life, but Hoot Gibson is hard to beat with his distinguished career. It's perfectly fine to have an opinion, a bit less to just be disrespectful
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