Second in a series of Shuttle Sunday live shows, covering STS-2 through STS-4. With Chris B, Sawyer and Jack. Includes resources from the Shuttle areas of L2: shop.nasaspaceflight.com/prod...
Link to the first one, STS-1: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-sz6qcjolcwY.html - third show will be on NSF Space Coast Live at 3pm Eastern. this coming Sunday.
Thank you - agree w everyone else - great show! My middle school teacher wheeled in this large CRT TV into our class so we could watch the 1st launch. Appreciate you sharing!
thanks guys for the shuttle sunday review boy brings back many amazing memories the awesome facts much appreciated thank again looking forward for more cheers from melbourne australia
Thanks for yet another great video. I was fortunate enough (and old enough now, agh!) To watch Space Shuttle Enterprise on the amazing 747 land at Stansted Airport UK in 1983. I cycled there to watch it from my home in a tiny village called High Easter, in Essex, UK. It was amazing. I took some photo's. The official release pics were better, but as a kid seeing it was is a lifelong memory.
Thanks for doing this. It was an interesting discussion, but how come the recording is unlisted? I'd like to also watch the first episode but I can't find it.
We wouldn't want to send a notification out to so many people, but yeah, I wish there was a better solution. I've put it as a community channel note now.
So glad to see a Playlist created. Now I can follow it and not miss any Shuttle Sunday's. Your passion for and knowledge of shuttle make these so enjoyable. Please go through every single mission in grotesque detail. Thank you thank you!!
Still the most beautiful spacecraft ever made in my opinion. I was lucky enough to meet a Columbia astronaut once named Ken Bowersox, he was cool and very nice.
Its because the CGI team wasn't ready with their green screen in time to send out the notifications. They had a huge rip in the section behind the baloon
You guys should do a re-enactment of the Shuttle launch as if it was live today. Pretending that you were around back then with the cameras and talking about the launch and counting till liftoff. That would be sick imo.
While they had commercial payloads on STS-5, most will say the "operational" title was more symbolic and political. The shuttle was never truly operational. Each flight was a test flight in unique ways. It was always risky as compared to what was advertised to Congress in the 1970s. There were engineering changes up through STS-135. But what was learned was worth it!