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STS-88 Launch - Cabin Audio, AI Upscale - Endeavour - December 4, 1998 - First Shuttle ISS mission 

Retro Space HD
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Remastered cockpit views and audio of STS-88 lift-off, the first shuttle flight to the ISS. There's extensive coverage of the crew getting into their seats and during the ascent. SRB ignition and jettison are clearly visible. Versions with different audio mixes and external angles are shown (cabin audio is from NASA sound library, timed to match STS-88 flight events).
AI upscaling (Topaz AI) was used to clean up the SD video footage. Color was corrected between the different cameras.
Research, editing and processing by Retro Space HD.
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STS-88 was the first Space Shuttle mission to the International Space Station (ISS). It was flown by Space Shuttle Endeavour, and took the first American module, the Unity node, to the station.
Space Shuttle Endeavour launched at 3:35:34 am EST from the Kennedy Space Center's Launch Pad 39A. STS-88 was the first shuttle flight to the International Space Station.
The seven-day mission was highlighted by the mating of the U.S.-built Unity node to the Functional Cargo Block (Zarya module) already in orbit, and three spacewalks to connect power and data transmission cables between the Node and the FGB. Zarya, built by Boeing and the Russian Space Agency, was launched on a Russian Proton rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan in November 1998.
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A special thanks to the channel supporters ( / retrospacehd ):
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#shuttle #endeavour #nasa

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Комментарии : 202   
@CodenameE9
@CodenameE9 Год назад
Finally after all these years I found someone who has hold of that cockpit view
@garryperkins9818
@garryperkins9818 6 месяцев назад
Always wanted to see it from the cockpit view
@Dra741
@Dra741 6 месяцев назад
They should have given us this footage a long time ago I get it
@TimothyOBrien1958
@TimothyOBrien1958 5 месяцев назад
I wish we had internal launch views of Apollo Saturn V.
@richardsmith8790
@richardsmith8790 4 месяца назад
Go with throttle up those four words will always be so eerie
@putnam568
@putnam568 4 месяца назад
No kidding. I bet those astronauts really get nervous at that moment, thinking about Challenger
@wadewilson524
@wadewilson524 2 года назад
I know they were far from perfect, but man do I miss the Space Shuttle! Awesome work as always on the video! It was a joy to watch!
@ryancool-pq5vu
@ryancool-pq5vu 2 года назад
It was NASA's fault for both disasters. The shuttle worked fine when they didn't rush everything.
@peacethroughstrength172
@peacethroughstrength172 Год назад
John Young helped design a great machine, any mishaps were on NASA and their failure to take advice from JY and others.
@AverageArtz
@AverageArtz Год назад
​@@ryancool-pq5vu That's a simplification if anything. Columbia is pretty much a done deal sure, but with Challenger it was actually private contractors that lied to NASA about the limitations in the design of the boosters. Morton Thiokol ensured NASA that the cold temperatures did not in anyway threaten the function of the joints. I guess you can fault NASA for not doing their own safety checks with the joints but that was how it was done in those days.
@christianbaler1166
@christianbaler1166 Год назад
not only you Wade🚀🛰 I'm born in 83 im growed up with this beauty running Ladys!!
@jayrod9979
@jayrod9979 8 месяцев назад
​@@AverageArtz It was engineers at Morton Thiokal who were screaming to have the Challenger launched scrubbed as well as those who inspected the boosters after recovery. They were well aware of the correlation between temperature and the O ring erosion and Challenger was the only launch with freezing temperatures the night before launch. Obviously we all know management refused to listen.
@Forts103
@Forts103 4 месяца назад
Wow the cabin audio really gives you an appreciation of how hard those SRBs hit when they lit up!
@iitzfizz
@iitzfizz 17 дней назад
For sure, those things fire up and shake the whole stack like it's nothing. I remember one astronaut (can't remember who said it) that said once those SRB's light up the whole vehicle shakes and vibrates so much you can't read any of the instruments on the panel
@gregengland5178
@gregengland5178 Год назад
The wind noise! WoW!
@Petefx86
@Petefx86 Год назад
Wow! It really gets loud in there as you approach and pass Max Q. Always assumed the sound was fairly constant until SRB separation.
@rawnukles
@rawnukles 8 месяцев назад
I have heard astronauts talk about the raw of the wind as they approached Max Q but I didn't expect it was that loud
@TheRokko66
@TheRokko66 5 месяцев назад
At 10:44 you can really hear the roaring sound of the air reaching peak level or Max-Q at more than 500 mph! Without throtteling the engines down at that moment the vehicle would fall apart within seconds.
@garyobrian3597
@garyobrian3597 3 месяца назад
I love the way the astronaut on the back right looks at there arm wrist mirror it's the little things on these space missions
@seabass450
@seabass450 Год назад
This is bad ass!! the sound is incredible!
@Ladco77
@Ladco77 5 месяцев назад
Amazing how quiet it gets after SRB sep. You'd almost think they were coasting at the point.
@roughridersfan
@roughridersfan 2 года назад
Cool how in the crew cabin video how the sound started to die down as they climbed out of the atmosphere.
@yourfathersspaceprogram2697
@yourfathersspaceprogram2697 2 года назад
Jeez Louise that's so sweet! Love the sound added from NASA library.
@xxanimexnerdxxkelson
@xxanimexnerdxxkelson 2 года назад
This is cool to see up-scaled. I was lucky enough to be in Cape Canaveral in person to see this launch.
@Gort58
@Gort58 2 года назад
Great work as always - thanks. As it happens, some of the best previous in-cabin coverage (from the rear) was from STS-65, which also had Bob Cabana as CDR. If you could perform your magic on that, it'd be appreciated.
@RetroSpaceHD
@RetroSpaceHD 2 года назад
There will be some STS-65 content in the future ;-)
@earth2006
@earth2006 Год назад
This would definitely be a situation where you absolutely not want to hear "Crunch, snap, Oh ---t oooops.
@snipereliete
@snipereliete 3 месяца назад
What a sound as she winds up just after launch.as an aviation enthusiast this video brings me great joy.Humans have only been flying for a little over 100 years and to be able to achieve space flight is a wonder of human engunuity.
@JimDaneker
@JimDaneker 2 месяца назад
Oh my word... I'm watching this in my professional recording studio with massive high-end speakers and an immersive screen.. the sound at 9:40 when the main engines start is otherworldly! In that one second you can hear the fuel pumps spin up, then BOOM! What I would give to see and hear an 8k version of this properly captured in IMAX!
@sidv4615
@sidv4615 2 года назад
woooow, i've never seen a shuttle launch from the cockpit with such an amazing resolution, your work is like magic buddy, keep up the great work. ALso how old are you? did you ever see a shuttle launch or land in person?
@RetroSpaceHD
@RetroSpaceHD 2 года назад
AI upscale works well with SD video.
@kandaman304
@kandaman304 8 месяцев назад
I know, right?!?! It's rather interesting. and strange...weird sounds and vibrations, and then sudden SILENCE!!!
@dirty364
@dirty364 Год назад
This has to be the best POV video I have seen! Love how you cut in different angles and different videos.
@sQuEeZyMaN13
@sQuEeZyMaN13 4 месяца назад
I didn’t even know they had an onboard camera for this. Awesome video!
@stmcdowell77
@stmcdowell77 4 месяца назад
We need to see more of this...maybe SpaceX will start showing high quality in cabin audio and video of its Starship once it fully gets rolling. This was amazing to watch but mostly because of the audio.
@franita65
@franita65 5 месяцев назад
the roar during accelleration, just after liftoff is impressive!
@wxb200
@wxb200 8 месяцев назад
The Space Shuttle was a beautiful piece of Engineering. Too bad it has SOOO many flaws. I can't imagine how crazy it was to see the very first shuttle lift off. I grew up with it. It just felt so normal.
@dochlldy
@dochlldy 5 месяцев назад
That first launch was pretty wild.I grew up watching Gemini and Apollo launches starting out slow,then building up speed.That shuttle took off like it was launched out of a cannon.Those rockets lit up,and it was gone.
@wxb200
@wxb200 5 месяцев назад
@@dochlldy quite the spectacle
@DavidThomasScorbal
@DavidThomasScorbal 2 года назад
Fantastic work, thank you for sharing this
@buster105e
@buster105e 2 года назад
wow fantastic, looks bumpier than I thought considering the crews always used to say what a smooth ride it was, its all relative though I guess
@override7486
@override7486 2 года назад
When they said that? I always remember they mentioned start is rough AF. Wobbly, shaky, and vibrations throughout the vehicle. So much power from SRB, especially in delta V at the launch, won't go unnoticed... The rest of the journey with SLME seems much nicer, and more close to "flight" conditions, like the one experienced in a regular jet plane.
@kandaman304
@kandaman304 8 месяцев назад
What an interesting view of the Space Shuttle launch from the INSIDE. It's rather strange though...weird crackling sounds of fire, and then sudden silence after SRB Separation!!!
@elfishpresleybarbiebreath1116
@elfishpresleybarbiebreath1116 3 месяца назад
Wow! The cabin audio only...it's a little terrifying up to max Q :O Cool separation sound :D
@somebodyontheinternet8257
@somebodyontheinternet8257 2 года назад
New shuttle footage! Awesome! Thank you
@AluminumOxide
@AluminumOxide 2 года назад
Oh wow this is wonderful. I always wanted to see an enhanced video of this mission
@robertoverissimodeaquino2804
@robertoverissimodeaquino2804 3 месяца назад
Fantastic footage. Thank you so much for sharing.
@TimothyOBrien1958
@TimothyOBrien1958 5 месяцев назад
It's amazing how the vibration nulls out after SRB SEP.
@basfinnis
@basfinnis 2 года назад
That looks really cool. Bouncing around a bit but bet it was fun 😜
@jamesfairfield3593
@jamesfairfield3593 4 месяца назад
Excellent video for this important and historic Space Shuttle mission.
@snipereliete
@snipereliete 3 месяца назад
Say what u will about America but u can't deny the brilliance of the minds that make this possible.its incredible to me to see those computers.my phone probably has more computing power than those computers shown in the cockpit.i find that amazing.
@jandrews1157
@jandrews1157 2 года назад
Great work on this one!
@WhosThat2876
@WhosThat2876 5 месяцев назад
But but but...... the firmament!!! 😂😂 This is great footage, and the punching through the atmosphere was an awesome sight
@kiwidiesel
@kiwidiesel 5 месяцев назад
They punched through that firmament shell like a virgin with a ripe peach😂
@Gruby7C1h
@Gruby7C1h 5 месяцев назад
YT algo, you did a fine job today.
@em3460
@em3460 3 месяца назад
Used to watch the launches from my house all the way in Deltona as a boy. Also remember the sonic boom of the landings shaking the house.
@peteblac1
@peteblac1 8 месяцев назад
Topaz video AI is an impressive tool. This is an excellent application
@derby2510
@derby2510 5 месяцев назад
Powerful video. Chilling video. Profound video. I’ve never seen anything like this in my life.
@mylesdias8453
@mylesdias8453 3 месяца назад
6:57 What a stunning exterior shot that is!!!!!
@getplaning
@getplaning 3 месяца назад
I have watched a few launches. Until you see one, you just don't appreciate how FAST that thing leaves the ground and disappears.
@MrFisheh100
@MrFisheh100 4 месяца назад
awesome video, great sound.
@MarsFKA
@MarsFKA Год назад
My wife and I made our first trip to the US to watch this launch but, after we had booked and paid for everything, NASA shifted the lunch date from July to December. So we went, anyway and had a great holiday, but we never did see a Shuttle launch - we missed out on the last launch of Discovery in 2010, as well. It was scrubbed because of a hydrogen leak and cracked struts in the External Tank interbank structure.
@colinashby3775
@colinashby3775 5 месяцев назад
Amazing. No music. My type of video
@muddybeestenboel6746
@muddybeestenboel6746 2 года назад
Nice ork once again. thanks
@MostafaMansoori
@MostafaMansoori Месяц назад
Nice footage.
@maxwellwalcher6420
@maxwellwalcher6420 2 года назад
Ready for Apollo 12 and the first Atlas launch.
@maxwellwalcher6420
@maxwellwalcher6420 2 года назад
try the is Music for Friendship 7 launch ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ZPPzoKD-gNg.html.
@ryan200520
@ryan200520 11 месяцев назад
Other than launching the Hubble telescope, this may have been the most important mission in the history of US/ world spaceflight, leading the way to the future of manned spaceflights and the expanded exploration of the solar system/ galaxy/ universe.
@suasponte8363
@suasponte8363 Год назад
Never gets old!
@Linuxpunk81
@Linuxpunk81 5 месяцев назад
That initial comms check gave me manning the maneuvering watch vibes, doing the phone checks on the sound powered phones with control. 😂space was tight on those birds and this is coming from a former submariner. 🖖STS1 (SS)ret Evans
@Dra741
@Dra741 6 месяцев назад
Remember what Alan Bean said when he lit the Saturn V rockets and they were going to the Moon he said I never knew anything that shook that much, and it didn't fall apart, everything else that had the type of vibration that he experienced it had to fall apart, but the Saturn V rocket performed admirably
@stephenking9271
@stephenking9271 3 месяца назад
This is incredible & put something as a question. 1903 first flight & fast forward to the first space missions, what we have achieved here is more than incredible. Incredible utterly incredible, however imo we have slowed down we have not kept that rapid rate of development & have we gone further answer is no. We should be Engineering a new format of exploration, we should be testing our limits & look further. Propulsion is a factor but we should be going further.
@darkfiles2274
@darkfiles2274 6 месяцев назад
Красивый, эффектный, был проект.
@shirolee
@shirolee 5 месяцев назад
That's so awesome!
@karankawa1703
@karankawa1703 2 месяца назад
That was amazing!!!!!!!
@putnam568
@putnam568 4 месяца назад
So awesome!
@timkeller3907
@timkeller3907 8 месяцев назад
Man, would I love to have flown in that!.
@cesarfuentes6499
@cesarfuentes6499 Год назад
Wow Sergey krikaliev on board of the space shuttle a long Dream came trhue
@PapaSchlumpf78
@PapaSchlumpf78 6 месяцев назад
Amazing!
@joescuteri7680
@joescuteri7680 Год назад
Just Awsome!!.👍👍
@thomasstarlingcollector8157
By any chance do you have the replays to this launch? I’m really interested to see all the different angles.
@theonewhowas7709
@theonewhowas7709 2 месяца назад
man thats amazing!!!!!!!!!
@dieter2020
@dieter2020 3 месяца назад
version 3 by far my favorite
@carlosluis1964
@carlosluis1964 3 месяца назад
Que increíble, super sorprendente, maximo
@paweltauruz4230
@paweltauruz4230 Год назад
Wow!!! Maximum speed & noize BIG☝️🆙♥️😉💪👍
@factormars4339
@factormars4339 5 месяцев назад
10:35 to 10:45 is terrifying. These guys have big balls.
@user-cj4bb5ni4i
@user-cj4bb5ni4i 3 месяца назад
Critical. That's all i can say. Everything is critical. Brave astro people.
@jayrod9979
@jayrod9979 8 месяцев назад
I clicked because I saw Sergei Krivalev walking up. Despite the rivalry with Russia, the man is arguably the most accomplished cosmonaut and its awesome NASA gave him a chance to be an Astronaut also.
@PeddaVomMond
@PeddaVomMond 5 месяцев назад
Omfg goosebums
@swwash
@swwash 2 месяца назад
I'm going to listen again later through my large stereo system of the last part. Headphones just don't seem like they do it justice!
@camaycama7479
@camaycama7479 7 месяцев назад
CRAZY!!!
@Dra741
@Dra741 6 месяцев назад
Thank you all of the girls from United States Alliance from South Carolina
@edsmith6464
@edsmith6464 8 месяцев назад
Why bother photoshopping flames if not for clicks? Or I missed it. When did the apparent flames show up?
@Travis_22
@Travis_22 6 месяцев назад
Nice
@keithharris1672
@keithharris1672 2 месяца назад
They should've done it inside the apollo capsule during Saturn V. liftoff. And Gemini too what was it like to ride the Titan.
@lordnilsson1
@lordnilsson1 8 месяцев назад
You hear how gradually the wind noise decrease with the altitude towards empty space.....
@yotu9670
@yotu9670 5 месяцев назад
Did they broadcast that on TV?? Never saw any of this footage so far…
@marvin7533
@marvin7533 6 месяцев назад
I was wondering how they got in there. It's 2023, and I just seen it for the first time.
@user-fj7ib9ci2k
@user-fj7ib9ci2k 4 месяца назад
I did not know that Bob was the commander of this flight he was also the commander of STS 65
@aorchotika
@aorchotika 5 месяцев назад
Note the drop in sound after they go supersonic
@duffman7065
@duffman7065 23 дня назад
I stress put watching these thinking what I would do if my back was itchy and no way of scratching it in those suits and all strapped in.
@vascularcylinder
@vascularcylinder 6 месяцев назад
This was when NASA was still NASA
@ggsmith48906
@ggsmith48906 7 месяцев назад
What is the burst of noise right about the "throttling" call? About 4:55
@mauriziomascagna
@mauriziomascagna 6 месяцев назад
I think they exceeded the speed of sound at that moment.
@miroorim4062
@miroorim4062 5 месяцев назад
No, max. of air dynamic pressure also called Max Q. Type it in google
@TomSoyeur
@TomSoyeur 4 месяца назад
Il doit falloir un immense courage pour oser monter dans un engin pareil 😳😳
@koopsjunta
@koopsjunta 5 месяцев назад
I wonder if there will ever come a day when we look back at these launches, propelling humans atop chemical rockets, and think, ‘How quaint’?
@fastmclaren71
@fastmclaren71 5 месяцев назад
Carrying a chunk of the ISS in the boot(trunk).
@Republic3D
@Republic3D 6 месяцев назад
I miss the shuttles so much. Proper spaceship. There's something special about that view of 6-7? crew members sitting in each captain chair, rocking and shaking as the ship roars towards the sky. Can't wait to see how Starship is going to look inside with a full crewed version. Going to be awesome.
@nivi319
@nivi319 3 месяца назад
0:14 kinda ironic that EVACUATE is posted on the wall.
@stevecam724
@stevecam724 Месяц назад
Commander Cabana read that out loud 3 times 😆😆😆
@dochlldy
@dochlldy 8 месяцев назад
Musk may have come up with the coolest landing in any space program,but I don't see anybody coming up with a launch as cool as our shuttles.Maybe we should see if Musk would like to take a shot building a new one.
@jayford8479
@jayford8479 5 месяцев назад
He is.
@westway7742
@westway7742 5 месяцев назад
Amazing, but very unnerving.
@glauberirineu5837
@glauberirineu5837 3 месяца назад
eu amo ❤ A NASA
@TERRI19842
@TERRI19842 5 месяцев назад
You no they have the video of the cockpit of challenger
@winsor68
@winsor68 6 месяцев назад
Brave souls
@4uidrum
@4uidrum 8 месяцев назад
They filmed inside the cabin on all launches... why isn't there any cabin footage of Challenger?
@ggsmith48906
@ggsmith48906 7 месяцев назад
@4uidrum, my guess is that is a local recording device. They recover the recording after the shuttle landed. That would mean the recording was lost with the destruction of Challenger and Columbia. :(
@4uidrum
@4uidrum 7 месяцев назад
@@ggsmith48906 could be. But typically these devices are designed to withstand such stressful events. Much like black boxes. Anyways, just curious. :) Thank you for replying.
@ggsmith48906
@ggsmith48906 7 месяцев назад
@@4uidrum I do know that some recording devices send back real time telemetry, others store it and are retrieved at recovery. I have no idea which category this falls under, but my guess is this is more of an interest recording and not a cockpit "black box".
@user-vv8ho8ub9y
@user-vv8ho8ub9y 5 месяцев назад
💌
@tubehicks7037
@tubehicks7037 5 месяцев назад
What a hellish machine! What drives us humans to strap ourselves ontop of huge tanks filled with explosives?!
@jayford8479
@jayford8479 5 месяцев назад
A thrill ride to top all others. Some astronauts could never adjust to retirement.
@gustavorojas6169
@gustavorojas6169 Год назад
How many G's must they support?
@fixpontt
@fixpontt 9 месяцев назад
never more than 3 at lift-off, slightly more at re-entry
@kiwidiesel
@kiwidiesel 5 месяцев назад
That moment of engine ignition would ruin every other vehicle ride or use on the planet for the rest of your life. Would be worth ot tho.
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