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Iconic rocket at Alabama rest stop to be taken down, NASA says
Ricci.Wright
Member Posts: 5,128 ✭✭✭✭
The NASA rocket that towers at the north Alabama welcome center on Interstate 65 will be taken down, the space agency and the U.S. Space & Rocket Center said in a statement Friday night.
Comments
That's a Saturn I. Nothing lasts forever, and rockets were never meant to.
Why? What's the problem with it staying?
It has deteriorated to the point that it would cost a fortune to repair. Sad, but like Rocky said nothing lasts forever. Bob
Well in that case,,,
Well, it IS white and it's predecessors owned slaves.
Man, how long has that thing been up? I think it was there the first time I ever drove a truck down that way in '80 or '81.
NASA is just doing their part in the war effort. They are going to ship that thing to the Ukraine! 😲
They should tape a bunch of bottle rockets to it and light it off 🚀💥
Someone refresh my memory. I remember reading an article a while back on a older, massive rocket used years ago (Saturn V?), that supposedly would collapse in on itself unless it was loaded with fuel, or was under a certain amount of air pressure inside. It seems like it was either on display at a museum, or in the process of going to one. The pictures I remember showed it on its side. Any ideas?
That was the original Atlas ICBM/space booster. It was essentially a stainless steel balloon with walls thinner that that of a dime. It had to be kept pressurized or it would collapse under its own weight.
cultural appropriation did it in LOL
after all its long big and white.
not a common trait
just guessing based on current P.C.
Stopped by there about a half dozen times. Liked to always take a look.
That's the one! Thanks, Rocky.
I stopped to look at that rocket many times. It is beautiful.
The Saturn I was another of Von Braun's brainchildren. It was essentially eight Redstone rockets strapped together to make one medium-huge booster. It was used to take the upper stages and Apollo capsule to low orbit, both to test Apollo systems and to get to our first space station - which was the upper stages of a Saturn V! They launched the Saturn I from a Saturn V launch pad with a steel "adapter" to take the place of the V's first stage. Clever.
There is a Saturn 5 at the welcome center on I 10 in Alabama
. Quite a sight to see.
That's just the first stage. You should see a complete one! They have one at KSC.
The Saturn V at KSC is truly a sight to see.
The engineering to just transmit the thrust of the five main engines to the structure is incredible, not to even mention generating that thrust.
Brad Steele