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- Path: sparky!uunet!portal!cup.portal.com!BrianT
- From: BrianT@cup.portal.com (Brian Stuart Thorn)
- Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle
- Subject: Re: Launch Pass
- Message-ID: <69814@cup.portal.com>
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 92 22:06:10 PST
- Organization: The Portal System (TM)
- References: <Bxw6Dt.L33@undergrad.math.waterloo.edu>
- Lines: 59
-
- Well, the launch date for STS-53 is not yet final (now there is a problem
- with one of Discovery's Auxillary Power Units) so a launch date for STS-54
- is a bit premature, but the second week of January seems pretty stable.
-
- A Car Pass for Space Shuttle launches will put you on the NASA Causeway,
- a strip of land crossing the Banana River between Kennedy Space Center
- (on Merritt Island, Florida - between Cape Canaveral and the mainland) and
- the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station (on Cape Canaveral proper.)
- The NASA Causeway is about six miles due south (in the middle) of
- Launch Pad 39A and about seven miles south of Launch Pad 39B. This location
- is probably the best all-round viewing location for launches of the
- Space Shuttle, but there are some qualifiers...
-
- First, determine (from NASA press kits or other semi-technical sources)
- the launch azimuth for the Space Shuttle on the particular mission you
- hope to see launched. If it is a low-inclination flight (i.e., the normal
- 28.45 degree orbit) then the NASA Causeway car pass site is far and away
- the best spot to be. This azimuth will have the Shuttle travelling an arc
- eastward across the sky, creating the impression that the Shuttle flies
- right over you (it doesn't though!)
-
- On the other hand, a high-inclination launch (57 degrees) will take the
- Space Shuttle almost directly AWAY from the NASA Causeway site, and you'll
- be looking straight up the SRB plume. Now this is still EXTREMELY exciting
- and EXTREMELY impressive, but a better VIEWING site might be the Indian
- River shore in the Titusville, Florida area. Titusville is due west of
- the Kennedy Space Center launch pads, and a high-inclination launch will
- arc northward across the sky from your vantage point.
-
- There are pros and cons to both sites, but if you can get a pass, definitely
- go out to the NASA Causeway! The NASA Causeway site is equipped with
- loudspeakers broadcasting commentary from Shuttle Launch Control (the same
- as NASA-Select TV) so you'll know what's going on even if you don't have
- a radio. However, be advised that traffic on the Causeway can be terrible.
- My advice is to take plenty of food, drink, and sunblock and plan to spend
- a lot of time waiting. It's a smart idea to take some fold-up chairs and a
- picnic set-up, too.
-
- Pros for the Titusville area are easier access and a faster getaway after
- the launch. Cons are that some riverside locations charge you for the
- priviledge of parking there (ah, capitalism at work) and a radio station
- carrying launch coverage may be hard to find (keeping you in the dark as
- to what's happening in Launch Control.) Further, a morning launch may be
- lost in the rising sun as seen from Titusville. (If the launch is scheduled
- for within two hours of dawn, go down to Cocoa Beach instead.)
-
- For you information:
-
- STS-53 DISCOVERY (no earlier than 2 December)
- 57 degree orbit (high inclination - northeastward flightpath)
-
- STS-54 ENDEAVOUR (no earlier than 2nd week of January)
- 28.45 degree orbit (low inclination - due east flightpath)
-
- The second week of January is likely to be chilly, even in Florida, and
- especially standing on a causeway in the middle of a river. Be sure to
- bundle up!
-
- -Brian
-