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LAUNCH IS A GO! DOCKING IS TAKING PLACE RIGHT NOW 10 AM EST SUNDAY
spacehayduke
Posts: 5,478 ✭✭✭✭✭
We need this, post your space related coins.
Best, SH
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I do not have any space related coins (except for Ike dollars with the moon on it)...but will be watching this launch....Great to see us back in space...Cheers, RickO
Where is Walter Cronkite when we need him!
I'm watching it live now (3 PM.)
About time.
T-10:00
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"I spent 50% of my money on alcohol, women, and gambling. The other half I wasted.
Liftoff!
Great!
It was great to watch a successful launch!
Looking for Top Pop Mercury Dime Varieties & High Grade Mercury Dime Toners.
Great to see!
God speed Doug and Bob
A world without coins "Chaos"
Boy, that was exciting !
Hope to catch the link-up tomorrow.......
Nothing against the Russians but it is nice to be able to take our own ride into space.
Boy, we needed that! Great launch!!
Not technically a space coin, but it started it all:
Here's a warning parable for coin collectors...
"I'm sorry Dave, I can't do that".....
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Having watched the launch on the ABC network broadcast I will say again ... where is Walter Cronkite when we need him?
That was cool....
I was at work a couple of days ago and realized I was the only one in our office of 8 people who was alive the last time American astronauts took a ride on a new American spacecraft. The shuttle was OK but ate up all the budget and took us no further than low earth orbit. This launch today was very fun to watch. I made darn sure my kids were watching too. Seemed to take forever to accelerate away from the tower.
I’ve followed the SpaceX program for several years and absolutely love the progress they’ve made. It brings out the engineer geek in me. My favorite thing is the way they land & reuse the first stage, even after NASA told them doing it wasn’t possible. That Elon guy is a tad out of round, but a visionary the likes of which we haven’t seen for many years.
The recent "favorite modern commem" thread made me realize I needed one of these in my collection, so it's now on its way:
https://myspokenheart.files.wordpress.com/2013/06/a91c3457188765cb18dbc045bf97f9.jpg
Congrats to the astronauts that left Earth today. Good choice
andy milonakis
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
I thought it accelerated away quick compared to the old Saturn V launches. That behemoth needed some serious thrust to get off the ground and you could see the effort............
Was truly cool to see that they landed the reusable first stage.
Best, SH
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Watched the launch yesterday, called my 15 year old daughter down to watch. Her response was "oh, who cares?" I remember space launches Apollo 17 in 1972 and even watched the actual landing and moonwalk. Maybe it is just a generational thing - I like space stuff - was excited for the Apollo-Soyuz docking in 1975 and collect the memorabilia from both programmes.
I can't help but thinking ... the Imperial Storm Troopers have arrived at the International Space Station.
Sweet launch & the docking went off without any problems also.
They also got to fly it by hand for a few minutes to test it out.
The Merlin engine is nice but I'm looking forward to seeing the Raptor on the launch platform.
POTUS has apparently been talking to Bridenstein about a massive funding increase.
This might be the beginning of something really mind blowing.
My Saint Set
Brought tears to my eyes. We are finally back in space!
“In matters of style, swim with the current; in matters of principle, stand like a rock." - Thomas Jefferson
My digital cameo album 1950-64 Cameos - take a look!
Too bad this historic event got overshadowed by the riots.
Definitely an event to remember:
And it was quite impressive to see the rocket not only return to earth for reuse, but how it landed upright on a ship in the ocean:
This is absolutely amazing!!!!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dm__ZSLc6IsIt was so refreshing to focus on something other than our current troubles, at least for a little while.
Very cool. 😀
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“While people planning trips to stars
Allow another boulevard to claim
A quiet country lane
It's insane.”
-Neil Young, “Here We Are In The Years”, 1969
“They can put a man on the moon quite easy
While people here on earth are dying of old diseases“
-Black Sabbath, “Wicked World”, 1969
My PCGS Set Registry Profile
Here's to the Dawn of a completely new era in crewed spaceflight...
It's GREAT seeing a US made spacecraft taking off with humans from US soil again. It's also a HUGE step forward into a fundamentally different vision of spaceflight, e.g. commercial forces will also be a driver in the development of space. The development of space will no longer be solely a Governmental playground.
It takes time to move from what is technologically possible to what is somewhat affordable. The South Pole was first successfully reached in 1911. It took forty five years, before humans went back to Antarctica to stay. In 1956 the US created the first permanent base in Antarctica, McMurdo station. The US has been launching humans into space, off and on, since 1961. This is the first time that it looks to be a fairly reasonable cost per mission.
The Falcon 9/Dragon 2 transportation system was built for a government investment of $400,000,000. The rest of the cost was picked up by SpaceX. To put it mildly that is an incredible bargain for the US taxpayer PLUS we now have a system that is privately owned, so it is not at the whim of the US Government and the 2, 4, 6, 8 election year cycle. It is somewhat of a harbinger of "New Space", where private companies are the driving force behind exploring/commercializing circumlunar space (e.g. the space between the Earth's surface and the Moon's surface). Hopefully New Space, or to put it more honestly, commercial space, will also soon be a driver on exploring/developing the Moon too.
The thing to remember is that space is hard. There is a reason it's called rocket science. I for one am thrilled that the US will HOPEFULLY be able to safely launch humans again from it's own soil on it's own hardware/software. It's a nice beginning step for this next era of spaceflight and commercial development.
I'm not going to say congratulations to SpaceX and NASA until the crew is safely back to the USA after a complete and successful mission. However, needless to say, I'm PUMPED.
Here's a dime that flew on Gemini 3 on March 23, 1965. Gemini 3 was the first manned Gemini spaceflight. The spacecraft was flown by Gus Grissom and John Young. Up until that point in time the USSR owned every important manned space first in history.
Gemini 3 produced the FIRST EVER significant US manned space first in history, the first change in orbit. Up until that point in time, all USSR and USA spacecraft, while they could change their roll, pitch and yaw, flew on whatever orbital path the rocket they were on, launched them on. Gemini had powerful enough thrusters that it could change orbital parameters, so that it could rendezvous with other spacecraft. The dime was owned by Gus Grissom and was given by him to Guenter Wendt (look him up in Google) after the mission. Grissom carved GT-3 (Gemini Titan-3, Titan was the name/type of the launch rocket) in the coin with his mission survival knife after landing. The Gemini program was where the USA took the lead in crewed spaceflight.
U.S. Type Set
I'm also of the generation who witnessed the Apollo missions and recall the first landing on the moon. However, try as I might, my high school aged daughters are not space geeks in the slightest. They will watch the movies "Apollo 13" and "First Man" with me, and sometimes "The Martian", but they zone out on even the best produced documentary footage.
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson