Author
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Topic: Greatest career achievement by an early astronaut
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Tminus8 Member Posts: 14 From: Registered: Aug 2013
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posted 01-13-2014 11:30 AM
An interesting discussion point is which astronaut achieved/contributed most in their career (I'm thinking of the pre-shuttle era).I'd put forward three in particular: - Dave Scott - Gemini 8 (first US space emergency), Apollo 9 (first CMP on first LM flight) and Apollo 15 (arguably most productive lunar expedition) - three great individual performances.
- Neil Armstrong - Gemini 8 (as Scott) and Apollo 11 (speaks for itself).
- John Young - Gemini 3 (first flight in programme), Gemini 10, Apollo 10 (first CMP on lunar flight) and Apollo 16 - three impeccable performances.
Any others? |
randy Member Posts: 2176 From: West Jordan, Utah USA Registered: Dec 1999
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posted 01-13-2014 12:34 PM
Wally Schirra- only man to fly Mercury, Gemini and Apollo. |
moorouge Member Posts: 2454 From: U.K. Registered: Jul 2009
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posted 01-13-2014 01:31 PM
Borman and Lovell on Gemini 7. To be cramped in a Gemini capsule for fourteen days was a feat above and beyond the call of duty. |
p51 Member Posts: 1642 From: Olympia, WA Registered: Sep 2011
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posted 01-13-2014 02:22 PM
quote: Originally posted by Tminus8: John Young - Gemini 3 (first flight in programme), Gemini 10, Apollo 10 (first CMP on lunar flight) and Apollo 16 - three impeccable performances.
Not to mention STS-1 later on, which ranks right up there with Apollo 8 in the 'uber impressive test flight' heading. |
alanh_7 Member Posts: 1252 From: Ajax, Ontario, Canada Registered: Apr 2008
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posted 01-13-2014 02:46 PM
You could make the point that any of the successful flights helped move the astronauts career forward and contributed to advancing the program. But I get your meaning. Jim McDivitt, commander of the first US spacewalk Gemini 4 but also commander Apollo 9 as a result of which paved the way for the future lunar missions. He went on the become Apollo Program Manager. |
sts205cdr Member Posts: 649 From: Sacramento, CA Registered: Jun 2001
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posted 01-13-2014 02:50 PM
Conrad and Bean, who both walked on the Moon and then set records orbiting the Earth. |
ea757grrl Member Posts: 729 From: South Carolina Registered: Jul 2006
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posted 01-13-2014 03:59 PM
I'd nominate the crew of the first Skylab mission. Conrad, Kerwin and Weitz not only saved the Skylab program through some gutsy (and at times dangerous) repair work, but on top of that managed to conduct some darn good science. To me it's right up there with the mission to fix Hubble as among the greatest achievements in human spaceflight. |
Shuttle Endeavour Member Posts: 234 From: Freehold, NJ, USA Registered: Aug 2013
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posted 01-13-2014 04:11 PM
Robert Crippen: He was advanced from pilot to commander after STS-1.Edward White: First U.S. EVA. Was selected for Apollo 1. |
JBoe Member Posts: 960 From: Churchton, MD Registered: Oct 2012
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posted 01-13-2014 04:57 PM
Speaking of Robert Crippen, he did accomplish many things on the ground before going up in STS-1. He was assigned to the Manned Orbiting Laboratory as an instructor, member of the Skylab 2-4 astronaut support crew, and a member of the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project support crew. A side note, as a member of the MOL he was looking/developing intelligence applications for crew onboard the station. |
Mike Isbell Member Posts: 551 From: Silver Spring, Maryland USA Registered: Aug 2003
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posted 01-13-2014 05:18 PM
I would include Thomas Stafford. Flying as pilot on the Gemeni 6 rendezvous he also commanded Gemeni 9-A flight. He then commanded Apollo 10 and flew the lunar module to within 50,000 of the lunar surface prior to the first moon landing. He then became chief of the astronaut office while Alan Shepard was training for Apollo 14. Command of the Apollo/Soyuz flight capped off his career as an astronaut. |
micropooz Member Posts: 1512 From: Washington, DC, USA Registered: Apr 2003
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posted 01-13-2014 06:18 PM
Let me take this a different direction - Joe Walker. Before becoming an astronaut, he flew the X-1 and X-1E rocketplanes. Then he flew 25 missions in the X-15. Three of those X-15 flights earned him belated astronaut wings for going over 50 miles altitude (and two of those missions would have qualified for the current 100 km altitude threshold for spaceflight). Walker went on to iron-out the Lunar Landing Research Vehicle (LLRV) that helped define how the Apollo Lunar Module would land on the moon, and became the training tool to enable those landings... |
Tminus8 Member Posts: 14 From: Registered: Aug 2013
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posted 01-14-2014 06:22 AM
Wally Schirra certainly achieved despite tetchiness on Apollo 7. (Arguably most successful Mercury flight, first rendezvous mission and gutsy first Apollo flight). Also Tom Stafford also on first rendezvous mission) plus late call up to Gemini 9, command of Apollo 10 (first LM flight in lunar orbit) and ASTP.How about Buzz Aldrin? - must not forget very successful EVA on Gemini 12 (much needed at the time) and Apollo 11 (of course). |
Delta7 Member Posts: 1505 From: Bluffton IN USA Registered: Oct 2007
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posted 01-14-2014 10:18 AM
Lots to chose from, and some already mentioned here. I would add Jim McDivitt and Rusty Schweikart for the first manned test of the LM. The first true "spacecraft" incapable of returning to earth. Never flown in it's real environment before then. Had to perform pretty much flawlessly the way engineers had designed it to and predicted it would. A major problem or malfunction would have made it far less likely we would land on the moon before the end of the year, if not impossible. It worked, they proved it, and the rest is history... |
onesmallstep Member Posts: 1310 From: Staten Island, New York USA Registered: Nov 2007
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posted 01-14-2014 01:55 PM
All the above are worthy, plus these four: -Deke Slayton: Although he sat out M-G-A, he was no bystander as he (wrong or right) transformed the astronaut corps to carry out Kennedy's goal of reaching the moon. With Alan Shepard, he chose the best astronauts for some of the most historic space missions. Apollo-Soyuz was his consolation prize. -John Glenn: As the first American to orbit the earth, maneuver his spacecraft and take the first color photos of his flight, Glenn was certainly the hero of the moment. He also set a precedent by angrily protesting the lack of information shared by ground control during the heatshield/retropack problem before reentry. As pilot in command, he ensured that those who followed would not be kept in the dark. -Walt Cunningham and Donn Eisele: Rounding out the crew of Apollo 7 with Wally Schirra, it can't be overstated that, after Apollo 1, had this mission failed, Apollo 8 and the missions that followed would have been delayed or changed, possibly missing the goal of a moon landing before the decade's end. |