RIP James McDivitt
Gnome de PPRuNe
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Too close to Croydon for comfort
Age: 60
Posts: 12,684
Received 338 Likes
on
186 Posts
RIP James McDivitt
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/obituari...emini-4-whose/
James McDivitt, who has died aged 93, piloted the American spacecraft Gemini 4 in 1965 on a four-day mission that set a new endurance record for two-man space flight and later commanded the Apollo 9 mission that helped to pave the way for the first Moon landings.
Another one down . It's just a matter of time before all the Apollo astronauts are gone (we've already lost about half of them). I know McDivitt never made it to the moon, but the only people who have been to another heavily body are Apollo astronauts.
When they shutdown the Apollo program in 1972, I don't think anyone involved really thought they'd all be gone before we made it back to the moon. Today, that's become a very real possibility (especially if it's dependent on SLS )
When they shutdown the Apollo program in 1972, I don't think anyone involved really thought they'd all be gone before we made it back to the moon. Today, that's become a very real possibility (especially if it's dependent on SLS )
Gnome de PPRuNe
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Too close to Croydon for comfort
Age: 60
Posts: 12,684
Received 338 Likes
on
186 Posts
Think I'm right in suggesting that only the Apollo 8 crew is still complete - Borman, Lovell and Anders.
Even including the Apollo-Soyuz and Skylab missions, they are thin on the ground now.
Even including the Apollo-Soyuz and Skylab missions, they are thin on the ground now.
Apollo 9 was an exceptional engineering flight. The tests provided for a fair bit of knowledge that was relied on for the Apollo 13 recovery. Much of the emergency actions that were required by the O2 tank failure came from the earlier data and system testing. Apart from the LMP's "chicken salad"...
Gemini 4 was also important, for initial rendezvous, Dave Whites EVA and the discovery of the same problem that had nearly killed Alexi Leonov on Voshkod-2.
Ed White just before overheating trying to get an expanded suit back inside
Alexi Leonov on the first ever space walk, before having a major scare trying to get back into the blow up transfer chamber.
Back when testing was done in real time without the HR, CRM, FAA, EASA, ICAO PC bandaids
That was a life well lived. Vlad, take note.
Gemini 4 was also important, for initial rendezvous, Dave Whites EVA and the discovery of the same problem that had nearly killed Alexi Leonov on Voshkod-2.
Ed White just before overheating trying to get an expanded suit back inside
Alexi Leonov on the first ever space walk, before having a major scare trying to get back into the blow up transfer chamber.
Back when testing was done in real time without the HR, CRM, FAA, EASA, ICAO PC bandaids
That was a life well lived. Vlad, take note.
FWIW of no little historical importance is Jim McDivitt's role in Neil Armstrong being the first man on the Moon.
In the original mission planning McDivitt's crew were meant to fly their "D" Mission (LM in Low Earth) as the second planned manned Apollo flight. Due to the way crew rotation worked that put Pete Conrad, McDivitt's backup, in the slot to command the first Moon landing ( the G mission).
As it turned out LM development ran late, the second flight got rejigged to go LM'less to the Moon (a mission profile that was never in the original NASA plan) ...McDivitt declined to fly it since he was determined to stick with his LM, so Borman's crew moved up one flight in the sequence....and that put Borman's back up, Armstrong onto G, aka Apollo 11...
Shortly after 9 it's rumoured McDivitt was offered the option of a landing on a later mission alongside a fit again Al Shepard.....McDivitt wasn't a Shepard fan and was having none of it, instead he moved into Apollo management.
Last edited by wiggy; 19th Oct 2022 at 20:17.