Meaning that under those G loads, there is an economy of breath and body control that is required. "OK" requires far less effort than utilizing many words. Under high G loads, every bit of breath is needed for the brain to function. This is why pressure suits are used. Not just to maintain atmospheric pressure in the suit, but to also restrict blood flow to our extremities. This is also how centrifuge training for astronauts and fighter pilots really pays off. Pilots learn techniques to control their breathing to help prevent black outs due to lack of oxygen in the brain.
My Dad let me stay up late to watch the Moon landing. My Mom wasn't happy about that. She was a Moon landing denier. Eventually accepted that it happened.
My father and I watched this from our front yard through binoculars. We listened on the radio, we had no television then. I still have the binoculars, we purchased them from Sears Roebuck.
@@CD3WD-Project me too...I have alot of Craftsman tools. Whenever I broke one all I had to do was go into a Sears store, show the clerk the broken tool and pick one like it up and leave with it. :-) The most simple and best lifetime warranty!
My family went to Cape Kennedy in 1969 to see the Moon Shot. Alan Shepard was staying at our motel & we got to meet him in the lobby. It was an amazing experience for a 5 year old. It made following NASA & our space program a lifelong endeavor.
So cool that Alan Shepard got his Ménière's disease taken care of and was able to go to the moon on Apollo 14. To be grounded after this flight for so many years must have been disappointing for him.
The Redston rocket that Shepard launched Shepard into space had 78,000 lbs of thrust. Both engines combined on the Boeing 767-300 that I flew for United had 120,000 lbs of thrust.
And the Redstone was a direct decendent of the German V-2, made by the same group of engineers in Huntsville Alabama after they moved them Fort Bliss Texas.
For those asking about lack of visible vibration, the camera and everything else visible, including Shepard himself are all affixed to same hardware, capsule frame. So they are vibrating, but since they are vibrating in synch it is not visible to viewer. Also take a look at youtube video "Launch Mishaps - Early Rocket Failures at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station" to get a sense of how dangerous this really was.
I'm still mad at Mrs. Neuman, my third grade teacher. She went to the next door classroom and watched the launch on their TV. Then she came back and told us what she saw and drew a pathetic picture of the rocket on the chalkboard.
@@freepadz6241 Yes, it was that bad. It was white chalk on a black board and the lesson was this is the pointy end and this is the flamey end. Meanwhile my class missed something that was making history.
the early mercury astronauts were extremely brave men. these rockets were not that reliable and blew up quite often. GOD BLESS EVERY ONE OF THEM. THEY DEFINITELY HAD THE RIGHT STUFF.
It's not a rocket bro it's called a space capsule, the very top part of a "rocket" carries capsules that house human astronauts, these are two very different things and they used to blow up due to O2 rich environment which the Americans finally realized after Apollo 1 catastrophe and fixed it using a 60-40 O2+N2 mix.
I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Shepard on his book tour for Moon Shot. Written with Deke Slayton about the race to the moon. He was very gracious as he signed his book. I loved thd space program and it was an honor to meet him. Great video of this flight.
I'm 63, and I've been avidly following NASA Crewed Spaceflight since Gemini 3 in 1965. All this time, hearing 'the clock has started', I had no idea Shepherd had to punch start manually. It may seem trivial, but, after all, the words were a statement of pilot action, rather than just pilot observation. Thanks for the insight, it makes a difference in my understading. Cheers!
Ya had to be there. My Uncle was an engineer for the fuel control valves on the Atlas Booster in the late 50's. My Brother, Sister and I did multiple walk-thru's at NASA in Huntsville, Alabama during those formative years. We had the opportunity to check out the Mercury Space Capsule. I couldn't fit, my Sister has claustrophobia, but my Brother (4th grader) was allowed to climb into it. Among other things, Shepard's size was a factor in his flight selection. John Glenn was selected for the multiple orbit trip primarily because he was small and could withstand 12g's without blacking out. Talk about "irony". My Uncle was waive 2 at Omaha Beach (Normandie Invasion) and ended up reporting to the man who invented the V1 and VII rockets (Wernher Von Braun). If you look up Operation Paperclip you will see how.
I watched all the launches on TV with my father right through Apollo 17. Sixty plus years later it's all a blurry yet still vivid cascade of visual memory and events; but each one was at the time a major event and overall the bravery, adventure and professionalism shaped me as a person.
Much longer flight than I remember as an 11 year old boy. He went much higher that I had thought, much greater G load coming down than we had been told. The days of the giants. Rest in peace, Moon Golfer.
WOW! So cool... I have never seen that before... I wrote a letter to Alan Shepard while in elementary school and he responded.. I still have the letter and pictures he sent back...
Absolutely amazing. I was a few months before being born when this happened. I’m now a retired Military Aviator, and I’m really enjoying these videos. Thanks, and I can’t wait to see more
hard to believe this all started the year I was born. Mind blowing how much has happened just in my lifetime. Can you imagine what these guys went through? It was ALL new and everything was taking HUGE chances. No pioneers like that now.. no way.. not with what they had to through just to get to that point let alone taking off on a rocket alone not knowing what was going to really happen. Fantastic. Love these.
Imagine Deke seeing all that progress through the eyes of Flight Director! From Alan Shepard to the Apollo missions. Amazing. You’re right, there are no pioneers like that today, but maybe the era of interplanetary exploration that is coming will change that. Somebody, or many somebodies, are gonna have to volunteer for those multi-year missions to Mars and beyond. I wonder how all this would have played out without pressure from the USSR. Would any of this have happened without the space race? Would anyone have taken these risks without Soviet motivation?
@@lestercoons3962 Apollo 14 (January 31 - February 9, 1971 yes and Edgar Mitchell , two walks on the surface. Also, Shepard "hit two golf balls he had brought with him with a makeshift club." ~ Wikipedia. They had a good time up there. '71 what a year... I'll never forget that year for many reasons. They also had some malfunctions that almost ended the program but were resolved and they were successful.
Beautiful job. Just the right amount of explanation. Perfect highlights on the instrument panel. Like many, I recall this as yesterday...but never had access to this level of information and video footage. Thank you very much.
"Don't f*ck up, Shepard..." Per the man himself, often misquoted as a prayer," Dear Lord, please don't let me f*ck up...", but, Shepard always denied the "prayer" part...
Some books I have read that I really liked: Carrying the Fire by Michael Collins, And First Man. Also the newly released photo book Apollo Remastered. I was most struck by Michael Colllins's book released in 1974 and carried a forward by Charles Lindburgh. To think that so much could happen in the span of one life is truly amazing.
In those days, all activity stopped and the space shots were broadcast on the PA. I was in the second grade and we loved it. We had a president who wasn’t a cadaver, at least for a couple of years.
Never saw this video before. Thanks for posting it. Still shaking my head at the bravery of those pioneering astronauts. I ask myself, would I be this brave?
many thanks for bringing this rare footage for sharing with us , its much interesting to see most procedure had been doing manually ...its a joy when you doing first time (of course USSR done it before but for USA it was all new ) creations, failures then correction then test then get successes. i can imagine how thrilling it might be for all the team but now space travel to low earth orbits become so routine that no one cares about it these days . some time i watch earth live from ISS and i can barely see only 700 people watching it along with me . thanks again .
Wow. I grew up on this stuff and became a professional technical geek. This is wonderful work. Please: do the rest of Project Mercury! Did we go to the Moon? Hell yes we did.
My dad was one of the Pad leaders for Alan Shepard, it was a stress engineer for McDonnell aircraft. I went to Cocoa Beach Elementary school second grade our class watch the launch from the beach. Great memories
Interesting to know that a pad cabin fire just like the Apollo 1 tragedy could have happened with Mercury and Gemini, too: "To save weight, Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo spacecraft were designed to operate at a cabin pressure of 5.5 lbs. per square inch of pure oxygen in space. When the spacecraft were pressurized on the launch pad, however, they had to be a couple of pounds over atmospheric pressure, 14.7 lbs. per square inch, to keep the cabin in pure oxygen."
They used what they could get right off the shelf.. When they realized they had no way for the Astros to take a leak, their nurse went out that day and bought a women's panty girdle plus the pick up hose for a leg urine bag and several condoms and made a wearable collection garment on her sewing machine. She did that for each Mercury Astronaut. Only with the Gemini flights did NASA make something better .
@9:40, he experienced 11.5 g? Naturally, I had to check with wikipedia. "Early experiments showed that untrained humans were able to tolerate a range of accelerations depending on the time of exposure. This ranged from as much as 20 g for less than 10 seconds, to 10 g for 1 minute, and 6 g for 10 minutes." No doubt Shepard was well trained. And in this video it doesn't look like he was at 11.5 g for over a minute, although he stopped reading out the numbers after 9. But this could be a max g record for American astronauts. I wonder what the G forces would be if the emergency ejection system was activated during launch, and how long those forces would last.
The Mercury capsules had almost no lift and had a ballistic reentry trajectory. Later spacecraft had some lift ability and could “fly” so they would reenter more gradually and experience smaller g forces.
Probably few Gs more than the rocket was accelerating at it's peak, but ye I was also surprised at the amount of acceleration(and still looking to be fine, but he quite certainly didn't feel so well)
Watched it live as an 8 year old. Shepard leaving the transfer van and looking up at the Redstone still etched in my memory. Alan Shepard and the Mercury 7 indeed had the Right Stuff. America at its finest. I only wish to live long enough to witness our return to the moon. Mars thereafter if I’m really lucky. I thought once we landed the moon in 1968 we would already be on Mars today (54 years later). America and NASA really dropped the ball in manned space. Public interest waned but virtually every device we use today came as a spinoff from science and technology including the importance of manned spaceflight. Elon Musk via SpaceX has jump started our national space program. I doubt without his drive and ingenuity we would be as well placed to restart space exploration. Go USA !
Just watching Astronomy Live's coverage of the USSF-67 launch/return. He said all credit for the stabilization goes to you, so I had to leave a comment telling you that was fantastic work!
I remember this like it was yesterday! We early sixties kids lived through amazing history. I got the Mercury Astronaut G.I. Joe and the Mercury Capsule that following Christmas!!
Neil Armstrong, Buz Aldrin, Pete Conrad, Alan Bean, Alan Shepard, Ed Mitchell, Dave Scott, Jim Irwin, John Young, Charlie Duke, Gene Cernan, Harrison Schmitt
Expected to see camera vibration on the launch but it was very stable. During the Gemini program, at school we had an assembly for every launch to watch on TV.
Stop giving flat earthers the time of day. It’s the epitome of punching down. It’s like giving air time to people who think aliens built the pyramids. Why waste the time?
Great footage. It is amazing the leaps that NASA had to make from this short journey of Freedom 7 to the Apollo flights to the moon. It is still a great time to be around in space and planetary discoveries currently being made. But for Astronauts to experience their exploration of the Moon and their individual experiences of seeing our beautiful planet out on its own in space. 😊
I was three years old when Russia launched Sputnik. I vividly remember being in my back yard in Indianapolis and seeing it in the night sky, with my dad.
@@OttoByOgraffey Really! I can vividly remember certain things when I was 3 years old which suprised and was confirmed by my parents and older siblings. Even recall certain things from two and a half. So yes @davidmangold , I believe you!
I read the stories about the Mercury Seven when I was 14 back in 1980 and it was such a riveting and interesting read. I read anything that was about astronomy and the Mercury and Gemini projoects.
I don't know how he or any of the rest of them got in those capsules with balls that big. Alan was my first space hero and he just oozed confidence and was a man's man. Military/test pilot, and had the ego to match, because if you weren't supremely confident and did not feel like you could handle anything, you didn't have the right stuff.
Gagarin circled the Earth in a near-full orbit, using basically an ICBM. Shepard had a much weaker rocket under him, which meant he was restricted to a quick up and down hop
I love watching these old videos, but I never understood how we see no vibrations in the video, I watched the apollo one recently and it was fantastic!
Those knee straps really did their job holding him in place while riding on an explosion without a bump, shake or anything. The camera probably went up and down with the seat to help stabilize the picture as well. They thought of everything.
My father-in-law worked at the cape from 56 to 75 he knew all those guys I didn't really believe it till we were walking up the tarmac at a little air show fly in , in Three Forks Montana and he slaps me on the shoulder and says ,you know that guy is ? I had no idea my father-in-law says that's Gene Cernan last man to walk on the moon so I got to sit in the shade of his airplane wing and listen to Gene cernan and my father-in-law talk about everything for hours,too cool
I remember watching this with my Mom, as she explained how we were watching history taking place. I remember for days after, when my Mom asked me to do something, I would reply with a Roger, Over. It drove her crazy. 😂
The camera was firmly attached to the wall of the capsule. So, the camera vibrated at the same rate as the capsule. Makes it look like there's no vibration, but it's all vibrating like heck!
the guy is pulling 11.5g and he just goes "okay"
Meaning that under those G loads, there is an economy of breath and body control that is required.
"OK" requires far less effort than utilizing many words. Under high G loads, every bit of breath is needed for the brain to function. This is why pressure suits are used. Not just to maintain atmospheric pressure in the suit, but to also restrict blood flow to our extremities. This is also how centrifuge training for astronauts and fighter pilots really pays off. Pilots learn techniques to control their breathing to help prevent black outs due to lack of oxygen in the brain.
Dad told my brother and me to be late for school so we could see history being made. Thank you Dad!!
My Dad let me stay up late to watch the Moon landing. My Mom wasn't happy about that. She was a Moon landing denier. Eventually accepted that it happened.
@@maxwellcrazycat9204 They had those back then, at the time?
I was in a factory NCR Dayton ohio .1966 I was at ccafs working on Apollo with IBM
4 yrs of College at University of Dayton got me there.
@@maxwellcrazycat9204 Wasn't it at about 9 PM eastern time?
My father and I watched this from our front yard through binoculars. We listened on the radio, we had no television then. I still have the binoculars, we purchased them from Sears Roebuck.
Love that story
Back when u could buy high quality items at affordable prices that would last forever, right from the neighborhood
No, I think you bought them from JC Penney or Montgomery Ward. They were black, right?
I miss Sears
@@CD3WD-Project me too...I have alot of Craftsman tools. Whenever I broke one all I had to do was go into a Sears store, show the clerk the broken tool and pick one like it up and leave with it. :-) The most simple and best lifetime warranty!
Baddassery on full display here. Never knew this footage existed. Thank you so much for posting..
My family went to Cape Kennedy in 1969 to see the Moon Shot. Alan Shepard was staying at our motel & we got to meet him in the lobby. It was an amazing experience for a 5 year old. It made following NASA & our space program a lifelong endeavor.
grazie per la tua testimonianza bellissima
And Alan eventually got to drive a golf ball on the moon!
Forever and ever!
Great job. I’m 70 years old and vividly remember this flight.
Born in 1957, I got to see it.
Great time to be alive!
1955. True!!
Same here, born in '57...boy, those were some good days...
1960s The best time to be a kid! Great video. Merci.
So cool that Alan Shepard got his Ménière's disease taken care of and was able to go to the moon on Apollo 14. To be grounded after this flight for so many years must have been disappointing for him.
The Redston rocket that Shepard launched Shepard into space had 78,000 lbs of thrust. Both engines combined on the Boeing 767-300 that I flew for United had 120,000 lbs of thrust.
As I recall. The Redstone was originally designed to launch nuclear warheads. A ballistic missile. Modified for the Mercury missions.
@@maxwellcrazycat9204 I think a lot of space missions in the 60s used modified ICBMs
If I recall correctly the escape tower on top of the Apollo Saturn 5 alone had more thrust than the Redstone. Things escalated quickly.
If only a couple of GE CF6-80-C2 turbofans could get you into orbit.
And the Redstone was a direct decendent of the German V-2, made by the same group of engineers in Huntsville Alabama after they moved them Fort Bliss Texas.
For those asking about lack of visible vibration, the camera and everything else visible, including Shepard himself are all affixed to same hardware, capsule frame. So they are vibrating, but since they are vibrating in synch it is not visible to viewer. Also take a look at youtube video "Launch Mishaps - Early Rocket Failures at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station" to get a sense of how dangerous this really was.
I was named after Alan Sheppard. Born in 62 so this was before my time. Cool to see.
I'm born in 63. I remember Apollo 11
Born in 61 , named John . Because of Johnny Cash , JFK , Pope John and of course John Glenn . Top hit in 61 Big Bad John lol....
I was born about six months before the first U.S. astronauts were announced-- including one "Scott." Then a ton of Scotts were born after that...
love that you captioned what's happening on the gauges and indicators, thank you
I'm still mad at Mrs. Neuman, my third grade teacher. She went to the next door classroom and watched the launch on their TV. Then she came back and told us what she saw and drew a pathetic picture of the rocket on the chalkboard.
Now I'm mad at her too. Lousy thing to do.
The capsule looks like it could be easy to draw. Are you sure the drawing was that bad.
@@freepadz6241 Yes, it was that bad. It was white chalk on a black board and the lesson was this is the pointy end and this is the flamey end. Meanwhile my class missed something that was making history.
mrs. neuman sounds like a commie.
I despise that Mrs. Neumann!
the early mercury astronauts were extremely brave men. these rockets were not that reliable and blew up quite often. GOD BLESS EVERY ONE OF THEM. THEY DEFINITELY HAD THE RIGHT STUFF.
It's not a rocket bro it's called a space capsule, the very top part of a "rocket" carries capsules that house human astronauts, these are two very different things and they used to blow up due to O2 rich environment which the Americans finally realized after Apollo 1 catastrophe and fixed it using a 60-40 O2+N2 mix.
Not very knowledgeable about history are you. Maybe just be quiet instead of pretending.
@@coronalight77Nor are you, so shhhhhhhh.
@@coronalight77 The fuck are you talking about?
I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Shepard on his book tour for Moon Shot. Written with Deke Slayton about the race to the moon. He was very gracious as he signed his book.
I loved thd space program and it was an honor to meet him.
Great video of this flight.
I'd never seen the entire flight before. Absolutely fascinating! Thanks for putting this on TH-cam!
I'm 63, and I've been avidly following NASA Crewed Spaceflight since Gemini 3 in 1965. All this time, hearing 'the clock has started', I had no idea Shepherd had to punch start manually. It may seem trivial, but, after all, the words were a statement of pilot action, rather than just pilot observation. Thanks for the insight, it makes a difference in my understading. Cheers!
Ya had to be there. My Uncle was an engineer for the fuel control valves on the Atlas Booster in the late 50's. My Brother, Sister and I did multiple walk-thru's at NASA in Huntsville, Alabama during those formative years. We had the opportunity to check out the Mercury Space Capsule. I couldn't fit, my Sister has claustrophobia, but my Brother (4th grader) was allowed to climb into it. Among other things, Shepard's size was a factor in his flight selection. John Glenn was selected for the multiple orbit trip primarily because he was small and could withstand 12g's without blacking out. Talk about "irony". My Uncle was waive 2 at Omaha Beach (Normandie Invasion) and ended up reporting to the man who invented the V1 and VII rockets (Wernher Von Braun). If you look up Operation Paperclip you will see how.
Great view of something read in the books for years but never seen for me! 11.5 G…those men were made of something else!
After the 11.5g, the mens’ makings were more or less homogenous.
Real men I swear
Yep, and cool as a cucumber. The video it looks like he's dropping through the Dairy Queen drive-thru.
I watched all the launches on TV with my father right through Apollo 17. Sixty plus years later it's all a blurry yet still vivid cascade of visual memory and events; but each one was at the time a major event and overall the bravery, adventure and professionalism shaped me as a person.
Much longer flight than I remember as an 11 year old boy. He went much higher that I had thought, much greater G load coming down than we had been told. The days of the giants. Rest in peace, Moon Golfer.
He was definitely first in line at the tee!
WOW! So cool... I have never seen that before... I wrote a letter to Alan Shepard while in elementary school and he responded.. I still have the letter and pictures he sent back...
Ici pour aider, tes chaines youtube méritent la monétisation
My grandmother, mother and I watched his launch on television. It was truly awesome.
I remember watching this in Mrs Henson’s 2nd grade class. It was so cool, we could watch the entire space flight from school.🎉
Thankyou. Great edit with really useful captions. I was surprised by how short the flight was
Absolutely amazing. I was a few months before being born when this happened. I’m now a retired Military Aviator, and I’m really enjoying these videos. Thanks, and I can’t wait to see more
Fantastic video. Felt like I was there with Alan, except I didn't feel the 11.5 g's! Thank you for putting this together. Amazing.
hard to believe this all started the year I was born. Mind blowing how much has happened just in my lifetime. Can you imagine what these guys went through? It was ALL new and everything was taking HUGE chances. No pioneers like that now.. no way.. not with what they had to through just to get to that point let alone taking off on a rocket alone not knowing what was going to really happen. Fantastic. Love these.
Imagine Deke seeing all that progress through the eyes of Flight Director! From Alan Shepard to the Apollo missions. Amazing.
You’re right, there are no pioneers like that today, but maybe the era of interplanetary exploration that is coming will change that. Somebody, or many somebodies, are gonna have to volunteer for those multi-year missions to Mars and beyond.
I wonder how all this would have played out without pressure from the USSR. Would any of this have happened without the space race? Would anyone have taken these risks without Soviet motivation?
Alan Shepard was on Apollo 14 and walked on the moon February 5, 1971.
@@lestercoons3962 Apollo 14 (January 31 - February 9, 1971 yes and Edgar Mitchell , two walks on the surface. Also, Shepard "hit two golf balls he had brought with him with a makeshift club." ~ Wikipedia. They had a good time up there. '71 what a year... I'll never forget that year for many reasons. They also had some malfunctions that almost ended the program but were resolved and they were successful.
I appreciate the extra technical details in these videos. I enjoy learning something new.
This is an amazing piece of space aviation history. Thank you so much for sharing.
Beautiful job. Just the right amount of explanation. Perfect highlights on the instrument panel. Like many, I recall this as yesterday...but never had access to this level of information and video footage. Thank you very much.
Excellent, excellent video man! Very well done, you should be proud
Alan Shepard. My boyhood hero. Naval aviator, fantastic pilot. Naval aviators are a breed apart, including Marines. RIP
Greatest video ever !
Give that man some money, youtube, damn it.
yes, do it!
"Don't f*ck up, Shepard..." Per the man himself, often misquoted as a prayer," Dear Lord, please don't let me f*ck up...", but, Shepard always denied the "prayer" part...
Awe inspiring as a child growing up in the 1960's
Some books I have read that I really liked: Carrying the Fire by Michael Collins, And First Man. Also the newly released photo book Apollo Remastered. I was most struck by Michael Colllins's book released in 1974 and carried a forward by Charles Lindburgh. To think that so much could happen in the span of one life is truly amazing.
Wow, look at all those analog instruments!
Like my '90 Volvo! lol
In those days, all activity stopped and the space shots were broadcast on the PA. I was in the second grade and we loved it. We had a president who wasn’t a cadaver, at least for a couple of years.
This has to be one of the most fascinating, compelling and informative videos I’ve ever seen. Just WOW great work 👏. Got a new subscriber here!
Never saw this video before. Thanks for posting it. Still shaking my head at the bravery of those pioneering astronauts. I ask myself, would I be this brave?
Very good. Your work deserves many more views.
CAN RECALL THIS FLIGHT SO WELL, IT WAS A VERY BIG DEAL. NEVER SAW THIS DETAIL. GREAT STUFF!!!
many thanks for bringing this rare footage for sharing with us , its much interesting to see most procedure had been doing manually ...its a joy when you doing first time (of course USSR done it before but for USA it was all new ) creations, failures then correction then test then get successes.
i can imagine how thrilling it might be for all the team but now space travel to low earth orbits become so routine that no one cares about it these days .
some time i watch earth live from ISS and i can barely see only 700 people watching it along with me .
thanks again .
I remember listening to the flight in school on intercom. Very nice
Clever assembly of footage and audio. Well done. I look fore ward to more reconstructions.
Appreciate the effort going to produce this.
Wow. I grew up on this stuff and became a professional technical geek.
This is wonderful work. Please: do the rest of Project Mercury!
Did we go to the Moon? Hell yes we did.
My God! What courage and skill !
My dad was one of the Pad leaders for Alan Shepard, it was a stress engineer for McDonnell aircraft. I went to Cocoa Beach Elementary school second grade our class watch the launch from the beach. Great memories
Great video, good idea adding capsule visualization based on data.
Interesting to know that a pad cabin fire just like the Apollo 1 tragedy could have happened with Mercury and Gemini, too:
"To save weight, Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo spacecraft were designed to operate at a cabin pressure of 5.5 lbs. per square inch of pure oxygen in space. When the spacecraft were pressurized on the launch pad, however, they had to be a couple of pounds over atmospheric pressure, 14.7 lbs. per square inch, to keep the cabin in pure oxygen."
Je commente pour le référencement, pour aller chercher la monétisation
I like the automotive hose clamp on the large line feeding what appears to be Alan's helmet.
They used what they could get right off the shelf..
When they realized they had no way for the Astros to take a leak, their nurse went out that day and bought a women's panty girdle plus the pick up hose for a leg urine bag and several condoms and made a wearable collection garment on her sewing machine. She did that for each Mercury Astronaut.
Only with the Gemini flights did NASA make something better .
@@ablewindsor1459I recall, Alan had to use it!😮
@@leechjim8023 From the Movie The Right Stuff " I am a wet back now" then " let's light this candle"
This is excellent! Good clean images and audio. 😃
I may have been a bit judgemental with my previous comment on another video you published. 🥺
@9:40, he experienced 11.5 g? Naturally, I had to check with wikipedia. "Early experiments showed that untrained humans were able to tolerate a range of accelerations depending on the time of exposure. This ranged from as much as 20 g for less than 10 seconds, to 10 g for 1 minute, and 6 g for 10 minutes." No doubt Shepard was well trained. And in this video it doesn't look like he was at 11.5 g for over a minute, although he stopped reading out the numbers after 9. But this could be a max g record for American astronauts. I wonder what the G forces would be if the emergency ejection system was activated during launch, and how long those forces would last.
The Mercury capsules had almost no lift and had a ballistic reentry trajectory. Later spacecraft had some lift ability and could “fly” so they would reenter more gradually and experience smaller g forces.
Probably few Gs more than the rocket was accelerating at it's peak, but ye I was also surprised at the amount of acceleration(and still looking to be fine, but he quite certainly didn't feel so well)
@@ImieNazwiskoOK Deceleration on reentry.
@@tsfullerton I was talking about acceleration on launch abort, but ye the 11g was the acceleration on reentry
Amazing people !
Thanks god we had this generation !
I remember that flight it was the day before my 11th birthday.. what a ride it was too..
Man of Steel. The best of the best.
Remarkably well made...Thanks!
Watched it live as an 8 year old.
Shepard leaving the transfer van and looking up at the Redstone still etched in my memory.
Alan Shepard and the Mercury 7 indeed had the Right Stuff. America at its finest.
I only wish to live long enough to witness our return to the moon. Mars thereafter if I’m really lucky.
I thought once we landed the moon in 1968 we would already be on Mars today (54 years later).
America and NASA really dropped the ball in manned space.
Public interest waned but virtually every device we use today came as a spinoff from science and technology including the importance of manned spaceflight.
Elon Musk via SpaceX has jump started our national space program.
I doubt without his drive and ingenuity we would be as well placed to restart space exploration.
Go USA !
Great video. Just seeing it now. Fascinating
Incroyable! Merci d'avoir fait ça!
I was in 5th grade and they brought a TV into the classroom so we could watch the launch.
Just watching Astronomy Live's coverage of the USSF-67 launch/return. He said all credit for the stabilization goes to you, so I had to leave a comment telling you that was fantastic work!
Thank you Thank you. Greetings from Ecuador
I remember this like it was yesterday! We early sixties kids lived through amazing history. I got the Mercury Astronaut G.I. Joe and the Mercury Capsule that following Christmas!!
Neil Armstrong, Buz Aldrin, Pete Conrad, Alan Bean, Alan Shepard, Ed Mitchell, Dave Scott, Jim Irwin, John Young, Charlie Duke, Gene Cernan, Harrison Schmitt
Expected to see camera vibration on the launch but it was very stable. During the Gemini program, at school we had an assembly for every launch to watch on TV.
and in 8 yrs we be walking on the moon. and in 50 yrs, flat earthers think this is all CGI. EVENtho it hasnt been invented yet.
@@aussieblue7132 Yes they havent been back. But you must have been there in tghe first place to be able to gO BACK.
@@aussieblue7132they found nothing useful and no reason to go back until now to set up for Mars exploration. Wake up, son.
Stop giving flat earthers the time of day. It’s the epitome of punching down. It’s like giving air time to people who think aliens built the pyramids. Why waste the time?
We did go back anyway. We went 6 times so…
@@mtb416 Sometimes seeing people show their idiocy can be entertaining. Tho i think most flerthers arent serious, they enjoy trolling to annoy people.
Great footage. It is amazing the leaps that NASA had to make from this short journey of Freedom 7 to the Apollo flights to the moon. It is still a great time to be around in space and planetary discoveries currently being made. But for Astronauts to experience their exploration of the Moon and their individual experiences of seeing our beautiful planet out on its own in space. 😊
I was three years old when Russia launched Sputnik. I vividly remember being in my back yard in Indianapolis and seeing it in the night sky, with my dad.
At 3? I don't think so
@@OttoByOgraffey Really! I can vividly remember certain things when I was 3 years old which suprised and was confirmed by my parents and older siblings. Even recall certain things from two and a half. So yes @davidmangold , I believe you!
I read the stories about the Mercury Seven when I was 14 back in 1980 and it was such a riveting and interesting read. I read anything that was about astronomy and the Mercury and Gemini projoects.
Thanks for sharing this.
Super travail, merci !
“Is go”, I don’t know how such a simple phrase means “LET’S GET THIS BOYS!!!” Riles me up. Love it.
Thanks for this video !!!
thank you for this
Incredible job thx 😃
My grandfather was in charge of all the recovery forces for the Mercury program.
My middle name is Alan, after Commander Sheppard. Very cool video.
I don't know how he or any of the rest of them got in those capsules with balls that big.
Alan was my first space hero and he just oozed confidence and was a man's man. Military/test pilot, and had the ego to match, because if you weren't supremely confident and did not feel like you could handle anything, you didn't have the right stuff.
Yuri Gagarin’s flight was 1h48m. Amazing how short Alan Shepards flight was
Gagarin circled the Earth in a near-full orbit, using basically an ICBM. Shepard had a much weaker rocket under him, which meant he was restricted to a quick up and down hop
28,000 km/hour, reached 267 km in altitude and descended to 30,000 feet where the chute opened in a very short time.
Cruets the size of Coconuts.
Very cool film. Thanks 👍🏼
Super vidéo !
I was in 2nd grade when Shephard went up. My dad worked for NASA at the time. I’m 74 now.
I love watching these old videos, but I never understood how we see no vibrations in the video, I watched the apollo one recently and it was fantastic!
Those knee straps really did their job holding him in place while riding on an explosion without a bump, shake or anything. The camera probably went up and down with the seat to help stabilize the picture as well. They thought of everything.
My father-in-law worked at the cape from 56 to 75 he knew all those guys I didn't really believe it till we were walking up the tarmac at a little air show fly in , in Three Forks Montana and he slaps me on the shoulder and says ,you know that guy is ? I had no idea my father-in-law says that's Gene Cernan last man to walk on the moon so I got to sit in the shade of his airplane wing and listen to Gene cernan and my father-in-law talk about everything for hours,too cool
I remember watching this with my Mom, as she explained how we were watching history taking place. I remember for days after, when my Mom asked me to do something, I would reply with a Roger, Over. It drove her crazy. 😂
deb & i were babies back then , but heard about all later still . even watched soome gemini launches from school
I'm amazed there wasn't any vibration in the camera! This was so impressive to watch.
The camera was firmly attached to the wall of the capsule. So, the camera vibrated at the same rate as the capsule. Makes it look like there's no vibration, but it's all vibrating like heck!
I was 15 and remember watching this in class with the rest of my classmates.
Fantastic content!
Ich werde es nie verstehen dass man solch gute Nerven besitzt!
Einfach Wahnsinn 😬
Wow.. what would acceleration like that, for that long be like.. amazing.