• Tag Archives space
  • Kennedy Space Center: Saturn IB (2000) 

    Saturn IB at the Kennedy Space Center in February 2000

    Source: Kennedy Space Center: Saturn IB (2000)

    The Saturn IB was a predecessor to the Saturn V which first took Astronauts to the moon. The Saturn IB was used for early orbital test flights of the Apollo Command Service Module and the Lunar Module. It launched the first manned Apollo flight and test of the Command Service Module, Apollo 7 (originally designated Apollo 1 but a tragic fire killed that crew).

    Later (1973), the Saturn IB was used to launch crews to the Skylab space station three times. Finally in 1975, a Saturn IB was used to launch the Apollo portion of the US-USSR Apollo-Soyuz Test Project.

    There were a total of 14 Saturn IBs built or partially built. The first five (SA-201 – SA-205) were used for test flights for the Apollo program. The next two (SA-206 – SA-207) were used for flights to Skylab. SA-208 was used as a standby to rescue astronauts from the Skylab 3 flight if needed (it wasn’t) and was used to transport the third and final Skylab crew.

    SA-209 was used as a rescue standby for both the Skylab 4 flight and the Apollo-Soyuz flight (fortunately not needed for either). It was then designated for the Skylab 5 mission which was to boost the orbit of Skylab so that it would last until the Space Shuttle was ready. This mission was cancelled and the rocket was never used. This is the Saturn IB in the picture above at the Kennedy Space Center.

    SA-210 was used for the Apollo-Soyuz mission and was the last Saturn IB flight.

    SA-211 was unused and the first stage is at the Alabama Welcome Center on I-65 in Alabama while the S-IVB stage is on display at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Alabama.

    SA-212 was unused. The first stage was scrapped while the S-IVB stage was converted to the Skylab Space Station.

    Both SA-213 and SA-214 only had first stages built and they were unused and eventually scrapped.



  • Liberty Bell 7

    The Liberty Bell 7 was the capsule that flew on board a Mercury-Redstone rocket for the second U.S. manned spaceflight with Gus Grissom in 1961. This was a suborbital flight that only lasted a little over fifteen minutes and all went well until splashdown.

    The hatch cover was designed to release via a small explosive device in the event of an emergency. For some reason, it was unintentionally activated shortly after the capsule landed in the ocean. Gus Grissom escaped safely (though he would later die in the Apollo 1 fire), but the capsule sank before it could be recovered.

    Nearly 40 years later in 1999 it was finally recovered in 16,000 feet of water after a fourteen year private effort to find and retrieve it financed by the Discovery Channel. Ironically, while the emergency explosive device on the hatch exploded when it wasn’t supposed to, another explosive device designed to produce a sound to aid location in the event of sinking did not detonate. This had to be removed upon recovery.

    After the Liberty Bell 7 was taken apart, cleaned and reassembled it went on a national tour for several years. Today, it’s home is in the Cosmosphere, a museum in Kansas, but in October 2000 when these pictures were taken it was at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.