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NASA Skylab Readiness & Delivery Schedule & Martin Marietta Skylab Foldout

$ 7.91

Availability: 10 in stock
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Modified Item: No
  • Condition: Both items are in very good used condition. Color and Graphics are very good also.Please see all attached pictures.
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Year: 1971 & 1973
  • Theme: Astronauts & Space Travel
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Exploration Missions: Apollo
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Type: NASA Skylab Memorabilia
  • Signed: No

    Description

    NASA Skylab Readiness & Delivery Schedule & Martin Marietta Skylab Foldout
    Skylab Hardware Readiness and Delivery Schedule
    ML-20,
    dated June 24
    th
    , 1971 covers all Skylab launches (SL-1 through SL-4).
    Large Martin Marietta Skylab Program Foldout Overview
    , dated March 1973. This opens to show a detailed picture and text of Skylab. The reverse side also has extensive detailed picture and text of Skylab.
    Measurement Open:
    Foldout- 30
    inches
    X
    22
    inches.
    Card- 3
    inches
    X
    5
    inches
    Condition;
    both items are in very good used condition. Color and Graphics are very good also.
    Please see all attached pictures.
    Shipping includes a Tracking Number.
    Skylab was the first United States
    Space Station
    , launched by
    NASA
    , occupied for about 24 weeks between May 1973 and February 1974. It was operated by three separate three-astronaut crews:
    Skylab 2
    ,
    Skylab 3
    and
    Skylab 4
    . Major operations included an orbital workshop, a
    solar observatory
    ,
    Earth observation
    , and hundreds of
    experiments
    .
    On August 8, 1969, the
    McDonnell Douglas Corporation
    received a contract for the conversion of two existing S-IVB stages to the Orbital Workshop configuration. One of the S-IV test stages was shipped to McDonnell Douglas for the construction of a mock-up in January 1970. The Orbital Workshop was renamed "Skylab" in February 1970 as a result of a NASA contest. The actual stage that flew was the upper stage of the AS-212 rocket (the S-IVB stage, S-IVB 212). The mission computer used aboard Skylab was the
    IBM
    System/4Pi
    TC-1, a relative of the
    AP-101
    Space Shuttle computers. The Saturn V with serial number SA-513, originally produced for the Apollo program – before the cancellation of Apollo 18, 19, and 20 – was repurposed and redesigned to launch Skylab. The Saturn V's third stage was removed and replaced with Skylab, but with the controlling
    Instrument Unit
    remaining in its standard position.
    Skylab was launched on May 14, 1973, by the modified Saturn V. The launch is sometimes referred to as Skylab 1. Severe damage was sustained during launch and deployment, including the loss of the station's
    micrometeoroid
    shield/sun shade and one of its main
    solar panels
    . Debris from the lost micrometeoroid shield further complicated matters by becoming tangled in the remaining solar panel, preventing its full deployment and thus leaving the station with a huge power deficit.
    Immediately following Skylab's launch,
    Pad 39A
    at
    Kennedy Space Center
    was deactivated, and construction proceeded to modify it for the
    Space Shuttle
    program, originally targeting
    a maiden launch in March 1979
    . The crewed missions to Skylab would occur using a
    Saturn IB
    rocket from Launch Pad 39B.
    Skylab 1 was the last un-crewed launch from LC-39A until February 19, 2017, when
    SpaceX CRS-10
    was launched from there.
    Unable to be re-boosted by the
    Space Shuttle
    , which was not ready until 1981, Skylab's orbit decayed and it disintegrated in the atmosphere on July 11, 1979, scattering debris across the
    Indian Ocean
    and
    Western Australia
    .