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Jess Lurkin NULL wrote in news:Xns9D8AED8D8266BIPHIDEinuseALERT@
74.209.136.81: Mitchell Holman wrote in 30: snip Of course, for a whole year after Sputnik the US orbital rockets kept blowing up on the launch pad, showing just how "able" the US was.......... Painting with a wide brush there, pilgrim. Refine your searches. Read more (recently printed) history books. Quit using Hollyweird as a source (your comment sounds suspiciously close to a verbatim quote from the script of "The Right Stuff"). One of these days you may actually learn the full extent of what was really going on back in those days. Just in the last few years has some of the records/info seen the light of day. Much of what you may believe as history might actually have been a govt. subterfuge. "As the first tangible effort to counter the apparent Soviet leadership in space technology, the White House announced that the United States would test launch a Project Vanguard booster on 6 December 1957. The media was invited to witness the launch in the hope that it could help restore public confidence, but it was a disaster of the first order. During the ignition sequence, the rocket rose about three feet above the platform, shook briefly, and disintegrated in flames. John Hagen, who had been working feverishly to ready the rocket for flight, was demoralized. He felt even worse after the next test. On 5 February 1958, the Vanguard launch vehicle reached an altitude of four miles and then exploded." http://tinyurl.com/2fyfpp5 |
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On Tue, 01 Jun 2010 22:06:17 -0500, Mitchell Holman wrote:
Of course Sputnik was primitive. But it got into orbit, something it took the US over a year to imitate. The story is complex and perhaps best discussed in alt.history or something. But, to be brief, the massive Soviet push to develop and showcase a rocket that had orbital capabilities was a direct response to their own nuclear bomber inferiority (an inferiority which persisted until the very end of the cold war). Furthermore, the US military had plans for orbital satellites well before Sputnik but were concerned about the political ramifications of sending space objects over foreign territory. Ironically, the Soviet Sputnik launch only dissolved those concerns. The plus side was it kick-started US educational standards and ushered in the priority of math and science education that served NASA well in the following decades. If public hysteria has value, that was it, I suppose. Consider the following quote (LA Times, 1957): One proud exception to the general knicker-twisting? The editorial board of the Los Angeles Times, whose primary response to the news of Sputnik's launch was a Pattonesque slap at all the blubbering ninnies. From our Oct. 8, 1957 editorial "Moonshine About the New Moon"... This week-end's outpourings over the Russian satellite show most of the American spokesmen at their juvenile worst. They act like the alumni who want to fire the coach every time the team loses a game. That is exact: they view the satellite launching as a race which the United States has lost. "Blubbering juvenile ninnies" is a good characterization of the public hysteria that surrounded Sputnik. |
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On Wed, 02 Jun 2010 20:47:35 +0000, rabid_fan wrote:
The story is complex and perhaps best discussed in alt.history or something. Fortunately, I was able to locate an article on the web that provides an excellent summary: http://www.newsweek.com/2007/10/01/t...nik-story.html Internet sources cannot (yet) compete with printed publications for depth and comprehensiveness. But be assured that scholarly works do exist that completely dispel the ridiculous notion that the Sputnik launch was a "proof" of Soviet technical superiority. Sputnik was a cheap sideshow, and nothing more. |
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rabid_fan wrote in news
![]() @righthere.net: On Wed, 02 Jun 2010 20:47:35 +0000, rabid_fan wrote: The story is complex and perhaps best discussed in alt.history or something. Fortunately, I was able to locate an article on the web that provides an excellent summary: http://www.newsweek.com/2007/10/01/t...nik-story.html Internet sources cannot (yet) compete with printed publications for depth and comprehensiveness. But be assured that scholarly works do exist that completely dispel the ridiculous notion that the Sputnik launch was a "proof" of Soviet technical superiority. Sputnik was a cheap sideshow, and nothing more. Mr. Fan, Thanks for the follow-up(s). The interesting part for me is that my father-in-law is an 80-something cryogenic engineer who worked in the Soviet rocketry programs, including the Buran. He retired at 70, just before the fall of the USSR. After the fall, he realized that there was no retirement check, he and his wife listened to their only child and immigrated to the US. I am fortunate enough to have married into this class family (my wife is a research doctor of microbiology, her daughter is a cardiologist, my wife's ex is a physicist still in Moscow). I have learned enough Russian to be able to sit and enjoy his knowledge and tales. He says that for every U.S. rocket loss, there were at least two for the Reds. Also says that it was more a sheer miracle that Spudnik (sic) made it. But the (Western) agitprop of the day lead the sheep to think that the U.S. was trailing far behind. Even he knows better. On top of what I have read and heard, he can dispel much of what has been discussed in this thread... But then no one would believe what he or I say... it's just the internet... and we like anonymity. |
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On Thu, 03 Jun 2010 01:55:55 +0000, Jess Lurkin wrote:
He says that for every U.S. rocket loss, there were at least two for the Reds. Also says that it was more a sheer miracle that Spudnik (sic) made it. But the (Western) agitprop of the day lead the sheep to think that the U.S. was trailing far behind. Even he knows better. In retrospect, the Western reaction (or overreaction) to Sputnik may seem senseless and silly, but the world was far different back then. Communism was perceived as a terrible threat to the freedom of the world, and in many ways the threat was very real. The animosity between Soviets and Americans extended down to the average man/woman on the street. Attitudes are different now, but the citizen of the 1950's lived in the midst of a palpable fear of the communist enemy. Schools regularly held nuclear attack drills (the "duck and cover" campaign) and home fallout shelters were even encouraged. Once we take the prevalent social anxiety of the 1950's into consideration, the hysteria over Sputnik becomes more understandable if not more excusable. |
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On 03/06/2010 03:52, rabid_fan wrote:
On Thu, 03 Jun 2010 01:55:55 +0000, Jess Lurkin wrote: He says that for every U.S. rocket loss, there were at least two for the Reds. Also says that it was more a sheer miracle that Spudnik (sic) made it. But the (Western) agitprop of the day lead the sheep to think that the U.S. was trailing far behind. Even he knows better. Nonetheless, the Russians still did something that no-one thought they were capable of doing - placing a satellite in orbit before anyone else was capable of doing so. In retrospect, the Western reaction (or overreaction) to Sputnik Surely that should be "...the *American* reaction (or overreaction) to Sputnik..." may seem senseless and silly, but the world was far different back then. Communism was perceived as a terrible threat to the freedom of the world, and in many ways the threat was very real. The animosity between Soviets and Americans extended down to the average man/woman on the street. Attitudes are different now, but the citizen of the 1950's lived in the midst of a palpable fear of the communist enemy. Schools regularly held nuclear attack drills (the "duck and cover" campaign) and home fallout shelters were even encouraged. ....thus taking hysteria to a whole new level. Once we take the prevalent social anxiety of the 1950's into consideration, the hysteria over Sputnik becomes more understandable if not more excusable. Only from an American viewpoint! Those that lived a lot closer to the Soviet threat weren't nearly so paranoid. Of course there was danger, I'm more than fully aware of that, having served in Germany in the 1960s, but Europe tended to get on with its life rather than looking for Reds under every bed. -- Moving things in still pictures |
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On Thu, 03 Jun 2010 20:18:10 +0100, ®i©ardo wrote:
Nonetheless, the Russians still did something that no-one thought they were capable of doing - placing a satellite in orbit before anyone else was capable of doing so. If you insist on giving credit where credit is due, then we all have to admit that virtually every aeronautical and astronautical development that occurred since 1945 was the direct result of *German* engineering. Both the US and the Soviet Union grabbed as many German scientists and engineers as was possible. The post-war space and aviation industries of both nations was shaped largely by the work of the these German ex-patriots. The American B-47 bomber, for example, which laid the foundation for all subsequent aircraft in its class, both military and commercial, was based entirely on German experimental work on swept-wing airframes that the Boeing Corp. had acquired. If not for the Germans, we'd probably still be flying the B-36. |
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On 03/06/2010 21:03, rabid_fan wrote:
On Thu, 03 Jun 2010 20:18:10 +0100, ®i©ardo wrote: Nonetheless, the Russians still did something that no-one thought they were capable of doing - placing a satellite in orbit before anyone else was capable of doing so. If you insist on giving credit where credit is due, then we all have to admit that virtually every aeronautical and astronautical development that occurred since 1945 was the direct result of *German* engineering. Both the US and the Soviet Union grabbed as many German scientists and engineers as was possible. The post-war space and aviation industries of both nations was shaped largely by the work of the these German ex-patriots. The American B-47 bomber, for example, which laid the foundation for all subsequent aircraft in its class, both military and commercial, was based entirely on German experimental work on swept-wing airframes that the Boeing Corp. had acquired. If not for the Germans, we'd probably still be flying the B-36. Yes, you probably would be which, I seem to recall, used a development of the British Whittle jet engine! -- Moving things in still pictures |
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