T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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169.1 | Publications US printing Office | PIPA::BIRO | | Fri Apr 18 1986 11:41 | 28 |
| Soviet Military Power 1986 stock number 008-000-00410-2 $7.00
mastercard/visa phone orders us Gov Print Office Was DC
202-783-3238 monday throught friday 8-4 est
also of interest could be
Soviet Space programs Vol 2 052-070-05963-0 $8.00
Soviet Space programs Vol 3 052-070-06029-8 $8.50
Vol 1 is out of print
Vol 2 is man flight
Vol 3 is unmanned space Activites (up to 83)
They have lots of good book relating to space, and at
resonable prices, you may want to ask for the following
catalogs and or subject areas
SOVIET UNION
SPACE HUTTLE PUBLICATIONS
NASA SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNICAL PUB
NASA EDUCATION PUB
SPACE ROCKETS AND SATELLITES
Phone order are accept instantly, takes 10 days to get to the
shipping desk, and then via book rate forever mail, typical
turn around time 30 to 60 days
if you live near a Gov Pub you can pick them up in person
jb
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169.2 | | MONSTR::HUGHES | Gary Hughes | Fri Apr 18 1986 14:36 | 4 |
| I ordered the 1985 one from the Boston US Govt Printing Office and
got it in a couple of days.
gary
|
169.3 | ?? bos office | PIPA::BIRO | | Wed Apr 23 1986 12:09 | 6 |
| I did not know there was a local US Govt Printing Office in Boston
do you know the telephone number and address. Can you stop by and
pick up what you want if it is in stock???
john
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169.4 | Boston Govt Printing Office | MONSTR::HUGHES | Gary Hughes | Thu Apr 24 1986 14:33 | 6 |
| The Boston US GPO is (617) 223 6071. I think they are in the Govt
Centre downtown. They have Soviet Military Power in stock and they
take phone orders. They said it would be quicker to order the other
items directly from DC.
gary
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169.5 | IT MAY NOT BE LONG NOW | EDEN::KLAES | The right computer finally came along. | Wed Dec 03 1986 10:36 | 5 |
| The Soviets have completed final static tests on their Space
Shuttle.
Larry
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169.6 | 1988 launch? | VINO::DZIEDZIC | | Wed Dec 03 1986 10:59 | 5 |
| Last I heard the initial launch was expected to be in early 1988
(I wonder if that was why NASA chose that as a target date for a
first shuttle flight after the Challenger accident?). Has the
expected launch date for the Soviet shuttle changed?
|
169.7 | the other shuttles | NANUCK::KILSDONK | | Fri Feb 20 1987 11:29 | 4 |
| There is a nice article in the current issue of POPULAR SCIENCE
(MARCH 87) concerning the SOVIET, EUROPEAN, and JAPANESE shuttles.
They also talk about the mini-soviet shuttles. have fun FRANK
|
169.8 | Cosmonauts simulate space shuttle manuevers | DICKNS::KLAES | I grow weary of the chase! | Tue Oct 27 1987 09:41 | 35 |
| VNS TECHNOLOGY WATCH: [Mike Taylor, VNS Correspondent]
===================== [Nashua, NH, USA ]
Soviets Fly Jet Powered Space Shuttle Testbed
Cosomonaut crews are conducting runway takeoff and landing
test with a jet engine powered version of the Soviet Union's
space shuttle orbiter in preparation for the shuttle's first
orbital launch, which may not occur until 1989, depending on
resolution of problems with the orbiter's digital flight
control system and availability of the shuttle's ENERGIA
launcher.
The flight tests are beign conducted from the 15,000 ft
shuttle landing strip recently constructed at the Baikonur
Cosmodrome in Tyuratam. Cosmonaut Igor Volt is the chief
pilot in the shuttle flight test program and will be the
leading candidate to fly the shuttle on its first orbital
mission. The flight testbed orbiter has been fitted with
four 20,000 lb class Lyulka engines that provide sufficient
thrust to power the vehicle through a convential runway
takeoff to an altitude from which it can simulate the
approach and landing profiles it will fly when returning from
orbit, according to officials.
{AW&ST October 12, 1987}
Several small, commerically important experiments will be
flown on US Space Shuttle mission STS-26, but the reduced flight
rate in upcoming years has forced NASA to delay of cancel more than
350 small commerical and technical payloads that earlier would have
been launched on that shuttle.
{AW&ST October 12, 1987}
<><><><><><><> VNS Edition : 1431 Tuesday 27-Oct-1987 <><><><><><><>
|
169.9 | Hey Hey Hey | ISOLA::NIS | Nis Schmidt, VBO-AFSG, 828-5610 | Thu Nov 19 1987 10:54 | 9 |
| So the Space-race is reSTARted, who will first get a shuttle in
orbit? Europe, USSR or U 'knighted' states.
Re: .8 - "difficulties with digital flight control system".
So, all that work that went into "confusing the russians" finally
starts to pay of - or maybe they are waiting for 'VS-6000'.
"Nuts In Space ..."
|
169.10 | CHALLENGER tragedy is far-reaching... | DICKNS::KLAES | All the galaxy's a stage... | Tue Jan 12 1988 17:46 | 32 |
| AEROSPACE INDUSTRY WEEKLY NEWS HIGHLIGHTS
For the Week of November 23, 1987
Sponsored by
Aerospace Industry Marketing
Provided By
CSP Associates, Inc.
Cambridge, MA 02140
CHALLENGER ACCIDENT SLOWED SOVIET SHUTTLE PROGRAM
Roald Sagdeyev, head of the Soviet Space Research Institute, said in
Washington that the CHALLENGER crash prompted the Soviet Union to more
carefully assess their own Shuttle program and the cost-effectiveness
and advisability of depending solely on a shuttle to get into space.
He also noted that the Soviets had a lot of work to do before launching
their first shuttle.
WEINBERGER SAYS SOVIETS ARE BUILDING COVERT SPACE LAUNCH CAPABILITY
Based on the fact that the Soviets are making major investments in the
fighting ability of their space systems, former Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger said he believes the USSR is developing a covert
mobile space launch capability in addition to its three main fixed
space launch sites. He also noted their larger and more dispersed
number of launch complexes and their mobile ICBMs with potential for
conversion to space launch as additional causes for concern.
|
169.11 | Shutle to Dock to Space Station | HYDRA::BIRO | | Tue Aug 15 1989 09:02 | 80 |
| reprinted in part from tuesday aug 15 1989 NY times
NY TIMEs articles
The Soviet Union has significantly scaled back its space shuttle program
and deferred a manned shuttle mission until 1992, a senior Soviet officials
said yesterday. The plans were reported as senior Soviet rocket scientists led
an American Congressional delegation and military specialist above through a
top secret site in Baikonur for assembling space vehicles, including the
shuttle...
Soviet technicians in white laboratory jackets stared in seeming disbelief as
Boris I. Gubanov, the chief designer for the Energiya rocket program,
led members of the house Armed Service Committee, a team of American
specialists and a group of American reporters on a brisk tour.
Earlier in the day, Maj. Gen. Vladimir Gudilin, the head of the space shuttle
program, led the Americans on a tour of a mammoth, hangarlike structure
that houses the Soviet Unions's two space shuttles, one of which has
already flown, and a third mock shuttle that is used for research and
development purposes.
The American Congression delegation which is on a 10 day tour of Soviet
Military sites, flew this morning to an airport near the space center,
a sprawling complex situated on the stepps of Central Asia, near the
city of Tyuratam about 15000 miles southeast of Moscow.
The American were asked not to take any pictures form the air of the complex,
which is also used to test the Soviet's military's long-range missiles.
Bun on the ground, the Americans were allowed to take photographs.
On a 45 minute bus ride from the airport the Americans passed thorough a dusty
city that houses the 75,000 specialist who work here and their dependents.
....cut
Here at Baikonur, General Gudilin portrayed the shuttles abilities more
favorable, noting its ability to recover expensive space-based systems
and return them to earth. ( Sagadeyev argued against the shuttle
in favor of expendable rockets on Sunday)
The general also said the shuttle could be used for reconnaissance satellites,
twice mentioning the American Lacrosse satellite, which can reportedly look
through clouds by developing images through radar. But it was not clear
whether the general meant that the shuttle should be used to deploy such
satellites or retrieve them for maintenance.
......
Next flight in 1991. Soviets officials said the Baikonur complex can launch 12
shuttles a year at the two launching pads but General Gudilin said that the
next shuttle flight would not take place until 1991, when an unmanned shuttle
would be sent into space and would dock with the space station, linking
itself to the station through a special device in the Shuttle's cargo bay...
Astronauts in the space stations would operate some of the docked Shuttle's
systems before it returned unmanned to earth. This would be the
second flight of the shuttle, which orbited the earth on an unmanned
mission last year.
The first manned shuttle mission will be carried out in 1992, the general said.
Such a mission, with three crew members, could last 7 to 30 days, he said.
After that, one shuttle a year will be launch until the year 2000, the
general said.
Earlier plans were far more ambititious, said Vladimir L. Lapygin the
chairman of the Supreme Soviets's newly formed Defense and State Security
Committee. He said today that Soviet authorities had initially planned to
carry out 10 shuttle launches by 1997.
If Soviet shuttle plans are scaled back, officials said, Moscow has several
alternatives. The Energiya launching system, which uses powerful strapped-on
booster rockets to lift the the Soviet shuttle into space , can operated
independently of the shuttle, as Marcia S. Smith an expert on Soviet
space program at the Congressional Research Service, has noted..
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