Revenki's photos with the keyword: Atlas

Mercury Monument, Then and Now

04 Sep 2009 117
The image on the left is from a slide taken by my grandparents in early 1965, the one on the left I took in August 2009, showing the same scene today. Unfortunately, the printed image I was using as a reference was not complete, cutting off at the corner of the pedestal. It was also nearly impossible with my D-80 to get the perspective to match the original image, even while crouching down to simulate an old slide camera held at chest height (judging by the crossbar on the monument, I obviously didn't crouch down enough). The people in the photo are other tourists, no connection to my grandparents (ie: I don't know who they are).

LC-14, Then and Now

04 Sep 2009 135
The top left image is from a slide taken by my grandparents in early 1965. The upper right image is the same view from August 2009. The lower image is what is left of the launch facility, hidden now by the foliage on the righthand side of the access road -- the mound on the left is the launch control blockhouse, and straight ahead is the rocket launch mount and the foundation for the red launch umbilical tower seen in the older image. The tower itself is I think the one shown in other images in my KSC tour set, laid out in segments in a parking lot at the nearby rocket park.

LC-14

11 Aug 2009 112
The launch mount at LC-14, used for the Mercury Atlas launches.

Reserved Parking

LC-14

11 Aug 2009 80
Part of the launch pad at LC-14.

LC-14

11 Aug 2009 88
The blockhouse and launch mount at LC-14.

Blockhouse

11 Aug 2009 97
The blockhouse at LC-12.

Cape Canaveral Air Force Station

10 Aug 2009 128
From left to right, LC-41, LC-40, the old Titan Vertical Integration Facility, and LC-37, as seen from the middle of the causeway across the Banana River.

LC-41

10 Aug 2009 108
The former Titan launch pad, now used by Atlas-V. The structure in the background at left is the fixed service tower, where rockets are assembled onto a mobile launch platform. Like Shuttle, the mobile platform is rolled out to the launch mount (the low concrete structure between the lightning towers on the right) for launch.

Rocket Park, KSC

31 Oct 2009 115
An Atlas (left) and Thor (right). Taken during a visit in late June, 1976. This area is now part of the KSC visitor center, and some of these same bits and pieces are probably still on display .