no.247/ marvin

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marvin
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no.247/ marvin

Beitragvon marvin » Samstag 4. März 2006, 17:07

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Was hat dieses Bild mit MOPAR zu tun?

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Toaschtn
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Beitragvon Toaschtn » Samstag 4. März 2006, 17:10

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Superbee :?: :Nix: :gruebel:
Frequently Wrong........Never in Doubt!

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Beitragvon Toaschtn » Samstag 4. März 2006, 17:18

Der Antrieb war aber ein GM Produkt :wink:

Propulsion: diesel-electric, four General Motors 12-278A diesel main engines driving four General Electric generators and three General Motors 3-268A auxiliary services engines, single screw, 3,600shp


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Frequently Wrong........Never in Doubt!

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judge
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Beitragvon judge » Samstag 4. März 2006, 19:53

ich nehme an, du meinst die jupiter r&d missile, die von chrysler für's mercury project produziert wurde.

http://www.redstone.army.mil/history/chron2b/1959b.html

chrysler hatte ja immer ein naheverhältnis zur army...

vielleicht aber auch able und baker, die als belohnung vorstandsposten bekamen und für die verkaufserfolge der 61-63er modelle verantwortlich zeichnen mussten... :) :) :)
words tend to be inadequate. it's a doozie...

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Beitragvon Driver » Samstag 4. März 2006, 21:43

vielleicht wars auch das schiff dass den "lawman" auf seine reise zu den us truppen nach emmm hmmm vietnam brachte, um diese mit den fahreigenschaften neuer detroiter produkte vertraut zu machen :?: wäre dann in dem falle ein 66er charger gewesen...weit hergeholt, hab ich aber grad wo gelesen...

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Beitragvon marvin » Samstag 4. März 2006, 23:50

judge hat es gelöst!
Gratulation' :clap1: :clap1: :clap1:

Langsam werdet Ihr mir unheimlich...
Ich habe die Frage als relativ schwer empfunden...

ABLE und BAKER hießen die beiden Affen auf dem Foto (offensichtlich nach der Landung), die 1959 mit einer (Chrysler/Mopar) Rakete in den Orbit befördert wurden...

Aber lest selbst:

THE ABLE-BAKER MISSION


May 28, 1959: Fired from Atlantic Missile Range at 0235 hours EST. The flight was successful with impact ranging from 0.1 to 0.4 nm from the target. The missile traveled a 1,500 mile range. The significant mission of the missile was to test the effects of cosmic radiation, increased gravity, and weightlessness on live passengers and biomedical experiments of material housed in the nose cone. On board were an American-born rhesus monkey, Able; a squirrel monkey, Baker; and the biomedical experiments -- yeast , corn, mustard seeds, fruit-fly larvae, human blood, mould spore, and fish eggs. Able and Baker were recovered unharmed within one and one-half hours after lift-off. This milestone marked the first recovery of living creatures from a flight through near space. The biomedical experiments were for NASA analysis. Telemetry data disclosed that the responses of the animals were normal for the conditions they were experiencing. During the boost phase, when the higher g-loads were being sustained, body temperature, respiration, pulse rate, and heartbeat rose but were well within tolerable limits. During the weightless period along the trajectory arc, the physiological responses of Able and Baker approached normal - so near, in fact, that according to telemetry data, Baker appeared either to doze or to become drowsy. Upon reentry, the responses rose again, but at landing the animals were nearing a settled physiological state. This flight was another milestone proving that life could be sustained in a space environment.

The flight of monkeys Able (an American-born rhesus monkey supplied by the Army) and Baker (a South American squirrel monkey furnished by the Navy) marked the first successful recovery of living creatures after their return to earth from outer space. The monkeys rode in the nose cone of JUPITER Missile AM-18 to an altitude of 300 miles and a distance of 1,500 miles, successfully withstanding 38 times the normal pull of gravity and a weightless period of about 9 minutes. Their survival of speeds over 10,000 miles per hour was the first step toward putting a man into space.

The Army Ballistic Missile Agency lifted two monkeys into space on a suborbital mission in a Jupiter missile nose cone to test physiological reactions to spaceflight. The test took its name from the two monkeys, Able, a 3.18 kilogram (7-pound) rhesus monkey, and Baker, a 311.9 gram (11-ounce) squirrel monkey.

In 16 minutes, the nose cone traveled 2735 kilometers (1700 miles) from Cape Canaveral and reached an altitude of approximately 579 kilometers (360 miles). The two monkeys survived the flight in good condition. Able, though, died 4 days later from a reaction to the anesthetic given during surgery to remove an infected electrode. Baker died on Nov. 29, 1984, in Huntsville, Ala. of kidney failure at the age of 27.

The flight contained seven other experiments. Sea urchin eggs, human blood cells, yeast and onion skin cells, corn seeds, mustard seeds, mold spores, and fruit fly larvae were exposed to cosmic rays and returned to Earth for study.

THE ABLE-BAKER COUCHES
These are the actual fixtures used to hold and monitor the monkeys Able and Baker during their flight. The rhesus monkey Able, preserved after her death, is displayed here in her specially-designed couch, which fit inside a protective capsule.

THE BAKER EXPERIMENT
The smaller squirrel monkey Baker also was transported in a specially-designed restraint, cushioned with polyurethane foam. The end of the couch cylinder has molded rubber pads to absorb jolts, while the couch foam absorbed high-frequency vibrations. Baker's biological reactions were telemetered to ground recorders. The Baker Experiment was a project of the U.S. Naval School of Aviation Medicine.


THE ABLE EXPERIMENT
Able's fiberglass couch, lined with polyurethane foam, held her in a position similar to that which was to be used by the Mercury astronauts. During the flight, a 16-mm movie camera photographed Able, while her biological reactions were telemetered to ground recording stations.
As part of a physiological experiment, scientists planned to have the rhesus monkey press a telegraph key (under the right paw) when a light flashed. The rhesus monkeys initially trained for the mission, though, were born in India where the rhesus is sacred and are not used as experimental animals. To avoid diplomatic repercussions, the American-born Able was substituted, two weeks before the mission. As she did not have time to learn her drill, the experiment was cancelled.
The Able Experiment was a project of the U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command.


Bild

Die Chrysler Corporation umfasste zB 1961:

PLYMOUTH
VALIANT
DODGE
DART
LANCER
CHRYSLER
IMPERIAL
DODGE TRUCKS
MOPAR
REDSTONE
JUPITER

AIRTEMP
AMPLEX
MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL ENGINES

....und REDSTONE und JUPITER bauten Raketen!

Nochmal Gratulation an Judge...er ist - wieder - dran!
Zuletzt geändert von marvin am Sonntag 5. März 2006, 10:48, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.

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judge
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Beitragvon judge » Sonntag 5. März 2006, 10:26

danke, marvin!

ich schau' mal, bis zu tom's großem frühjahrsputz ab 14 uhr noch ein rätsel reinzustellen...
words tend to be inadequate. it's a doozie...

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Beitragvon superbee » Sonntag 5. März 2006, 12:26

man lernt nie aus :shock: :idea:

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