Ye Olde Rocket Forum

Ye Olde Rocket Forum (http://www.oldrocketforum.com/index.php)
-   Scale & Sport Scale Rocketry (http://www.oldrocketforum.com/forumdisplay.php?f=35)
-   -   Mercury Redstone (http://www.oldrocketforum.com/showthread.php?t=16531)

Brent 03-14-2017 09:22 AM

Mercury Redstone
 
Freedom 7 flew on MR-3. The photos on the NASA dot gov website have MR7 on the booster. Is this correct.

Rob Campbell 03-14-2017 09:25 AM

Quote:
Originally Posted by Brent
Freedom 7 flew on MR-3. The photos on the NASA dot gov website have MR7 on the booster. Is this correct.


The combination of the Mercury capsule and Redstone booster was designated MR (Mercury Redstone)-3 as it was the third launch of this hardware configuration. The NASA site is a typo as there never was a MR-7. Mercury flights received MA designations beginning with John Glenn's flight since the Atlas booster was used and not the Redstone.

RocketRohde 03-14-2017 12:53 PM

Actually there was a MR-7 on the original NASA schedule for June 1960, but was cancelled somewhere along the way when the schedule apparently slipped some.

Rob Campbell 03-14-2017 02:54 PM

I stand corrected! BOTH are valid designations for Alan Shepard's spacecraft. The flight was designated MR-3, but the rocket was designated MR-7. Now that's just plain confusing.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercu..._Launch_Vehicle

Earl 03-14-2017 08:03 PM

I think where some of the confusion comes in is that (as I recall) Shepard's Mercury spacecraft (the capsule) was production #7. The *mission* designation however was MR-3.

Because it was production spacecraft #7, Shepard chose the name "Freedom 7" as his official *spcaecraft* name.

However (yep, it gets a little more confusing), because there were seven Mercury astronauts, when Gus flew the next mission (as a gesture of teamwork and fraternity), he kept the "7" designation in the naming of his capsule, calling it, as we all remember, "Liberty Bell 7", even though it had to be, one would assume, spacecraft #8 to come off the assembly line.

And so, each following Mercury astronaut used the number 7 in the naming of their *spacecraft*, though Shepard's was actually the only one that really was capsule #7.

The *mission* designations however did run MR-3, MR-4, then the MA series missions for the Mercury-Atlas orbital flights.

I think I got that right.... :o


Earl

mojo1986 03-15-2017 07:23 AM

I'll bet there was a little superstition there..............7 is a 'lucky' number.

Joe

Brent 03-16-2017 08:02 AM

So I guess I would be correct using MR7 on the booster of the 4" Redstone with Freedom 7 markings on the capsule when the flight was designated MR3. Darn that was almost confusing to type.

mojo1986 03-16-2017 01:50 PM

Quote:
Originally Posted by Brent
So I guess I would be correct using MR7 on the booster of the 4" Redstone with Freedom 7 markings on the capsule when the flight was designated MR3. Darn that was almost confusing to type.


:chuckle:


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:32 AM.

Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.0.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.