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Apollo-Soyuz Test Project

The Apollo-Soyuz mission, also called Apollo-Soyuz Test Project (ASTP), was the first joint flight between United States and the Soviet Union. As a cooperation mission was a symbol of the improved international relations between the two superpowers. In July, 1975, the spacecraft took off separately and the American and Soviet space teams met in orbit to test an international docking system and joint flight procedures. The astronauts (Stafford, Brand and Slayton) and cosmonauts (Leonov and Kubasov) were able to move from one ship to the other and shook hands as a symbol of friendship and cooperation. The mission also allowed to conduct scientific experiments that included the artificial eclipse of the Sun by the Apollo spacecraft to photograph the solar corona from the Soyuz.

 

The mission provided useful engineering experience for future joint US-Russian space flights, such the Shuttle-Mir and the International Space Station.

 

The mission was a great success, both technically and international relations, and is a symbol of international cooperation and the peaceful exploration of space.

 

I present you a minifig scale model of the Apollo-Soyuz Mission (1:32 scale).

Apollo CSM spacecraft with docking module. Command module can be separated from service module and the docking module. The command module has a hatch and fits 3 astronauts seat in the cabin.

Soyuz 19 spacecraft, variant 7K-TM. The 3 modules (orbit, descent and service) can be separated. The descent module can be opened and fits 2 minifigs of cosmonauts.

There are 5 minifigs: 3 astronauts and 2 cosmonauts, with custom spacesuits.

Total brick count: about 2K pcs

 

Background image from NASA: A bank of clouds over the western Pacific Ocean was photographed by Astronaut Frank Borman and James A. Lovell during the Gemini 7 mission (1965). In the background the moon can be seen.

spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/images/gemini/gemini7/hires/...

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Uploaded on May 13, 2018