View allAll Photos Tagged KSC

Erica Mccall. Basketball player. Indiana fever of Women's National Basketball Association. Oregon state. Stanford's. Arizona state. Games. Sports. WBK. Women's Basketball. Team. Game. Jelenleg az Atomerőmű KSC Szekszárd játékosa.

This is a present to my new sticker slapping street art family KSC

 

KSCrewsters I need your addy's

(if I don't already have them)

 

Also if anyone is like a non active member let me know so we can all have more!!!

KSC-2009-1148 (01/14/2009) --- CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- Viewed across the waters of the Banana River at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, space shuttle Discovery is secured on Launch Pad 39A. First motion was at 5:17 a.m. EST. Discovery was secured to the pad at 12:16 p.m. Discovery is targeted to launch to the International Space Station Feb. 12. During Discovery's 14-day mission, the crew will install the S6 truss segment and its solar arrays to the starboard side of the station, completing the station's backbone, or truss, enabling a six-person crew to live there starting in May. Photo credit: NASA/Troy Cryder

This is the first time I have set up the MOC out door at night for photographs

Glassford Street, Glasgow

A few packs going out tomorrow and more next week....

NS Train 68-C parked on DLW-4, Binghamton, NY September 2, 2021.

1967 Ford Falcon 289 coupe.

 

Registered in August 2016.

Monemvasia, Μονεμβασιά.

A few to go out...

Marathopoli, Messinia, Greece

A beautiful sight as the sun rises over the Vehicle Assembly Building VAB, at the Kennedy Space Center KSC in Florida's space coast.

 

1967 Ford Mustang GT A fastback.

 

Registered in March 2016.

Eastern Scottish B161 KSC a Leyland Olympian delivered in 1985 is seen later that year at work in Airdrie at work on the Glasgow to Edinburgh via Bathgate service 16.

 

It is already prepared for the SBG changes taking places that year before deregulation with its Best Bus Around and Best Bus with Us promotional lettering.

 

©eb2010

 

Do not use this image without my permission.

Kaum zu glauben - Eine Nilgans in ihrem unnatürlichem Habitat des Rheinhafens Karlsruhe. Mit einer Nilgans hatte ich bei meinem Ausflug zu den Rheinhäfen wirklich nicht gerechnet. Dass die Aufnahme aus Karlsruhe ist, kann man eindeutig dem KSC Fußball-Emblem zuordnen, hat der KSC etwa ein neues Maskottchen? :-))

 

Hard to believe - a Nile goose in its unnatural habitat at the Rhine harbour in Karlsruhe. I really hadn't expected to see a Nile goose on my trip to the Rhine harbours. The fact that the photo is from Karlsruhe can clearly be attributed to the KSC football emblem - does KSC have a new mascot? :-))

the launchpad awaits the arrival of Eeloo I this morning to begin umbilical hookups and readiness checks

I cant imagine what it would take to design and build these.

Le Centre spatial Kennedy de la NASA, le dernier endroit où mes pieds ont touché Terre il y a un peu plus de trois mois. Un lieu mythique pour la conquête spatiale ! Sur ces photos, on voit bien les endroits près desquels on a passé nos derniers moments avant le grand départ : le pas de tir, la plage, la mare aux 🐊… Tout est gravé dans ma mémoire. L’ambiance très spéciale qui a précédé le lancement me manque parfois, cette impression d’être dans Top Gun - sans le beach-volley 😅

 

NASA’s Kennedy Space Center (and the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on the shared premises), or the last place I’ve seen on Earth for 92 days now. Such a fantastic place and I have great memories there: I can easily see all the spots where we prepared for launch or just hung out and tried to make the most of our last days on earth (for now): the launch pad, the beach, the alligator pond. What a very special time and a very special place. I miss the pre-launch atmosphere, it felt a bit like being in the Top Gun movie, but without the beach volley and shower scenes.

 

Credits: ESA/NASA–T. Pesquet

 

513C2607

This is the first time I have set up the MOC out door at night for photographs

Node 1, the first element of the International Space Station to be manufactured in the United States and the first to be launched on the Space Shuttle, is unloaded in its container from an Air Force C-5 jet cargo transport at Kennedy Space Center's (KSC) Shuttle Landing Facility runway on June 23, 1997, after its arrival from NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC). The module was then transported to the Space Station Processing Facility. The Node 1 module was launched aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour on STS-88 on December 4, 1998 along with Pressurized Mating Adapters (PMAs) 1 and 2. The 18-foot in diameter, 22-foot-long aluminum module was manufactured by the Boeing Co. at MSFC. Node 1 functions as a connecting passageway to the living and working areas of the International Space Station. It has six hatches that serve as docking ports to the U.S. laboratory module, U.S. habitation module, an airlock and other Space Station elements.

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

 

Credit: NASA

Image Number: KSC-97PC-923

Date: June 23, 1997

A 7 image stitch of the Apollo 14 crew module taken during a visit to Kennedy Space Center back in the summer.

KSC-69PC-375 1969-Jul-11

 

description pending

This is the first time I have set up the MOC out door at night for photographs

The Vertical Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center by sunset. It is among one of the largest buildings in the world by volume, such that it's not uncommon to get "rain" inside the building due to moisture condensing near the ceiling nearly 500 feet up. The building was used for the final assembly of the Saturn V moon rocket and more recently for stacking the space shuttle to its external tank and solid rocket boosters. In the future, it may be used for the final assembly of NASA's new Space Launch System rocket or perhaps large commercial rockets. One little known fact is that it also contains the remains of the orbiter Columbia and some pieces from the Challenger accident.

“Two 156-inch solid rocket motors (SRM’s) and three liquid hydrogen engines are shown in this artist’s concept boosting the space shuttle to approximately 100,000 feet. Both SRM’s and the large center fuel tank are recoverable for refurbishment and reuse.”

 

One of many wonderful, some iconic, works by extremely talented & veteran NASA (KSC) artist, Don Mackey.

 

The above caption/description is possibly of NASA origin, as the abbreviated content of the below linked (NASA-numbered) version is roughly the same.

 

Marathopoli, Messinia, Greece

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