visibility Similar

The Last Panels are Installed on the New Countdown Clock

[Severe Winter Storms and Flooding] McAlester, OK, January 21, 2007 -- FEMA contractors load a 144 KW generator onto a flatbed trailer for delivery to a local church opening an emergency shelter after a January 12 ice storm left much of the state without power. Generators also are being used to keep water treatment plants on line and hospitals in operation. Photo by Anita Westervelt/FEMA News Photo.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – At NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, work continues to install 24 light emitting diode LED panels in the new countdown clock at the spaceport's Press Site. The modern, multimedia display is similar to the screens seen at sporting venues. The new screen will be nearly 26 feet wide by 7 feet high, a foot taller than the original clock. The historic countdown clock was designed by Kennedy engineers and built by space center technicians before Apollo 12 in 1969. NASA has requested to acquire the countdown clock from the agency’s Artifact Working Group at the agency's Headquarters for display at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex. For more information on the countdown clock, go to http://go.nasa.gov/10Zku10. Photo credit: NASA/Jim Grossman KSC-2014-4602

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- Technicians in the Vehicle Assembly Building at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, prepare to jack crawler-transporter 2, or CT-2, four feet off the floor to facilitate removal of the roller bearing assemblies. After inspections, new assemblies will be installed. The Ground Systems Development and Operations Program office at Kennedy is overseeing the upgrades to CT-2 so that it can carry NASA’s Space Launch System heavy-lift rocket and new Orion spacecraft to the launch pad. For more than 45 years the crawler-transporters were used to transport the mobile launcher platform and the Apollo-Saturn V rockets and, later, space shuttles to Launch Pads 39A and B. Photo credit: NASA/Charisse Nahser KSC-2013-1918

"Louisville, Miss., July 9, 2014 -- This 10x20 storm shelter is delivered to the FEMA developed Temporary Housing Unit park in Louisville. It is designed to fit 34 people and it can withstand winds up to 250 MPH. FEMA/Yuisa Rios"

Inuti Uppsala omformningstation. Omformningsvagn Statens Järnvägar, SJ Q24 3.

Soldiers from the 689th Rapid Port Opening Element,

Maxwell AFB, Ala. - Maxwell Air Force Base serves as

Workers in the Space Shuttle Main Engine Processing Facility get a new Space Shuttle main engine (block 2 engine) ready to move to the Orbiter Processing Facility. The engine will be installed for its first flight on the orbiter Atlantis, on mission STS-104. The Block II Main Engine configuration is manufactured by Boeing Rocketdyne in Canoga Park, Calif., and includes a new Pratt & Whitney high-pressure fuel turbo pump. Engine improvements are managed by NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. Each Space Shuttle Main Engine is 14 feet (4.3 meters) long, weighs about 7,000 pounds (3,175 kilograms), and is 7.5 feet (2.3 meters) in diameter at the end of the nozzle KSC-01pp0894

code Related

QCSEE QUIET CLEAN STOL EXPERIMENTAL ENGINE UTW UNDER THE WING ENGINE

description

Summary

The original finding aid described this as:

Capture Date: 8/29/1979

Photographer: DONALD HUEBLER

Keywords: Larsen Scan

Photographs Relating to Agency Activities, Facilities and Personnel

Nothing Found.

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Tags

qcsee clean stol clean stol engine utw engine utw wing nasa national aeronautics and space administration high resolution ultra high resolution qcsee quiet clean stol experimental engine utw wing engine photographer donald huebler nasa photographs 1970 s space program us national archives
date_range

Date

1979
create

Source

The U.S. National Archives
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Link

https://catalog.archives.gov/
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No known copyright restrictions

label_outline Explore Wing Engine, Engine Utw, Qcsee Quiet Clean Stol Experimental Engine Utw

Topics

qcsee clean stol clean stol engine utw engine utw wing nasa national aeronautics and space administration high resolution ultra high resolution qcsee quiet clean stol experimental engine utw wing engine photographer donald huebler nasa photographs 1970 s space program us national archives