Is it a bird? Is it a plane? No, it's Super Guppy! NASA's whale-shaped
cargo plane makes a rare public appearance

By Daily Mail Reporter

 *PUBLISHED:* 13:50 GMT, 1 July 2012 | *UPDATED:* 06:55 GMT, 2 July 2012

 NASA’s Super Guppy cargo plane has been cheered by hundreds of people in
Seattle as it delivered part of the Space Shuttle Trainer.

More than a thousand people gathered at the Museum of Flight as the
aircraft circled before landing for welcome ceremony.

Inside the turboprop plane was the crew compartment of NASA’s Full Fuselage
Shuttle Trainer - a full-scale mockup of the Space Shuttle Orbiter - which
is now owned by the museum.
+

Inside the turboprop plane was the crew compartment of NASA's Full Fuselage
Shuttle Trainer, which is now owned by the museum

It is just one piece of a future exhibit which museum officials call 'world
class'.

It will feature the 121-foot shuttle trainer, which had never before left
Houston’s Johnson Space Center.



It will be completely reassembled in the Museum of Flight’s $12 million
Charles Simonyi Space Gallery.

When finished, the trainer will look like a life-size but wingless space
shuttle.

The delivery of the 28-foot crew compartment is the first of three trips
NASA's Super Guppy cargo plane is scheduled to make to the museum

  Two more flights will bring sections of the shuttle trainer's 61-foot
cargo bay to the museum in Seattle

The delivery of the 28-foot crew compartment is the first of three trips
NASA’s Super Guppy cargo plane is scheduled to make on the project. Two
more flights will bring sections of the trainer’s 61-foot cargo bay.

Other parts of the mock-up are being delivered by truck. The first to
arrive were three engine bells, replicas of the shuttle’s mammoth exhaust
cones, that came in mid April.

Gov Chris Gregoire told the waiting crowds: 'We want the aerospace leaders
of tomorrow to be inspired right here.'

The Museum of Flight is paying NASA $2 million to deliver the shuttle
trainer, which NASA Administrator Charles Bolden awarded the museum last
year.

Seattle had been among more than 20 sites that sought to host one of NASA’s
retiring space shuttles, which Bolden awarded to visitor centers in New
York, Los Angeles, Florida and the Washington, D.C., area — places he said
would maximize the number of people who see them

Museum of Flight officials hope to capitalise on the fact that visitors
will be able to step inside the FFT, unlike the real shuttles, which must
be displayed at a distance.

The Museum of Flight is paying NASA $2 million to deliver the shuttle
trainer, which will be a 'world class' exhibit






<http://groups.yahoo.com/group/funonthenet/>


 __._,_.___


*".... I am the KING to my own UNIVERSE that Rule my MIND, BODY and
SOUL!!! ...."
*
**
*- Aga Madjid -*

-- 
-- 
you have this email because you join to "aga-madjid" GoogleGroups.
to post emails, just send to :
[email protected]
to join this group, send blank email to :
[email protected]
to quit from this group, just send email to :
[email protected]
please visit to www.facebook.com/aga.madjid,
add my Yahoo Messenger at [email protected] or
add my twitter @aga_madjid
thanks for joinning this group.

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"aga-madjid" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Kirim email ke