..and what about the mission to the Hubble Space Telescope? My rather rusty memory seems to recall that ISS & Hubble are in completely different orbital planes.
--- Tony Fredericks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Randall Clague <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > >Less work to just send every subsequent Shuttle > flight to ISS. There, > >it can be inspected, and if found to be unsafe for > reentry, the ISS > >crew just got bigger. Ramp up the Progress and > Soyuz pipeline, try to > >bring the Shuttle back unmanned, and when it > crashes take that as the > >cue to retire the bloody thing. > > Except the Columbia was in an orbit where they were > unable to reach the ISS. > > Tony Fredericks "Mind that bus!" > Amateur Rocket Scientist "What Bus?" > E.R.P.S. Member SPLAT!! - Arnold > Rimmer > > _________________________________________________________________ > Enter for your chance to IM with Bon Jovi, Seal, Bow > Wow, or Mary J Blige > using MSN Messenger > http://entertainment.msn.com/imastar > > _______________________________________________ > ERPS-list mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://lists.erps.org/mailman/listinfo/erps-list __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! SiteBuilder - Free, easy-to-use web site design software http://sitebuilder.yahoo.com _______________________________________________ ERPS-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.erps.org/mailman/listinfo/erps-list
