..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
> 
>
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