![]() ![]() Part of the reason no other museum has displayed a space shuttle or Saturn V rocket vertically is the enormous cost and technical difficulty in doing so. And it's really sad that we're not able to keep flying something like that," Chamitoff said. "It was an amazing thing that we were flying. By contrast, with the space shuttle, "so much of the vehicle makes it into space, and then back down to the Earth." "Whatever capsules are flying today, whether it's Russian or SpaceX, you can fit three of them inside the shuttle cargo bay," Chamitoff said. There are three remaining authentic Saturn V rockets on display, and all are displayed horizontally. It's going to be pretty impressive," Chamitoff said.Ĭhamitoff said he thought the exhibit would be more dramatic than, for example, exhibits showing the Saturn V rocket that launched astronauts on the Apollo program to the moon, which are mostly just fuel tanks, with only a tiny proportion of the spacecraft returning to Earth. And then it'll be disappearing from you, up into the size of a building. With the addition of the twin solid rocket boosters and the fuel tank, the overall look when added to the shuttle itself will appear "more than double that size. Although the reusable shuttle is already 122 feet long (around the same length as a Boeing 737) the external fuel tank is even longer - at 153.8 feet long, taller than a 15-story building. The overall exhibit will be far more dramatic than the current temporary exhibit, where Endeavour is displayed horizontally, as if it has just landed. There are a few experiences like that around the world where you see something of that scale, that's real, and that's been so significant to our exploration of the universe." ![]() "And that, I think, will inspire so many people. And it's almost overwhelming how huge it is," Rudolph said. "That's the view we're gonna give people - like, they're right at the base of the launchpad looking up at this shuttle stack. ![]() Most people who witnessed shuttle launches did so from a vantage point miles away, California Science Center President Jeffrey Rudolph said, rather than up close. A rendering of the exhibit, which is expected to be the tallest vertical authentic spacecraft display in the world. ![]()
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