Apollo RocketSaturn 5Space ClubSaturn V RocketRocket TattooNasa WallpaperNasa Space ProgramApollo Space ProgramNasa RocketApollo / Saturn 5 Moon rocket, "POSTER" NASA ( 1967 )NASA poster publication, Heroicrelics.org scan website: heroicrelics.org/index.html344
Saturn 5Apollo SpacecraftAstronaut BabyLiquid OxygenSpace TattoosSpace AnimationPhotography SpaceSaturn VShip Concept ArtApollo / Saturn 5 rocket: "cutaway" from NASA poster (1967)Apollo/Saturn 5 ALL INFO and ALL PICTURES: www.flickr.com/photos/mrdanbeaumont/albums/72157630355038518 AND ALL VIDEOS: www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL-HsE-FedVRhq_99fJQ3XG8M5U...94
Saturn 5Saturn V RocketNasa Space ProgramPhotography SpaceNasa HistorySaturn VAce CombatApollo ProgramFlight CentreSeptember 8, 1960During a quiet ceremony in July 1960 that formally transferred a facility from the military to a civilian agency, the United States Army Ballistic Missile Agency began operating as the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center. What caused this transfer and why name it after an Army general if it was no longer a military81
Apollo Space ProgramLunar LanderKerbal Space ProgramSpace TechnologySpace LaunchSpacex StarshipSpace XSpaceship ConceptBlue OriginDueling Superpowers, Rival Billionaires. Inside the New Race to the MoonIn the 1960s, the U.S. competed with the Soviet Union to touch the moon. Now, it's in a fight with multiple countries and billionaires.891
Saturn 5Apollo Moon MissionsApollo SpacecraftNasa Space ProgramApollo Space ProgramNasa HistoryRocket SpaceSaturn VApollo ProgramSaturn-5 rocket (SA-500F), the first Rollout, 1966LIFE photo, source Google/Life 2008 (Free). Wikipedia: "SA-500F (alternately SA500F, 500F, or Facilities Integration Vehicle) was a dummy Saturn V used by NASA to test facilities at Launch Complex 39 at the Kennedy Space Center on Merritt Island, Florida during 1966.[1] Tests included the mating of the Saturn's stages in the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB), the fit of the service platforms, the launcher-transporter operation, the propellant loading system, and the test connections to the…2k
Rocket DrawingSaturn 5Apollo Space ProgramNasa Space ProgramAerospace DesignNasa HistorySaturn VRocket DesignApollo MissionsRocket Drawing330
Saturn 5Saturn V RocketModel RocketryApollo Space ProgramNasa SpacexKerbal Space ProgramNasa HistorySaturn VNasa ApolloSaturn 51.3k
Saturn 5Apollo Moon MissionsNasa Space ProgramApollo Space ProgramNasa HistorySaturn VLunar LandingApollo ProgramApollo 1350 Years Ago: Apollo 13 Off to the Moon - NASAThe countdown for Apollo 13, the planned third Moon landing mission aiming for a pinpoint touchdown in the Fra Mauro highlands, continued smoothly toward the475
Saturn 5Saturn V RocketNasa Space ProgramApollo Space ProgramSaturn VApollo ProgramNasa Space ShuttleNasa ApolloSpace Technologyliftoff of Apollo 11The huge, 363-ft.-tall Apollo 11 (Spacecraft 107/Lunar Module V/Saturn 506) Space Vehicle is launched from Pad A, Launch Complex 39 Kennedy Space Center (KSC), at 9:32 a.m. (EDT), July 16, 1969. Image S69-39527 courtesy NASA/JSC.147
Saturn 5Apollo Moon MissionsLunar RoverApollo Space ProgramOuter Space PlanetsCrash Team RacingSaturn VVintage NasaSpace SkyThe Day the Saturn V Almost Failed: 50 Years Since Apollo 6 - AmericaSpaceThroughout its stellar 13-flight career, between November 1967 and May 1973, the mighty Saturn V—which still retains a place as the largest and most powerful rocket ever to reach operational service—never once failed to complete its assigned mission. It boosted two unmanned and one manned Apollo spacecraft into low-Earth orbit, sent nine teams of explorers104