phrogpilot73
Well-Known Member
And some that have never been pilots...They have selected almost every stripe of pilot; for example, they like helo pilots for the robot arm.

http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/cassidy-cj.html
And some that have never been pilots...They have selected almost every stripe of pilot; for example, they like helo pilots for the robot arm.
Does that hold for NFOs? I believe I had heard something about someone from Hawkeyes being selected for the astronaut program; but I don't remember a name.
75" max height. You're not going anywhere... ogre.
God forbid this happens.....I think they are just afraid of them drinking too much scotch.And I remember not so long ago when NASA was not taking ANY jet guys into the astronaut program office. Something about moving to longer duration missions and not wanting 3 or 4 Type A's living in a confined space for months at a time.
That's a pretty cool story - can he squeeze anything else onto his resume? SEAL, Astronaut, I don't know ... maybe Pope?And some that have never been pilots...
http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/cassidy-cj.html
That's a pretty cool story - can he squeeze anything else onto his resume? SEAL, Astronaut, I don't know ... maybe Pope?
And some that have never been pilots...
If I can't drive, I'm not going!
Hate to piss in your proverbial Wheaties, but nobody actually gets to fly or "drive" the shuttle. She's all computer controlled and with a pre-programmed flight plan from launch to landing.
So why do they need a pilot? It seems that during the landing sequence the computer prompts gear extension and the pilot has to push the "Yes, extend the gear" button. But if he doesn't push it, the computer will override it and extend them anyway.
It's all covered in Richard Feynman's Challenger essay, part of What Do You Care What Other People Think?
Although I did see that movie where Clint Eastwood pops the emergency hatch at about Mach 10, then dead sticks it in to Cape Canaveral. I guess that could happen, right?
The problem with a resume like that is when you're talking to a girl in a bar and she asks what you do and you say, "Well I was a Navy SEAL but I got tired of that so I'm an Astronaut now" she'll probably say, "Suuure, well it was nice meeting you"
Be that as it may, the question that this thread is looking at is this one:
So, anyway the total between all the astronauts (historical and active) breaks out like this.....
I was trying to dodge working on a Masters paper, so I put them all into an Excel file then categorized each one.
I love how a tongue-in-cheek comment turned into a whole new thread split and serious debate. It was just some run-of-the-mill average ascot-bashing, folks!