Michael A. Terrell wrote:
> When were you at Wallops? I worked on a lot of the equipment
> Microdyne supplied the NOAA ground station around 2000 to track &
> control their birds.
>
1972-1973, I think. It was an AWESOME place to work, even after the
winding down of their heyday there when there were major launches daily.
I got to see several rain erosion tests with the 2-stage rocket that
did a 19 mile arc through the cloud tops to gauge erosion of MIRV
vehicles coming down. I saw the reference test that was done in
clear air. I still don't know how the hell they did this, but the
actual rain erosion tests
were scheduled months in advance, and they were able to predict the absolute
WORST weather with pinpoint accuracy. These things were ususally scheduled
for what was essentially a hurricane sitting off the coast.
I also got to see a exametnet super-loki datasonde launch from a mile
away, the rocket simply disappears with 120 G acceleration off the pad.
I was in the blockhouse for the launch of MTS-D, the meteoroid technology
satellite, on a Scout-II.
Lots of other cool stuff, like the FPS9 radar and the advanced data
acquisition site.
I worked with 2-way radio and CCTV, mostly.
Jon