- 3-2-1 launch!
- all ready to go houston!
- Contains one of only three Saturn V rockets still in existence. Made up of S-IC-T (test stage) and the second and third stages
- simulation of mission control of the launch
- of what made it possible
- for a video presentation
- and we are in!
- Quick facts of the day.
- The Apollo/Saturn V Center!
- Parked Crawler Transporters
- Moving onto the next part of our tour!
- hot days are typical here
- look cool engraved tags!
- lets get a move on!
- all the best for STS-135
- as explained in this illustration
- Alantis covered by the service structure
- Scenic view over the Indian river
- looks just like in the picture!
- LC-41, where Voyager 2 probe was launched in 1977
- LC-37 looks like an antenna farm
- The Cape Canaveral Air Force Station down south
- a sight we will never see again
- Atlantis STS-135 all ready on Pad A
- Launch complex LC39A in the distance
- overview of the nearby crawler tracks
- and Propellant Storage and Service Area
- The VAB
- the outdoor viewing areas
- with the nozzle on the ground floor
- A savaged challenger shuttle rocket booster
- The top floors
- used for Space Shuttle launches. First stop on the KSC tour
- to get a good view of the two launch pads
- This is a tower you can climb
- Up the LC 39 Observation Gantry
- Inside the VAB (not the small shuttle inside)
- An insight of the VAB
- future space flight will be done this way commercially
- other variants of plane launch
- and sterile bay access area
- including the superstructure
- The various component of the launch pad
- The welcome area of LC 39
- It's a 60-foot-tall Launch Complex
- the LC 39 Observation Gantry
- Our first stop along Saturn V road
- the crawler tracks to the launch pads
- this will be the last time it will ever be used
- it's a huge building, mush bigger than a hangar