Canon PowerShot S90
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As today is the 50th anniversary of the first American in space (Alan Shepard’s Freedom 7 flight atop a Mercury Redstone rocket), I thought I would post a piece of the very first Mercury flight.

This connector, a bundle of discrete copper wires,was used to connect the Mercury spacecraft to the Redstone booster rocket.

On November 21, 1960, MR-1 was the first attempt to launch a spacecraft with the Mercury-Redstone launch vehicle. Intended to be an unmanned sub-orbital flight, the launch failed after lifting about four inches off the ground and then settling down (a “four inch flight”). The booster lost its electrical ground prematurely, and so this cable carried the cut-off signal to the spacecraft, and so the emergency escape recovery sequence was initiated, deploying the escape rocket tower and parachutes.

Shepard was remarkable brave to strap in to what seems like a primitive system in retrospect. (I posted photos of the hand controller, with mechanical linkages to the various engine valves from the three-axis hand grip.)

Some memorable quotes from Alan Shepard:

“It’s a very sobering feeling to be up in space and realize that one’s safety factor was determined by the lowest bidder on a government contract.”

“I think all of us certainly believed the statistics which said that probably 88% chance of mission success and maybe 96% chance of survival. And we were willing to take those odds.”

“Please, dear God, don’t let me f*** up.”

10 responses to “Mercury Redstone MR-1 Connector”

  1. So did this just yank the cables till they broke when the capsule separated? What ensured where they disconnected?

  2. Even without all the historical connotations, this qualifies as art.

  3. @kevlar
    Releasing the umbilical connections is an art and different missiles do it different ways. All of them involve actively "pulling the plug" before the vehicle moves. Some have an arm or retractor attached to each plug, some are ganged together several to an arm, and some (especially the early ones) have a tilting tower that falls away pulling them all out at once.

    What they all have in common, though, is that the launch controller (the machine doing the last second sequencing, not the guy standing behind the console with a headset on) has to see every plug pulled at the correct time and in the correct sequence before the vehicle is released.

    This particular flight had other problems as well. Chris Kraft, NASA’s first flight controller (the guy standing behind the console with a headset on, not the machine doing the sequencing) describes the whole thing in his book "Flight, My Years in Mission Control."

    – Jack

  4. cool artefact.. the real risk of first space missions is hard to estimate in any particular percentage given…but "He who doesn’t risk never gets to drink champagne"… as Russians and French (?) say…

  5. Good stuff…
    Reading about Mercury,the first real post V2 American rocket,is always exciting.

  6. It still seems unimaginably brave to me that anyone goes up in space on top of a huge stick of dynamite.

  7. You have the best stuff.

  8. A good way to commemorate the significant event.

  9. thanks y’all.

    And here’s a scan of the accompanying letter

    Mercury MR-1 Cable COA

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