Space Shuttle Collides With Bridge In New York 157
First time accepted submitter AbrasiveCat writes "While transporting the space shuttle Enterprise to its new home at the Intrepid Museum, a gust of wind caught the shuttle and pushed a wing tip into the South Channel Subway Bridge. With any luck it was just the protective covering that was damaged. Ah, New York traffic."
Blast. (Score:5, Funny)
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Linkbait titles! (Score:1)
I wish they weren't so common.
It was on a boat (Score:5, Informative)
Re:It was on a boat (Score:5, Informative)
A barge is fairly heavy, and if it's being pulled with the current, there's a whole lot of energy behind it. The shuttle could act like the crumple zone on a car in a collision, essentially being crushed in the process of slowing or stopping the barge.
Re:It was on a boat (Score:5, Informative)
This page is more informative and has the damage photos: http://www.collectspace.com/news/news-060412a.html [collectspace.com]
Doesn't look too bad.
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I suspect that, had they had to get that wingtip flight rated again, the bill might have come in considerably higher...
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I think it's cool to be able to see the structure, which is depicted pretty clearly in some of the photos taken immediately after the collision. They oughta just face it so that wing is away from the entrance to the exhibit or direction you walk up to it normally or whatever.
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The leading edges of the Enterprise are just foam replacements anyway- the originals were used for testing post Columbia.
Re:It was on a boat (Score:4, Funny)
That's funny, the damage doesn't look as bad from out here.
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Well, I'm still not gonna ride on it.
Re:It was on a boat (Score:5, Interesting)
Low speed doesn't mean little damage necessarily
I can vouch for that. When I was in the USAF stationed at Dover in 1971-3, one of the tow tractors backing a C5-A into a hangar hit the hangar door with a wing. We're talking really low speed here, slower than a normal walk. It did five million dollars in damage. Worried the hell out of the tractor driver until they layed the blame on the wingwalker.
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Worse, this is the second time a NASA barge has hit a bridge in a little over four months. The first time [space.com] knocked a section of the bridge down, and they just got a new section installed [wlwt.com] about a week ago.
I'm beginning to think that NASA needs to seriously improve the rigorousness of their training/selection process for barge captains. Just saying.
I'm wondering why the barge was not wider (Score:3)
Is it just me, or is it blindingly obvious that if the barge was at least as wide as the shuttle, it'd be the barge scraped up and not the shuttle. Barges are generally more replaceable than shuttles, even if they are only flight test and landing mocks.
-- Terry
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He hands it to the final spot. "Yea, we can just buff that out."
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It could have fallen off a plane.
SAVE THE ENZOS! (Score:3)
Guess I should check Wrecked Exotics [wreckedexotics.com] while I'm at it.
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Wrecked exotics seemed interesting, until it started loading pop ups and pop behinds.
bah.
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While I assumed truck (shame on me for not following how the shuttle was being moved!) My first mental image was of them shearing the tail off on a bridge because someone forgot to measure... seeing the wingtip damage in the photos though makes me think this is mostly a non-story, that damage looks quite minor, and probably easily enough fixed/covered up. (especially being that the repair doesn't need to be able to survive launch or re-entry stresses)
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Yeah, but when the need to pull it out of display to lainch it to save us from [X] it needs to be flight ready!
I'm sure some one at Syfy is writing the right now.
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I agree. Still too soon to be publishing stories with sensational headlines about aircraft crashing into things in NY.
I'm not trying to be funny or sarcastic.
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It's not like it'd be flying. It's been retired.
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According to the summary, the shuttle was being transported by a gust of wind.
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Read TFA. The wingtip of the shuttle lightly grazed a wooden navigation bumper on the bridge, causing some protective foam to fall off the shuttle and no damage to the bridge.
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From the picture... It looks like the shuttle was made out of wood and foam...
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Enterprise was just used for flight testing, I don't believe it ever flew in space. As another poster pointed out further up, the wing leading edges were removed and replaced with foam so that they could be used in testing after the Columbia accident.
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I just picture the Barge captain cringing his face and breathing in very loudly threw his teeth, as his heart drops to his bowels.
Re:It was on a boat (Score:5, Funny)
A priceless relic collides with a heavily used piece of transportation infrastructure?
Thank God the relic wasn't damaged, and the Shuttle should be pretty easy to fix.
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If it went to Houston... (Score:1)
it would have been taken care of better.
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The Saturn V is now in a lovely enclosure fully restored.
Oddly enough the same people who complained about it being left outside to rot complain about it now being covered up in a warehouse.
Oblig Tasteless (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Oblig Tasteless (Score:4, Funny)
Well, as long as we're all going to hell today, 2001 called, 1986 can have its tasteless humor back:
This just in: A SECOND SPACE SHUTTLE HAS JUST CRASHED INTO THE SECOND PIER OF THE BROOKLYN BRIDGE!
Interwting (Score:2)
the level of anxiety I felt when reading the headline. I had to take a moment to remember they aren't in use.
Disappointment (Score:2, Interesting)
Why am I both relieved and disappointed this wasn't an awesome space crash?
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C'mon! I mean, Marina Sirtis wasn't even driving...
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Was Kirk flying it?
All I can say is, we're certain they didn't forget to disengage the parking brake this time!
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Yea, what was up with that.
I mean Riker is suppose to be a really good pilot and all. He should have just taken the helm. Or why not Data to handle both consoles. I mean he is orders of magatudes faster then a human, he could do whatever he does and pilot the ship at the same time.
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Were you expecting the saucer crashdown from Star Trek: Generations?
C'mon! I mean, Marina Sirtis wasn't even driving...
The fact she was driving when the E* crashed in Generations was bad luck. Besides, the Enterprise-E crashed into a ship in Nemesis too
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From the Wikipedia article (Enterprise is the OV-101)
The design of OV-101 was not the same as that planned for OV-102, the first flight model; the tail was constructed differently, and it did not have the interfaces to mount OMS pods. A large number of subsystems—ranging from main engines to radar equipment—were not installed on this vehicle, but the capacity to add them in the future was retained. Instead of a thermal protection system, its surface was primarily covered with simulated tiles made from polyurethane foam. Fiberglass was used for the leading edge panels in place of the reinforced carbon-carbon ones of spaceflight-worthy orbiters. Only a few sample thermal tiles and some nomex blankets were real.
Imaginary Diagrams (Score:2)
Hint: It would have been the Brooklyn Bridge, and there would have been volcanoes and dinosaurs involved.
New Yorkers... (Score:5, Funny)
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Was a Masshole piloting the tugboat?
(ref: all the insane drivers here)
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Came for the slagging of New Yorkers. Left satisfied.
Should of sent it (Score:5, Insightful)
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It's just the Enterprise, not one of the shuttles that was actually launched.
We should return it to NASA. "This one's broken, we want to exchange it for Atlantis"
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Just... the... ENTERPRISE? Scotty, have you... been... DRINKING... again?
Re:Should of sent it (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, they were trying to console Houstonians a few weeks ago by telling them, "Well, at least the model shuttle we'll be getting is something the public will be allowed to walk through and see from the inside." Small comfort for a city that's devoted so much to the industry. It just feels like a massive slap in the face.
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Members of my family, none of whom work at NASA, were out there with others from the community helping to collect the debris. A close family friend of ours was one of the astronauts on Columbia's last mission that returned successfully, and she pulled some strings to get us into the family-only area to see the launch for the mission. I didn't know it at the time, but I found out later that her mission and the one that ended in disaster had been swapped in the schedule. I can't help but wonder how my own lif
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The space under bridges is very narrow in a lot of the major ports of the world. During low tide, sometimes there's only 2-3 feet of clearance. I think not accounting for the lift of the wings from the wind is something not many people would account for.
Re:Should of sent it (Score:5, Insightful)
You mean like this? http://www.click2houston.com/image/view/-/14428030/medRes/1/-/maxh/360/maxw/640/-/vrhrx6/-/shuttle54-jpg.jpg [click2houston.com]
Houston seems to have managed to get their replica to it's new home safely. Someone dropped the ball, you always factor in wind when on the water, always
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And you know what? sometime odd things happen, and factors turn out to be more extreme then normal..
Of course, sometimes people are drunk. I just assume if they are piloting a ship, they are either Ffolkes*, or a drunk pirate.
*Roger Moore's best film. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0081809/ [imdb.com]
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Should of sent it to Texas, we were more careful with our shuttle replica than they were with the real things it seems. Someones head is going to roll over this I bet.
Texas was already given a shuttle [wikipedia.org]. You just have to go pick up the pieces and put it together.
What, too soon?
I didn't see anything... (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, I can say there was nothing recognizable damaged to an untrained eye with a 300mm camera lens... I was on the bank of the bay, near the Verrazana-Narrows Bridge taking pictures... Maybe that's why they were late getting there, they might've stopped to inspect it after the collision.
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Maybe you shoulda shot the side that hit the bridge, since you can clearly see damage in some of the photos.
Ambiguities (Score:4, Informative)
There are many ambiguities in the summary.
1. The bridge was over water, not a roadway.
2. This was neither caused by "New York traffic" nor did it disrupt (land) traffic.
3. The protective covering that was damaged was on the Enterprise, not the bridge.
4. You can view photos of the damage [collectspace.com] yourself.
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And the "protective covering" that was damaged is actually part of Enterprise in the same way the [protective] bumper on the front of your car is part of your car. It's physically part of the vehicle.
No Business in NYC (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm so glad New York City got a Space Shuttle instead of the National Museum of the United State Air Force. That way, citizens can pay to see it (NMUSAF is totally free--including parking), in a setting that makes sense (there were carrier-based space shuttles, right?) and it's clustered next to another shuttle (less than eight hours NYC to DC, vs. putting it towards the center of the country). Further, this shows that the Intrepid museum is already providing the lack of care they have provided other artifacts [slashdot.org].
It destroys the value!!! (Score:2)
Wow,this is going to kill the value of it even more! It doesn't have the original box and instructions, now it's nicked up. NFW will they get the high dollar at ComicCon.
I guess it'll just have to be suspended on a string from the Statue of Liberty's arm.
So, (Score:5, Funny)
these are the voyages of the Starship Enterprise?
Bloody... (Score:2)
...women drivers...
Stop parading it around then (Score:2)
Seriously, this thing is getting more press coverage then when it was in use. Also, does this mean the Earth's core is going to stop spinning?
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Yes, the Earth's core is going to stop spinning. The secret spacecraft that was in orbit for a year was measuring the earth's magnetic field to confirm it.
And this time, make sure to go around the air pockets in your way to the core and don't forget to bring bad some diamonds.
Another accident ... (Score:5, Funny)
SHIELDS! SHIELDS! (Score:3, Funny)
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[Scotty]: What, she didna' have her shields up?
[Cartwright] They're heading for the bridge!
Better headline (or at least more scary) (Score:2)
A better headline would have been "Enterprise crashes into bridge"
I mean everybody knows the shuttles are retired, but CVN65 hasn't retired just yet (I think its on the last tour of duty) and I am sure an aircraft carrier would do a lot more damage, not to mention the potential of leaks from its 8 reactors.
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Just imagine how different it would be... (Score:2)
Come on... (Score:2)
It's not like this is rocket science.
(anymore)
See Discovery, not Enterprise (Score:2)
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The Enterprise was intended to go into space, and wasn't designed as merely a testbed. The main differences that you might have seen is because of two big factors:
The main problem was the internal airframe of the Enterprise
Someone understandable. (Score:5, Interesting)
After looking at the pictures, it's not like the Brooklyn bridge just jumped out in front of the barge carrying the shuttle. It was transiting a fairly narrow bridge. The wingspan on the shuttle is 78 feet, and a google map distance measurement of where the shuttle clipped the bridge says the space they had to work with was about 100 feet, give or take. That means if you absolutely threaded the needle, you should have had 11 feet (That's about 3.3 meters for you folks unfamiliar with a proper unit of measurement =) ) to work with on either side of the bird. That seems like a lot, but on a windy day.....very touchy.
https://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=J+F+K+Airport,+New+York,+NY&aq=0&oq=JFK+&sll=40.639749,-73.824348&sspn=0.097239,0.057421&vpsrc=0&t=h&ie=UTF8&hq=J+F+K+Airport,+New+York,+NY&z=13&cid=17028024512003641840&iwloc=A [google.com]
(if the link is jacked up, just go to JFK and work your way south east)
It looks like, from the pictures upthread, the shuttle hit the railroad bridge that sits between Cross Bay Blvd and JFK airport. I've ground handled large aircraft on the tarmac, and 11 feet is too close for comfort in my book. I don't envy the guys who had to try and make that work.
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11 feet on either side is a lot, even in 35kt gusts. The shuttle and barge are very heavy. They should have sailed further into the wind, leaving under 10 feet on the windward side, and more than a dozen feet in the lee to work with. They should have covered the shuttle in a frame and cover that would have made it less of a sail through that narrow passage. They should have armored the wingtips with a few feet of protection. Hell, they could have flown it into Newark and out the Raritan Bay.
This collision i
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You're right about the heavy part. The problem is, 35kts is a heck of a gust, not a sustained wind. Even if they were correcting to one side or the other, when a strong wind gets that much mass moving in one direction, there's not much you're gonna do. It has been proven time and again that Newton's laws > an infinite number of "oh shit oh shit oh shit" utterances.
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Navigating that narrow passage is a well known problem, both generally and in this voyage. I personally have navigated it since I was a kid, though in a small craft that has no problem fitting between the structures. 35kts is not unique to that day. Since it's directly opposite Jamaica Bay from the JFK airport, the wind patterns are completely well documented.
If they were going to fly the shuttle into JFK instead of into Newark (which I believe has a clear passage, even for a wide load like a shuttle), they
Sad to see (Score:2)
I know the damage is minor, but it's just sad to see a symbol of our great space achievements be subject to so much indignity. Involved in a fender bender while riding on a garbage scow headed for New Jersey. Oh, Enterprise! I weep for thee.
Put up a plaque. (Score:3)
"On the 4th of June 2012, on this spot, the Space Shuttle Enterprise crashed into this bridge."
Details are not that important. Awesome plaqueage is.
You Break It, You Buy It (Score:3)
These clowns should never have been allowed to touch the Shuttle. That "cosmetic foam" was one of the most important structures/mechanisms on the shuttle: its heat shield that protected it from reentry. That reentry is what makes it a shuttle and not just a launcher. The heat shield foam was one of the most famous innovations brought by the shuttle programme. They didn't know that? Why didn't they cover the wingtips with something stronger than foam? They knew it was narrow clearance, in a usually windy passage.
But then, they evidently don't have artificial lighting to inspect their cargo after dark, either. Or schedules, so they'd know they'd need lights to inspect the shuttle for damage once they arrived, even if they hadn't obviously smashed it.
This was a brand-new Space Shuttle. They just broke it. Weeks Marine should have to buy NYC a new one.
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i was picturing something like this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Msp2xO_TdQ4 [youtube.com]
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If you were picturing that, I worry for your mind. Then, I watched most of it, I worry for mine. It was like Timecube in video.
Re:Ease up on the hyperbole please. (Score:5, Funny)
Mod parent up to +10. There's NOTHING worse than hyperbole. If I had a nickel for every time I saw unnecessary hyperbole, I'd be a BILLIONAIRE by now. If I could jump as over the top as these headlines get, I could out-leap Superman over tall buildings! Excessive use of hyperbole is worse than SATAN rising from the DEPTHS OF HELL, spewing HELLFIRE on everyone!
Or, maybe, just maybe, you need to take a valium. Not sure.
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If I've told you once, I've told you a million times, DON'T EXAGGERATE!
Also, all extremists should be shot.
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If I've told you once, I've told you a million times, DON'T EXAGGERATE!
Also, all extremists should be shot.
Don't say that. Don't you know that all generalizations are wrong?
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Everyone who makes sweeping generalizations is a complete moron.
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You forgot your "Hurr, durrr...".
Hey, what's that "Whoosh" noise?
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These things have been known to break up on re-entry.
And shortly after launch.
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No one drive in New York, too much traffic.
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Saudi, you idiot.
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More people will visit the Enterprise at the Intrepid museum than would visit it anywhere else.
The middle of the country doesn't deserve to have the Moon in the sky, let alone a shuttle. What are you, some kind of communist?