[FPSPACE] Are there films of the N-1 launch on July 3, 1969?

LARRY KLAES ljk4 at msn.com
Fri Aug 6 15:23:29 EDT 2004


Are there any known films of the N-1 launch of July 3, 1969?  Perhaps they would show if an escape capsule was ejected during the explosion?

Larry

  ----- Date: Thu, 5 Aug 2004 21:24:44 EDT
  From: NOdin at aol.com<mailto:NOdin at aol.com>
  Subject: Re: [FPSPACE] Names on a plaque
  To: fpspace at friends-partners.org<mailto:fpspace at friends-partners.org>
  Message-ID: <8c.117e1c60.2e4437dc at aol.com<mailto:8c.117e1c60.2e4437dc at aol.com>>
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  In a message dated 8-5-2004 8:45:49 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
  robert at collectspace.com<mailto:robert at collectspace.com> writes:
  The Apollo 15 crew desired to make a personal, private, symbolic 
  gesture commemorating all deceased astronauts and cosmonauts; this 
  desire was reinforced by the death the month before of three Soviet 
  cosmonauts during the Soyuz 11 flight.
  Yes, all of that is explained in the Smithsonian display -- the question 
  remains: WHY are Belyayev and Gagarin listed among those who died on space 
  missions in quest of the Moon, training or otherwise -- Including Dobrovolsky, 
  Patsayev and Volkov?  Did they not know that "officially" Gagarin died piloting a 
  trainer aircraft while supposedly drunk, taking with him his instructor, 
  Seryogin?  Did they not know that Belyayev's surgery was botched in 1970 and he, like 
  Korolyev, supposedly died of peritonitis?  These men did NOT DIE (officially) 
  in "quest of the exploration of the Moon." 

  However -- and this because I was asked to repeat my wild theories -- if 
  Gagarin and Seryogin were really aboard Zond 4B, that would explain Gagarin.  And, 
  if Belyayev and an unknown rookie were aboard the N-1 launched 3 July 1969, 
  that would explain Belyayev; though it appears that the capsule was pulled away 
  from the conflagration and he may not have died in the incident -- maybe 
  later from injuries that never healed -- I'm just trying to make sense out of a 
  lot of loose pieces, and the air crash and surgery stories never sat well with 
  me.  Of course, if there is officially no Moon program, how can men die in Moon 
  Rocket accidents?

  Most of the things that I was once chided for, even herein, have now been 
  shown to be correct.  And, now we know that many of the diaries may be a bit less 
  than complete and/or accurate, so where is the whole truth?

  Think of it this way!  The Soviet politicians were still in control!  What 
  better man to go to lunar distance for the first time than the first man in 
  space -- we know he was back in training!  And, they needed a spectacular success 
  following the demise of Komarov.  And, I'm not the first to think that Leonov 
  was left in the cold without a moon ride when the PROTON was scrapped as the 
  vehicle to go circumlunar, but his Voshkhod cabinmate, Belyayev, might well 
  have been one of the first two, the only two, to get a ride aboard a Zond carried 
  by N-1, however shortened that flight was to be.

  Take your shots!  I've been both hit and missed before ...

  Ed "N-1" Cameron
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