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Author Topic: ASTP considered an Apollo mission?  (Read 2956 times)

Offline Day Quinn

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ASTP considered an Apollo mission?
« on: July 13, 2023, 09:50:36 am »
When people think of the Apollo missions, the three skylab flights are usually not included despite using Apollo hardware. Even their mission names were not Apollo; they were Skylab 1-3.

But what about the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project?
Do you view this as an Apollo mission (the USA portion), or something different?

Offline MadDogBV

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Re: ASTP considered an Apollo mission?
« Reply #1 on: July 13, 2023, 10:22:33 am »
From its conceptual beginnings in the mind of Abe Silverstein to Apollo 17's final splashdown, the Apollo mission and its mission schedule was nominally to do one thing and one thing only: put men on the Moon and bring them home before 1970. All of the missions prior to Apollo 11 were subordinated to a plan involving numerous milestones required to accomplish that objective. Each mission (even as the schedule was reconfigured for Apollo 8's unplanned lunar journey) was meant to be a new piece in the puzzle - a working Saturn V, a working CSM, a working LM, a lunar orbit, a rendezvous between the CM and LM, and a demonstration of a nominal landing. The missions that came after 11 were then to take advantage of the scientific opportunities that the landings could yield, and they anticipated a much longer and detailed schedule before the program was cut.

For this reason, I think even those flights that used Apollo hardware couldn't be considered true Apollo missions, as Apollo was an operation with distinct objectives where the goal of the mission was just as much a part of the paradigm as the hardware itself.
« Last Edit: July 18, 2023, 07:20:06 am by MadDogBV »

Offline Day Quinn

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Re: ASTP considered an Apollo mission?
« Reply #2 on: July 13, 2023, 05:46:57 pm »
Thanks for your reply!

Yes, I think I agree with you. Apollo was a lunar program, anything else was just bonus