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At first, SputnikSEO was like:
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According to the number of your posts. You are just obsessed with me. Get a life already, clown :)
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CyberSeo,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nedelin_catastrophe 100 die during a rocket test... and you guys hid it for decades... so your official stats don't mean shit... |
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2) How many cosmonauts/astronauts among those who died? 3) Was that rocket used at lest once? 4) How does it relate to "Soyuz" rocket - the only rocket used buy the USSR and Russia to send humans from around the globe to the space? Please don't use the terrorist act as a an example of bad tech. In other words, don't try to play David Copperfield. That's not yours, man. |
Is this the same Soyuz rocket that never fails? ->
"The Russian space agency, Roscosmos, determined that the most likely cause of the failure was contamination in the rocket’s fuel lines or stabilizer valve, which caused low fuel supply to the gas generator, Gerstenmaier told lawmakers Oct. 12 during a hearing of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee’s space and aeronautics panel. The accident occurred when the robotic Progress 44 cargo spacecraft crashed in Siberia after its Soyuz rocket failed shortly after liftoff. The craft and its 2.9 tons of supplies for the space station were lost." NASA Confirms Russian Soyuz Failure Findings | Progress 44 Soyuz Rocket Accident | Russian Space Agency Investigation |
just think of how far we would have gotten if both sides were helping each other rather than having a 'my dick is bigger than yours' contest
guess we'll never know, but considering the ISS, easy to make a few guesses |
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Ah I forgot to add something about catapulting systems. When "Challenger" has blown up, some of the US astronauts have died because... they hit the water. So they were alive all the time after the explosion. If it was Soviet "Buran", nobody would die, because "Buran" shuttles were equipped with catapults to save the crew in situations, similar to the one happened to "Challenger". Almost the same year, but different country and different level of technology.
P.S. A note for the Florida clown. This is not an anti-American post. No way! This is a small historical course for guys like you, whose parents were too poor to pay for your education. Thanks god, there is Wikipedia and you can finally educate yourself and get up to the basic level. |
Soyuz 1 dooms cosmonaut: The first fatal accident in a space mission befell Soviet cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov, whose problem-plagued Soyuz 1 capsule crashed onto Russian soil in 1967. 'Gravity' and Reality: History's Worst Space Disasters
Deaths in space: The Soviet space program also suffered the first, and so-far only, deaths in space in 1971, when cosmonauts Georgi Dobrovolski, Viktor Patsayev, Vladislav Volkov died while returning to Earth from the Salyut 1 space station. Their Soyuz 11 craft performed a textbook-perfect landing in 1971. So recovery teams were appalled to find the three-man crew sitting dead in their couches, with dark-blue splotches on their faces and blood dripping from their ears and noses. An investigation showed that a breathing ventilation valve had ruptured, asphyxiating the cosmonauts. The resulting drop in pressure also exposed the crew to the vacuum of space ? the only human beings to ever experience such a fate |
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Once again: "Soyuz" is the only rocket we use to send humans to the outer space (ours, yours and any others, including commercial tourists). We have more launches than all humanity together, and one one single person has died during the launch. That's a fact. Period. |
Sorry for T9. I wanted to say: "Soyuz" is the only rocket we use to send humans to the outer space (ours, yours and any others, including commercial tourists). We have more launches than all humanity together, and no one single person has died during the launch.". There were only 5 space shuttles in the USA and they killed a lot of people. Is this the US rocket technology?
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...e_profiles.jpg This is definitely not something to be proud of. |
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http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-0qkWKWbaHh...1967%2B(1).jpg The remains of the astronaut Vladimir Komarov, a man who fell from space, 1967 |
How utterly despicable of a person the Russian poster is.
A truly horrible and mean-spirited person. |
US intercepted Russian cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov's final words of rage | Daily Mail Online
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http://www.alexbeard.org/wp/wp-conte...to_believe.jpg BTW, the guys at your picture are not Russians - believe me. Those are Hollywood actors (look a their faces - hope you are not a complete imbecile and can see the difference between Russians and Armenians that live in L.A., not even talking about their uniform... which is a total fail). 21st century: a few webmasters at GFY against a bunch of uneducated crazy mofos. A sign of the time :( |
Russian marketing techniques are fascinating.
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If Russian space technology is so vastly superior to the U.S. - why did the Russian secret police feel the need to steal the spaceshuttle plans from NASA and then waste tens of billions replicating three shuttles (only one of which was flown apparently unmanned - and was subsequently wrecked in a hangar roof collapse).
If you'd be so kind to explain that without being a condescending prick - I'd genuinely enjoy hearing the Russian perspective on that. |
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