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Delta IV Launch Success Ushers in Record Year for Ecliptic's RocketCam

Delta 4: A new ELV workhorse for the early 21st century

Pasadena - Mar 17, 2003
The successful launch of Boeing's Delta IV rocket last Monday involved a record four RocketCam onboard imaging systems for capturing dramatic views of liftoff, first stage separation, second stage nozzle extension and operation, payload fairing separation, spacecraft spin-up and finally, spacecraft separation.

At the very end of the allowable launch window early Monday evening, the huge Delta IV rocket roared from its launch pad at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida and within 45 minutes successfully inserted its USAF DSCS III A-3 spacecraft payload into the desired low Earth orbit.

This launch also represented the first of a record number of scheduled missions using RocketCams within a single year. The popular onboard imaging system, available exclusively through Ecliptic, will be employed on nine more launches in 2003 -- nearly twice the launch rate and three times the number of camera systems used in any previous year.

As well, RocketCams will be employed later this year on flights involving high-attitude balloons and experimental aircraft, with spacecraft-based RocketCams coming in 2004.

The next two launches involving RocketCams are expected to be a Titan IV and Delta II in April.

To date, RocketCams have been used with 100% success on nearly two dozen launches since 1997 -- including Boeing Delta II, Delta III and Delta IV rockets; Lockheed Martin Atlas 2, Atlas 3 and Atlas 5 models; Lockheed Martin Titan IV; and NASA's Space Shuttle.

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The Case For Orion
Brisbane - Mar 12, 2003
"Orion" was the project name of a spacecraft design study so absurd that it stood absolutely no chance of success from the very outset. The drive mechanism was to be an atomic bomb machine gun. Ridiculous as the idea seems it was still given a shoestring budget and a team of top scientists to work on it. The results of that research which ended about two generations ago are still largely classified, but what is known raises some startling questions.

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