News1 min ago
moving a space shuttle
Now that the space shuttle Discovery has landed safely back in California how do NASA propose to get it back to Florida.
Assuming NASA solves its problems and space shuttle flights are allowed again it will need to get back to cape canaveral on the other side of the country. had it landed where it was originally planned to, it would already be there.
the shuttle can't take off and land like a normal plane (i think) and is surely too big for the road so it's going to take some engineering feat to get it back to florida.
any ideas how it's achieved?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by LordyGeordie. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.they will piggyback it on a 747 (although dont know how they get it on the back) and it is a specially designed 747 that is built soley for the purpose for that job, it isnt like any other 747.
The cost according to a nasa spokesperson, for piggybacking it to florida will be approx $1 million which isnt too much considering the overall cost of the mission is closer to $900 million but could have still saved them the $1 million if the weather was a sunny day in florida! Expensive thunderstorm!