NASA, HDNet ANNOUNCE HDTV SPACE SHUTTLE BROADCAST PARTNERSHIP

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moonman

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MEDIA ADVISORY
NASA, HDNet ANNOUNCE HDTV SPACE SHUTTLE BROADCAST PARTNERSHIP

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - Dallas, TX – March 29, 2006 - NASA and HDNet have formed a partnership allowing high-definition television broadcasts of all NASA space shuttle launches on the network’s HDNet channel through 2010.

NASA Administrator Mike Griffin and HDNet Chairman and President Mark Cuban will discuss formal details of the agreement at a press conference April 6th from 5:45-6:15 ET. This event is hosted by the Space Foundation and will be held during its 22nd National Space Symposium, April 3-6, at the Broadmoor Hotel in Colorado Springs, CO.

“We appreciate the financial investment and technical expertise HDNet has brought to the table to help us reach audiences interested in this next generation of television," Griffin said.

The agreement covers full live launch and landing broadcast coverage of NASA’s at least 16 remaining space shuttle missions from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. As a bonus, when feasible, HDNet will broadcast NASA’s unmanned rocket launches from Florida on its network. HDNet is also providing to NASA, free of charge, an NTSC signal of all launch broadcasts for media networks not yet equipped to broadcast HDTV.

“This is an exciting deal for HDNet. Every Shuttle Launch is a unique and historical American experience,” said Cuban. “For the next 5 years, the place to watch this experience live in high-definition will be on HDNet. We are proud that NASA has chosen HDNet for this important role.”

As a result of this agreement, HDNet will provide the facilities needed to cover these launches live and in full 1080i high-definition resolution. As it did for its exclusive high-definition broadcast of the Discovery launch last year, HDNet will provide twelve HD cameras, high powered telephoto lenses, recording systems, switchers, monitoring and a fiber optic system needed to get the camera signals from the
launch pad to the broadcast center several miles away. HDNet will be
the only all-HD network to broadcast full coverage of the shuttle launches.

Media wishing to cover this press conference or any symposium events should register with the Space Foundation at www.NationalSpaceSymposium.org/media. For questions concerning media registration, contact the Foundation’s press office at 719-576-8000.
:)
 
It doesn't appear that there will be that many more launches of the space shuttle. More and more missions are being scrubbed all the time because of lack of money.
 
This will be cool. the next launch in in june of july. Last week NASA said they still have all 8 launchs planed after columbia still on the books.
 
Eric Goempel said:
This will be cool. the next launch in in june of july. Last week NASA said they still have all 8 launchs planed after columbia still on the books.
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The shuttle program is sked. for closure in 2010...here is the tentative sked.
so far.........
STS-121/ULF1.1 (Discovery): 07/01/06 (3:52 p.m. EDT; launch window closes July 19)
STS-300* (Atlantis; emergency rescue flight if needed): 08/04/06
STS-115/12A (Atlantis): 08/28/06
STS-301* (Discovery; emergency rescue flight if needed): 11/11/06
STS-116/12A.1 (Discovery): 12/14/06
STS-117/13A (Atlantis): 03/22/07
STS-118/13A.1 (Endeavour): 06/14/07
* NASA is processing shuttles in parallel to permit emergency rescue flights in case of major problems during Discovery's mission or that of Atlantis in August. In both cases, the crew of a damaged shuttle could move aboard the international space station to await rescue. If the next two shuttle flights go smoothly, however, NASA will stand down from emergency flight processing.
 
vurbano said:
What took so long?

---------------
Discovery's launch delay from May 10 to July 1 was ordered by program manager Wayne Hale to give engineers time to replace suspect engine cutoff sensors in the hydrogen section of Discovery's external fuel tank. One of the four hydrogen ECO sensors in the tank showed a slight shift in electrical resistance that indicated a possible failure mode. Multiple failures in flight could lead to a premature engine shutdown or fool the ship's flight computers into running the engines long enough to suck the tank dry. Both scenarios are potentially catastrophic.

The ECO sensor swap out requires engineers to remove foam insulation at the base of the tank and to open a large manhole cover to permit workers to climb inside. Once the sensors are replaced, the tank must be closed up, refoamed and retested.
 
Just thought I'd stick this in:

Columbia was to heavy to reach the same orbit as the space station. So it couldn't have done that even if they knew about the foam damage. :(
 
So, why wasn't this release posted in the HDNet Discussion Forum instead of just here in the DirecTV Forum? When I got this news from NASA and didn't see it there or in the Breaking News forums, I got excited that I could post breaking news. Being a good netizen, though, I searched first and found it here (well, there was the other mention, but Dragon pointed out the duplication of effort.)

Could one of the Mods move this to the HDNet Discussion, please, since this will be on more than just DirecTV?
 
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