Soviet Shuttle Buran Found In a Junk Heap
gruenz noted the somewhat sad photo slideshow showing what appears to be the Soviet Space Shuttle Buran, lying in a Moscow suburb junk heap. Of course I don't read Russian, so it might also be a carnival ride rusting.
That they did not spend a crazy amount of money on what ended up in the U.S. as a net negative to what we COULD of had. The shuttle had some success and worked but it was way more expensive than it was sold to be and ended up tethering the U.S. to low earth orbit for decades instead of moving on like we should have to a permanent moon settlement and Mars.
Given that the Buran was destroyed by a hangar collapse: http://www.buran.ru/images/jpg/bbur90.jpg
I remember seeing pictures of Buran on the junk heap about 10 years ago. Why is this news today?
Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong fix.
It looks authentic, but does anyone have a translation of the article?
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I did take a year of Russian in college, and it is a bit (well, very, very rusty), but it seems to say that it is Buran and it has been "sacrificed" and it laments the fact that it was once a symbol of the Soviet power in space but is now junk. That is no where near an exact translation, but a rough translation of parts of the caption.
"" is buran in Russian
"" is essentially "Soviet" (some variation)
This page contains a list of the Buran airframes and their locations. This page has a photo of the OK-1K2 unfinished orbiter, this is the closest match to the photos shown in TFA. Aerospaceweb lists this orbiter as having been sold to the Technikmuseum Speyer in 2004, but I've recently been there and they have the OK-GLI atmospheric test bed on display, not OK-1K2.
Its either part of an incomplete buran-class ship or a static test model.
There were several of them partially built when the program was canceled
in addition to several static test models.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buran_program
slashdot having problems... target website holding fine... "In Soviet Russia, Buran slashdots you..."
Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
"And unprecedented case. Seemingly abandoned spaceship on the streets of Moscow - it is something from the realm of fantasy. But alas, this is the true reality. Correspondent "MK" discovered orbiting Soviet "Buran" play like garbage on the outskirts of the capital. Nobody cares what was once a symbol of cosmic power of our country.
Natalia Muschinkina"
AT &F1DT0,T0800665544 - Real men, real help desk support.
Well, it's not newspaper analogue of Fox News, but still very close - well-known "yellow paper" tabloid. So it's not _the_ "Buran", it's just some model / unfinished project, as it was said above. Still, it's not much worse than fate of original "Buran", which now just serves as a cheap attraction in local theme park.
Absence of proof != proof of absence.
I know that Soviet Russia meme gets overdone, but that is one of the funniest things I've seen here in a long time. Well done, advocate_one!
If we had done the same and gone back to the Apollo program, 14 people would still be alive.
Right, because no one died in the Apollo 1 fire http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_1 . And because no one almost died on Apollo 13. And because no Soviets died in craft similar to the Apollo http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soyuz_11 .
If we had stayed with Apollo type craft there would have almost certainly been more fatalities. Space travel is very dangerous. This isn't going to change anytime soon and wouldn't be different if we had used Apollo-like vehicles. Indeed, I'd tentatively guess that the reduced expense of such vehicles might mean many more launches and thus likely even more fatalities.
And to think how many people would still be alive if we gave up on building ships a few thousand years ago!
"linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
There is a Buran in Germany at the Speyer Technik museum.
http://blog.flightstory.net/681/russian-space-shuttle-buran-transported-to-german-museum/
http://sinsheim.technik-museum.de/node/1327
http://sinsheim.technik-museum.de/en
They have two awesome sister technical museums near Frankfurt/Stuttgart. Sinsheim has planes (both supersonic passenger planes) and the Buran is at the Speyer along with more space stuff. Both have a good amount of military stuff and tons of autos. Trains. Model trains. Chainsaws. Sewing machines. Steam Engines. Automatic organs. Motorcycles. A lot of the planes are set up so you can crawl around in them, and you can get very close to a lot of the cars.
Also, they are simple museums, not a lot of glitz or reading. Here is a car, model, year. Here are some more.
However, the best part may be the rides. Germans have a different sense of liability. They have crazy rides that are not supervised, very much buyer beware. Six story steel tube slides. Self loading roller coasters and go-carts. The best was a boat jump thing that winches you up a include, then drops you down a rail into a pool. Awesome fun.
...and it's fully automated first flight. As I recall, it did the whole thing under independent computer control -- was this an incredible achievement for the time?
It is by my will alone my thoughts acquire motion; it is by the juice of the coffee bean that the thoughts acquire speed
I understand that there's a memory associated with the object and certainly the shuttle played a role in Earth history. But ultimately, it's just an object. As I'm gearing and girding up for another hurricane season, I keep on thinking how much *stuff* I have. I admire those people -- and in Russia it seems to be a cultural thing -- who can easily give up objects. Maybe it's years of living under the USSR, or maybe it's the bleak landscape (in some areas), but my Russian friends seem not to fret about throwing things away. Me? I have a ticket stub from a U2 concert that I'm keeping. I have a cigarette lighter from my crashed 3000GT. I have a couple cartridges from an Atari 2600. They're just junk, but I have not been able to throw them away.
Hell, maybe it's the crappy cars they keep on telling me about. All of them were just a moment away from the trash heap anyway.
I'm not sure I'd call Buran a symbol of Soviet power. If i remember correctly, it never had a manned flight and the only fully completed orbiter got just one unmanned flight.
Sure, a complete unmanned demonstration of a return-to-earth spaceship is impressive, but I'd hardly call this thing a "symbol" of anything outside of the Soviet Union's passion for the me-too copycat Space Race.
If I were nominating symbols of the Soviet space program, I'd go with Mir, Sputnik, Venera, Soyuz, Progress, the Proton rocket - all groundbreaking projects and far more important than Buran.
I have no mod points, but I must laugh.
http://alternatives.rzero.com/
Here is the Russian translation according to google translate. And unprecedented case. Seemingly abandoned spaceship on the streets of Moscow - it is something from the realm of fantasy. But alas, this is the true reality. Correspondent "MK" discovered orbiting Soviet "Buran" play like garbage on the outskirts of the capital. Nobody cares what was once a symbol of cosmic power of our country. Natalia Muschinkina Views: 41,285
Actually, this would be it:
http://www.ninjito.com/images/2008-09-12/qx-mongolia-warrior-2.jpg
Soviet Warrior, loose translation is: that which was built by the people will be protected for the people. ..and yet..
From the pictures, the Buran looks like the Space Shuttle screwed a Concorde.
Sent from my CR-48
I'm Mikhael Afrcanvsky. I'm for the former administrator of the Russian Space Agency. I have in my possession in the outskirts of Moscow a fully functional Buran spaceship. I'm able to sell it for 419 MILLION DOLLARS for foregin investors. Unfortunately, due to my country currency crises I have currently no money. A common friend refered you as being an honest and hardworking person. If you're willing to help me covering initial transaction costs and shipping, I'll glad share with you 10% of the amount received from the investors: no less than FORTY MILLION DOLLARS.
Yours,
Mikhael Afrcanvsky.
This is Slashdot, not English Russia.
Naked chicks, booze, flipping over cars, and rusting aerospace; fucking awesome.
I seem to remember a slashdot story from a few years ago that the Russians had put the shuttle up for sale on Ebay.
Unlikely. Hard as it may be to believe, Shuttle's safety record (two disasters in 132 flights) was better than Apollo (one disaster in twelve flights) or even Soyuz (two disasters in 106 flights).
Most likely result if we hadn't gone with Shuttle would have been more, smaller disasters (killing people two or three at a time rather than seven at a shot).
"I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
Of course I don't read russian, so it might also be a carnival ride rusting.
http://translate.google.com/translate?js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.mk.ru%2Fphoto%2Fsocial%2F1090-buran-prinesennyiy-v-zhertvu.html
Seriously, how hard is that?
There were several articles about a secretive "mini-shuttle" being tested by the US military. Its supposed to be maneuverable in orbit, and perhaps landable.
Well a replacement tile, they made about 3.5 million extra tiles and in the late 90s I was able to get one for about $45. Its black and would have gone on the right front section.
Side note, the An-225 was up here in Anchorage in late June and I happened to drive by it at Ted Stevens International Airport. Big goddamned plane, dwarfed all the 747-400s it was parked near and made the MD-11s look miniature.
http://translate.google.com/ comes up with this translation:
"And unprecedented case. Seemingly abandoned spaceship on the streets of Moscow - it is something from the realm of fantasy. But alas, this is the true reality. Correspondent "MK" discovered orbiting Soviet "Buran" play like garbage on the outskirts of the capital. Nobody cares what was once a symbol of cosmic power of our country.
Natalia Muschinkina
Views: 101,149"
I wonder what the freight costs are from Moscow to Hutchinson?
www.eFax.com are spammers
I see a much more enjoyable ride on that web page.
I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
At least in Russia:
1. they know when to decomission;
2. they know better than to reuse old materials forever;
3. their market is free enough that a private scrapper can end up with space-age materials if they are interested in purchasing the item.
In America, that shuttle would be getting disintigrated with live crew aboard and no private entity could ever expect to get their hands on something of potential interest like such expensive, "sensitive" former NASA equipment, even if they could pay for it.
"Stratigraphically the origin of agriculture and thermonuclear destruction will appear essentially simultaneous" -- Lee
The parent is absolutely correct.
Now that would make an awesome episode of Scrapheap Challenge!
NASA learned from their mistakes and did a good job of not repeating them. After Apollo 1 they stopped filling the capsule with 100% oxygen and made some design changes to the capsule to make it safer (and there hasn't been another cabin fire since on any mission).
The Apollo style rockets are fundamentally safer than shuttles. If we had stayed with that kind of rocket we likely would have had something similar to the Russian Soyuz, a rocket that hasn't had an accident since 1971. The reason they are safer is due to being much less complex and because they carry the payload on top of the rocket (so there is no chance of it being struck by falling ice or foam during launch).
The number of Russians (or anyone else) who died on launches by Soyuz during the lifetime of the shuttle program: zero.
Those two Soyuz disasters happened very early in its program (the first and eleventh flight). There has not been another disaster on the Soyuz since 1971. During the entire lifetime of the shuttle program there hasn't been a single fatality on the Soyuz.
If we had invested in remote-manned EXPLORATION instead of Cold War cockwaving space tourism, we'd be much further along in exploring space and developing the robotic systems we REQUIRE ANYWAY to support future manned tourism.
Behold "return on investment":
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voyager_1
"This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
There's a good history of Buran over at Astronautix. First the article about the craft itself, another (with a lot of overlap) about the project, then a short piece about the Buran Analogue. A very good write-up with several good photos (sad ones at the end) over at Aerospaceweb.
If you've got some time to kill, you can find a Buran mock-up sitting at the Baikonur Cosmodrome on Google Earth. Also the final resting place of the Buran that flew and the Energia reusable launch vehicle, but it's a little hard to locate.
You don't use science to show that you're right, you use science to become right.
The fate of the actual flying Buran is rather well-documented, as well as the fate of the second flight-capable vehicle. What you see in those pictures is neither. This is probably one of the full-scale mock ups, which is known to have ended up in an amusement park.
Reading about the Buran doesn't really surprise me. Back around '95, I was on a business trip in the (fairly new) Czech Republic, and one day on a drive between Hradec Kralove and Pardubice, we passed this junkyard, and it was full of scrapped tanks, and artillery pieces and such, and to cap it all off there were a few old MiGs (old, like -15s and -17s IIRC) strewn across the top of the pile. All just pleasantly rusting away in the Bohemian countryside...
Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
Screw the shuttle...what's up with the dude wearing the bunny ears?
When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
problem are the dickheads thinking one has said "could of" & daring to issue a corrections, leading one having to explain that one's using an abbreviated form of "could have" spelt "c-o-u-l-d-'-v-e".
yet despite this, Apollo type vehicles are what we are going to start using again. Who'd have thunk it? More complicated does not always mean better.
To tell if it's real, we can check to see if there is a tape loop of Shirley Bassey running at all times.
I like music
I was in Moscow in May last year. I went on a boat trip along the Moskva River and passed a Buran in Gorky Park. I immediately altered my plans for the following day so as to include a visit.
The next day, May 28th 2009, as I walked towards the Buran I was mortified to see guys with hammers, shovels and brushes starting to demolish it.
I wasn't able to get right up to it to take photos because some uniformed guard insisted that taking photographs was forbidden, but you can see one of the surreptitious snaps I took here - http://www.samoa.co.uk/images/proc0023.jpg
If you look carefully, in the image linked to above, at the nose section where the tiles have been stripped away, you will see that the tiles were actually mounted on wooden lathes.
A somewhat better photo of the nose section can be found here - http://www.samoa.co.uk/images/proc0024.jpg
A little bit of Googling and it turns out that the Buran in Gorky Park was actually a simulator.
The OP was correct, it was a carnival ride.
The preceding line was intentionally left blank.
The crew compartment being on the top of the stack also allows you to attach an escape booster to the top. That's what the pointy bit is at the top of a Saturn V stack. If something goes wrong during launch, they can blow the bolts below and let the escape booster get them away from the rest of the rocket.
#naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
You missed the interesting link to photos further down on that same page!!! http://www.mk.ru/photo/social/1013-singapur-razyigrali-v-butyilochku.html
Sure enough, the cow costume was hanging up next to the superhero outfit and sailors uniform. (S,Spud)
The majority of the casualties in the Soviet space program were on the ground. The US lost about a dozen people in ground accidents (the largest direct loss was 3 people when they asphyxiated in a rocket motor but I think six died in a space program related lab explosion). The Soviet space program lost over 40 people on two separate occasions. China is by far the worse with up to 200 dead in a single incident.
Technically the US lost more Astronauts then the Soviet union lost Cosmonauts but the US had more space missions. Also the Russians picked up the safety game in the late Soviet era.
Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
Every launch the guys that designed the Saturn 5 said that they were insane to allow people that close to the launch as the explosion would rip them apart.
Apollo was not carefully designed for safety first. IT was designed to get there as fast as possible on a short timetable... the Saturn 5 was a miracle that we never had any fail. Because that giant bomb would have made a major mess. LOX + kerosene is damn volatile.
Ignore the propaganda of the space race, read the books from the guys that actually did it.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
Here is the website for the airframe on display in Speyer. The vehicle was discovered in Bahrain by the director of the museum and transported to Germany a couple of years ago. The (german-language) audio comment of the embedded video mentions that it is the only remaining Buran that actually was flying, if only for tests of the automated landing system.