[ADXA] CHALLENGER DISASTER
Michael Reynolds, NO6O
Michael at NO6O.com
Wed Jan 28 18:59:21 EST 2026
Hi Don,
I should have added this in my previous reply to you. My last Air Force
assignment, before joining Sprint, was at the Sunnyvale Satellite
Control Facility in the SF Bay Area. The mysterious "Blue Cube" is no
more. I was the day-shift supervisor, for a few years, inside the
telecommunications control facility. We had to isolate and correct data
losses for satellite command and telemetry, and literally every second
of data loss was tracked, because a "bird" could be lost, if they were
in the process of adjusting its orbit.
We also supported the space shuttle communications throughout each
orbit. There were no automatic relays. Instead they had to link up
with ground stations at Vandenberg, Boston, England, Guam, and Hawaii.
We had continuous links with each station, and had to physically patch
the shuttles through to Mission Control as they passed over each ground
site. After each patch, people nearby performed a comm check with an
astronaut.
Michael, NO6O
On 2026-01-28 2:28 PM, Don Banta wrote:
>
> I cannot believe the time has flown so fast, but today is the 40^th
> anniversary of the space shuttle Challenger disaster. Perhaps this
> might be interesting to some of you:
>
> Do you remember where you were and/or what you were doing that day on
> January 28, 1986?
>
> It isn’t hard at all for me to remember. – /I was there/…… at the
> Kennedy Space Center visitor launch viewing area, 6 miles from Launch
> Complex 39-B.
>
> I was treated to one of the greatest thrills I’ve ever experienced.
> Viewing a shuttle launch live is like viewing a total solar eclipse
> live…watching on television doesn’t even come close. Unfortunately,
> that thrill lasted only 72 seconds. Within 10 minutes of the
> explosion, we were herded back on the bus that had brought us to the
> viewing area from the Kennedy Space Center visitor center. We were
> then instructed to leave immediately as the base was being closed. I
> had just enough time to sprint into the gift shop and gather a few
> items for mementos.
>
> Although the racks were already almost bare, I was able to secure a
> Challenger button, flight patch, and packet of official NASA
> Challenger photos. The next day before leaving our Orlando hotel, I
> found and purchased a copy of the Orlando Sentinel newspaper and after
> arriving back home had the front page laminated to preserve it. A
> couple of weeks later I purchased the issue of People magazine that
> honored Christa McAuliffe:
>
>
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> 73 – Don K5DB
>
>
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