The countdown does not start with the famous “10 … 9 …
8 … 7” etc. The official countdown for an Apollo mission launch actually
begins the day before.
Countdown starts 28 hours before the scheduled launch
time with the announcement: “T-minus 28 hours and counting.” From this moment
on, every man involved in operations at Cape Kennedy is on highest alert.
The massive service structure withdraws to a parking
area a mile and a quarter away from the launch pad by T-11 hours. The Saturn
rocket capped with the Apollo spacecraft sits on the pad, monitored by sixty TV
cameras sending data back to 15 display screens at the Launch Control Center,
overseen by technicians sitting at 150 consoles.
By T-minus 2 hours 10 minutes the crew has been
strapped into the command module, three abreast. The hatch is closed and sealed
thirty minutes later. The LES – Launch Escape System – is armed.
T-minus 3 minutes 10 seconds:
A firing
command initiates the automatic launch sequencer.
T-minus 50 seconds:
The Saturn V
rocket is now under its own internal power.
T-minus 10 seconds:
Thousands of
gallons of water splash into the flame trench below the rocket.
T-minus 9 seconds:
The Saturn’s five
F-1 engines ignite.
T-minus 5 seconds:
The IU (Instrument
Unit, the rocket’s guidance system) assumes control.
T-minus zero:
The hold-down
arms release and the engine thrust reaches maximum.
LIFTOFF!
T-plus 12 seconds:
The rocket
clears the tower.
At this
moment, Houston takes over from the Cape.
T-plus 2 minutes 30 seconds:
The rocket is
approximately 40 miles above the surface, traveling at over 6,000 miles per
hours – almost Mach 9, nine times the speed of sound. Now the second stage
ignites.
T-plus 9 minutes:
The rocket is
approximately 110 miles up, racing up at 16,000 miles per hour – about Mach 22. Now the third stage ignites.
T-plus 11 minutes:
The spacecraft
reaches Earth orbit.
T-plus 3 hours (approximately):
After
extensive checkout, the spacecraft receives a “GO!” for TLI – Trans-lunar
injection, and from now it is three day trip to the Moon ….
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