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AR15.COM
7/27/2005 8:12:32 AM EDT
I was watching a TV show on the 7 Natural Wonders of aviation.

One of the seven was the Soviet  Antonov An-225 Mriya, the world's largest aircraft.

They showed video of this jet piggybacking a Soviet space shuttle, the Buran.

Did everyone know the Soviets had their own space shuttles?

Aparently there were several, all of which were eventually called "Buran".

Info on the Buran HERE



Info on the Antonov HERE

The Antonov was specifically built with two humps on top for easy transportation
of the shuttle and other heavy cargo.




7/27/2005 8:14:54 AM EDT
[#1]
This made all the news in the '80s.  The media were celebrating the fact that the Soviet Union was right there with us in the space race.



I don't believe it is flying now, and I don't recall that it ever flew all that much back when it was rolled out.
7/27/2005 8:17:14 AM EDT
[#2]
Makes you wonder if Nasa could buy a few "spares" for little to nothing.

7/27/2005 8:17:55 AM EDT
[#3]
There is a picture floating around of a Buran rotting away, parked on a tarmac with weeds growing on it and rust stains running down the fuselage.

7/27/2005 8:19:02 AM EDT
[#4]
Moonraker!
7/27/2005 8:19:03 AM EDT
[#5]
Never was launched as far as I know.
7/27/2005 8:19:16 AM EDT
[#6]
That's a LOT of tires.........
7/27/2005 8:19:27 AM EDT
[#7]
Didn't they try to sell those?
7/27/2005 8:19:38 AM EDT
[#8]
It flew once I believe and was unmanned.  Hardly on par with our shuttle program.
7/27/2005 8:21:07 AM EDT
[#9]
No capitalist American plans or ideas were copied in the prodcution of this spacecraft.

Which is now rotting away in a junk yard for lack of use / funding.



liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/rsa/buran.html


Cancellation

After the first flight of Buran, funding for the project was cut. Although the project wasn't officially canceled until 1993, much of the work was halted long before that date. There were two other Buran shuttles under construction. The second orbiter, "Ptichka" ("Little Bird" in Russian) was originally scheduled for completion in 1990. The third Buran was due in 1992. Neither was finished. In November 1995, the partially completed shuttles were dismantled at their production site. The manufacturing plant is scheduled to be converted for production of buses, syringes, and diapers.

7/27/2005 8:23:13 AM EDT
[#10]
Back when you could park your car and watch planes take off from Houston Intercontinental Airport (now Bush Intercontinental), I watched an Antonov take off a few times.  One vantage point was at the END of a runway, and that damn plane looked like it was going to run you over, and NEVER get off the ground.  Truly a sight to see.
7/27/2005 8:23:46 AM EDT
[#11]
Yeah they stole our plans a long time ago.

I don't believe it ever flew.
7/27/2005 8:43:21 AM EDT
[#12]
Their socialist space program got a copy of our socialist space program's 1950s "reusable" spacecraft/shuttle.  Whoopdy-doo!
7/27/2005 8:51:15 AM EDT
[#13]
You have to wonder how old some of you guys are.
7/27/2005 9:00:48 AM EDT
[#14]

Quoted:
You have to wonder how old some of you guys are.



Why?
7/27/2005 9:02:07 AM EDT
[#15]

Quoted:
You have to wonder how old some of you guys are.



If knowing about the Soviet space program is the deciding factor, then I guess I'm old.  Teach me to be a plane nut.
7/27/2005 9:07:48 AM EDT
[#16]

Quoted:
You have to wonder how old some of you guys are.



I was questioning my own age when I heard of the Soviet Shuttle.

I remember the first launch, but I was in grade school.

If I recall, we were all sitting in front of the TV, watching the countdown,
while Good Morning America was showing off another new invention.

The Kodak Disc Camera.

Dave
7/27/2005 9:36:44 AM EDT
[#17]
7/27/2005 9:37:11 AM EDT
[#18]

Quoted:
This made all the news in the '80s.  The media were celebrating the fact that the Soviet Union was right there with us in the space race.



I don't believe it is flying now, and I don't recall that it ever flew all that much back when it was rolled out.



The Buran only flew once, on an unmanned mission.  It was entirely successful.

It had minor differences from the US shuttle, including no orbiter-mounted main engines (the Energia booster held the main engines), so it had some advantage on payload capacity.

Jim
7/27/2005 11:08:18 AM EDT
[#19]

Quoted:

Quoted:
You have to wonder how old some of you guys are.



Why?



Because this shit was plastered all over TIME and NEWSWEEK when I was in school.  Its amazing to me that some people are so young now that they have no conception that the BURAN existed before they found it themselves.  
7/27/2005 11:28:08 AM EDT
[#20]
Easy ARDOC,
......... consider most of them think of GW1 like we did of Vietnam
7/27/2005 11:44:38 AM EDT
[#21]

Quoted:
Easy ARDOC,
......... consider most of them think of GW1 like we did of Vietnam



Yup the fate of an old fart.  Shit I remember the Karate Kid as if it was yesterday.
7/27/2005 11:57:51 AM EDT
[#22]
http://www.spacedaily.com/news/buran-00a.html






A rowing boat crew takes a break and admires the 'Buran', Russian space shuttle turned restaurant in Moscow's Gorky Park, 12 April 1996. After the medical tests the visitor of the restaurant passes through the airlock into the ancient space shuttle and for 45 minutes one floats, eats cosmonaut food and glides over the Earth's surface on the banks of the Moskova river.

7/27/2005 12:13:24 PM EDT
[#23]

Quoted:
http://www.spacedaily.com/news/buran-00a.html



www.spacedaily.com/images/buran-park-bg.jpg


A rowing boat crew takes a break and admires the 'Buran', Russian space shuttle turned restaurant in Moscow's Gorky Park, 12 April 1996. After the medical tests the visitor of the restaurant passes through the airlock into the ancient space shuttle and for 45 minutes one floats, eats cosmonaut food and glides over the Earth's surface on the banks of the Moskova river.






Their shuttle was not the best financial idea and that is why it is now a restaurant.  Neither is our shuttle.  There are much cheaper ways to get things into space.  But, the shuttle idea will hopefully have a successor that functions better and cheaper.  Not because of the space travel fantasies we thought of when we were kids and watched the shuttle on television, but because of the ability to make repairs and upgrades to billion dollar satellites.  Instead of having the disposable system we have now.  While the shuttle has been used for repairs in space, the cost of the shuttle being sent is outrageous and only a good idea on ridiculously expensive satellites.
7/27/2005 12:18:16 PM EDT
[#24]