Soldato
- Joined
- 26 Dec 2005
- Posts
- 16,135
- Location
- Paisley
And yet the Soyuz had more room and more advanced instruments, including a computer.
Ultimately, wasn't your initial question about Apollo v Shuttle? I think it comes down to the Shuttle being reusable, and thus a lot cheaper per launch than Apollo. In 135 missions what, five fully functional Shuttles have had to be built? With the SRBs being used on quite a few missions each. Each Apollo mission not only required a brand new CMD, LM (or whatever additional module was required) and ablative reentry heatshield, but also an entire Saturn V rocket. I think the price difference is somewhat monumental.
My original response was about firsts, I didnt mention anything about Apollo vs Shuttle.
On the Apollo Soyuz test project, the Americans wanted to go for a high orbit but the Russians didnt have the ability to, they wanted to go about 400 miles but had to stick to 200 or so, I think its pretty safe to say that the Apollo was a far better and more advanced machine than the early Soyuz crafts.