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Black Arrow


XL929

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Interesting article here that the remains have been found and are to be displayed in the UK.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2019/01/21/britains-satellite-launching-rocket-go-display-48-years-desert/

 

Not exactly well researched though....

"Britain’s only rocket to successfully launch a satellite into orbit is to finally go on display 48 years after it crashed into the Australian desert.

The Black Arrow was launched in 1971 from the Isle of Wight, delivering the Prospero satellite, but the programme was shut down soon after, with the money diverted to build Concorde.

🤦‍♂️

 

 

 

 

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22 minutes ago, XL929 said:

The Black Arrow was launched in 1971 from the Isle of Wight, delivering the Prospero satellite, but the programme was shut down soon after, with the money diverted to build Concorde.

Hey, Australia... Isle of Wight... they're both islands populated by the descendants of convicts...

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On ‎21‎/‎01‎/‎2019 at 09:09, XL929 said:

Interesting article here that the remains have been found and are to be displayed in the UK.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2019/01/21/britains-satellite-launching-rocket-go-display-48-years-desert/

 

Not exactly well researched though....

"Britain’s only rocket to successfully launch a satellite into orbit is to finally go on display 48 years after it crashed into the Australian desert.

The Black Arrow was launched in 1971 from the Isle of Wight, delivering the Prospero satellite, but the programme was shut down soon after, with the money diverted to build Concorde.

🤦‍♂️

 

 

 

 

This is what I'm seeing in the article linked to, which is correct:

 

"The Black Arrow was developed on the Isle of Wight and launched in 1971 from Woomera, Australia, delivering the Prospero satellite, but the programme was shut down soon after, with the money diverted to build Concorde."

 

With a massive a slice of hindsight, given the cash cow that the market of launching small and micro satellites has developed into these days, it was a massive mistake to cancel the programme in favour of supersonic transport, a form of transport that in reality no one wanted.

 

Required reading on the UK's space programme.

 

https://www.worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/p810

 

Tommo.

Edited by The Tomohawk Kid
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Yes the article appears to have been amended after initially being published. Poor work from the Telegraph initially but at least they got it right in the end, eh?

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