Engineering:Gemini SC-2

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Short description: First reused space capsule
SC-2
Gemini2x.jpg
Gemini SC-2 on display
TypeReentry capsule
Test article
ClassGemini
ManufacturerMcDonnell
Manufactured1964
Flight history
First flightGemini 2
January 19, 1965
Last flightOPS 0855
November 3, 1966
Flights2
Preserved atAir Force Space and Missile Museum

Gemini SC-2 (Spacecraft No. 2) was the second NASA Project Gemini full-up reentry capsule built. This McDonnell Gemini capsule was the first space capsule to be reused, flying twice in suborbital flights. SC-2 flew on Gemini 2 and OPS 0855 flights. The capsule is currently on display at the Air Force Space and Missile Museum at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station .[1]

Spacecraft history

The capsule is part of the collection of the National Air and Space Museum of the Smithsonian Institution.[2]

On 19 January 1965, the Gemini 2 suborbital test mission was launched, with the second prototype Gemini capsule.[3][4]

In March 1965, NASA approved the transfer of the Gemini 2 capsule to the USAF for modification into the first prototype of the Gemini B capsule.[5]

On 3 November 1965, the first Manned Orbiting Laboratory (MOL) and Gemini B suborbital test mission was launched.[5] It is the first capsule to ever be flown twice in space.[6] Several Mercury capsules were used on multiple flights, including the capsule used on Mercury-Redstone 1 and Mercury-Redstone 1A, the Mercury capsule used on test flights Little Joe 5A and Little Joe 5B, and the Mercury capsule used on flights Mercury-Atlas 3 and Mercury Atlas 4, but none of these capsules surpassed the Kármán line on two separate flights. Thus, Gemini SC-2 became the only reentry capsule of the United States to be reflown in space before SpaceX's Crew Dragon Endeavour.[7]

The capsule was transferred to the Smithsonian Institution, as part of the National Air and Space Museum collection.[2]

A mock-up of the Gemini B capsule was put on display in the Allan and Malcolm Lockheed and Glenn Martin Space Gallery at the National Museum of the USAF in 2016.[2]

The flown Gemini SC-2 capsule was put on display in the exhibit hall of the Air Force Space and Missile Museum of the USAF in 2017.[3]

Flight history

Flight № Mission Launch date (UTC) Launch Landing Notes
1 Gemini 2 1965-01-19 19 January 1965


Gemini 2.jpg SH-3A Sea King over Gemini 2 spacecraft 1965.jpg NASA Mission [3][4][5]
2 OPS 0855 1966-11-03 3 November 1966


Titan-3C MOL-Gemini-B-Test 3.jpg USAF Mission; first reflight of a previously flown reentry capsule [3][4][5]

See also

References

Further reading

External links