Humor Camera Fried by Rocket

Nicholas Kang

Tutorial Publisher
Tutorial Publisher
News Reporter
Joined
Apr 3, 2016
Messages
522
Reaction score
10
Points
18
Location
-
This is spreading like wildfire on the Net. SpaceX's F9 launch for the GRACE-FO mission turned a nice camera into a roasted one.

506px_100_dither_point_2sec.gif

Before:

tripod_set_up_20180521.jpg

After:

ingalls_camera_post_fire.jpg

Some background story:

NASA photographer Bill Ingalls has been shooting for the agency for 30 years.

"I had six remotes, two outside the launch pad safety perimeter and four inside," said Ingalls. "Unfortunately, the launch started a grass fire that toasted one of the cameras outside the perimeter."

The location and vegetation can be seen in the set-up picture at right. Once the fire reached the camera, it was quickly engulfed. The body started to melt. When Ingalls returned to the site, firefighters were waiting to greet him. Recognizing the camera was destroyed, Ingalls forced open the body to see if its memory card could be salvaged. It could, which is how we can see the fire approaching the camera.

Ironically, the four cameras set up inside the perimeter were undamaged, as was the other remote. The damaged camera was one of the furthest from the pad, a quarter of a mile away.

The "toasty" camera, as Ingalls calls it, is likely headed for display somewhere at NASA Headquarters in Washington, DC. Meanwhile, Ingalls himself will soon travel to Kazakhstan to photograph the June 3 landing of the International Space Station's Expedition 55 crew. He expects that will be a completely normal assignment.

Anyway, it's kind of interesting to see what a rocket can do apart from propelling humans and cargoes spaceward. :lol:

Source: NASA, Space.com
 

Graham2001

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 20, 2008
Messages
1,518
Reaction score
68
Points
48
This story made me think of Robert Landsburg, one of the cameramen who didn't survive covering the 1981 Mt St Helen's eruption, his story and the last photographs he took (and which he protected with his body, knowing he would not survive what was coming.) can be seen at this site which copies part of the text of the 1981 National Geographic article on the eruption.

https://www.lomography.com/magazine/234721-robert-landsburgs-brave-final-shots
 
Top