Pioneer 10 Mission Patch
Pioneer 10/11 Project Information. Pioneer 10 and 11 were the first in the Pioneer series of spacecraft to fly. This is an image of the Pioneer 10/11 mission patch. Media in category 'Pioneer 10' The following 49 files are in this category, out of 49 total. Pioneer 10 - Pioneer 11 - mission patch - pioneer patch.jpg 435. After Pioneer 10 emerged through the asteroid belt. Pioneer 11, ended its mission Sept. 30, 1995, when the last transmission from the spacecraft was received.
Contents. Origins The first space patch was flown by Soviet cosmonaut on the mission in 1963; however, that was hidden from public view by the bright orange coverall that was part of the space suit at the time. At the start of the manned ‘space age’, as a rule, astronauts were pilots from a military background. These pilots took the tradition of military with them; most US space missions have had dedicated designs, and since the mid-1980s most Soviet/Russian flights also featured space patches.
Mission patches were first sported by astronauts in 1965. The idea was first introduced to NASA by Air Force pilot (and astronaut). Evolution. Mission insignia Following the loss of the crew in a devastating fire, embroidered patches were restricted from crew clothing. Instead, astronauts in flight wore mission patches of fire-resistant onto which designs were. (Embroidered patches were still produced for ground side wear, non-flight personnel, sale to collectors and to be flown in space as souvenirs.) In the Soviet Union/Russia The Vostok-6 patch was the only one of that program.
The first spacewalker, Alexei Leonov wore a general patch that he designed himself on his EVA, which was also used on subsequent flights. As part of the Interkosmos program, the manned flights to the Salyut and Mir space stations between 1978 and 1988 featured mission logos.
After that, some international flights had a patch, but only from 1994 onward did every Russian manned launch feature a space patch. At that time, the design and production of the patches was done on the initiative of the crew; the designs were not sanctioned by the Russian space agency (Glavkosmos/RKA/Roscosmos). On a few confusing occasions, that lead to two ‘crew-approved’ patches existing for a single mission. The first agency-approved Russian space patch was the one for Soyuz TMA-13. However, Roscosmos was very late in announcing the design, by which time the crew had already produced their own version; the official design was not worn on the crew’s suits. Since Soyuz TMA-14 in 2009, all launches feature ‘official’ patches. In the United States Early manned NASA missions lacked patches; instead, the astronauts gave their spacecraft names.
('s capsule for was named Freedom 7, for instance.) When proposed to name his capsule Molly Brown—a reference to, referring in turn to Grissom's capsule which sank in the ocean shortly after splashdown – NASA officials were nonplussed and they abolished the practice of naming capsules. Gordon Cooper's Gemini 5 mission patch; NASA's first manned patch This prompted astronaut to propose and develop a mission patch for his and 's flight: an embroidered cloth patch sporting the names of the two crew members, a covered wagon, and the slogan '8 Days or Bust' which referred to the expected mission duration.
NASA administrator approved the design, but insisted on the removal of the slogan from the official version of the patch. The so-called Cooper patch was worn on the right breast of the astronauts' uniforms below their nameplates and opposite the NASA emblems worn on the left. Since Gemini 5, patches have been created for all NASA manned missions and many unmanned expeditions. Patches are now created by professional graphic designers, but the design is still directed by each astronaut crew. Enthusiasts have since created patches for manned NASA missions which preceded Gemini 5; many purists object to these designs on the grounds that these souvenir patches were not created or worn by the astronauts. Since Gemini 5, every NASA manned space mission had its own patch; 8 designs for Gemini, 12 for Apollo, 3 for Skylab, 1 for the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project (ASTP) and 135 for the Space Shuttle program. In Europe Although European manned spaceflight, performed by ESA, is dependent on US or Russian launches, most European astronauts have worn a patch designed for their particular mission (apart from some of the earlier Shuttle flights, when ESA astronauts wore the same crew patches as their NASA colleagues).
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ESA patches are designed either by the agency's graphics teams or occasionally by members of the public through competitions organized by ESA. ESA maintains a patch gallery of every patch worn by its astronauts. China In 2003, China launched its first astronaut, aboard.
Following the US and Soviet/Russian tradition, he had a mission patch on his pressure suit. The manned Shenzhou-6, -7 and -9 missions continued the tradition. In a departure from US and Russian designs, the Chinese mission patches do not feature crew names. Categories. Mission patch or crew patch; designed for a single manned space mission.
Payload patch; designed for a particular payload carried on board a Space Shuttle mission. ISS expedition patch; designed for the expedition of a crew on board the International Space Station; these crews wear a separate patch for the Shuttle or Soyuz mission that takes them to the station. Project patch; designed for a program of experiments on board a space station, like ESA designs for missions on Mir and ISS; also for a program of spaceflights, like the Space Shuttle program logo.
Agency patch; depicting the logo of a space agency, like the NASA ‘meatball’ and the ESA ‘thumbprint’ (or the ESA 'flags' patch). Personal patch; designed for an individual astronaut or cosmonaut, for use on one or more space missions. Usually, the patch is not publicized. Astronaut/cosmonaut group patch; features the logo of a selection of one particular ‘class’ of astronauts/cosmonauts, usually including the year of selection. Unmanned and commemorative patches; lots of patches feature rockets, satellites, spaceships, the moon, planets or stars, but some collectors do not consider these ‘true’ space patches. Artists On the US side, artist like Jean Bealieu, William Bradley, James Cooper, Victor Craft, Jerry Elmore, Frank Kelly Freas, Barbara Matelski, Robert T.
McCall, Jean Pinataro, Emilio Pucci, Gene Rickman, Allen Stevens, Norman Tiller, Walter A. Weber, and Lumen M. Winter took care of patch designs. But also aerospace company artists, astronauts and their family members and NASA graphic department designers came up with patch designs.
Most early Soviet/Russian patches were designed by artists that remain anonymous. In the 90s, Dmitri Shcherbinin and Alex Panchenko provided designs for Soyuz missions and personal patches. Russian designs for Soyuz TMA-14 through TMA-03M included art done by children, submitted to Roscosmos as part of a competition. More recently Tim Gagnon of the US and Jorge Cartes of Spain designed Shuttle and ISS expedition patches, while Luc van den Abeelen and Erik van der Hoorn, both of the Netherlands, provided art for Russian Soyuz missions to ISS.
Additionally, Johnson Space Center graphic designer Blake Dumesnil has also worked closely with ISS crews on expedition mission patches, Soyuz patches, and personal crew patches, in addition to official NASA commemorative designs for the end of the Space Shuttle Program and the 50th Anniversary of Extravehicular Activities (EVAs). Collecting Space patch collecting is done by a modest group of people worldwide, trying to keep up with new releases while searching for vintage examples of early mission patches, some now nearly 50 years old.
Since 1971, all official NASA mission patches have been produced by a single supplier: of. As a result, most mission patches since Apollo have been widely available to the public. But a number of years ago, the company switched embroidery machines, and recent versions of older Shuttle patches differ from the originals, making the latter more interesting to serious collectors. Original Soviet era patches and early Russian ones were either never available to the public or in very limited numbers. Since 2009, the supplier of Soyuz patches has modest numbers of patches available for collectors.
The Chinese crew patches are very scarce and mostly only obtained through contacts within the Chinese aerospace industry. ESA patches were only made in limited numbers for PR events, but since 2012 the agency has moved to make its mission patches more widely available to the public from their original providers (Quadrotem in Germany, Emblemen in the Netherlands and Stewart Aviation in UK).
Further reading. Kaplan, Judith and Muniz, Robert. Space Patches: From Mercury to the Space Shuttle.
Sterling Publishing Co., Inc., New York, 1986,. Hengeveld, Ed.
The Apollo Emblems of Artist Al Stevens. Spaceflight magazine, June 2008, pp. 220–225.
Available online at. Kircher, Travis. More Than Just a Merit Badge. Ad Astra magazine, Nov/Dec 2000, pp. 23–25. Also available online at. Lattimer, Dick.
Emco compact 5 cnc manual mill. Emco Compact 5 Lathe A Operation and Parts Manual is available for the Compact 5 Emco Home Page. Fitted with the Emco Compact 5 milling head. A CNC version. Related Manuals for EMCO Compact 5 CNC Basic Manual. EMCO PC Turn 50 EMCO WinNC Heidenhain. Emco compact 5 mill emco compact 5 parts emco compact lathe emco.
All We Did Was Fly to the Moon. The Whispering Eagle Press, Gainesville, FL, 1985,.
Kaplan, Judith and Muniz, Robert. Space Patches: From Mercury to the Space Shuttle. Sterling Publishing Co., Inc., New York, 1986,. Lattimer, Dick. All We Did Was Fly to the Moon. The Whispering Eagle Press, Gainesville, FL, 1985,. Patterson, Ann.
Space Shuttle Patch History. Glushko, Alexander. Design for Space: Soviet and Russian Mission Patches. DOM Publishing, 2016, References.