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HONEYSUCKLE CREEK: IAN HAHN’S PHOTOS Ian Hahn – 1966. Ian Hahn was the second member of the permanent Honeysuckle crew to be on site, and served in the Power House 1966 – 1968. Ian took photos of the first road as well as the newly-completed buildings and equipment in late 1966. Earlier scans by Mike Dinn and John Saxon of those slides were posted on the website in 2004. MIKE DINN - HONEYSUCKLE CREEK Mike Dinn was born and educated in England. After graduating in Electrical Engineering (London) in 1955 he worked in British industry mainly on aircraft electronics and electrics. In 1960 he moved to Australia, and was responsible for aircraft flight testing Instrumentation with the Royal Australian Air Force. APOLLO RANGE INSTRUMENTED AIRCRAFT Apollo Range Instrumented Aircraft. GSFC’s Bob Burns took this photo of an ARIA (10327), with the ALOTS pod fitted, from his Connie, NASA 422, in June 1967. He writes, “we were over northern Texas, coming back from Category II Acceptance Testing out over the Gulf of Mexico, heading back to DON GRAY - HONEYSUCKLE CREEK Don Gray. Honeysuckle Creek Station Director 1970–78. Photo: by Hamish Lindsay. Jul 1988 to Nov 1989 – Manager, Remote Sensing Unit, AUSLIG. Don was interviewed for the 2009 BBC Knowledge documentary “ One Small Step: The Australian Story ”. We recorded this 90 UNIVAC FEDERAL SYSTEMS DIVISION UL univac 1230 military computer (cp-855/uykj militarized construction (mil-e-16400) compact size: 72"h x 38"w x 37"0 weight: 2200 pounds30-bit word length
DSS 42 - HONEYSUCKLE CREEK 1 J Heath Senior RF Engineer: DSS 42 B M Window Ops Supervisor: DSS 42, HSK-X, Parkes, DSS 43 M J Dinn DSD: DSS 42, HSK Written by DSS 42 Tidbinbilla’s forgotten role A TRIBUTE TO HONEYSUCKLE CREEK TRACKING STATIONAPOLLO 11 TVDEPARTMENT OF SUPPLYINTERVIEWSAPOLLO MISSIONSALSEPREUNIONS A Tribute to Honeysuckle Creek Tracking Station. Updated 24 May 2021. | News & Jottings 02 January 2021. May 2021. 24 May 2021: We’re saddened to report that Dr Ross Taylor, a giant in the field of lunar geochemistry, has died in Canberra. In July 1969, Dr Taylor from ANU performed the first chemical analysis of the lunar samples returned by STATION: APOLLO TRACKING OPERATIONS Prior to supporting tracking operations all Apollo stations performed a three hour station readiness test (SRT). This test was conducted in three phases. Phase 1 tested the station intercom (munication) system where all operator positions were manned. Each operator’s headset/microphone was tested in a roll-call sequence. ASCENSION ISLAND TRACKING STATION Ascension views. The Ascension Island Tracking Station at Devil’s Ashpit, near the eastern corner of Ascension Island. The MSFN 9 metre USB antenna (network designation ACN) is at left, the DSN 9 metre antenna is at right. The Acquisition Aid is just visible at centre, behind the Operations building. The dramatic peak is “The Peak NAMADGI NATIONAL PARK The site of Honeysuckle Creek lies within the huge Namadgi National Park, which covers a sizeable portion of the Australian Capital Territory. After the tracking station buildings were demolished, a camping ground was established immediately adjacent to the old main gate. The entrance to the Honeysuckle Camp (ing) groung – a hundredmetres or
HONEYSUCKLE CREEK: IAN HAHN’S PHOTOS Ian Hahn – 1966. Ian Hahn was the second member of the permanent Honeysuckle crew to be on site, and served in the Power House 1966 – 1968. Ian took photos of the first road as well as the newly-completed buildings and equipment in late 1966. Earlier scans by Mike Dinn and John Saxon of those slides were posted on the website in 2004. MIKE DINN - HONEYSUCKLE CREEK Mike Dinn was born and educated in England. After graduating in Electrical Engineering (London) in 1955 he worked in British industry mainly on aircraft electronics and electrics. In 1960 he moved to Australia, and was responsible for aircraft flight testing Instrumentation with the Royal Australian Air Force. APOLLO RANGE INSTRUMENTED AIRCRAFT Apollo Range Instrumented Aircraft. GSFC’s Bob Burns took this photo of an ARIA (10327), with the ALOTS pod fitted, from his Connie, NASA 422, in June 1967. He writes, “we were over northern Texas, coming back from Category II Acceptance Testing out over the Gulf of Mexico, heading back to DON GRAY - HONEYSUCKLE CREEK Don Gray. Honeysuckle Creek Station Director 1970–78. Photo: by Hamish Lindsay. Jul 1988 to Nov 1989 – Manager, Remote Sensing Unit, AUSLIG. Don was interviewed for the 2009 BBC Knowledge documentary “ One Small Step: The Australian Story ”. We recorded this 90 UNIVAC FEDERAL SYSTEMS DIVISION UL univac 1230 military computer (cp-855/uykj militarized construction (mil-e-16400) compact size: 72"h x 38"w x 37"0 weight: 2200 pounds30-bit word length
DSS 42 - HONEYSUCKLE CREEK 1 J Heath Senior RF Engineer: DSS 42 B M Window Ops Supervisor: DSS 42, HSK-X, Parkes, DSS 43 M J Dinn DSD: DSS 42, HSK Written by DSS 42 Tidbinbilla’s forgotten role A TRIBUTE TO HONEYSUCKLE CREEK TRACKING STATION A Tribute to Honeysuckle Creek Tracking Station. Updated 24 May 2021. | News & Jottings 02 January 2021. May 2021. 24 May 2021: We’re saddened to report that Dr Ross Taylor, a giant in the field of lunar geochemistry, has died in Canberra. In July 1969, Dr Taylor from ANU performed the first chemical analysis of the lunar samples returned by NAMADGI NATIONAL PARK The site of Honeysuckle Creek lies within the huge Namadgi National Park, which covers a sizeable portion of the Australian Capital Territory. After the tracking station buildings were demolished, a camping ground was established immediately adjacent to the old main gate. The entrance to the Honeysuckle Camp (ing) groung – a hundredmetres or
HONEYSUCKLE CREEK LOCATION Honeysuckle Creek Location. The site for the Australian Apollo station was a 14 acre radio-quiet location surrounded by granite peaks in the Australian Alps, 32km SSW of Canberra, Australia’s national capital. The area is now part of the Namadgi National Park. Honeysuckle CreekLocation Map.
ISLAND LAGOON TRACKING STATION, WOOMERA Island Lagoon today updated to 2019. ( 1981, 2001, 2008, 2014, 2019 .) Aerial view of Island Lagoon from about 6,000 feet (1800m), by William Schoene. Island Lagoon location. Click the image for a 760kb overview annotated satellite image covering Red Lake in the north, down to Island Lagoon in the south. ( 4.8MB PDF version here). BAKER NUNN, ISLAND LAGOON The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory established a Baker-Nunn satellite tracking camera at Range G, Woomera, in 1957, as part of the International Astrophysical Year.The camera was also used to support activities on the Range. The Woomera Baker-Nunn Camera was moved to Island Lagoon in early July 1964 (apparently planned for 1963), to a new building which sat at a location between theCARNARVON FPQ6
The AN-FPQ 6 radar was built by RCA and was, effectively, a development of the AN-FPS 16. The Q6, as it was known by those who worked on it, was an amplitude comparison monopulse C-band radar, with a 2.8 MW peak klystron transmitter tunable from 5.4 to 5.8 GHZ, which had a 9 metre parabolic antenna, having 52 dB gain, a 0.6 degree beamwidth
APOLLO 14 - HONEYSUCKLE CREEK Apollo 14. In this section: Apollo 14 Essay by Hamish Lindsay. See also: The Apollo 14 Flight Plan. new. This tri-fold leaflet was produced for the Apollo 14 mission by the United States Information Service. Scanned by Colin Mackellar. RON HICKS - HONEYSUCKLE CREEK Ron Hicks was born in 1936 and grew up in Moncton, New Brunswick on Canada’s east coast.. In 1959 he graduated from the Indiana Institute of Technology with degrees in Electronic Engineering and Mathematics. Following a year’s stint in Canada’s far north as an engineer on “The Mid-Canada-Line”, an early warning radar system that stretched across the country, Ron and a mate hitchedBRYAN SULLIVAN
Bryan Sullivan. Bryan Sullivan was born in Sydney in 1939. After completing an electrical trade apprenticeship at the navy dockyards, he graduated from an Electronics and Communications Certificate Engineering course at the North Sydney Technical College (TAFE). He joined the staff of Weapons Division at the Garden Island Dockyard andworked as
RCA APOLLO 8 TELEVISION CAMERA elements is a solid-state device, employing primarily digital logic to obtain desired timing pulses. How Scan Converter Works A TV signal received from Apollo is applied to the A TRIBUTE TO HONEYSUCKLE CREEK TRACKING STATIONAPOLLO 11 TVDEPARTMENT OF SUPPLYINTERVIEWSAPOLLO MISSIONSALSEPREUNIONS A Tribute to Honeysuckle Creek Tracking Station. Updated 24 May 2021. | News & Jottings 02 January 2021. May 2021. 24 May 2021: We’re saddened to report that Dr Ross Taylor, a giant in the field of lunar geochemistry, has died in Canberra. In July 1969, Dr Taylor from ANU performed the first chemical analysis of the lunar samples returned byTHE STATION
The Station. Hamish Lindsay’s classic photo of Honeysuckle Creek. Alan Scheckenbach has made these detailed scans of a print of Hamish Lindsay’s photo – from Kaz Kijak’s collection. Large, Larger. Another classic photo by Hamish. Scan by Nevil Eyre. Large, Larger. This photo was taken before the one above – compare the plants nextto
ASCENSION ISLAND TRACKING STATION Ascension views. The Ascension Island Tracking Station at Devil’s Ashpit, near the eastern corner of Ascension Island. The MSFN 9 metre USB antenna (network designation ACN) is at left, the DSN 9 metre antenna is at right. The Acquisition Aid is just visible at centre, behind the Operations building. The dramatic peak is “The Peak STATION: APOLLO TRACKING OPERATIONS Prior to supporting tracking operations all Apollo stations performed a three hour station readiness test (SRT). This test was conducted in three phases. Phase 1 tested the station intercom (munication) system where all operator positions were manned. Each operator’s headset/microphone was tested in a roll-call sequence. HONEYSUCKLE CREEK LOCATION Honeysuckle Creek Location. The site for the Australian Apollo station was a 14 acre radio-quiet location surrounded by granite peaks in the Australian Alps, 32km SSW of Canberra, Australia’s national capital. The area is now part of the Namadgi National Park. Click the image to download an 80kb PDF. ISLAND LAGOON TRACKING STATION, WOOMERA Island Lagoon today updated to 2019. ( 1981, 2001, 2008, 2014, 2019 .) Aerial view of Island Lagoon from about 6,000 feet (1800m), by William Schoene. Island Lagoon location. Click the image for a 760kb overview annotated satellite image covering Red Lake in the north, down to Island Lagoon in the south. ( 4.8MB PDF version here). HONEYSUCKLE CREEK: IAN HAHN’S PHOTOS Ian Hahn – 1966. Ian Hahn was the second member of the permanent Honeysuckle crew to be on site, and served in the Power House 1966 – 1968. Ian took photos of the first road as well as the newly-completed buildings and equipment in late 1966. Earlier scans by Mike Dinn and John Saxon of those slides were posted on the website in 2004.CARNARVON FPQ6
The AN-FPQ 6 radar was built by RCA and was, effectively, a development of the AN-FPS 16. The Q6, as it was known by those who worked on it, was an amplitude comparison monopulse C-band radar, with a 2.8 MW peak klystron transmitter tunable from 5.4 to 5.8 GHZ, which had a 9 metre parabolic antenna, having 52 dB gain, a 0.6 degree beamwidth
APOLLO RANGE INSTRUMENTED AIRCRAFT Apollo Range Instrumented Aircraft. GSFC’s Bob Burns took this photo of an ARIA (10327), with the ALOTS pod fitted, from his Connie, NASA 422, in June 1967. He writes, “we were over northern Texas, coming back from Category II Acceptance Testing out over the Gulf of Mexico, heading back to WOOMERA - AT HONEYSUCKLECREEK.NET Woomera Pipeline. Started at Morgan on the River Murray. (1966). From Jan Delgado – taken in 1964 and 1965. This was taken just outside Woomera at Phillips Pond. This man died of thirst. (taken 1964) This is the Woomera checkpoint known as the Pimba Gate. A TRIBUTE TO HONEYSUCKLE CREEK TRACKING STATIONAPOLLO 11 TVDEPARTMENT OF SUPPLYINTERVIEWSAPOLLO MISSIONSALSEPREUNIONS A Tribute to Honeysuckle Creek Tracking Station. Updated 24 May 2021. | News & Jottings 02 January 2021. May 2021. 24 May 2021: We’re saddened to report that Dr Ross Taylor, a giant in the field of lunar geochemistry, has died in Canberra. In July 1969, Dr Taylor from ANU performed the first chemical analysis of the lunar samples returned byTHE STATION
The Station. Hamish Lindsay’s classic photo of Honeysuckle Creek. Alan Scheckenbach has made these detailed scans of a print of Hamish Lindsay’s photo – from Kaz Kijak’s collection. Large, Larger. Another classic photo by Hamish. Scan by Nevil Eyre. Large, Larger. This photo was taken before the one above – compare the plants nextto
ASCENSION ISLAND TRACKING STATION Ascension views. The Ascension Island Tracking Station at Devil’s Ashpit, near the eastern corner of Ascension Island. The MSFN 9 metre USB antenna (network designation ACN) is at left, the DSN 9 metre antenna is at right. The Acquisition Aid is just visible at centre, behind the Operations building. The dramatic peak is “The Peak STATION: APOLLO TRACKING OPERATIONS Prior to supporting tracking operations all Apollo stations performed a three hour station readiness test (SRT). This test was conducted in three phases. Phase 1 tested the station intercom (munication) system where all operator positions were manned. Each operator’s headset/microphone was tested in a roll-call sequence. HONEYSUCKLE CREEK LOCATION Honeysuckle Creek Location. The site for the Australian Apollo station was a 14 acre radio-quiet location surrounded by granite peaks in the Australian Alps, 32km SSW of Canberra, Australia’s national capital. The area is now part of the Namadgi National Park. Click the image to download an 80kb PDF. ISLAND LAGOON TRACKING STATION, WOOMERA Island Lagoon today updated to 2019. ( 1981, 2001, 2008, 2014, 2019 .) Aerial view of Island Lagoon from about 6,000 feet (1800m), by William Schoene. Island Lagoon location. Click the image for a 760kb overview annotated satellite image covering Red Lake in the north, down to Island Lagoon in the south. ( 4.8MB PDF version here). HONEYSUCKLE CREEK: IAN HAHN’S PHOTOS Ian Hahn – 1966. Ian Hahn was the second member of the permanent Honeysuckle crew to be on site, and served in the Power House 1966 – 1968. Ian took photos of the first road as well as the newly-completed buildings and equipment in late 1966. Earlier scans by Mike Dinn and John Saxon of those slides were posted on the website in 2004.CARNARVON FPQ6
The AN-FPQ 6 radar was built by RCA and was, effectively, a development of the AN-FPS 16. The Q6, as it was known by those who worked on it, was an amplitude comparison monopulse C-band radar, with a 2.8 MW peak klystron transmitter tunable from 5.4 to 5.8 GHZ, which had a 9 metre parabolic antenna, having 52 dB gain, a 0.6 degree beamwidth
APOLLO RANGE INSTRUMENTED AIRCRAFT Apollo Range Instrumented Aircraft. GSFC’s Bob Burns took this photo of an ARIA (10327), with the ALOTS pod fitted, from his Connie, NASA 422, in June 1967. He writes, “we were over northern Texas, coming back from Category II Acceptance Testing out over the Gulf of Mexico, heading back to WOOMERA - AT HONEYSUCKLECREEK.NET Woomera Pipeline. Started at Morgan on the River Murray. (1966). From Jan Delgado – taken in 1964 and 1965. This was taken just outside Woomera at Phillips Pond. This man died of thirst. (taken 1964) This is the Woomera checkpoint known as the Pimba Gate.THE STATION
The Station. Hamish Lindsay’s classic photo of Honeysuckle Creek. Alan Scheckenbach has made these detailed scans of a print of Hamish Lindsay’s photo – from Kaz Kijak’s collection. Large, Larger. Another classic photo by Hamish. Scan by Nevil Eyre. Large, Larger. This photo was taken before the one above – compare the plants nextto
HONEYSUCKLE CREEK LOCATION Honeysuckle Creek Location. The site for the Australian Apollo station was a 14 acre radio-quiet location surrounded by granite peaks in the Australian Alps, 32km SSW of Canberra, Australia’s national capital. The area is now part of the Namadgi National Park. Click the image to download an 80kb PDF.PEOPLE AND STORIES
People and Stories. People menu. People. People at work Page 1, Page 2, Page 3. Station Directors – Bryan Lowe, Tom Reid, Don Gray, Ian Grant. Individuals – Mike Dinn, John Saxon, Hamish Lindsay, Ron Hicks, Martin Geasley, Bryan Sullivan. Staff ID photos August 1967. Apollo 11 Staff photo 1969. EARLY DAYS - HONEYSUCKLE CREEK The Apollo Road. Fuel deliveries from Caltex. Opening Day – 17 March 1967 (section) updated. The scene on opening day – taken from the cherry-picker. This photo is from the commemorative book presented to Department of Supply Deputy Secretary Lloyd Bott. Large, Larger. THE OFFICIAL OPENING Opening Day - 17th March 1967. Invited guests are dwarfed by the 85 foot Honeysuckle antenna at the official opening, 17th March 1967. Photo: Bruce Withey. APOLLO RANGE INSTRUMENTED AIRCRAFT Apollo Range Instrumented Aircraft. GSFC’s Bob Burns took this photo of an ARIA (10327), with the ALOTS pod fitted, from his Connie, NASA 422, in June 1967. He writes, “we were over northern Texas, coming back from Category II Acceptance Testing out over the Gulf of Mexico, heading back to MISSION CONTROL CENTER The Mission Operations Control Room (MOCR), was the principal command and decision area for each mission, and was the “Houston” frequently referred to. The centre of a complex world-wide communications network to tracking stations, ships and aircraft, it had 19 main areas of responsibilities shown in the diagram below. DON GRAY - HONEYSUCKLE CREEK Don Gray. Honeysuckle Creek Station Director 1970–78. Photo: by Hamish Lindsay. Jul 1988 to Nov 1989 – Manager, Remote Sensing Unit, AUSLIG. Don was interviewed for the 2009 BBC Knowledge documentary “ One Small Step: The Australian Story ”. We recorded this 90 GEMINI III - HONEYSUCKLE CREEK Gemini III is launched on March 23 (US time) 1965. A Titan II GLV booster sent Gemini III into orbit from pad 19 at Cape Canaveral. Within 60 seconds the vehicle was speeding upwards at 1,059 kilometres per hour, the crew pulling 2gs.FRIENDSHIP 7
MA-6 “Friendship 7” – 20th February 1962. After many frustrating delays, Lt. Colonel John Glenn was launched into orbit on his Mercury-Atlas 6 three orbit flight, at 10:47pm Western Australian Standard Time, on February 20 1962. The Atlas launch vehicle carrying Friendship 7 launches toward orbit. The stations of the Mercury Space A TRIBUTE TO HONEYSUCKLE CREEK TRACKING STATIONAPOLLO 11 TVDEPARTMENT OF SUPPLYINTERVIEWSAPOLLO MISSIONSALSEPREUNIONS A Tribute to Honeysuckle Creek Tracking Station. Updated 24 May 2021. | News & Jottings 02 January 2021. May 2021. 24 May 2021: We’re saddened to report that Dr Ross Taylor, a giant in the field of lunar geochemistry, has died in Canberra. In July 1969, Dr Taylor from ANU performed the first chemical analysis of the lunar samples returned byTHE STATION
The Station. Hamish Lindsay’s classic photo of Honeysuckle Creek. Alan Scheckenbach has made these detailed scans of a print of Hamish Lindsay’s photo – from Kaz Kijak’s collection. Large, Larger. Another classic photo by Hamish. Scan by Nevil Eyre. Large, Larger. This photo was taken before the one above – compare the plants nextto
ASCENSION ISLAND TRACKING STATION Ascension views. The Ascension Island Tracking Station at Devil’s Ashpit, near the eastern corner of Ascension Island. The MSFN 9 metre USB antenna (network designation ACN) is at left, the DSN 9 metre antenna is at right. The Acquisition Aid is just visible at centre, behind the Operations building. The dramatic peak is “The Peak STATION: APOLLO TRACKING OPERATIONS Prior to supporting tracking operations all Apollo stations performed a three hour station readiness test (SRT). This test was conducted in three phases. Phase 1 tested the station intercom (munication) system where all operator positions were manned. Each operator’s headset/microphone was tested in a roll-call sequence. HONEYSUCKLE CREEK LOCATION Honeysuckle Creek Location. The site for the Australian Apollo station was a 14 acre radio-quiet location surrounded by granite peaks in the Australian Alps, 32km SSW of Canberra, Australia’s national capital. The area is now part of the Namadgi National Park. Click the image to download an 80kb PDF. ISLAND LAGOON TRACKING STATION, WOOMERA Island Lagoon today updated to 2019. ( 1981, 2001, 2008, 2014, 2019 .) Aerial view of Island Lagoon from about 6,000 feet (1800m), by William Schoene. Island Lagoon location. Click the image for a 760kb overview annotated satellite image covering Red Lake in the north, down to Island Lagoon in the south. ( 4.8MB PDF version here). HONEYSUCKLE CREEK: IAN HAHN’S PHOTOS Ian Hahn – 1966. Ian Hahn was the second member of the permanent Honeysuckle crew to be on site, and served in the Power House 1966 – 1968. Ian took photos of the first road as well as the newly-completed buildings and equipment in late 1966. Earlier scans by Mike Dinn and John Saxon of those slides were posted on the website in 2004.CARNARVON FPQ6
The AN-FPQ 6 radar was built by RCA and was, effectively, a development of the AN-FPS 16. The Q6, as it was known by those who worked on it, was an amplitude comparison monopulse C-band radar, with a 2.8 MW peak klystron transmitter tunable from 5.4 to 5.8 GHZ, which had a 9 metre parabolic antenna, having 52 dB gain, a 0.6 degree beamwidth
APOLLO RANGE INSTRUMENTED AIRCRAFT Apollo Range Instrumented Aircraft. GSFC’s Bob Burns took this photo of an ARIA (10327), with the ALOTS pod fitted, from his Connie, NASA 422, in June 1967. He writes, “we were over northern Texas, coming back from Category II Acceptance Testing out over the Gulf of Mexico, heading back to WOOMERA - AT HONEYSUCKLECREEK.NET Woomera Pipeline. Started at Morgan on the River Murray. (1966). From Jan Delgado – taken in 1964 and 1965. This was taken just outside Woomera at Phillips Pond. This man died of thirst. (taken 1964) This is the Woomera checkpoint known as the Pimba Gate. A TRIBUTE TO HONEYSUCKLE CREEK TRACKING STATIONAPOLLO 11 TVDEPARTMENT OF SUPPLYINTERVIEWSAPOLLO MISSIONSALSEPREUNIONS A Tribute to Honeysuckle Creek Tracking Station. Updated 24 May 2021. | News & Jottings 02 January 2021. May 2021. 24 May 2021: We’re saddened to report that Dr Ross Taylor, a giant in the field of lunar geochemistry, has died in Canberra. In July 1969, Dr Taylor from ANU performed the first chemical analysis of the lunar samples returned byTHE STATION
The Station. Hamish Lindsay’s classic photo of Honeysuckle Creek. Alan Scheckenbach has made these detailed scans of a print of Hamish Lindsay’s photo – from Kaz Kijak’s collection. Large, Larger. Another classic photo by Hamish. Scan by Nevil Eyre. Large, Larger. This photo was taken before the one above – compare the plants nextto
ASCENSION ISLAND TRACKING STATION Ascension views. The Ascension Island Tracking Station at Devil’s Ashpit, near the eastern corner of Ascension Island. The MSFN 9 metre USB antenna (network designation ACN) is at left, the DSN 9 metre antenna is at right. The Acquisition Aid is just visible at centre, behind the Operations building. The dramatic peak is “The Peak STATION: APOLLO TRACKING OPERATIONS Prior to supporting tracking operations all Apollo stations performed a three hour station readiness test (SRT). This test was conducted in three phases. Phase 1 tested the station intercom (munication) system where all operator positions were manned. Each operator’s headset/microphone was tested in a roll-call sequence. HONEYSUCKLE CREEK LOCATION Honeysuckle Creek Location. The site for the Australian Apollo station was a 14 acre radio-quiet location surrounded by granite peaks in the Australian Alps, 32km SSW of Canberra, Australia’s national capital. The area is now part of the Namadgi National Park. Click the image to download an 80kb PDF. ISLAND LAGOON TRACKING STATION, WOOMERA Island Lagoon today updated to 2019. ( 1981, 2001, 2008, 2014, 2019 .) Aerial view of Island Lagoon from about 6,000 feet (1800m), by William Schoene. Island Lagoon location. Click the image for a 760kb overview annotated satellite image covering Red Lake in the north, down to Island Lagoon in the south. ( 4.8MB PDF version here). HONEYSUCKLE CREEK: IAN HAHN’S PHOTOS Ian Hahn – 1966. Ian Hahn was the second member of the permanent Honeysuckle crew to be on site, and served in the Power House 1966 – 1968. Ian took photos of the first road as well as the newly-completed buildings and equipment in late 1966. Earlier scans by Mike Dinn and John Saxon of those slides were posted on the website in 2004.CARNARVON FPQ6
The AN-FPQ 6 radar was built by RCA and was, effectively, a development of the AN-FPS 16. The Q6, as it was known by those who worked on it, was an amplitude comparison monopulse C-band radar, with a 2.8 MW peak klystron transmitter tunable from 5.4 to 5.8 GHZ, which had a 9 metre parabolic antenna, having 52 dB gain, a 0.6 degree beamwidth
APOLLO RANGE INSTRUMENTED AIRCRAFT Apollo Range Instrumented Aircraft. GSFC’s Bob Burns took this photo of an ARIA (10327), with the ALOTS pod fitted, from his Connie, NASA 422, in June 1967. He writes, “we were over northern Texas, coming back from Category II Acceptance Testing out over the Gulf of Mexico, heading back to WOOMERA - AT HONEYSUCKLECREEK.NET Woomera Pipeline. Started at Morgan on the River Murray. (1966). From Jan Delgado – taken in 1964 and 1965. This was taken just outside Woomera at Phillips Pond. This man died of thirst. (taken 1964) This is the Woomera checkpoint known as the Pimba Gate.THE STATION
The Station. Hamish Lindsay’s classic photo of Honeysuckle Creek. Alan Scheckenbach has made these detailed scans of a print of Hamish Lindsay’s photo – from Kaz Kijak’s collection. Large, Larger. Another classic photo by Hamish. Scan by Nevil Eyre. Large, Larger. This photo was taken before the one above – compare the plants nextto
HONEYSUCKLE CREEK LOCATION Honeysuckle Creek Location. The site for the Australian Apollo station was a 14 acre radio-quiet location surrounded by granite peaks in the Australian Alps, 32km SSW of Canberra, Australia’s national capital. The area is now part of the Namadgi National Park. Click the image to download an 80kb PDF.PEOPLE AND STORIES
People and Stories. People menu. People. People at work Page 1, Page 2, Page 3. Station Directors – Bryan Lowe, Tom Reid, Don Gray, Ian Grant. Individuals – Mike Dinn, John Saxon, Hamish Lindsay, Ron Hicks, Martin Geasley, Bryan Sullivan. Staff ID photos August 1967. Apollo 11 Staff photo 1969. EARLY DAYS - HONEYSUCKLE CREEK The Apollo Road. Fuel deliveries from Caltex. Opening Day – 17 March 1967 (section) updated. The scene on opening day – taken from the cherry-picker. This photo is from the commemorative book presented to Department of Supply Deputy Secretary Lloyd Bott. Large, Larger. THE OFFICIAL OPENING Opening Day - 17th March 1967. Invited guests are dwarfed by the 85 foot Honeysuckle antenna at the official opening, 17th March 1967. Photo: Bruce Withey. APOLLO RANGE INSTRUMENTED AIRCRAFT Apollo Range Instrumented Aircraft. GSFC’s Bob Burns took this photo of an ARIA (10327), with the ALOTS pod fitted, from his Connie, NASA 422, in June 1967. He writes, “we were over northern Texas, coming back from Category II Acceptance Testing out over the Gulf of Mexico, heading back to MISSION CONTROL CENTER The Mission Operations Control Room (MOCR), was the principal command and decision area for each mission, and was the “Houston” frequently referred to. The centre of a complex world-wide communications network to tracking stations, ships and aircraft, it had 19 main areas of responsibilities shown in the diagram below. DON GRAY - HONEYSUCKLE CREEK Don Gray. Honeysuckle Creek Station Director 1970–78. Photo: by Hamish Lindsay. Jul 1988 to Nov 1989 – Manager, Remote Sensing Unit, AUSLIG. Don was interviewed for the 2009 BBC Knowledge documentary “ One Small Step: The Australian Story ”. We recorded this 90 GEMINI III - HONEYSUCKLE CREEK Gemini III is launched on March 23 (US time) 1965. A Titan II GLV booster sent Gemini III into orbit from pad 19 at Cape Canaveral. Within 60 seconds the vehicle was speeding upwards at 1,059 kilometres per hour, the crew pulling 2gs.FRIENDSHIP 7
MA-6 “Friendship 7” – 20th February 1962. After many frustrating delays, Lt. Colonel John Glenn was launched into orbit on his Mercury-Atlas 6 three orbit flight, at 10:47pm Western Australian Standard Time, on February 20 1962. The Atlas launch vehicle carrying Friendship 7 launches toward orbit. The stations of the Mercury SpaceDetails
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