That ...$50 million Rocket ...?

vostok

Well-Known Member
Dear World on behalf of my nation, I gotta apologize for the forth coming splash ,...
and anyone under it, we goofed, sorry it won't happen again ...maybe


This cargo rocket carrying crap to the space station has gone outta control,
many of my buddies say that it will burn up falling back to earth,
but I (and the rest of Ru) ain't placing any money on it

..what you think it easy being Russian in the 21st century, .....?
 

mainliner

Well-Known Member
Sometimes I am glad I read an occasional post. It shows me what a dumbass you are.
i once knew this guy and i was wrong about him then i creepily posted my way back into his fabulous life..........creepily without needing to admit i was wrong.


know what i mean ?


ddddddd d d d umber than me see:)
 

bluntmassa1

Well-Known Member
revenge for ww2 *cough* and ww1


just saying..... You scare me now your text is black !!!!
You should be they would sink the UK in WW3. lol, But we all die anyway could die from cancer a nuke would be better. bongsmilie I might be OK shit goes down I'm hitting up the Caribbean good coke and Jamaican herb mon. :bigjoint:
 

cleverpiggy

Well-Known Member
And these are the a-holes that are going to drive us to and around space. Never trust a commie they just are not that smart.
 

vostok

Well-Known Member
UPDATE: Russian spacecraft 'to fall back to Earth on Friday' says BBC...
Yeah ..! its still falling a credit to the ground crew who have struggled so vainly to keep it up


..
A Russian spacecraft that has been out of control since launching last week will fall back to Earth and burn up on Friday, scientists say.
The unmanned cargo ship was launched from Kazakhstan last Tuesday, but contact was lost with it soon afterwards.
The spacecraft, carrying three tonnes of equipment, will disintegrate as it enters Earth's atmosphere.

Any fragments to reach Earth should hit the sea and not land.
The Progress M-27M was to deliver food, water, fuel, oxygen and clothing to the crew of six people
on the International Space Station, that orbits about 420km (250 miles) above Earth.

But after a communications failure, it began spiralling out of control.
Since then, it has been slowly descending, and orbiting Earth in a pattern
that takes it over the eastern United States, Colombia, Brazil and Indonesia.

Roscosmos, the Russian space agency, said on Wednesday it expected the spacecraft to "end its existence"
between 01:23 and 11:55 Moscow time on Friday (22:23 GMT Thursday and 06:55 GMT Friday).

It said: "Only a few small parts of elements of its construction could reach the surface of our planet."

Last week, Cathleen Lewis, a specialist in Russian space programmes at the
Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum in Washington, said
"The likelihood of it coming down and hitting someone is so remote as to be minuscule."


A special commission has been set up in Russia to investigate why Progress was lost.
In 2011, one of its predecessors was destroyed when it crashed soon after take-off in Siberia.
Even after Progress' loss, the astronauts have enough supplies to keep them going until the next expected delivery on 19 June.
A Roscosmos spokesman told Reuters that the loss was valued at 2.59 billion roubles ($50.7m; £32.9m).
 

vostok

Well-Known Member
The Rocket just burnt up in the air ....job done .....bummmer!

The Russian space agency says that its out-of-control spacecraft has burnt up as it re-entered the Earth's atmosphere.

Re-entry was over the Pacific, it said, and only a few fragments were expected to hit the sea.

The unmanned cargo ship was launched from Kazakhstan on 28 April, but control was lost soon afterwards.

The Progress M-27M was carrying more than three tonnes of supplies to the International Space Station.

Russian space agency Roscosmos said: "The Progress M-27M spacecraft ceased to exist at 05:04 Moscow time (02:04 GMT) on 8 May 2015. It entered the atmosphere... over the central part of the Pacific Ocean."

Progress was to deliver food, water, fuel, oxygen and clothing to the crew of six people on the ISS, which orbits about 420km (250 miles) above Earth.

http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-32635037
 
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