The Pad Abort Test-1 (Apollo) reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

Pad Abort Test-1 (Apollo)

Time you got around to sponsoring a child
Pad Abort Test 1 was the first abort test of the Apollo spacecraft.

Mission Statistics
Mission:Pad Abort Test 1
Launch:7 November, 1963
16:00:01 UTC
White Sands Missile Range Area 3

Objectives

Pad Abort Test 1 was a mission to investigate the effects on the Apollo spacecraft during an abort from the pad. The launch escape system (LES) had to be capable of pulling the spacecraft away from a possibly exploding rocket while it sat it on the pad. It then had to be able to gain enough altitude to allow the parachutes to open and preferably have the spacecraft over water where the Apollo spacecraft was designed to land.

The flight featured a production model LES and a boilerplate Apollo spacecraft, the first mission to feaure one. Inside the spacecraft there were no measuring instruments for structrual loads as these measurements would be of little use seeing that the boilerplate did not fully represent a real spacecraft.

Flight

Pad Abort Test 1
Pad Abort Test 1
An abort signal was sent to the LES at 09:00:01 local time. This initiated a sequence where the main solid rockets fired to move the spacecraft craft and smaller attitude rockets fired so that the spacecraft moved laterally (at
Cape Canaveral this lateral movement would be towards the ocean).

The LES separated after fifteen seconds with the spacecraft now on a ballistic trajectory. The parachute system worked perfectly with the drogue chute stabilising the spacecraft, followed by the three main parachutes that slowed the descent to a leisurely 26 kilometres per hour

The only problems found in the whole flight were that that LES rockets had left a soot deposit on the spacecraft exterior, and that the stability of the spacecraft was less than predicted.

External Links