Here's a 360 deg view of the Cockpit of the Shuttle , A lot of buttons and switches
http://360vr.com/2011/06/22-discover...236/index.html
Here's a 360 deg view of the Cockpit of the Shuttle , A lot of buttons and switches
http://360vr.com/2011/06/22-discover...236/index.html
It reminds me of this line*
LIGHTS!"The thing's hollow—it goes on forever—and—oh my God—it's full of..."
(And now my head's spinning)
*From 2001, A Space Odyssey.
Last edited by ameerat42; 19-04-2012 at 12:09pm.
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wow......not bad Bill. I`d like a ride in THAT.
Those seats look very hard to me!
All my photos are taken with recycled pixels.
Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit.
Wisdom, is knowing not to serve it in a fruit salad.
Technically it's not a 360 degree view, it's actually a 129,600 degree view, 360 degree x 360 degrees.
Would be better if it was higher resolution so that when you zoom in you can read the button names. I can't work out if one of the ones on the roof is "BAD CNTRLR" (1 and 2) or "GAD CNTRLR" (1 and 2).
Maybe the co-pilot flicks on the "Bad Controller" when he has lost faith in the pilot.
The button near it marked "Cabin Relief" could conjur up all sorts of ideas as to what that does.
With all those switches to learn, I'm surprised anyone knows them all. No wonder there aren't a hell of a lot of people that can put "Shuttle Pilot" as their occupation!!!
Last edited by Ezookiel; 20-04-2012 at 1:01pm.
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It isnt really that hard to learn what the buttons are for.
They are grouped according to the various systems of the craft, and many of them are duplicated for the pilot and co-pilot.
A lot of the ones overhead are more than likely circuit breakers anyway, so these pop out when they go, and just need to be pushed back.
Some of the buttons and knobs are for altering the colour display screens to show you what you want them to, and in case of something going wrong, the displays will change automatically to let you know.
Very similar to any large plane, with just a few extras, so most pilots would feel at home anyway.
The big difference is in the engineer's seat, as most modern airliners don't use engineer positions anymore.
wow! a heck of alot of buttons! a good place to say "i wonder what this red button does?" lol
it's great! thanks for sharing
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