Soyuz-6 opens floodgate of launches (original) (raw)

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Soyuz-6 opens floodgate of launches

The first of the three spacecraft participating in the planned joined mission lifted off on October 11, 1969. The Soyuz-6, carrying no docking port, entered orbit without problems and was in position to monitor the rendezvous of the two subsequent vehicles.


Previous chapter: Triple Soyuz launch campaign

Soyuz-6 mission at a glance:

Spacecraft designation Soyuz, 7K-OK-A 11F615 No. 14
Crew at launch Georgy Shonin, Valery Kubasov
Call sign Antei
Launch date and time 1969 Oct. 11, 14:10:00 Moscow Time
Launch site Tyuratam, Site 31
Landing date 1969 October 16, 12:52:47 Moscow Time
Landing site 180 kilometers northwest of Karaganda
Mission Rendezvous and formation flying with vehicles No. 15 and 16
Flight duration 4 days 22 hours 42 minutes 47 seconds

crew

Valery Kubasov (left) and Georgy Shonin arrive at the launch pad before liftoff of the Soyuz-6 spacecraft
on October 11, 1969.


On October 11, 1969, the crew of Soyuz-6 was awaken at 7:30 local time (05:30 Moscow). The State Commission, overseeing launch preparations convened at 11:00. During the meeting, Vladimir Patrushev, a senior officer responsible for pad operations, reported some electrical problems, apparently caused by rain. Still, he assured everybody that the necessary measures were being taken to dry up the vehicle, so the commission gave the green light to the fueling of the rocket. (774)

Georgy Shonin and Valery Kubasov took their seats aboard the spacecraft two hours before the planned liftoff (12:00 Moscow, 10:00 local).

The Soyuz-6 spacecraft lifted off as scheduled at 14:10:10.22 Moscow Time. (820) The launch vehicle ascended to orbit according to the following timeline:

Event Planned Actual
RK-I command (Stage I separation) 118.95 seconds 118.95 seconds
Payload fairing jettison 157.92 seconds 165.72 seconds
GKP-II command (Stage II separation) 288.46 seconds 288.46 seconds
Stage III tail section separation 297.71 seconds 301.16 seconds
GK-III-08 command (Stage III engine shutdown process begins?) 521.05 seconds 521.65 seconds
GK-III command (Stage III separation) 527.05 seconds 527.65 seconds

The nearly 10-minute ride to orbit was flawless and mission control quickly received confirmation that the solar panels and antennas of the spacecraft had deployed as planned. (774)

However, the pressurization of the DPO attitude control system aboard Soyuz did not take place immediately after the separation of the spacecraft from the launch vehicle. The initial attempt by the crew to start pressurization from an onboard console also failed. The problem threatened to severely limit the maneuvering capabilities of the spacecraft, but fortunately, during the third orbit, the pressurization was finally initiated, after Shonin was able to trigger a pyrotechnic device in the valve responsible for the operation. (820, 774)

According to ground tracking data cited by Vasily Mishin, Soyuz-6 had the following orbital parameters:

Parameter Planned Actual, Orbit 1 Actual, Orbit 1 and 2
Orbital period 88.58 minutes 88.37 minutes 88.36 minutes
Inclination 51.68 degrees 51.65 degrees 51.71 degrees
Perigee 208.1 kilometers 186.6 kilometers 185.9 kilometers
Apogee 224.9 kilometers 222.8 kilometers 222.9 kilometers

Mishin also recorded the periods for communications with Soyuz-6 on October 11, during its passes over the Soviet ground stations:

Orbit Start of communications End of communications
Orbit 2 15:39 Moscow Time 16:02 Moscow Time
Orbit 3 17:11 Moscow Time 17:28 Moscow Time
Orbit 4 18:44 Moscow Time 18:58 Moscow Time
Orbit 5 20:16 Moscow Time 20:27 Moscow Time

During the 5th orbit of the mission, the cosmonauts aboard Soyuz-6 re-oriented their spacecraft for orbit correction and then manually activated the ship's SKDU propulsion system for 27 seconds. The maneuver added 11 meters per second to the ship's velocity and put it in position for the rendezvous operations in the coming days.

In the meantime, back in Tyuratam, the launch vehicle with the Soyuz-8 spacecraft was rolled out to the launch pad at Site 31 at 18:00 Moscow Time, or just four hours after Soyuz-6 blasted off from the same facility. (774)

Next chapter: Soyuz-7 joins Soyuz-6 in orbit


The article by Anatoly Zak; Last update:October 18, 2019

Page editor: Alain Chabot; Last edit: October 15, 2019

All rights reserved

insider content

Soyuz-6

Shonin and Kubasov bid farewell from the top of the launch gantry at Site 31 in Tyuratam before boarding Soyuz-6 on October 11, 1969.