- CAPCOM
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Okay, if you're ready, I'll give you the emergency voice check. We will turn off UHF and HF transmitters for this so that you will not have to change volume.
- Scott Carpenter
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Roger. Muchea Cap Com. Loud and clear. Tell Jerry and Gus and Lewis and—everybody else there, that I worked with “hello.” John Whittler, if you see him, tell him to saddle Butch up. Break, break. Is your cloud cover such that I can expect [to] see light—or flares at Woomera? Over.
- CAPCOM
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Roger. The cloud coverage here is 3,000 [nautical miles] overcast stratus, and we think you'll probably see them through the clouds. Woomera is clear.
- Scott Carpenter
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Roger. And—go ahead and send it. I'll—you'll be interested to know that I have no moon, now. The horizon is clearly visible from my present position; that's at 00 54 44 elapsed. I believe the horizon on the dark side with no moon is very good for pitch and roll. The stars are adequate for yaw in, maybe 2 minutes of tracking. Over.
- Scott Carpenter
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Roger. I'll try that. Going all the way off and back up a little bit lower than where I was.
- Scott Carpenter
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Well, that's a result of an increase in flow lately. I would think that—I'll try increasing rather than decreasing.
- CAPCOM
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Roger. This is Woomera. This is Woomera Cap Com. Reading you loud and clear. How me?
- CAPCOM
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This is Muchea Cap Com. They will not be contacting you for another 3 minutes.
- CAPCOM
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Roger. Understand. I'll give you the settings, correction, the attitudes for the first flare at this time. It would be plus 80 [degrees] yaw, minus 80 [degrees] in pitch.
- CAPCOM
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Roger. Okay. The Cape now advises to keep the suit setting where it was since it's coming down.
- Scott Carpenter
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Roger. I—for your information, I have increased it just slightly. My readings now are 7 [psia] and 7 [psia] on suit and cabin. What are my inverter temperatures and thruster line temperatures, Deke? Are they okay?
- CAPCOM
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Rog. We are losing you. We are losing you on air-ground. Would you care to contact Woomera at this time?
- Scott Carpenter
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Roger, Woomera. Reading you loud and clear, also. I'd like readout on my inverter temperatures—and mark on your flare. Over.
- CAPCOM
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Roger. We're going to have the flare in approximately 2 minutes. We'll give you a readout on your temperatures.
- CAPCOM
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Roger. Understand. All systems okay. We have your temperatures. Your 150 inverter, 152 [degrees]. Your 250 inverter, 167 [degrees]. Do you copy? Over.
- CAPCOM
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We're going to have the flares. All four of them go at approximately 00 [plus] 58 plus 30. We do have an eight by eight coverage.
- CAPCOM
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This is Woomera Cap Com, Seven. Surgeon reports all systems look good down here. And Systems reports everything okay on his panel.
- CAPCOM
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Have copied. Evidently the cloud coverage is too tight.
Expand selection down Contract selection up - Scott Carpenter
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I have some lights on the ground underneath me. Stand by, I'll try to identify them.
- Scott Carpenter
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Roger. My control mode is fly-by-wire, gyros are free, and the maneuver switch is off. Fuel reads 75-85 [percent], oxygen 88 and 100 [percent]. Wait till I pick a washer out of the air. And everything is very good. Over.
- Scott Carpenter
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Roger. Suit temperature is now 70 [degrees]. Suit temperature is 70 [degrees]. Steam exhaust is 70 [degrees]. The cabin exhaust is 80 [degrees].
- Scott Carpenter
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That is negative. I have then both set on seven at this time and—an increase in setting resulted in a decrease—in suit temperature. I think I'd like to try—try them at this setting a little while longer. Over.
- Scott Carpenter
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Gyros are caged. I have about a 2-degree-per-second yaw rate. All gyros are zero. I have Corvus directly above me. I'm yawing over the top. I feel that my attitude is—the line of sight is nearly—nearly vertical.
- Scott Carpenter
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I am in VOX record only now. The time is 01 04 00 elapsed. I'm searching the star charts.
- Scott Carpenter
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The finish on the star chart is so shiny that—it's impossible to read because of reflection.
- Scott Carpenter
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Attitudes are of no concern to me whatsoever. I know I'm drifting freely. The moon crossed the window not too long ago.
- Scott Carpenter
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Let's see, now what can—I am at this moment rocking my arms back and forth and I can make this show up in the roll, yaw, and pitch needle. By moving my torso, I can make the pitch rate needle move up to 1 degree per second. Roll is, needle, rate needle is very sensitive to this. Yaw is also. Let's see, am going to open the visor at this time. Have a few crumbs of food floating around in the capsule.
- Scott Carpenter
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At 01 06 106—-at 1 minute, 1 hour and 7 minutes elapsed, I'm going above the scale to approximately 8 on cabin and suit.
- Scott Carpenter
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Hello, hello, Canton Com Tech, Canton Com Tech, Aurora Seven. Weak but readable. Go ahead.
Spoken on May 24, 1962, 1:43 p.m. UTC (62 years, 5 months ago). Link to this transcript range is: Tweet