Mission: SPACE by the numbers

wdwguide

Ex Guide Book Author
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Mar 19, 2001
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I just found this on the media web site, and thought that it might be of interest for the trivia lovers among you:



Mission: SPACE -- By the Numbers


LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. -- Mission: SPACE, presented by HP, will send Epcot guests on an out-of-this-world adventure they never thought possible. The next awesome attraction at Walt Disney World Resort features ride technology never used before in a theme park and gives guests the incredible sensation of lifting off and traveling through outer space.

Work Load: It took more than 650 Walt Disney Imagineers more than 350,000 hours over five years to work on developing Mission: SPACE.

Moon Missions: The 29 missions that the United States and the Soviet Union sent to the moon between 1959 and 1976 are all noted on the moon sphere in the Planetary Plaza of Mission: SPACE.

The Right Red: Nearly 100 shades of red were mocked up before Imagineers decided on the color of the red planet that dominates the dramatic façade of Mission: SPACE.

How BIG Is It? Jupiter is the biggest celestial body in the Planetary Plaza of Mission: SPACE at 16 feet in diameter. Earth is 10 feet in diameter and the moon is 12 feet in diameter. As they exist in our galaxy, Earth is 7,926 miles in diameter; the moon is 2,160 miles in diameter and Jupiter is 88,700 miles in diameter.

How Sweet It Is: It would take 13,136,640 jellybeans to fill the Earth sphere in Planetary Plaza; 22,702,080 to fill the moon sphere and 53,809,920 to fill the Jupiter sphere.

Slow Mover: The Gravity Wheel located in the Space Simulation Lab rotates once each minute.

Loading Up: There are four ride systems at Mission: SPACE. There are 10 capsules in each ride system. Four people can ride in each capsule. If all capsules in each of the ride systems are at capacity, 160 guests can take this awesome adventure at the same time.

Height Requirement: 44 inches

Astronaut Jobs: In Mission: SPACE each guest performs a primary role vital to the mission -- commander, pilot, navigator or engineer. Here are some legendary astronauts that have performed those same roles:

Commander:
Neil Armstrong, Apollo 11
Jim Lovell, Apollo 13
Alan Shepard, Apollo 14

Pilot:
John Glenn, Friendship 7
Buzz Aldrin, Apollo 11

Engineer (Mission Specialist):
Dr. Sally Ride, STS 7
Tech Overload: Two primary computers on the ride system control the entire ride and show functions of the attraction. In addition there are 30 motion-control computers on board. They control altitude during flight. Finally, there is a show-control computer that operates the interactive functions within each capsule.

Looking Ahead: Guests will travel in the X-2 rocket on their mission to Mars. The design of the rocket is based on advanced propulsion technology, which could conceivably take astronauts into deep space in the future.
 
I am so impatient to experiece this ride. Thanks for the info, guide!
 

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