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Mercury 4
Mission Insignia
Mission Statistics
Mission Name:Mercury MR-4
Call Sign:Liberty Bell 7
Number of
Crew Members:
1
Launch: July 21, 1961
12:20:36 UTC
Cape Canaveral
Complex 5
Landing: July 21, 1961
12:36:13 UTC
27° 32' 9" N
75° 45' 57" W
Duration:15 min 37 s
Number of
Orbits:
Suborbital
Apogee:118.30 mi
190.39 km
Distance
Traveled:
302.07 mi
486.15 km
Maximum
velocity:
5,168 mph
8,317 km/h
Peak acceleration:11.1 g (10.9 m/s²)
Mass:1,286 kg
Crew Picture
Gus Grissom

Mercury 4 was a Mercury program manned space mission launched on July 21, 1961 using a Redstone rocket. Its capsule was named "Liberty Bell 7" and performed a suborbital flight piloted by astronaut Virgil I. "Gus" Grissom. It reached an altitude of over 118.26 miles (190 km) and traveled about 300 miles (480 km). The Redstone was MRLV-8 and the spacecraft was Mercury spacecraft # 11, the first one with a centerline window instead of two portholes.

1 Crew

2 Mission Parameters


3 Liberty Bell 7

__NOTOC__

Mercury spacecraft # 11, was designated to fly the second manned suborbital flight in October, 1961. It came off McDonnell's St. Louis production line in May 1960. Spacecraft # 11 was the first Mercury operational spacecraft with a centerline window. It was closer to the final orbital version than was Alan Shepard's Freedom 7.

3.1 Explosive hatch

Spacecraft # 11 also had a new explosive side hatch. This would allow an astronaut to exit the spacecraft quickly in the event of an emergency. Emergency personnel could also trigger the explosive hatch from outside the spacecraft by pulling on an external lanyard. The original exit procedure was to climb out through the antenna compartment, after removing of a small pressure bulkhead. This was a difficult and slow procedure. Removal of an injured or unconscious astronaut through the top hatch would be nearly impossible. The original side hatch was bolted shut with 70 bolts and covered with several spacecraft shingles. It was a slow process to open the original hatch.

McDonnell engineers came up with two different quick release hatches for the Mercury spacecraft. One with a latch, used on Ham's MR-2 and Shepard's MR-3 missions. The other design was an explosive release hatch. The quick release latching hatch weighed 69 pounds (31 kg), too much of a weight addition to use on the orbital version of the spacecraft. The explosive hatch design used the 70 bolts of the original design; but each quarter-inch (6.35 mm) titanium bolt had a 0.06 inch (1.5 mm) hole bored into it to provide a weak point. A mild detonating fuse (MDF) is installed in a channel between the inner and outer seal around the periphery of the hatch. When the MDF is ignited, the resulting gas pressure between the inner and outer seal causes the bolts to fail in tension.

There were two ways to fire the explosive hatch during recovery. On the inside of the hatch was a knobbed plunger. The pilot could remove a pin and press the plunger with a force of five or six pounds force (25 N). This would detonate the explosive charge which would shear off the 70 bolts and propel the hatch 25 feet (8 m) away in 1 second. If the pin was left in place, a force of 40 pounds force (180 N) was required to detonate the hatch. An outside rescuer could blow open the hatch by removing a small panel near the hatch and pull a lanyard. The explosive hatch weighed only 23 pounds (10 kg).



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