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Rehbar-1, Pakistan's rocket

No, the government just decided other matters were of more importance, such as the nuclear programme. This meant SUPARCO got some budget cuts.

Walaikum Salam , The two go hand in had : satellites and delivery vehicles, it is vital we step up and spend the required resources to ensure we are not weak.

Asalamu Alaikum

Suparco is currently not working on larger space initiatives because of Pakistan's ambitions but Suparco has some great space programs in it's belly. The info and research at Suparco is also very advance and has helped Pakistan in many fields.
 
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Asalamu Alaikum

Suparco is currently not working on larger space initiatives because of Pakistan's ambitions but Suparco has some great space programs in it's belly. The info and research at Suparco is also very advance and has helped Pakistan in many fields.
Walai kum salam, Sorry, I am results orientated and immune to excuses.
 
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Sorry, I am results orientated and immune to BS.

Mercury.jpg
 
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It was achievement in 60s to be proud of but have no relevance in 21st century where we are no where to be seen.
 
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It was achievement in 60s to be proud of but have no relevance in 21st century where we are no where to be seen.

Asalamu Alaikum

It still has relevance now, since it shows we were the first ones in the region to send rockets into space. Not our neighbour, which is important because many among them need to be humbled.
 
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Rehbar 1:

vDlvZW8.jpg


Rehbar 1 was the first rocket to be launched into space from Pakistan. It was launched on the 7th of June, 1962. This made Pakistan the 1st country in South Asia and the 10th in the world to develop and launch a rocket into space.

Rehbar 1 was a 2 staged, solid fuel rocket that was the first of many to be launched by Pakistan over the next 10 years. The rocket also ended up playing an important role when it came to Pakistan developing it's missile programme. The rocket was designed to measure the wind velocities and wind shears in the upper atmosphere, and was created because NASA realised that the Indian Ocean region was a black hole of data relating to the wind structure of the upper atmosphere which was badly needed for NASA's satellite/Apollo programmes. NASA offered all countries on the area of the Indian Ocean help to establish rocket ranges in order to obtain such data on the condition of fully sharing it with NASA. Pakistan accepted.

In a period of nine months, the Pakistani team was established, their training completed in US facilities, the rocket range equipment and instrumentation procured, the scientific payloads selected, construction of the rocket range at Sonmiani completed and the first rocket successfully launched. This was a unique achievement that even surprised NASA's specialists. Pakistan was the first amongst all developing (including Brazil, China and India) and Islamic countries to carry out a scientific rocketry program.


Throwback From An Era When We Wanted To Do Things With Our Own Hands and Not Get Freebies From Others
:frown::frown::cry::cry::hitwall::hitwall::hitwall:
 
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after that we started to love democracy may be... i could be wrong like always.

Please relax and enjoy being right: you are wrong on this as always. That is known in philosophy as Joe's Paradox. You see, democracy and space research are not incompatible, so you are wrong even as you are right in being wrong. Pretty cleverly done. A treat to watch you in action, Sir.

Rehbar 1:

vDlvZW8.jpg


Rehbar 1 was the first rocket to be launched into space from Pakistan. It was launched on the 7th of June, 1962. This made Pakistan the 1st country in South Asia and the 10th in the world to develop and launch a rocket into space.

Rehbar 1 was a 2 staged, solid fuel rocket that was the first of many to be launched by Pakistan over the next 10 years. The rocket also ended up playing an important role when it came to Pakistan developing it's missile programme. The rocket was designed to measure the wind velocities and wind shears in the upper atmosphere, and was created because NASA realised that the Indian Ocean region was a black hole of data relating to the wind structure of the upper atmosphere which was badly needed for NASA's satellite/Apollo programmes. NASA offered all countries on the area of the Indian Ocean help to establish rocket ranges in order to obtain such data on the condition of fully sharing it with NASA. Pakistan accepted.

In a period of nine months, the Pakistani team was established, their training completed in US facilities, the rocket range equipment and instrumentation procured, the scientific payloads selected, construction of the rocket range at Sonmiani completed and the first rocket successfully launched. This was a unique achievement that even surprised NASA's specialists. Pakistan was the first amongst all developing (including Brazil, China and India) and Islamic countries to carry out a scientific rocketry programme.

<gasp!> Really?

What can be more important than weather, farming, water and irrigation , reconnaissance, targeting, communications etc etc which are a few uses of space satellites. We should have had a hundred satellites up there by now if we had our own delivery vehicles.

We already have a programme (you might have come across newspaper references). Use ours.
 
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Please relax and enjoy being right: you are wrong on this as always. That is known in philosophy as Joe's Paradox. You see, democracy and space research are not incompatible, so you are wrong even as you are right in being wrong. Pretty cleverly done. A treat to watch you in action, Sir.



<gasp!> Really?



We already have a programme (you might have come across newspaper references). Use ours.
When Wlady was running the show things were going in the right direction after him we lost track sadly
 
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