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I always had trouble figuring out
exactly what each instrument panel in the various Mercury Capsules
looked like. Every time I looked at a photo or drawing, they looked
different. It turns out that every capsule had a unique instrument
panel. Some were similar but no two were alike. After many years of
collecting and searching, I thought I had a diagram of every capsule's
panel. Once again, every time I went looking for something or saw a
reference to something, they were different.
I decided to try to document each
and every Mercury Capsule instrument panel. After all, there were only
20, production capsules, plus a mock-up, plus a few trainers...How hard
could it be...This web page is a start to document each and every one.
I have been able to verify almost everything I have drawn from photos
of the actual panels. Some of the photos were fuzzy or hard to see some
details. If you have a photo or reference of an actual panel that
conflicts with these models, please let me know. I'll continue to draw
the panels as I get time. If you want something I don't have here, let
me know and I'll move it to the front of my list. These initial models
are provided in support of the 1/4 paper capsule project.
All the panels are presented in
exactly 1/4 scale. Check for rev letters in the title for the latest
part. If you want a full size version of any of these panels, send me a
note telling me what you want it for and I'll get send it to you. I'll
re-generate the PDF file so you get the full resolution. I had a
lot of fun drawing them and I learned a lot! I hope you find them
useful.
As of 7/29/07, all of the panels
were updated. Sorry about any inconvenience...The changes were mostly
to clean up some switches, re-color some minor details to make them
stand out more, make the tick marks in all the instruments more visible
in the printed versions.
SC7
Freedom 7 Alan Shepard
The most noticeable thing about
7's panel is it was smaller than the other manned panels. It was
missing the far right side. It was also colored like most airplane
instrument panels of the day, a light gray. Subsequent panels had
changeable labels under most controls where 7's labels were mostly
engraved into the panel.

SC13
Freindship7 John Glenn
The panel in 13 can really be
called a baseline for the short orbital missions. It included the Earth
Path Indicator and the Periscope. Both of these were eventually
deleted. I might not model the panel for Liberty Bell 7 (SC11). It was
very similar to 13 when it flew. The rebuilt one in the capsule today
is different than when it flew. Some of the instruments were just gone
and couldn't be replaced in the mock-up panel. Its difficult to find
actual original photos of this panel to build an accurate model from.
If you have any, please send them to me and I'll do a panel and post
the photos. And of course, check out
the virtual 360 tour of 13 at:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/mercury/index.html

SC18
Aurora7 Scott Carpenter

Scott's panel was similar to
John's (13) with a few exceptions. The EPI was deleted. I don't have a
photo of the original door covering the EPI space. Its missing in the
capsule today but you can see where the hinge was. There were some
other minor differences and I think I got them all. The sequencer panel
is nearly identical.
SC16
Sigma7 Wally Schirra

Again, it appears similar to 13
but there are some obvious differences on the right side. There are
also some obvious differences on the sequencer panel side.
SC20
Faith7 Gordo
Cooper May 15-16, 1963
This panel is the last one to fly.
Its very similar to the much documented panel in SC15. One of the
mistakes in documenting 15 (including the MRC model) is the omission of
the telelight covers. They have been misplaced (swiped) through the
years. While documenting 15 as it is today is fine, it really should
also be documented as it would have flown. Maybe I'll model it
one day, or if someone requests it. For now, these panels are quite
representative of the Mercury Spacecraft as they flew.

Last
Updated 12/20/08
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2007 SpacecraftReplicas.com
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