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April 2023 by Arjun Modi
Got to see Wallops Flight Facility in a specialized tour as a member in the Virginia Space Coast Scholars Summer Program. Great Experience!
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November 2021 by Daniel Trevino
it'll be released soon, dont worrykrona
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November 2021 by Johnny Gibbons
Awesome place to work.
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November 2020 by John G
This place is great. Incredible that (redacted, redacted AND REDACTED) all occur here. What a country!
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November 2020 by Alex W (Donkey)
Rockets are cool!
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November 2020 by Steve Reed
That's where I work
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November 2020 by doug bevan
It was fun watching the Navy planes do touch and go landing practice
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November 2019 by Raja Bandi
Awesome facility.
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November 2019 by Mira Oktaria
Wallops Flight Facility is a rocket launch site in Virgina, United States.....
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November 2019 by Yukon
It's a really cool place and you can see the launch pads far off in the distance. All the cool stuff is not open to the public so it's not a place worth planning a whole trip for unless there's a rocket launch. The only place open for public is the visitor center with some sounding rockets on display outside and a small museum you'll go through in like 30 minutes. Really cool! Although I really want to check out their rocket assembly facilities (restricted to public). It's great to stop by though if you planned a trip to Chincoteague Island which is really close by (that's what I did).
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November 2019 by Thomas J Horner lll
From the year of 2004 February 14, until 2007 April 17, 2007. I Thomas J Horner lll delivered to this site by way of Desktop Office Depot. I was investigated for to carry Scif Badges.There's deco's on my badge which allowed me do the following;Open Storage – SCI may be openly stored and processed and may be left out when not in use.Closed Storage – SCI material is stored in GSA approved storage containers when not in use. This includes documents, computer hard drives, and storage media.To be in the present of1 Special access program2 Intelligence cycle securityHost of other types of classified information.
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November 2018 by JJ R.
Purpose: The primary purpose of this mission was to test the loading methods for lithium canisters to be flown on the upcoming Kudeki (Kwajalein, April 2013) and Pfaff (Wallops, June 2013) missions, and verify their functionality under sounding rocket launch and space flight conditions.Rocket Type: Two-stage Terrier MK70 Improved-OrionLocation: Wallops RangeLauncher: MRLDate of Launch: January 29, 2013Time: 17:50 ESTExperiment results: Thermistor data looked nominal. Good report from airborne optical platform of recorded video and lithium clouds also visible by ground observation.’Enough said!
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November 2018 by Michelle Mohr
We just happened to be driving by and stopped. It's a free exhibit of missions from the wallop flight center.
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November 2017 by Meghna Sarkar
Because I was finding a place difficult to find with the help of it you loose the road
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November 2017 by Stanton Fruman
Wallops Flight Facility was an unfortunate disappointment and was not worth the 41 mile drive from Ocean City, MD. As much as I love flight and all things NASA, I didn't find anything all that interesting about the place. At least 5 of the exhibits were out of order and the movies (2) weren't all that interesting either. I don't think you'll need more than 30 minutes, and unless it's a launch day I would not recommend going out of your way to visit the place. If Wallops is within your path, or no more than 10 miles out, it is worth giving a shot. Maybe the exhibits will be working. There are only 5-6 small rockets to see; the rest are models inside the visitor center.