Manned Spaceflights and Buran Analogue Flights - 1989

Last Year Manned Spaceflight Chronology Index Next Year

Flight Launch Landing Name Country   Parameters
STS-29 March 13, 1989
(14:57 GMT)
March 18, 1989
(14:35 GMT)
Commander: Michael Coats
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA M Perigee: 305 km
Apogee: 337 km
Inclination: 28.5°
80 orbits
Pilot: John Blaha
(1st Flight) (NASA Group 9)
USA M
Mission Specialist 1: James Buchli
(3rd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA M
Space Shuttle
Discovery
(OV-103)
(8th Mission)
Launch Pad 39B
Kennedy Space Center,
Florida
21st landing at
Edwards Air Force Base,
California (Runway 22)
Mission Specialist 2: Robert Springer
(1st Flight) (NASA Group 9)
USA M Time
4 days
23 hours
38 minutes
Mission Specialist 3: James Bagian
(1st Flight) (NASA Group 9)
USA M

STS-30 May 4, 1989
(18:46 GMT)
May 8, 1989
(19:43 GMT)
Commander: David Walker
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA M Perigee: 297 km
Apogee: 331 km
Inclination: 28.8°
65 orbits
Pilot: Ronald Grabe
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 9)
USA M
Mission Specialist 1: Mark Lee
(1st Flight) (NASA Group 10)
USA M
Space Shuttle
Atlantis
(OV-104)
(4th Mission)
Launch Pad 39B
Kennedy Space Center,
Florida
22nd landing at
Edwards Air Force Base,
California (Runway 22)
Mission Specialist 2: Norman Thagard
(3rd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA M Time
4 days
0 hours
56 minutes
Mission Specialist 3: Mary Cleave
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 9)
USA F

STS-28 August 8, 1989
(12:37 GMT)
August 13, 1989
(13:37 GMT)
Commander: Brewster Shaw
(3rd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA M Perigee: 289 km
Apogee: 306 km
Inclination: 57°
81 orbits
Pilot: Richard Richards
(1st Flight) (NASA Group 9)
USA M
Mission Specialist 1: James Adamson
(1st Flight) (NASA Group 10)
USA M
Space Shuttle
Columbia
(OV-102)
(8th Mission)
Launch Pad 39B
Kennedy Space Center,
Florida
23rd landing at
Edwards Air Force Base,
California (Runway 17)
Mission Specialist 2: David Leestma
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 9)
USA M Time
5 days
1 hour
0 minutes
Mission Specialist 3: Mark Brown
(1st Flight) (NASA Group 10)
USA M

Soyuz TM-8
(7K-STM #58)
September 5, 1989
(21:38 GMT)
February 19, 1990
(04:36 GMT)
Commander: Aleksandr Viktorenko
(2nd Flight) (TsPK Detachment - Group 7)
USSR M Perigee: 390 km
Apogee: 392 km
Inclination: 51.6°
2,631 orbits
5 spacewalks
Site-1 (Launch Pad 5)
Baikonur Cosmodrome
72 km NE of Arkalyk Flight Engineer: Aleksandr Serebrov
(3rd Flight) (NPOE Detachment - Group 4)
USSR M
Docked with Mir
September 7, 1989

(22:25 GMT)
Undocked from Mir
February 19, 1990

(01:06 GMT)
1st Backup Crew: Vladimir Soloviyov USSR M Time
166 days
6 hours
58 minutes
1st Backup Crew: Aleksandr Balandin USSR M
Launch Vehicle
Soyuz-U2
Port Relocation
December 12, 1989

(08:22 GMT - 08:42 GMT)
2nd Backup Crew: Gennadi Manakov USSR M
2nd Backup Crew: Gennadi Strekalov USSR M

STS-34 October 18, 1989
(16:53 GMT)
October 23, 1989
(16:33 GMT)
Commander: Donald Williams
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA M Perigee: 295 km
Apogee: 323 km
Inclination: 34.3°
80 orbits
Pilot: Michael McCulley
(1st Flight) (NASA Group 10)
USA M
Mission Specialist 1: Shannon Lucid
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA F
Space Shuttle
Atlantis
(OV-104)
(5th Mission)
Launch Pad 39B
Kennedy Space Center,
Florida
24th landing at
Edwards Air Force Base,
California (Runway 23)
Mission Specialist 2: Franklin Chang-Diaz
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 9)
USA M Time
4 days
23 hours
39 minutes
Mission Specialist 3: Ellen Baker
(1st Flight) (NASA Group 10)
USA F

STS-33 November 23, 1989
(00:23 GMT)
November 28, 1989
(00:30 GMT)
Commander: Frederick Gregory
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA M Perigee: 207 km
Apogee: 214 km
Inclination: 28.45°
79 orbits
Pilot: John Blaha
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 9)
USA M
Mission Specialist 1: Manley Carter
(1st Flight) (NASA Group 10)
USA M
Space Shuttle
Discovery
(OV-103)
(8th Mission)
Launch Pad 39B
Kennedy Space Center,
Florida
25th landing at
Edwards Air Force Base,
California (Runway 4)
Mission Specialist 2: Story Musgrave
(3rd Flight) (NASA Group 6)
USA M Time
5 days
0 hours
6 minutes
Mission Specialist 3: Kathryn Thornton
(1st Flight) (NASA Group 10)
USA F

Kvant 2
(77KSD #171-01)
November 26, 1989
(13:01 GMT)
March 23, 2001
(05:59 GMT)
Kvant 2
(Mir space station module)
USSR   Perigee: 221 km
Apogee: 339 km
Inclination: 51.6°
64,692 orbits
Launch Vehicle
Proton-K #354-01
Site-200L (Launch Pad 39)
Baikonur Cosmodrome
Docked with Mir
December 6, 1989

(12:21 GMT)
Transfer to the upper lateral port
December 8, 1989

(07:19 GMT - 08:19 GMT)
Time
4,134 days
16 hours

Buran Analogue
Taxi Test 9
December 29, 1989
Baikonur Cosmodrome, Soviet Union
Test Pilot: Rimantas Stankyavichus
(20th Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M The Buran Analogue
was retired after
this taxi test run.
Test Pilot: Viktor Zabolotsky
(1st Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 3)
USSR M

Last Year Manned Spaceflight Chronology Index Next Year

Updated - October 20, 2006