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On April 4, 1968, NASA launched the final uncrewed test flight of its Saturn V rocket.

The Apollo 6 mission demonstrated that the Saturn V rocket and the Apollo spacecraft were ready to send astronauts into space. On top of the rocket was the Apollo Command and Service Module and a boilerplate version of the Lunar Module. While the mission did encounter some problems, it was deemed successful enough for astronauts to be able to fly afterwards. A few minutes after launch, oscillation in some of the rocket engines caused internal fuel lines to break. This made some of the engines shut down early, but the other engines made up for this by burning longer. The spacecraft ended up in a slightly different orbit than NASA originally planned, but NASA still called the mission a success.
Transcript
00:01On this day in space.
00:03On April 4th, 1968, NASA launched the final uncrewed test flight of its Saturn V rocket.
00:08The Apollo 6 mission demonstrated that the Saturn V rocket and the Apollo spacecraft were
00:12ready to send astronauts into space.
00:15On top of the rocket was the Apollo Command and Service Module and a boilerplate version
00:19of the Lunar Module.
00:20While the mission did encounter some problems, it was deemed successful enough for astronauts
00:24to be able to fly afterwards.
00:25A few minutes after launch, oscillation in some of the rocket engines caused internal
00:30fuel lines to break.
00:31This made some of the engines shut down early, but the other engines made up for this by burning
00:35longer.
00:36The spacecraft ended up in a slightly different orbit than NASA originally planned, but NASA
00:40still called the mission a success.
00:42And that's what happened on this day in space.
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