The Space Shuttle program was the fourth human spaceflight program carried out by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), which accomplished routine transportation for Earth-to-orbit crew and cargo from 1981 to 2011. The Large Shuttle Seat was a Tier-3 vehicle attachment, taking up 4 slots.
The cover also includes a cover for the padded headrest.

Astronauts found that such covers made the high-backed metal seats more comfortable. It was completely phased out by STS-88 (late 1998) and replaced by the ACES suit.The suit was manufactured by the David Clark Company of Worcester, Massachusetts

The Large Shuttle Seat could not be removed once attached to a Large Shuttle or Rover. SPACE.com partner Robert Pearlman, editor of collectSPACE, snapped the photos. So for STS-5, there were three on the flight deck for launch and landing and one on the mid deck. The Space Shuttle was a partially reusable low Earth orbital spacecraft system that was operated from 1981 to 2011 by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) as part of the Space Shuttle program.Its official program name was Space Transportation System (STS), taken from a 1969 plan for a system of reusable spacecraft of which it was the only item funded for development. For STS-5 and STS-9 the ejection seats were still in place but inactive. And for STS-9 it was three up and three down for launch and landing. Did the Space Shuttle have a launch escape system or an ejection seat for emergencies? Space Shuttle abort modes: Ejection seat on Wikipedia has details. A seat in a Soyuz capsule costs $86 million today, an increase of nearly 400 percent over about a decade and a half. During reentry, the abort mode was to pull up and bounce back into space. The Space Shuttle's abort mode was to detach from the fuel tank and glide back to the Cape. Take a rare glimpse inside the space shuttle Atlantis just before NASA powered it down forever in 2011. The pilot and commander of the shuttle get the prime seats in the forward section of the flight deck. $\endgroup$ – a CVn Jan 13 '17 at 10:20 Two of the Space Shuttle orbiters — Enterprise and Columbia — were built with ejection seats for the two pilots.
Since the end of the space shuttle program in 2011, NASA has relied on the Russian Soyuz spacecraft to ferry its astronauts to and from the International Space Station (ISS). The Space Shuttle Columbia (Orbiter Vehicle Designation: OV-102) was the first space-rated orbiter in NASA's Space Shuttle fleet. The Launch Entry Suit (LES), known as the "pumpkin suit", is a partial-pressure suit that was worn by all Space Shuttle crews for the ascent and entry portions of flight from STS-26 (1988) to STS-65 (1994). Mostly, no. $\begingroup$ What @LocalFluff says about Buran's ejection seats reminds me of the first few qualification flights for the space shuttle, which were done with a crew of two and ejection seats. But when building the next 3, which were designed for a minimum crew larger than 2 people, ejection seats didn't seem feasible, so they were built with out them. NASA’s dependence on Russia to send humans to space has been expensive.


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