Stages To Saturn
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     Stages to Saturn
              NASA SP-4206
Stages to Saturn
Roger E. Bilstein
Bilstein, Roger E.
Stages to Saturn.
PREFACE xv
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xix
I. PROLOGUE 1
          1    .
                   Concepts and Origins                                                            3
         1 1   .
                   Qualifying the Cluster Concept                                                323
                                               vii
STAGES TO SATURN
                                                                                   Page
 VII.     EPILOGUE                                                                 379
NOTES 457
          INDEX       .
                                                                                   501
                                            Illustrations
                                                                                   Page
Frontispiece       the Saturn     V   at   LC-39                                      ii
viil
                                                                   LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
                                                                                       Page
Saturn engine applications                                                               90
Turbopump for the H- 1 engine                                                            94
Specifics and systems of the H-l engine                                                 100
Firing and manufacture of the H-l engine                                                105
Specifics and schematic of the F- 1 engine                                              110
Engine start sequence for the S-IC stage                                               Ill
F-l engine injector plate and turbopump                                                117
F-l thrust chamber and brazing furnace                                                 122
F-l test stand                                                                         125
F-l engine production line                                                             126
Centaur stage with two RL-10 engines                                                   136
RL-10 engine specifics and systems; engine cluster mounted             in the   S-IV
    stage of Saturn I                                                                  139
J-2 engine specifics, systems, assembly,           and   testing                       151
Saturn S-IV stages                                                                     161
Seven photos of manufacturing the S-IVB stage                                          169
Comparison of S-IVB stages of Saturn IB and V                                          179
S-IVB stage   rollout      and   testing                                               187
S-IC stage Saturn V launch vehicle                                                     197
Five photos of skin fabrication for the S-IC stage                                     204
Six photos of assembly and testing of the S-IC stage                                   208
Seven photos of fabrication and assembly of the S-II stage                             220
The mission control center at KSC                                                      236
ST-124  inertial guidance platform                                                     244
Instrument unit specifics, systems, and assembly                                       246
Wernher von Braun is briefed by Mathias Siebel                                         262
Saturn program major sites                                                             268
Saturn contractors                                                                     268
Two organization charts of Saturn V program                                            272
Photo of Arthur Rudolph                                                                273
NASA Office of Manned Space Flight Management Council                                  277
Manned Space Flight Awareness Program                                                  279
Photo of MSFC's Saturn V program control center                                        286
S-IC flight stage at MSFC on its transporter                                           300
S-II stage   on   its
                        transporter                                                    303
Five photos of the        NASA    barge    fleet                                       306
Four photos of Saturn         air transport                                            316
USNS Point Barrow                                                                      319
Saturn transportation equipment                                                        319
Three views of Saturn I test flights                                                   326
Two views of Pegasus payloads for Saturn I                                             333
Cutaway drawing and two views of the Saturn IB launch vehicle                          342
AS-501, first flight-ready Saturn V                                                    343
Launch Complex 39                                                                      356
Mobile Service Structures at LC 39                                                     365
Apollo   8                                                                             367
Apollo 11 in flight; control room after launch; Astronaut Edwin Aldrin
     prepares to step onto lunar surface; lunar sample chest                           373
Apollo 1 7 lunar roving vehicle                                                        377
Commonality of Saturn hardware                                                         380
Two photos of Saturn and Skylab                                                        385
Two views of Saturn and the Apollo-Soyuz Test Mission                                  389
Four photos of Huntsville, Alabama                                                     395
                                                                                        ix
                            Foreword
        of man's technological endeavors compare in scope of signifi-
Few
  cance to the development of the Saturn      family of launch vehicles.
     At the time of this writing in 1979, we may still be too close to the
project to see it objectively from the perspective of history, but I expect
that future historians will compare the development of Saturn to such
great and imaginative projects as the building of the Panama Canal and
to such latter day technological achievements as the Manhattan Project.
In terms of both vision and achievement, Saturn may surpass them all.
     It was as if the Wright Brothers had gone from building their
                                      XI
STAGES TO SATURN
 Xll
                                                           FOREWORD
                                                                       Xltl
                             Preface
       gigantic Saturn V launch vehicle may well be the first and last
The
  of      kind. Subsequent space ventures will be based on new vehicles,
         its
such as the smaller, reusable Space Shuttle. Manned launches in the near
future     be geared to orbital missions rather than planetary excursions,
         will
and unmanned deep-space missions      will not demand the very high thrust
boosters characteristic of the Apollo program. As the space program
moves into the future, it also appears that the funding for elaborate "big
booster" missions will not be forthcoming for NASA. The Saturn V class
of launch vehicles are the end of the line of the Saturn generation. It is
not likely that anything like them will ever be built again.
     Because of the commanding drama of the awesome Saturn V, it is
easy to forget the first Saturns the Saturn I and Saturn IB. This history
is an attempt to give due credit to these pioneering vehicles, to analyze
the somewhat awkward origins of the Saturn I as a test bed for static testing
only, not as an operational vehicle, and to discuss the uprated Saturn IB
as an interim booster for the orbital testing of the first Apollo capsules.
Evolution of the engines is also given considerable space early in the
narrative. Because the Apollo-Saturn program was expected to put a
man on the moon within a fixed time span, the use of available hardware
was particularly attractive an aspect of the program that is not generally
appreciated by the public. The development of the early Saturn I and IB
vehicles, as well as the engines, illustrates this approach. Inevitably, the
unique nature of the mission called for advances in the state of the art,
and the Saturn history includes some examples. One outstanding exam-
ple is the development of high-energy liquid hydrogen engines. Other
examples include the development of insulation for extended storage of
large quantities of hydrogen in vehicle tanks and the advances in the
computer technology of the guidance and control systems.
     The development of Saturn was enormously expensive and time-
consuming. Even given the expected costs of developments to advance
the state of the art, why were the costs of the development time so great if
                                     xv
STAGES TO SATURN
the program still relied so much on existing hardware? Part of the answer
involves the uniqueness of dimensions. Even a proven component, to be
used in the huge Saturn, had to be scaled up in size. The larger
component had to withstand a similar increase in the amount of
punishment inflicted on it, and this fact opened up a whole new regime
of operational headaches. The scaling up of components and systems for
lunar missions seemed to involve geometrical progressions rather than
simple arithmetic progressions. The F-l engines for the S-IC first stage
graphically illustrate this difficulty. The size of the Saturn stages and
engines also called for enlargement of test stands and other facilities, with
attendant increases in time and costs. The logistical challenge assumed
gargantuan proportions. The managers of the Apollo-Saturn programs
also discovered unanticipated expenses in storing and maintaining exotic
hardware that was subject to degradation unless constantly monitored,
refurbished, and attended by additional cadres of technicians.
     This book is a technological history. To many contemporaries the
narrative may read too much like a technical manual, but the author's
concern is for posterity, when the technical manuals may be lost or
dispersed (as many are already) and knowledgeable participants have
long since died. The narrative approach was largely predicated on
questions that might well be asked by future generations: How were the
Saturns made? How did they work? Two other histories, already published,
deal with subjects keyed to the Apollo-Saturn program: (1) the develop-
ment of the Apollo command and service modules along with the lunar
module, and (2) the construction and operation of launch facilities at
Cape Kennedy. These books contain much of the political and adminis-
trative struggles surrounding the origins and development of the Apollo
program, and it would be redundant to retell the whole story for the
Saturn history. I have therefore included only the background that
seemed necessary to put the Saturn in proper perspective, and Part Two
recapitulates the programmatic and administrative origins of Saturn.
The bulk of the text is devoted to the theme of technological develop-
ment. Even chapter 9, on management, is geared to the specifics of the
technological management of Saturn vehicles.
     The decision to treat the history of the Saturn program as a
technological narrative shaped the nature of all sections of the book. So
that some of the innovations and advances might be appreciated, it
seemed advisable to include a brief historical overview of rocket technol-
ogy. Against this background, I hope the Saturn story will stand out with
greater clarity.
      The narrative itself is organized into seven parts. The question was
how to deal with the complexity of many simultaneous programs during
the Saturn development that involved the various engines, stages, and
associated equipment for three separate launch vehicles. A strict chrono-
logical organization   seemed unnecessarily confusing. The   topical   approach,
xvi
                                                                           PREFACE
                                                                               xvn
                Acknowledgments
        Rudolph Hermann, Director of the Research         Institute of the
Dr.University of Alabama at Huntsville (UAH), encouraged much of the
early work of the Saturn history project. His successor, Dr. John F.
Porter, Jr., and Dr. J. Edwin Rush, Director of Graduate Programs and
Research at UAH, provided continuing encouragement and support.
     Frederick I. Ordway III and David L. Christensen were primarily
responsible for acquiring specialized documentation under the UAH
contract. With unusual accuracy and efficiency, Mrs. M. L. Childress
helped set up the documentary files and their annotated index and typed
several early drafts of the history. John Stuart Beltz, one of the original
historians on the project, drafted several "working papers" on aspects of
the Saturn program that were helpful in preparing the final manuscript.
Beltz conducted several interviews and acquired contractor documenta-
tion, particularly concerning the S-II stage of the Saturn V. Many long
conversations with him helped shape this and other parts of the Saturn
narrative. Mitchell R. Sharpe of George C. Marshall Space Flight Center
developed working papers and bibliographies on early rocket history
and assisted in acquiring materials on Saturn management (chapter 9) and
the "all-up" launch of the first Saturn V (chapter 12).
      At the MSFC Historical Office, David S. Akens, Leo L. Jones, and
A. Ruth Jarrell offered continuous assistance. After the office was
abolished, Robert G. Sheppard, Don Lakey, and Betty Davis helped fill
requests for additional information and coordinated the distribution of
preliminary copies of the manuscript within MSFC for editorial com-
ment. Bonnie Holmes, in the MSFC Director's Office, provided invalua-
ble help during a follow-up research visit to MSFC during the summer of
1975 and helped acquire photographs and drawings.
     During the final phases of completing the manuscript, the docu-
ments of the Saturn history project were temporarily transferred to the
Johnson Space Center (JSC) near the University of Houston/Clear Lake
City   (UH/CLC) campus. James M. Grimwood, JSC        Historian, not only
                                    xix
STAGES TO SATURN
provided shelf space for these documents but also provided office
          access to the coffee pot, encouragement, and advice. My debt to
facilities,
him is considerable. I wish to thank Sally Gates and my other colleagues,
also of JSC, at work on NASA histories: Edward and Linda Ezell and
David Compton, whose interest and suggestions were unfailingly helpful.
At UH/CLC, Dr. Calvin Cannon, Dean of Human Sciences and Humani-
ties,   and Dr. Peter      Fischer, Director of      Programs   in   Humanities, generously
cooperated     in                                            and writing.
                     arranging teaching duties to benefit research
Special thanks     to
                go Jean   Sherwood    and Myra  Hewitt Young who worked
so cheerfully and conscientiously in typing the manuscript.
     Dr. Eugene M. Emme, of the History Office at NASA Headquarters
in Washington, D.C., organized and guided the NASA historical pro-
xx
                                   a
Prologue
operation, and the Saturn V was a multistage rocket. Early plans for the
moon rocket included proposals for a comparatively simple "one-shot"
vehicle in the form of a single-stage rocket. For all the attraction of the
basic simplicity of a single-stage rocket as compared with a multistage
vehicle, designers finally discarded it. The single-stage concept would
have required a rocket of great girth and structural strength to carry all
the required propellants. As a single-stage vehicle climbed into space, a
considerable weight penalty developed because all the weight of the
empty tankage had to be carried along. This weight penalty severely
limited the size of the payload in this case, a manned spacecraft. The
multistage design allowed the first stage, with its big booster engines, to
drop off once its rocket propellants were depleted. The second stage
was more efficient because it had relatively less weight to push further
into the planned trajectory, and it benefited from the accelerative forces
imparted to it by the first stage. By the same token, the third stage had an
even lighter weight and an even higher acceleration. In addition, the
multistage approach permitted the use of special high-energy fuels in the
upper stages. These considerations played a large role in the develop-
ment of the Saturn V as a three-stage launch vehicle.
     For the Apollo 1 1 mission, components of the Saturn V launch
vehicle and the Apollo spacecraft had arrived in segments at Cape
Kennedy. Whether they reached their destination by ship, barge, plane,
or truck, they were all consigned for delivery to the Vehicle Assembly
Building (VAB). Inside, they were stacked together to make up the moon
rocket. The VAB was the heart of NASA's mobile launch concept, a
radical departure from earlier tradition in rocket launching. Previous
custom was to "stack" (assemble) the rocket at the launch pad itself, with
minimal protection from the elements afforded by a comparatively
makeshift structure thrown up around the rocket and its launching
tower.
     This approach completely tied up the launch pad during the careful
stacking procedures and lengthy checkout. The size and complexity
                                                                               of
the Saturn V dictated a change     in  tactics. NASA   was   planning   a  heavy
schedule of Saturn launches and simply could not accept the consequent
tie-up of launch sites. In a bold new approach, NASA implemented the
mobile launch concept, which entailed the erection and checkout of
several of the three-stage vehicles and spacecraft inside one gargantuan
building, the VAB, with equipment to move the readied vehicles
                                                                             to a
propellant tanks contained 767 cubic meters (203 000 gallons) of RP-1
fuel (a kerosene-type fuel) and 1251 cubic meters (331 000 gallons) of
oxidizer (liquid oxygen, or LOX). The S-IC consumed these propellants
in a fiery holocaust lasting only 2.5 minutes, by which time the Saturn V
was boosted to a speed of about 9700 kilometers per hour at the cutoff
altitude of around 61 kilometers. The spent first stage fell away, to fall
into the sea, and the S-II second stage took over. Like the first stage, the
S-II also mounted a cluster of five engines, but these were the 1 112 000
newtons (250 000 pounds) of thrust J-2 type, burning liquid hydrogen as
fuel, and using liquid oxygen as the oxidizer. In the course of its
six-minute "burn," the second stage propelled the Saturn V to an altitude
of 184 kilometers, accelerating to a speed of 24 620 kilometers per hour.
At this point, the Saturn vehicle had nearly reached the speed and
altitude for Earth orbit. After the second stage dropped away, following
its
    precursor into the ocean, the S-IVB third stage then hurtled the
113 400-kilogram payload into a 190- kilometer orbit, using its single J-2
engine for a burn of 2.75 minutes. In this final part of the orbital mission
sequence, the remainder of the launch vehicle and its payload barreled
into orbit at a speed of 28 200 kilometers per hour.
     The S-IVB did not deplete its fuel during the third-stage burn,
because the mission called for the S-IVB to reignite, firing the spacecraft
out of Earth orbit and into the translunar trajectory to the moon. During
the parking orbit (one to three circuits of the Earth), Astronauts
Armstrong, Aldrin, and Collins completed a final check of the third stage
and the spacecraft, while ground technicians analyzed telemetry and
other data before making the decision to restart the J-2 for the translunar
trajectory burn. No problems showed up to suggest the possibility of
terminating the flight, so mission personnel waited for the precise
moment in Earth orbit for the last five-minute operation of the Saturn V
launch vehicle. Two hours and 44 minutes after liftoff, over the southern
Pacific, the S-IVB ignited and accelerated the spacecraft to 39 400 kilom-
eters per hour enough to carry the spacecraft out of Earth orbit and
place it in a trajectory bound for the rnoon. The third stage was not
immediately separated from the rest of the spacecraft. First, the com-
mand and service module (CSM) separated from the lunar module
adapter, reversed itself and performed a docking maneuver to pull the
lunar module away from the now spent third stage and the instrument
unit. This transposition and docking maneuver signaled the end of the
Saturn V launch vehicle's useful life.
    As Armstrong, Aldrin, and Collins accelerated toward the moon
with the lunar module anchored to the CSM, the S-IVB and the
instrument unit were left behind in space. With both the spacecraft and
                   ^^P%. .^^r
                                              Apollo 11
                                              16-24 July 1969
On 16 July, Apollo 11 is
                       launched     (left);
                                              2.5 minutes    later
                       the first stage separates          and   the
PYROTECHNIC PIONEERING
theories and experiments from the growing bank of science and technol-
ogy that had developed around the turn of the century. For one thing,
the successful liquefaction of gases meant that sufficient quantities of fuel
and oxidizer could be carried aboard a rocket for space missions.
Research into heat physics helped lay the foundations for better engine
designs, and advances in metallurgy stimulated new standards for tanks,
plumbing, and machining to withstand high pressures, heat, and the
super-cold temperatures of liquefied gases. Progress in mathematics,
navigational theory, and control mechanisms made successful guidance
systems possible.
     Although Tsiolkovsky did not construct any working rockets, his
numerous essays and books helped point the way to practical and
successful space travel. Tsiolkovsky spent most of his life as an obscure
mathematics teacher in the Russian provinces, but he made some
pioneering studies in liquid chemical rocket concepts and recommended
liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen as the optimum propellants. In the
1920s, Tsiolkovsky analyzed and mathematically formulated the tech-
nique for staged vehicles to reach escape velocities from Earth. In
contrast to the theoretical work of Tsiolkovsky, Robert Goddard made
basic contributions to rocketry in flight hardware. Following graduation
from Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Goddard completed graduate
work at Clark University in 1911 and became a member of the faculty
there. In the 1920s, he continued earlier experiments with liquid-fueled
vehicles and is credited with the first flight of a liquid-propellant rocket
on 16 March 1926. With private support, Goddard was able to pursue
development of larger rockets; he and a small crew of technicians
established a test site in a remote area of the Southwest not far from
Roswell,   New Mexico. From 1930 to 1941, Goddard made substantial
progress   in the  development of progressively larger rockets, which
attained altitudes of 2300 meters, and refined his equipment for guid-
ance and control, his techniques of welding, and his insulation, pumps,
and other associated equipment. In many respects, Goddard laid the
essential foundations of practical rocket technology, including his research
8
                                              CONCEPTS AND ORIGINS
publicity given the German V-2 of World War II, the work of British,
American, and other groups has been overshadowed. If not as spectacu-
lar as the work on the V-2 rockets, their work nevertheless contributed to
the growth of rocket technology in the prewar era and the successful use
of a variety of Allied rocket weapons in the war. Although groups such as
the American Interplanetary Society (which later became the American
Rocket Society) succeeded in building and launching several small
rockets, much of their significance lay in their role as the source of a
growing number of technical papers on rocket technologies. But rocket
STAGES TO SATURN
development was complex and expensive. The costs and the difficulties
of planning and organization meant that sooner or later the major work
in rocket development would occur under the aegis of permanent
     In the early 1930s, the VfR attracted the attention of the German
Army because the Treaty of Versailles, which restricted some types of
armaments, left the door open to rocket development, and the military
began rocket research as a variation of long-range artillery. Captain
Walter Dornberger, an Army artillery officer with advanced degrees in
engineering, spearheaded military rocket development. One of his chief
assistants was a 20-year-old enthusiast from the VfR, Wernher von
Braun, who joined the organization in October 1932. By December 1932,
the Army rocket group had static-fired a liquid-propellant rocket engine
at the Army's proving ground near Kummersdorf, south of Berlin.
      Wernher von Braun was born   in   1912   at Wirsitz,   Germany,   in   Posen
Province, the second of three sons of Baron and Baroness Magnus von
Braun. A present of a telescope in honor of his church confirmation
started the youthful von Braun's interest in space, spurring him to write
an article about an imaginary trip to the moon. Fascination with the
prospects of space travel never left him, and in 1930 he joined the VfR,
where he met Oberth and other rocket enthusiasts. At the same time, he
attended the Charlottenburg Institute of Technology and did apprentice
work at a machine factory in Berlin. Before completing his bachelor's
degree in mechanical engineering in 1932, he had participated in the
space-travel film project and had come into contact with German
ordnance officers. This contact led to the Army's support of von Braun's
doctoral research in rocket combustion, which he completed in a brief
period of two years, and he received his degree from Friedrich-Wilhelms-
                               7
Universitat of Berlin in 1934.
     By the next year, it became evident that the available test and
research facilities at Kummersdorf were not going to be adequate for the
scale of the hardware under development. A new location, shared jointly
by the German Army and Air Force, was developed instead. Located on
the island of Usedom in the Baltic, the new Peenemuende facility (named
for the nearby Peene river) was geographically remote enough to satisfy
military security and boasted enough land area, about 52 square kilome-
ters, to permit adequate separation of test stands, research facilities,
production areas, and residential sections. Test shots could be fired into
                                                                                11
STAGES TO SATURN
the Baltic Sea, avoiding impact in inhabited regions. Starting with
about 80 researchers in 1936, the facility comprised nearly 5000 person-
nel by the time of the first launch of the V-2 in 1942. Later in the war,
with production in full swing, the work force numbered about 18 000.
     The V-2 (from Vergeltungswaffen-2, or "weapon of retaliation") had
no counterpart in the Allied inventory. The V-2 was 14 meters long, with
a diameter of 1.5 meters, and capable of speeds up to 5800 kilometers
per hour to an altitude of 100 kilometers. By the end of the war,
Germany had launched nearly 3000 of the remarkable V-2 weapons
against targets in England and elsewhere in western Europe at ranges up
to 320 kilometers. With the support of government, private, and univer-
personnel and their families. After regrouping, the von Braun team,
unaware that the United States was already formulating a program to
round up leading German scientific and technical personnel, began
making plans for contacting the Americans. Best known as Operation      9
Paperclip, the American search for the von Braun team had top priority.
12
                                                 CONCEPTS AND ORIGINS
     On    2    1944, von Braun's younger brother Magnus climbed on a
               May
bicycle   and         down a country road in search of the Americans.
                set off
Magnus   was  delegated for this delicate mission because he spoke better
English. Contact  was established, and several months of effort cleared the
bureaucratic hurdles and prepared the way for over 100 selected
German personnel to come to the United States. Finally, von Braun and
six others arrived at Fort Strong in Boston on 29 September 1945. If the
vanguard found the circumstances of their entry into the United States
somewhat confusing and disorganized, they found American rocket
                                                  10
development in much the same state of affairs.
                                                                         13
STAGES TO SATURN
14
                                              CONCEPTS AND ORIGINS
solid-fuel rockets),   Redstone had     the necessary attributes: shops,
                                       all
of funds. Medaris and the equally venturesome von Braun made             AABM
a remarkably resourceful and aggressive organization, especially when
ABMA    found itself in a solo role in Jupiter's eventual development.
     This situation came late in 1956, when naval experts decided to
concentrate on solid-fuel rockets. This direction eliminated logistic and
operational difficulties inherent in the deployment of liquid-propellant
rockets in seaborne operations, particularly with missiles launched under-
water from submarines. The Navy gave official authorization to its own
strategic missile  the Polaris early in 1957. Based on a solid-fuel motor,
the Polaris nevertheless borrowed from the Jupiter program in the form
of    its
            guidance system, evolved from the prior collaboration of      ABMA
and the Navy.
        ABMA continued Jupiter development into            a successful intermedi-
ate range         ballistic missile                    Army eventually had
                                      (IRBM), even though the
to  surrender its operational deployment to the Air Force when a
Department of Defense directive late in 1956 restricted the Army to
missiles with a range of 320 kilometers or less. Even so, ABMA maintained
a role in Jupiter R&D, including high-altitude launches that added to
ABMA's understanding of rocket vehicle operations in the near-Earth
space environment. It was knowledge that paid handsome dividends
later.
to uprate     first-stage engines and develop new second and third stages
              its
complex reasons, the committee selected the Viking; they argued that the
Viking had been intended from the start as a vehicle for space research
and that its development would not impinge on America's ballistic missile
program, which was considered to be lagging behind the Russians'
program. The choice of Viking, in the context of Cold War concerns over
international prestige and technological leadership, was a controversial
decision. The new program, to be known as Project Vanguard, was
                                                                          13
authorized in September 1955 under the Department of the Navy.
                                                                           17
STAGES TO SATURN
18
                                                 CONCEPTS AND ORIGINS
of the old National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA).
Created when President Eisenhower signed the National Aeronautics
and Space Act into law on 29 July 1958, NASA was organized to ensure
strong civil involvement in space research so that space exploration
would be undertaken for peaceful purposes as well as for defense.
Although late in success, Project Vanguard was not without its benefits.
Vanguard I finally got into orbit on 17 March 1958, and two more
Vanguards attained       orbit in   1959.   The program
                                                      yielded important
scientific results, as well as valuable
                                    operational experience. Upper stages
of the Vanguard vehicle were used in conjunction with later booster
vehicles such as the Thor and the Atlas, and the technique of gimbaled
                                                                        17
(movable) engines for directional control was adapted to other rockets.
      The period 19581959 seemed         to trigger feverish activity in space
                                                                           19
STAGES TO SATURN
that Astronaut John H. Glenn became the first American to orbit the
Earth. Boosted by a modified Atlas ICBM, Friendship 7 lifted off from
Cape Canaveral on 20 February 1962 and orbited the Earth three times
before Glenn rode the capsule to splashdown and recovery in the
Atlantic.
    These and other manned flights proved that humans could safely
traveland perform various tasks in the hostile environment of space.
Over the next few years, both Russian and American manned programs
improved and refined booster and spacecraft systems, including multicrew
missions. The Russians again led the way in such missions with the flight
of Voshkod I in 1964 (a three-man crew), and a Russian cosmonaut
Aleksey Leonov performed the first "space walk" during the Voshkod II
mission in 1965. The same year, NASA began its own series of two-man
launches with the Gemini program. With a modified Titan II ICBM as
the booster, the first Gemini mission blasted off from Cape Kennedy on
23 March 1965, and the Gemini program, which continued into the
winter of 1966, included the first American space walks, as well as highly
important rendezvous and docking techniques. The maneuvers required
to bring two separate orbiting spacecraft to a point of rendezvous,
followed by the docking maneuver, helped pave the way for more
ambitious manned space missions. Plans for multimanned space stations
and lunar exploration vehicles depended on these rendezvous and
docking techniques, as well as the ability of astronauts to perform certain
tasks outside the protected environment of the spacecraft itself. The
successive flights of the Mercury-Redstone, Mercury-Atlas, and Gemini-
Titan missions were progressive elements in a grand design to launch a
                                                              18
circumlunar mission to the moon and return to the Earth.
     Against the background of Mercury and Gemini developments,
work was already progressing on the Apollo-Saturn program. The
     .
spacecraft for the Apollo adventure evolved out of the Mercury and
Gemini capsule hardware, and other research and development was
directed toward new technology required for a lunar lander and associated
systems. A parallel effort involved the development of an entirely
different family of boosters. Heretofore, NASA had relied on existing
boosters requisitioned from the armed services the Redstone missile,
along with Thor, Atlas, and Titan. For manned lunar missions, a rocket
of unusual thrust and lifting capacity was called for literally, a giant of a
booster. During 1960, the von Braun team was transferred from ABM A
to NASA, bringing not only its conceptual understanding of manned
space flight (based on preliminary studies in 1957 and 1959) but also its
acknowledged skills in the development of rockets. For manned missions,
the von   Braun team developed       a totally different big booster     the
Saturn.
                                                                          21
              The Saturn         Building
                            Blocks
                                  23
Aerospace Alphabet:                  ABMA, ARPA, MSFC
      November   1956,   when   the Air Force finally triumphed over the
InArmy and Navy for leadership in long-range military rockets,     planners
at   ABMA momentarily regrouped to plot a new direction,      a strategy for
large booster development geared instead to the exploration of space.
Having      round
          lost      one to the Air Force, ABMA's stratagem was to
                                                     1
                                     25
STAGES TO SATURN
26
                         AEROSPACE ALPHABET: ABMA, ARPA, MSFC
                                                                         27
STAGES TO SATURN
     With the money they had left,    ABMA   went to work in Huntsville to
decide how to allocate their scarce dollars for oversized test stands and to
define the configuration of the tankage. An early decision was made to
modify an existing test stand "out in our backyard," as Mrazek phrased it,
keeping in mind that, although it had been designed to take Army
missiles like the Jupiter 2.67-meter-diameter tank and a thrust of 734 000
newtons (165 000 pounds) the test stand had to be reworked to take a
"monster" that was 24 meters high, 6 meters in diameter, and built to put
out a thrust of almost 6 700 000 newtons (1.5 million pounds). The lean
budget also had to cover a miscellany of items such as tooling to fabricate
the oversized tanks and development of a thrust structure to take the
maximum force of eight engines firing together at full throttle. There
was also the need for oversized assembly jigs for manufacturing and
checkout of the big new booster and for the costs of getting all the
materials and the manpower to put the thing together. Like Rocketdyne,
ABMA     found that short funds made a virtue of scrounging in the dark
corners of warehouses and stockrooms and put a premium on imagina-
tive shortcuts.
    Because ARPA Order Number 14-59 called only for a static
demonstration in the test stand, not a flight-configured launch vehicle,
the booster that began to take shape on the Redstone Arsenal drawing
                                                                            29
STAGES TO SATURN
                                                                                          31
STAGES TO SATURN
national security and the notion of a space race with the Russians,
Administration officials generally agreed that proposals for a new space
agency should result in an organization that was essentially nonmilitarv.
Because of its civil heritage, existing programs, and general programs,
NACA was singled out as the most likely candidate to form the nucleus,
though a new name was recommended.      Strictly military
                                               12
                                                            programs would
continue under the Department of Defense.
     During April 1958, Eisenhower delivered the formal executive
message about the national space program to Congress and submitted
the Administration's bill to create what was then called the "National
Aeronautical and Space Agency." The hearings and committee work that
followed inevitably entailed revisions and rewording, but the idea of a
civilian space agency persisted, and the old NACA role of research alone
President Dwight D.
Eisenhower presents com-
missions as the firstAd-
ministrator and Deputy
Administrator of the new
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration    to
Dr.   T.   Keith Glennan
(right)    and Dr. Hugh
Dryden.
                           AEROSPACE ALPHABET: ABMA, ARPA, MSEC
space program,    and  several committees had been at work in late 1957
and early 1958 studying the various factors a space program entailed:
vehicles; reentry; range, launch, and tracking; instrumentation; space
surveillance; human factors; and training. Late in March 1958, a NACA
group studying "Suggestions for a Space Program" included notations
for a launch program in January 1959 to put satellites of 135 000 to
225 000 kilograms in orbit (reflecting the earlier Department of Defense
plans), and development of a rocket of 4450000 newtons (1 million
pounds) thrust, as well as "development of hydrogen fluorine and other
special rockets for second and third stages."
      The ABMA large booster program first entered NASA planning
through the NACA Special Committee on Space Technology chaired by
Guyford Stever. The Working Group on Vehicular Program included
von Braun as chairman. Organized 12 January 1958, the Stever commit-
tee made its final report on 28 October, when NASA was already a month
     10
old.    Von Braun's working group on vehicles had already made its
preliminary report on 18 July. The language did not differ much from
that of the final draft. The report began with harsh criticism of
duplication of effort and lack of coordination among various organiza-
tions working on the nation's space programs. "The record shows
emphatically," the report said, that the Soviet Union was definitely ahead
of the United States in space travel and space warfare.
      How was the United States to catch up? There were several existing
vehicle systems to help the United States proceed on a logical and
consistent space research program. At least two large booster types under
                                                                                      33
STAGES TO SATURN
development      the
                  as  major director and coordinator of the vehicle
program, working  in partnership with ARPA. "The immediate initiation
of a development program for a large booster, in the 1.5 million pound
[6 700 000 newton] thrust class, is considered a key to the success of the
proposed program," the report stated, and urged the development of
such an engine. The program would cost about $17.21 billion to pay for
1823 launches, including the as-yet undeveloped ICBM and clustered
boosters. There would be considerable savings, the group noted, if a
                                                                  17
comprehensive booster recovery scheme were incorporated.
    With von Braun representing ABMA on the Stever committee, his
presence marked an early meshing of ABMA and NACA in the nation's
space programs. Indeed, the Stever committee was intended to fill in the
gaps in NACA space technology. NACA officials James Doolittle, Dryden,
and Stever selected committee members with an eye to their future roles
in the space programs as well as educating NACA personnel in space
R&D. Large rocket boosters certainly constituted a big gap in NACA
competence, so that the selection of von Braun was a key move, along
with Sam Hoffman of Rocketdyne, Abe Hyatt of the Office of Naval
Research, and Colonel Norman Appold, representing Air Force General
Bernard Schriever, who spearheaded the development of big rockets in
               18
the Air Force.
34
                            AEROSPACE ALPHABET: ABMA, ARPA, MSEC
SATURN PAYLOADS
stage studies because he liked the idea of a unified and cohesive design
effort; applying the "off-the-shelf "dictum, he sought to identify possible
upper-stage candidates from projects already under way. One suggestion
resulting from such brainstorming was to mount an X-15 research plane
atop the Juno V, or perhaps incorporate an Air Force project known as
Dyna-Soar. The X-15 idea did not last long, but Dyna-Soar persisted for
several years. The Dyna-Soar (for dynamic soaring) dated from the
autumn of 1957 and was envisioned as a manned, rocket-propelled
glider in a delta-winged configuration, capable of reaching altitudes of
up to 120 kilometers. More likely prospects for Juno V upper stages
included Jupiter, Atlas, and Titan.
     The problems of selecting the Juno V configuration, upper stages,
and payloads also bothered the people at NASA. Sitting in his office on
the second day of the new year 1959, W. L. Hjornevik, Assistant to the
Administrator, dashed off a memo to his boss, Glennan. Hjornevik's
STAGES TO SATURN
36
                         AEROSPACE ALPHABET: ABMA, ARPA, MSEC
                                                                        37
The heart of    the"von Braun team" that led the Army's space efforts at ABMA
before transfer to NASA: left to right: Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger, Director,
                                                                        Research
Projects Office; Dr. Helmut Hoelzer, Director, Computation Laboratory;
                                                                         Karl L.
Heimburg, Director, Test Laboratory; Dr. Ernst D. Geissler, Director, Aeroballis-
tics Laboratory; Erich W. Neubert, Director, Systems Analysis and Reliability
made NASA         a bit anxious because realistic planning    was   difficult as   long
as no firm booster configuration was drawn up. T. Keith Glennan
expressed his concern in a memo to Roy Johnson at ARPA within a week
of the publication of the "Saturn System Study." An early decision on
Saturn upper stages was needed, he said, and he urged Johnson toward
an early resolution of the issue. 24
    ARPA's own plans for the Saturn booster remained tied to a
combination with Centaur, to place "very heavy satellites in high orbits,
especially for communications purposes." In testimony before Congress
in late March, Johnson described the ARPA program for such satellites in
38
                        AEROSPACE ALPHABET: ABMA, ARPA, MSFC
terminate the Saturn program. In a memorandum to Johnson dated 9
June 1959, York rebuffed an ARPA request for additional funds. "In the
Saturn case," York said, "I consider that there are other more urgent
cases requiring support from the limited amount         which remains
                                                        .   .   .
got to work to head off the York cancellation order as soon as they heard
the news. Collaborating with Saturn supporters from within the Depart-
ment of Defense, Rosen and Richard Canright from ARPA drafted a
crucial memorandum in defense of the clustered booster program. They
 realized that Saturn as an Army project was in trouble apparently
because the Army had no specific use for it. At that time, neither did
 NASA, although Rosen and Canright felt that the range of potential
missions cited in the prior Rosen report offered, in the long run, enough
justification to keep Saturn alive. Rosen and others in NASA were
completely captivated by Saturn's promise. "We all had gut feelings that
we had to have a good rocket," he said, emphasizing the appeal of
Saturn's size. Rosen felt that he had "lived all his life with too small a
                  28
launch vehicle."
      Thus, in a tense three-day meeting, 16-18 September 1959, York
and Dryden co-chaired a special committee to review Saturn's future and
discuss the roles of the Titan C boosters and the Nova. Committee
members included representatives from the Army, Air Force, and NASA
as well as Canright from ARPA. After hours of intensive presentations
and discussion, the Saturn backers finally carried the debate, but not
without some conditions. Under York's prodding, it was agreed to start
discussions to transferABMA      and the Saturn project to NASA. York also
insisted that such a transfer could be accomplished only with the
Administration's guarantee for supplemental funding in support of
         29
Saturn.
      Years later, reviewing the issue of Saturn's cancellation, York
elaborated on his reasoning. For one thing, there seemed to be a strong
feeling within the Department of Defense that Saturn tended to siphon
off money, not only from important military projects in         ABMA
                                                                   but from
                                                                        39
STAGES TO SATURN
the Air Force as well. The Secretary of Defense twice turned down
requests for a   DX  (priority) rating for Saturn, once in December 1958
and again in May 1959. Moreover, York felt that Saturn was simply too
big for any military mission, and that included men
                                                      in space. Big boosters
of the Saturn class should be NASA's responsibility, he reasoned, because
there was no urgent military application and because of York's own
reading of the Space Act of 1958 and his understanding of Eisenhower's
views on the matter. In the meantime, York apparently agreed to con-
tinue adequate funding of Saturn through ARPA until the issue of
ABMA's transfer to NASA was resolved. As for the von Braun team at
Hunstville, York recalled that von Braun himself "made it very clear in a
face-to-face discussion in the Pentagon that he would go along only if I
                              3
allowed Saturn to continue."
     The near loss of the Saturn booster was a sobering experience. This
close brush with disaster underscored NASA's problems in securing
boosters developed and produced by other agencies; many in NASA now
believed they had to have control of their own launch vehicles. In fact,
York had already favored the transfer of ABMA, with responsibility for
Saturn, to NASA. Late in 1958, when Glennan and Deputy Secretary of
Defense Donald A. Quarles had proposed such a transfer, the Army and
ARPA had strongly opposed the move. 31 The      ABMA   transfer continued
to beguile top      NASA
                       executives, and Hjornevik emphatically urged
action on the matter. In a memo to Glennan late in January 1959,
Hjornevik argued that the role of ABMA as consultant and supplier was
operable as long as NASA was content merely to buy Redstone rockets in
the Mercury program, but the rapid changes in an ambitious NASA
launch program revealed a gap in the agency's capabilities, and Hjornevik
left no doubt that NASA needed ABMA's competence. Hjornevik phrased
his recommendations in no uncertain terms. "I for one believe we should
move in on ABMA in the strongest possible way," he declared. "It is
becoming increasingly clear that we will soon desperately need this or an
equivalent competence." Hjornevik cited NASA's needs in managing the
national booster program, especially the engines and "the big cluster,"
and the suggested joint funding as a means to "achieve a beachhead on
                    32
the big cluster."
    Roy Johnson, speaking for ARPA, emphasized the need for keeping
the von Braun team together, particularly if a transfer occurred. "At
Huntsville we have one of the most capable groups of space technicians in
the country," Johnson said during congressional testimony in March
1959. "I think that it is a unique group ... a national resource of
tremendous importance." Then he added, "ABMA team is the kind of
group that, if somebody had planned 10 years ago to create it, could not
have been done better." Although Johnson told the congressional com-
mittee that he could work with    ABMA    in or out of the Department of
Defense,  he   personally preferred  it in  the Department of Defense.
40
                       AEROSPACE ALPHABET: ABMA, ARPA, MSEC
                                                                        41
STAGES TO SATURN
42
                         AEROSPACE ALPHABET: ABMA, ARPA, MSFC
Dedication of the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center. In the foreground with
the bust of General Marshall are NASA Administrator Glennan, President
Eisenhower, and Mrs. Marshall.
                                                                              IIW
STAGES TO SATURN
considering the purchase of a 5-ton truck for hauling a heavy load and
                                                             41
finally deciding to merely load a wheelbarrow full of dirt."    As a result of
new evaluation studies that followed cancellation of work on the Titan as
an upper stage, ARPA decided to forego requirements to employ
existing hardware, and   ABMA    confidently embarked on a new series of
design concepts   for Saturn  upper stages, utilizing large diameters that
offered increased mission flexibility and payload capability. Undertaken
in the fall of 1959, these new "Saturn System Studies," as they were
                                                                            42
called, were conducted with an eye to NASA requirements in particular.
     The last months of 1959 could be called a watershed period for
NASA in many respects. The agency had acquired the von Braun team
and sharpened the focus on upper stages for a multistage vehicle. In
December, a critical judgment on the application of high-energy propel-
lants for Saturn's upper stages was in debate. The issue of high-energy
44
                            AEROSPACE ALPHABET: ABMA, ARPA, MSFC
also   had support   at   NASA        Headquarters, where Hyatt was corresponding
                                 45
with Silverstein about     it.
    Just before the Christmas holidays, the stage was set for a high-level
conference at Headquarters to determine the basic configuration of the
multistage Saturn. On 17 November, Associate Administrator Richard
Horner told the Director of Space Flight Development to organize a
study group to make additional recommendations concerning the trans-
fer of the von Braun team to NASA, "to prepare recommendations for
guidance of the development of Saturn, and specifically, for selection of
upper-stage configurations." A "Saturn Vehicle Team" was organized; it
comprised representatives from NASA, the Air Force, ARPA, ABMA,
and the Office of the Department of Defense Research and Engineering
(ODDR&E). Chaired by Abe Silverstein, the seven-man group was known
as the "Silverstein Committee." In addition to Silverstein, the NASA
representatives included Hyatt and Eldon Hall, and the other members
were Colonel N. Appold (USAF), T. C. Muse (ODDR&E), G. P. Sutton
                                              46
(ARPA), and Wernher von Braun (ABMA).
    When the Silverstein committee convened in December, not every-
one was in favor of the untried LH 2 technology because LH 2 was widely
thought to be too volatile and tricky to handle. Von Braun in particular
expressed doubts about LH 2 even though the Saturn-Atlas combination
had the Centaur's LH 2 system in the Atlas final stage, and he was
definitely opposed to a new           LH 2 Saturn second stage. On the other hand,
several influential committee           members made a forceful case for LH 2    .
Hyatt was already for it; Eldon Hall, not long before the committee had
been organized, had analyzed the performance of launch vehicles using
various combinations of propellants. Using his background in the work
previously   done    at Lewis, Silverstein argued with all the persuasive
powers   at his   command.    was just not logical, Silverstein emphasized, to
                                 It
develop  a series of vehicles over  a 10-year period and rely on the limited
payload capability   of conventionally fueled boosters with liquid oxygen
and kerosene-based propellants. He was convinced that the use of LH 2 in
the upper Saturn stages was inherently sound, and his conviction was the
major factor in swaying the whole committee, von Braun included, to
accept LH 2 boosters in the Saturn program. "Abe was on solid ground,"
von Braun acknowledged later, "when he succeeded in persuading his
committee to swallow its scruples about the risks of the new fuel." 4 ^
     Next, von Braun had to convince his colleagues back at Huntsville.
Before the committee adjourned, von Braun telephoned the Redstone
Arsenal to talk to Mrazek, one of the key team members who had come
with him from Germany, and the two men brainstormed the possibilities.
                                                                               45
Abe   Silverstein,   NASA's Director of
Space Flight Development, is shown
touring a rocket engine facility.
       46
                       AEROSPACE ALPHABET: ABMA, ARPA, MSEC
     In the spring of 1960, as the word of NASA's decision to rely on the
novel propellant combination for Saturn reached the public, Eldon Hall
and Francis Schwenk, from the Office of Launch Vehicle Programs at
NASA Headquarters, outlined the reasons for the choice. The higher
vehicle performance required for advanced missions simply required
higher energy propellants, they explained. The staging of several rockets
using conventional propellants rapidly reached optimum design limits,
because advanced missions and payloads required more thrust and more
engines which meant heavier rockets with bigger tanks and engines and
proportionately less efficiency in design and capability. On the other
hand, high-energy propellants promised the best results for advanced
missions requiring high escape velocities. "The choice of high-energy
upper stages for Saturn is based almost entirely on the fact that, with
present knowledge of stage construction, at least one of the upper stages
must use high-energy propellants if certain desirable missions are to be
accomplished with this vehicle," Hall and Schwenk emphasized. So "the
Saturn program was established for early incorporation of a high-energy
second stage into the vehicle system." 4
     In the course of the deliberations of the Silverstein committee, three
types of missions for the Saturn vehicle emerged. First priority was given
to lunar and deep-space missions with an escape payload of about 4500
                                                                        47
STAGES TO SATURN
48
                                          S-IV    LOX/LH
                                          FOUR      15-20K
                                          ENGINES
                                          S-lll   LOX/LH
                                          TWO      150-200K
                                          ENGINES
 S-V   (CENTAUR)                A
WO   15K ENGINES
                                          S-ll    LOX/LH
     S-IV    LOX/LH         /
                                          FOUR      150-200K
         LOX/RP
       S-l
       EIGHT H-1
                                          S-l    LOX/RP
        ENGINES
                                          T   = 2.0+   M
C-3
 STAGE
STAGES TO SATURN
lunar landing soon after. The agency also estimated the cost at $13 to $15
billion over the coming decade, and Associate Administrator Horner
     10-year plan, one which we expect to modify from year to year on the basis of
     realized experience, development progress, and resource availability. It is formu-
     lated around the requirement that its implementation must so utilize the resources
     of the United States that our national role as a leader in the aeronautical and space
     sciences and their technologies is preserved and steadily enhanced. We have also
     assumed that a steady growth in the scale and intensity of our efforts, especially for
     the next 5 years, is an essential basis for consistent and fruitful efforts in meeting
                           02
     this   requirement.
50
                         AEROSPACE ALPHABET: ABMA, ARPA, MSEC
would boost a 81 600-kilogram payload to escape velocity and return
6800 kilograms to Earth. The vehicle featured eight of the 6 700 000-newton
(1.5-million-pound) thrust engines in the first stage, four LH 2 engines in
the second stage, and one      LH
                             2 engine each in the third and fourth stages.
Data for a C-2 launch with assisted boost from Minuteman missile
solid-fuel strap-ons   were   also discussed, although "Marshall people were
                                                              54
not   enamored with the idea of any changes      to the C-2."    Therefore, the
Saturn configurations remained keyed to liquid propulsion engines,
especially theLH 2 propulsion systems. NASA planners considered using
the Saturn "C" series of vehicles for manned space stations, manned
circumlunar missions, and unmanned lunar and planetary probes. Manned
lunar excursions,   Homer     Stewart reminded   NASA   Administrator Glennan,
would definitely require the application of the 6 700 000-newton
(1.5-million-pound) thrust engine (known as the F-l) used in a cluster,
probably in a Nova vehicle, and if the LH 2 program developed any snags,
he warned, the Saturn program would quickly find itself in dire trouble. 55
     Toward the end of 1960, NASA planners decided it was time to
review the space program once again and make more specific recom-
mendations for future development in the Saturn and Nova projects.
Early in November, NASA laid out its milestone for the next 10 years. "A
ten-year interval has no special significance," the report asserted, "yet it is
considered to be an appropriate interval since past experience has shown
that the time required to translate research knowledge into
                                                               operationally
effective systems in similar new fields of technology is generally of this
order." This time span permitted opportunity to establish mission goals
and plans and coordinate the development of spacecraft and appropriate
booster hardware. Apparently there was already some confusion about
terminology, since the "Proposed Long Range Plan," as drafted by the
Headquarters Office of Program Planning & Evaluation, included some
definitions. "Launching vehicle" meant a first-stage booster and upper
stages to inject a spacecraft into proper trajectory. "Spacecraft" included
the basic payload as well as guidance and its own propulsion systems for
trajectory modifications following injection. The term "space vehicle"
                                                                        06
encompassed the entire system        launching vehicle plus spacecraft.
     With definitions thus established, the document discussed the major
launch vehicles, or boosters, under NASA cognizance: C-l, C-2, and
Nova. The C-l and C-2 descriptions closely followed the analysis pre-
pared by the Silverstein committee the previous year, the descriptions
reaffirming the building block concept with the C-l as a three-stage
vehicle and the C-2 as a four-stage booster including a newly developed
second stage with a cluster of four 890 000-newton (200 000-pound)
thrust hydrogen engines. The R&D for the Centaur and the new hydro-
gen engines appeared to be the biggest gamble in the long-range plan.
The decision to use LOX-LH 2 engines in C-l and C-2 upper stages "was
based on a calculated risk," the report stated, that such engine technology
                                                                           51
STAGES TO SATURN
would come along smoothly enough to keep the building block sequence
on schedule. By FY 1964- 1967, according to the "Proposed Long Range
Plan," the C-l should be operational in support of preliminary Apollo
orbital missions, as well as planetary probes and as a test bed for
advanced technology electron engines and nuclear engines. The C-2
should be ready somewhat later to place twice the payload into             orbit, as
                                        57
well as for launching deep-space probes.
     As for the Nova, "its primary mission      is   to   accomplish   manned   lunar
landings," the plan said. Nova was admittedly still in the conceptual stage,
since its size and ultimate configuration depended on space environmen-
talresearch, progress in advanced chemical engines such as the F-l, and
potential development of nuclear engines. The Nova, with an F-l cluster
combination to total 53 million newtons (12 million pounds) of thrust in
the first stage, seemed to be the most feasible, and the Nova booster could
make   a manned lunar landing mission by direct staging to the moon and
return or by a series of launches to boost hardware into low orbit for a
series of rendezvous operations, building up a space vehicle in low orbit
                             58
for the final lunar mission.
     As a prelude to the ambitious moon missions, a lot of basic research
had to be integrated into the plans for the launch vehicle development.
Guidance and control was one area singled out for special attention,
requiring advances in the state of the art in accelerometers; in cryogenic,
electromagnetic,   and   electrostatic   support systems for gyros and attitude
control; inertia wheels; in long-life gyro spin axis bearings.            The   long-
range plan noted research challenges in terms of heating                  and other
aerodynamic problems, along with mechanical, hydraulic, electrical,
electronic, and structural difficulties. The space environment created a
wide range of potential trouble spots in metals, plastics, seals, and
lubricants. The scaled-up size of Saturn and Nova suggested difficulties
in devising adequate automatic test equipment and techniques for the
fabrication and assembly of oversized components. The long-range plan
provided   the  opportunity to look ahead and anticipate these problem
areas, giving  NASA   designers and engineers the chance to start working
on solutions to these and other problems that were sure to crop up in the
course of launch vehicle development.
       The long-range
                    plan also projected a series of key dates in the
development of launch vehicles:
52
                         AEROSPACE ALPHABET: ABMA, ARPA, MSFC
1966-1967               launch 3-stage C-2
1968 - 1 970            Apollo manned orbiting lab and circumlunar     flights
Beyond 1970             manned lunar landing
                                                     59
       The long-range plan also estimated the costs.     NASA's plans at this
time found support from the President's Scientific Advisory Committee,
which had formed a special ad hoc group to examine the space program
to date and analyze its goals, missions, and costs. In its
                                                           report, released on
14 November, the group advanced the rationale that "at present the most
impelling reason for our effort has been the international political
situationwhich demands that we demonstrate our technological capabili-
ties   if   we
           are to maintain our position of leadership." The report
considered the scientific motive of much less significance than prestige
but commented that "it may be argued that much of the motivation and
drive for the scientific exploration of space is derived from the dream of
man's getting into space himself." 63 The committee wondered if 25 test
flights for the C-l and 16 for the C-2 were enough to qualify the vehicles
for manned launches but gave NASA good marks overall on their
                                                              plans
and schedules. Further, the committee endorsed the R&D plans for
liquid hydrogen technology and encouraged development of larger
                                             61
post-Saturn launch vehicles like the Nova.
     But NASA was not entirely free from difficulties. NASA Adminis-
trator Glennan departed NASA at the end of the Eisenhower Adminis-
tration and resumed his position as president of Case Institute. Several
weeks passed before President John F. Kennedy's new Administration
settled on a successor. Lyndon Johnson, the Vice-President, still played a
projects that would give the United States a visible lead in space
exploration.
      Congress also wanted more information from NASA about costs
and the problems of landing on the moon ahead of the Russians. In
mid-April, Webb repeated to Congress what Dryden had told the
President. The cost would be anywhere from $20 to $40 billion. Some
congressmen suggested the possibility that the Russians might attempt a
lunar landing around 1967, in conjunction with the 50th anniversary of
the Russian Revolution. With massive infusion of funds, the representa-
tives asked, could the Americans beat a Russian landing? In his response,
Associate Administrator Robert Seamans was wary. The target date of
1967 for the Russians was only an assumption, he said. Current NASA
planning put an American lunar landing in 1969 or 1970 at the earliest.
To reduce American intentions by three years was not necessarily an
impossibility, Seamans stated, but would certainly
                                                       be tremendously
                               68
expensive in the short term.
    During April and May, the executive and legislative branches of
government blossomed committees and working groups like flowers in a
spring garden. Within NASA, planning groups funneled a series of
honed and polished study papers to the White House for Kennedy's
consideration, and the Department of Defense and the space agency
refined mutual goals and individual efforts to ensure cooperation where
necessary and to avoid needless redundancy. The
                                                             nexus of all these
streams of activity culminated    in President   Kennedy's State of the Union
message on 25 May      1961.   The    manned     space program would be the
province of NASA,    a civilian agency,   not  a military agency. He proposed
to increase NASA's 1962 budget by       more   than  $500 million. Kennedy left
no doubt as to NASA's objective        or  its schedule   for realization. "This
nation should commit itself     to  achieving   the  goal, before this decade is
out, of landing a man     on  the   Moon,    and   returning him safely to the
          69
Earth."
                                                                             55
STAGES TO SATURN
SUMMARY
                                          57
STAGES TO SATURN
       Certainly if the F-l and J-2 were           to be the optimum engines, then
the vehicle      known       as the   Saturn C-5 promised to be an optimum booster.
The designers at MSFC                made a firm commitment to the C-5 by late 1961,
58
                          MISSIONS, MODES,       AND MANUFACTURING
and NASA Headquarters gave formal approval for
                                                       development on 25
January 1962. The C-5 was a three-stage vehicle, with five F-l engines in
the first stage, five J-2 liquid-hydrogen
                                          engines in the second stage, and
one J-2 in the third stage. The C-5 could handle a number of missions,
including 113000-kilogram payloads into low Earth orbit, or 41 000
kilograms on a lunar mission, which could be a circumlunar voyage or a
                   8
manned   landing.
    During a spring meeting of various       NASA managers at Langley
Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, Ernst Geissler of MSEC reviewed
the status of the booster program. Despite the welter of
                                                              configuration
changes and confusing nomenclature, one of the guiding principles of
the vehicle development program continued to be the
                                                             building block
concept, an idea even more significant with the passage of time and
realization of the immense costs and complexities of the
                                                              program. "By
qualifying individual components, such as stages, a fewer number of
flights are necessary for high reliability of the total vehicle system," he
emphasized. Moreover, the step-by-step approach allowed the space
agency to experiment with various maneuvers in orbit, as required for
                           9
different mission concepts. The Saturn C-l, at that time, was planned
for vehicle development launches that would also include
                                                         testing of the
planned lunar spacecraft module in orbit and reentry, culminating in a
series of manned flights. The spacecraft would thus be qualified in
                                                                        plenty
of time, ready for launch aboard the C-5. Qualifying some of the C-5
hardware suggested possible problems, however, unless some prelimi-
nary flight tests occurred. Geissler referred to still a different launch
vehicle, the C-1B. This interim vehicle, using the C-5's intended third
stage as its own second stage, would take advantage of the proven C-l
first-stage booster. Thus, the C-1B would be able to qualify certain
hardware and systems for the C-5, while demonstrating the feasibility of
                                                          10
orbital operations inherent in C-5 mission concepts.
     Geissler summarized three principal modes for a lunar landing
mission with the C-5 vehicle. Lunar orbit rendevous (LOR) involved
descent to the lunar surface from lunar orbit by using a small spacecraft
that separated from a parent lunar satellite and then rejoined the
orbiting spacecraft for the return home. Earth orbit rendezvous (EOR)
involved the landing of a larger vehicle directly on the lunar surface, thus
eliminating the descent and ascent of a separate spacecraft from orbit.
But the EOR mode required rendezvous techniques in building up the
necessary vehicle in Earth orbit. Geissler explained two different approaches.
After launching two vehicles, the upper stages of each could be con-
nected to form the lunar vehicle. An alternative was to transfer oxidizer
from one vehicle to the other in Earth orbit. There was one more feasible
way of going to the moon: if a large enough vehicle could be built, a
single launch would suffice. MSEC refused to give up on Nova. The Nova
in the spring of 1962 was to have 8- 10 F-l engines in the first stage, and a
                                                                          59
Early design concepts of C-l and C-5 versions of the Saturn launch vehicles.
60
      The   stable of   NASA   launch vehicles that were actually   built   and flown.
                                                                                         61
STAGES TO SATURN
    Early on, participants in the liaison effort discovered that their style
did not always mesh with that of MSEC. One trip report from an STG
team member in October 1960 noted von Braun's desire for additional
meetings in November and December, and added, somewhat peevishly,
"Dr. von Braun wants to participate. This probably means another
ballroom meeting." Apparently the MSEC method was to have a large
gathering for a semiformal presentation, then break into smaller groups
for detailed discussions. "I've reached the opinion that MSEC staff have
no qualms about playing one group against the other ... if we have
separate meetings," the correspondent complained, and warned STG to
            10
be careful.
     Perhaps part of the problem was STG's lesser standing vis-a-vis
Marshall as a full-fledged center. This aspect was improved in January
1960, when STG became a separate field element, reporting directly to
the NASA Director of Space Flight Programs, Abe Silverstein. As
Director of STG, Gilruth had his own staff of some 600, still physically
located at Langley. With a new organizational structure and bureaucratic
independence, STG was authorized to conduct advanced planning
studies for   manned vehicle systems, as well as to establish basic design
criteria.   STG   also    had authority
                                  to assume technical management of its
     Naturally, all concerned hoped that the joint groups would promote
understanding and reduce friction. That the Apollo-Saturn program
succeeded as well as it did testifies to the value of such efforts, but this is
62
                           MISSIONS, MODES,       AND MANUFACTURING
not to say that differences of opinion were always easily and quickly
adjusted. The issue of EOR vesus LOR, for example, brought Marshall
and the Manned Spacecraft Center into head-on conflict.
     Early in 1961, NASA's studies for a manned lunar landing were
keyed 18to the EOR mode using a Saturn vehicle or to direct ascent with the
Nova.      In view of MSC's later acceptance of LOR, Gilruth's initial
support   of the direct ascent concept is intriguing. "I feel that it is highly
desirable to develop a launch vehicle with sufficient performance and
reliability to carry out the lunar landing mission using the direct
approach," he wrote to NASA Headquarters reliability expert Nicholas
Golovin in the autumn of 1961. As for the rendezvous schemes (and here
he apparently referred only to EOR), Gilruth said that they compromised
mission reliability and flight safety, and that they were a "crutch to
achieve early planned dates for launch vehicle availablity, and to avoid
the difficulty of developing a reliable Nova Class launch vehicle." At the
same time, he understood the need for an Earth parking orbit during any
mission to allow adequate time for final checkout of spacecraft, equip-
                                                             19
ment, and crew readiness before going far from Earth.
     The concept of lunar orbital rendezvous (LOR) had been studied at
Langley Research Center as early as 1960. The idea was passionately
advocated by John Houbolt, a Langley engineer who first encountered it
while investigating rendezvous techniques for orbiting space stations.
The Langley- Houbolt concept of LOR was soon absorbed by the STG-MSC
                                                                    20
crew, and MSC eventually became the leading champion of LOR.
Houbolt played a key role in converting Headquarters planners to the
LOR   concept. Convinced that the idea had not received a fair hearing,
Houbolt bypassed everyone and wrote directly to Associate Administra-
tor Robert C. Seamans, Jr., in November. Fulminating at what he viewed
as grandiose plans for using boosters that were too large and lunar
landers that were too complex, Houbolt urged consideration of LOR as a
simple, cost-effective scheme with high likelihood of success. "Give us the
go-ahead, and a C-3," Houbolt pleaded, "and we will put man on the
                              2
moon   in very short order."'
     Houbolt's letter apparently   swayed several managers      at   Headquar-
ters, especially George Low, Director of Space Craft and Flight Missions,
in the Office of Manned Space Flight (OMSF). But D. Brainerd Holmes,
who presided over OMSF,   still had a
                                      prickly managerial problem. There
remained people at Headquarters with doubts about LOR, principally
Milton Rosen, newly named Director of Launch Vehicles and Propulsion
in OMSF. Early in November, Holmes and Seamans directed Rosen to
                                                                            63
                                Left,   John   C.   Houbolt goes
                                through   his chalk talk  on the
                                advantages of lunar orbit ren-
                                dezvous over competing modes.
                                Below, the typical mission pro-
                                file using
                                           lunar orbit rendezvous.
expressed a decided preference for EOR. Either way, a C-5 Saturn with
five F-l engines in the first stage was the recommended vehicle. In spite
of all the discussion of rendezvous, the Rosen committee in the end
favored direct ascent as opposed to either EOR or LOR. "The United
States should place primary emphasis on the direct flight mode for
achieving the first manned lunar landing," the report flatly stated. "This
mode gives greater assurance of accomplishment during this decade."
Therefore, the Nova vehicle "should be developed on a top priority
        23
basis."    The trend toward LOR strengthened, however. Even though
EOR became the "working mode" for budgetary planning for 1962, the
debate went on.
     Holmes hired Joseph Shea, an energetic young engineer, as Chief of
the Office of Systems Engineering in OMSF, with responsibilities to
conduct and coordinate mission mode studies. Holmes also instituted a
top-level series of meetings under the rubric of "The Management
Council," to discuss issues involving Headquarters and more than just
one center alone. 24 At just about every meeting of the Management
Council, Rosen and Gilruth got into a debate over the mode choice.
Finally, as Rosen recalled, Gilruth came up to him after one of the
meetings had adjourned and made one more pitch for the LOR mode.
The most dangerous phase of the mission, Gilruth argued, was the actual
landing on the moon. If Rosen's direct ascent idea was followed, then at
the moment for lunar descent, that meant landing an unwieldy vehicle
that was both quite long and quite heavy. A very touchy operation,
Gilruth emphasized. LOR, on the other hand, boasted an important
advantage: the lunar landing and lunar takeoff would be accomplished
by a very light and maneuverable vehicle specifically designed for the
task. Rosen confessed he had been preoccupied with simplicity from one
end of the mission the launch from Earth and he had no convincing
counterarguments when Gilruth      made him look at simplicity from the
                              20
other end, the lunar landing.
     While the consensus at Headquarters now shifted towards LOR, the
split between MSC and MSFC
                                 showed few signs of easing. On a swing
through  both MSC   at Langley  and MSFC at Huntsville in January 1962,
Shea was discouraged by the entrenched position of the two centers:
Marshall people displayed an "instinctive reaction" of negativism on the
                                                                       65
STAGES TO SATURN
66
                           MISSIONS, MODES,       AND MANUFACTURING
the    manned launch was postponed  too long on the pad or had to abort
during ascent, wiping out the mission to the cost of two complete launch
vehicles and associated launch expenses. In addition, von Braun noted
complex management and interface problems with dual launches. Using
the C-5 in a direct launch posed some thorny technical problems and
permitted only the thinnest margins in weight allowances for the space-
craft, so the C-5 direct route was rejected. The huge Nova booster could
have solved some of these problems, but it was rejected principally
because of its size, which would have created requirements beyond the
existing scope of fabrication and test facilities available to NASA; there
were also serious problems seen in time, funding, and technical demands
                                      29
for a booster of Nova's dimensions.
    Even with von Braun's imprimatur in June, the irrevocable decision
for    LOR
         did not come until the end of 1962. The Huntsville conclave
produced agreement at the center level only; NASA Headquarters still
had to formalize the choice and implement the decision. Early in July,
Seamans, Dryden, Webb, and Holmes concurred with a recommendation
for    LOR   by the   Manned Space   Flight   Management      Council, but the
President's Scientific Advisory    Committee    still
                                                        actively questioned the
LOR   mode. The committee evidently preferred the EOR approach
because it felt the
                    technological development inherent in the EOR
concept had more promise in the long run for civil and military
operations; its          also suggested that the LOR choice stemmed
                  argument
from internal     NASAexpediency as the cheapest and earliest mission
possibility even though technical analysis of LOR was incomplete.
Nicholas Golovin and Jerome Wiesner, in particular, remained adamantly
against LOR, and the controversy actually boiled over into a public
exchange between Wiesner and NASA officials at Huntsville while
President Kennedy was touring Marshall Space Flight Center in Septem-
ber.
     Host von Braun and the President were standing in front of a chart
showing the LOR maneuver sequence. As von Braun proceeded to
explain the details, Kennedy interrupted, "I understand Dr. Wiesner
doesn't agree with this," and turned around to search the entourage of
newsmen and VIPs around them. "Where is Jerry?" Kennedy demanded.
Wiesner came up to join Kennedy and von Braun, with Webb, Seamans,
and Holmes also in the group. Wiesner proceeded to outline his
objections to LOR,       and some lively dialogue ensued, just out of the
earshot of straining    newsmen and dozens of onlookers on the other side
of a roped-off aisle.   "They obviously knew we were discussing something
other than golf scores," Seamans recalled. In fairness to Wiesner,
Seamans later noted, the President's scientific advisor had to play the
devil's advocate on many issues when a robust agency was vigorously
pressing its position. Wiesner's job was to make sure that the President
received alternative views, and he once confided to Seamans that he was
                                                                            67
                                             President Kennedy's         visit to   MSFC
                                             in September 1962 provided a
                         AN AEROSPACE EMPIRE
     The Saturn program     created a vast new aerospace enterprise, partly
private and  partly public, with MSFC directing a group of facilities whose
extent far exceeded anything in the days of the old NACA. The federally
owned facilities under Marshall's immediate jurisdiction eventually included
the sprawling installation at Huntsville; the cavernous Michoud Assembly
Facility (MAF) at New Orleans; the huge Mississippi Test Facility (MTF)
at Bay St. Louis, Mississippi; and the Slidell Computer Facility at Slidell,
Louisiana. Other government-owned facilities directly related to the
Saturn program included the NASA Rocket Engine Test Site at Edwards
68
                           MISSIONS, MODES,      AND MANUFACTURING
Air Force Base in California and the government-owned production
facilities for the S-II second stage at Seal Beach, California.
      The growth of Marshall Space Flight Center at Huntsville began
almost as soon as the transfer of the von Braun team from the Army
Ballistic Missile Agency in 1960. This shift involved some 4.8 square
kilometers of land (within the 162 square kilometers of the Redstone
Arsenal) and facilities valued at $96 000 000, along with 4670 employees
from ABMA's Development Operations Division. (For subsequent fig-
ures on manpower, plant value, etc., see the appendixes.) Settling in its
new role, MSFC evolved as a facility of three distinct sectors, divided into
an administrative and planning area, an industrial area, and test area.
Although the transfer gave NASA the bulk of the land and facilities
previously used by ABMA's Development Operations Division, von
Braun's administrative staff was allowed to remain in their old ABM A
offices on a temporary basis only, and a Saturn-sized test area was
needed. Construction began on a new administrative complex and the
first MSFC personnel took occupancy during the
                                                    spring of 1963. Of the
several approaches to the center, perhaps the most impressive was from
the north. Driving several miles through the green pastures and wooded,
rolling hills of the Alabama countryside, a viewer watched the adminis-
trativecomplex looming ever larger. Three multistory buildings were
arranged in a "V" shape, with Building 4200, the tallest of the three,
proudly riding the crest of a low hill. With the U.S. flag snapping smartly
from its pole, this impressive office complex rising out of the rural
landscape rarely failed to impress visitors. As director of the Marshall
Space Flight Center, von Braun, with his staff, occupied office suites on
the top two floors of Building 4200, irreverently known as the "von
Braun Hilton."
    Once over the crest of the hill, the visitor saw the rest of the Marshall
complex stretching for several miles to the Tennessee River. In the
foreground, the former      ABMA   laboratories and manufacturing areas
occupied the equivalent of many city blocks. The labs incorporated
facilities for a host of esoteric research projects, computation, astrionics,
ing, engineering, quality and reliability assurance, and others had cav-
ernous, high bay areas attached to accommodate the outsized Saturn
components. In the background, the skyline was punctuated by the
silhouettes of the assorted test stands and other installations of the
expanded test area. Here were the engine test stands, an F-l engine
turbopump test position, and two especially large installations visible for
miles. One was the big, burly test stand for the S-IC first stage, 123
meters high, completed in 1964. The second was the Dynamic Test
Stand, 129 meters high, designed to accommodate the complete Saturn
"stack" of all three booster stages, the instrument unit, and the Apollo
spacecraft. Inside the   Dynamic Test Stand, heavy duty equipment shook
                                                                          69
STAGES TO SATURN
and pounded the vehicle         determine its bending and vibration charac-
                                     to
teristics during flight.       further
                                 Still   to the south, specially built roads for
transporting    the  bulky Saturn flight stages led to docking facilities on the
Tennessee River,      where barges picked up or dropped off stages en route
                                                              32
to other   test sites or launch facilities at Cape Kennedy.
gas bottles, cranes, hoists, and assorted large rocket components. A visit
to the Manned Spacecraft Center at Houston, with its sleek, ultramodern
office complexes and well-tailored inner courtyards (complete with
ponds and rocky little streams) was a study in contrasts.
      When Marshall was organized in 1960, the Army launch team under
the direction of Kurt Debus became the Launch Operations Directorate,
Marshall Space Flight Center. At the Army's Missile Firing Laboratory,
the Debus team had been launching a series of Army vehicles, including
Redstone and Jupiter, and had launched the first American Earth
satellite, Explorer /.In the months following the transfer to NASA, they
launched the manned Mercury-Redstone suborbital flights. As plans for
the Saturn series were finalized, the Launch Operation Directorate,
through Debus, participated in the search for a new launch site, large
enough and removed far enough from population centers to satisfy the
physical requirements of the big new space boosters. Cape Canaveral was
chosen, and development of the new facilities began, with Launch
Complex 34 becoming operational during the fall of 1961 to launch the
first   Saturn   I   vehicles.
        The immense       task of constructing new launch pads and developing
the     huge   installations required for    Saturn V operations called for a
separate administrative entity. In March 1962, NASA announced plans
to establish a new Launch Operations Center (LOG) at the Cape, and the
70
                        $T*iJCTUftis   AND PROPULSION
                        SYSTEMS ANALYSIS AND INTEGRATION
        ^'              MATIIMUS AND PROCESSES
                        SYSTEMS DYNAMICS
V booster stand).
HIUHHHB
special industrial capabilities required for the unique sizes inherent in the
Saturn program, including fabrication, manufacturing, and testing.
There was a certain kaleidoscopic aura about all these arrangements,
since some were accomplished entirely by the contractor on privately
owned premises and others were undertaken in government-owned
facilities, with the contractor supplying most of the work force.
      For example, the Saturn IB and Saturn V first stages were
manufactured at the Michoud Assembly Facility (known familiarly as
"Michoud") 24 kilometers east of downtown New Orleans. The prime
contractors, Chrysler and Boeing, respectively, jointly occupied Michoud's
186 000 square meters of manufacturing floor space and 68 000 square
meters of office space. The basic manufacturing building, one of the
largest in the country, boasted 43 acres under one roof. By 1964, NASA
added a separate engineering and office building, vertical assembly
                                                                                           71
STAGES TO SATURN
building, (for the S-IC) and test stage building (also for the S-IC). By
1966, other changes to the site included enlarged barge facilities and
other miscellaneous support buildings. Two things remained unchanged: a
pair of chimneys in front of the Administration Building, remnants of an
old sugar plantation. These ungainly artifacts served as reminders of
Michoud's checkered past, from a plantation grant by the King of France
in 1763, to ownership by the wealthy but eccentric New Orleans recluse
and junk dealer, Antoine Michoud. Never a successful plantation, its
sometime production of lumber and other local resources from the
swampy environs helped generate the local slogan, "from muskrats to
moonships."
     The  plant itself dated back to World War II, when it was built to
produce Liberty ships. A hiatus in contract agreements shifted the
emphasis to cargo planes, but only two C-46 transports rolled out before
the war ended. The government facility remained essentially inactive
until the Korean War, when the Chrysler Corporation employed over
2000 workers to build engines for Army tanks. Dormant since 1954, the
building had been costing the government $140 000 per year to keep up.
With so many jobs in the offing and the obvious level of economic activity
to be generated by the manufacture of large rocket boosters, selection of
the site occurred in a highly charged political atmosphere, with active
lobbying by a number of congressmen and chambers of commerce from
around the country. Eventual selection of the Michoud facility in 1961
followed a series of thorough NASA investigations, and Michoud easily
fulfilled several high-priority considerations: production space and avail-
72
                          MISSIONS, MODES,        AND MANUFACTURING
with a      of 34 potential locations, the site for test-firing Saturn V rocket
         list
quickly ruled out most of the other contending sites. The test area had to
be big. Size was a safety factor; test sites had to be widely separated from
critical support and supply facilities in case of accidental destruction of a
stage during a test run. More important, at the time the test facility
location was being debated, NASA designers were looking ahead to big,
deep-space booster stages of up to 111 million newtons (25 million
pounds) of thrust, and lots of noise. Therefore, a test area of expansive
proportions was required but in a location where a minimum number of
people would have to be relocated. After juggling all of these require-
ments, in October 1961 NASA settled on a sparsely populated corner of
Hancock County, Mississippi. A new, $300-million-plus space-age facility
was hacked out of soggy cypress groves, Devil's Swamp, Dead Tiger
Creek, and the Pearl River. By the intracoastal waterway and the Pearl
River, MTF was only a 72-kilometer barge trip from the production
facilities at Michoud, and was accessible by water to MSFC and the
                                                                         Cape.
      The central test area, around the test stands, comprised 55 square
kilometers, with a buffer zone of 518 square kilometers surrounding it.
Approximately 850 families from five small hamlets were resettled
outside MTF boundaries. The central test area was exclusively reserved
for NASA use, and although the buffer zone was uninhabited, the area
continued to be lumbered and teemed with wildlife, including wild hogs
descended from abandoned farm stock. An employee picnic in 1967
                                                                             36
frugally consigned some of these natural resources to a barbecue pit.
      At the heart of MTF were the monolithic test stands: a dual-position
structure for running the S-IC stage at full throttle, and two separate
stands for the S-II stage. Laboratories, monitoring equipment, control
center, and storage areas, including docks, were all deployed thousands
of meters away. The   MTF  complex was tied together by 12 kilometers of
canals (with navigation locks and a bascule bridge); 45 kilometers of
railroads; and 56 kilometers of roads and paved highways. Under it all
snaked 966 kilometers of cables, connecting test stands, laboratories, and
data banks. Each month,    MTF consumed enough electricity to keep 6000
households functioning.
     An arm of MSFC at Huntsville, MTF had an administrative pattern
that was a bit unusual. A comparatively small cadre of NASA personnel
(about 100) carried out overall managerial and supervisory duties. This
select group also made the final evaluation of test results and issued the
                                                                            73
STAGES TO SATURN
provided maintenance for the facility and operational support at the test
stands and elsewhere for the other tenants, including the construction
firms. GE's range of support ran the gamut from 19 special items of cable
equipment (for $1 183 187), to the always popular snake bite kits ($1.25
each).   On     occasion,   GE    hired cowboys to round
                                                   up stray cattle in the
outreaches of MTF, and             that
                                  it   was   GE
                                        arranged  for the transfer of the
cemeteries during resettlement of the area's small towns.
     Development of MTF had a hectic air about it. Construction delays
mounted by early 1964, after Mississippi went through a highly unusual
cold snap and a snowstorm. Heavy rains came during January, topping
records that had been on the books for 30 years. The schedules for
construction and testing merged to the point where the first test firings in
1966 were being planned concurrently with ongoing construction. The
MTF director, Jack Balch, observed: "We're sure this is the only way to
do it, but for the next year we'll be riding with one foot on each of two
galloping horses." The government-industry team at MTF did the job;
the   first   stage-firing test a 15-second test of the S-II stage, was   performed
successfully      on 23 April 1966                                  On 3
                                             in the test stand designated A-2.
March 1967,     a 15-second test of the S-IC-T (test) stage activated the
first-stage facility. In September 1967, the other S-II stand, designated
                                 37
A-l, was declared operational.
74
                               Left,   an
                                        aerial view of NASA's Michoud
                                                           MV04MN07W*
STAGES TO SATURN
engines was adopted, achieving adequate control force with less engine
deflection. The gimbal system for mounting engines permitted each
engine in the cluster to swivel about for either yaw or pitch control.
     On the other hand, the original multiengine concept was maintained.
Throughout the early design phase,     ABMA    stressed the reliability of the
multiengine approach in case one or even two engines were lost.
Particularly in the case of manned missions, von Braun emphasized, the
engine-out capability offered much higher margins of safety in continu-
ing a mission until conditions were less hazardous for separation of the
crew capsule.
     The   multitank design also persisted as a design choice. In his NASA
presentation, von   Braun praised the multitank design for several rea-
sons. Component tanks could be flown by Douglas C-124 Globemasters
to any part of the world and reassembled for launch; this procedure
would provide a high degree of flexibility. The separate tanks eliminated
the technical difficulties of internal horizontal bulkheads, required in a
large tank vehicle, to keep fuel and oxidizer separate. It also meant a
shorter, and more desirable, vehicle. In spite of the added weight, most
rocket propellant tanks included internal fuel slosh baffles, because
splashing and surging of the liquid fuel created problems in keeping the
vehicle stable and under control. In 1958, von Braun predicted that no
fuel slosh baffles would be required in the multitank design because of
the small diameter of the individual tanks (although the flight versions
actually incorporated slosh baffles in their design). A great deal of
attention was also given to booster recovery schemes, in which the spent
first stage would be recovered from the ocean after its descent had been
slowed by retrorockets and parachutes. The Huntsville group foresaw
immense savings in the recovery scheme, since the illustration given by
von Braun assumed "5 or 19 years from now" a launch rate of 100
vehicles per year over a 5-year period, at a cost of about $10 million per
launch. 39
76
                             MISSIONS, MODES,     AND MANUFACTURING
      More than any of     the Saturn vehicles, the Saturn I S-I stage
configuration  evolved   during flight tests (for details, see chapter 11).
NASA developed the Saturn I as first-generation and second-generation
rockets, designated Block I and Block II. The first four launches used the
Block I vehicle, with inert upper stages and no fins on the first stage, the
S-I. Block II versions carried a live second stage, the S-IV, sported a
corolla of aerodynamic fins at the base, and used uprated H-l engines.
The S-I first stage for the Saturn I also became the first stage of the
Saturn IB; in this application, it was called the S-IB. Again, there were
modifications to the fins, engines, and various internal components.
Nevertheless, the basic details of fabrication and testing of the Saturn I
and Saturn IB remained similar. The first stage of the Saturn I and IB
may have looked like a plumber's nightmare, but it fit the criteria of
conservative design and economy established early in the program. As
Marshall engineers discovered, development of a new booster of Saturn
I's size involved a number of design problems. Fabrication of the
                                                                  tankage
was comparatively easy. Even though the former Redstone and Jupiter
tanks had to be lengthened from 12 to 16 meters to carry added
propellants, the basic diameters of the 178-centimeter Redstone and
267-centimeter Jupiter tanks were retained, so they could be fabricated
from the tooling and welding equipment still available at Huntsville. The
tank arrangement settled on by MSFC gave an alternate pattern of the
four fuel and four oxidizer tanks, clustered around the 267-centimeter
center oxidizer tank. The oxidizer tanks carried the load from the upper
stages of the Saturn, the fuel tanks only contributing to the lateral
stiffness of the cluster. When filled, the oxidizer tanks contracted 63.5
millimeters, which meant that the fuel tanks had to have slip joints at
their   upper ends   to   accommodate other   structural elements that fluctu-
ated with the tank shrinkage. All together, the Saturn I first stage carried
340 000 kilograms of propellants in its nine tanks. To keep the propellant
in   one tank from depleting too rapidly during          flight,which would
seriously unbalance the vehicle, the Saturn incorporated
                                              I            an interconnecting
pipe system, with regulating equipment to keep propellants at uniform
level in all tanks during a mission. Each of the four outboard fuel tanks
fed two engines, yet interconnected with the other tanks. The 267-centimeter
center liquid-oxygen (LOX) tank provided series flow to the four
outboard LOX tanks, which also fed two engines apiece.
     Although the group of tanks eased the potential slosh tendencies of
a single large tank, each separate cylinder contained fixed baffles,
running accordionlike down the tank interiors. Pressurization for the
LOX tanks was done by a heat exchanger, dumping it into the top of the
LOX tanks as gaseous oxygen.    Gaseous nitrogen from fiberglass spheres
at the top of the booster pressurized the fuel tanks. The 48 spheres fixed
to the top of the stage were curiously reminiscent of bunches of grapes.
     The cluster of tanks was held together at the base by the tail section
                                                                           77
STAGES TO SATURN
and   at the top by an aptly named structural component known as the
"spider   beam." The  tail section consisted of the thrust structure
                                                                     assembly
as well as the heat shield, shrouding for engine components, holddown
points, stabilizing fins (on the later Saturn I first stages), and other
components. Assembly of the spider beam required a special fixture for
precise alignment and joining of the heavy aluminum I beams, of which it
was made. Starting with a hub assembly, eight radial beams were attached
to it at 45-degree intervals. Then eight more cross beams were joined to
the outer ends of the radials with splice plates. The spider beam played a
dual role. Special hardware attached to it was used during the initial
clustering of the tanks. In other words, the spider beam served as an
assembly fixture, then remained as part of the stage's permanent
structural assemblies, with each outboard oxidizer tank affixed to the
beam. Because a smaller diameter upper stage of 5.6 meters was planned
for the Saturn I, an upper shroud was incorporated as part of the
structural transition   from the larger 6.5-meter-diameter   first stage.   The
upper shroud also enclosed telemetry equipment, umbilical connection
points used in ground test and launch preparation, and space for the
recovery system for the first stage. In the later versions (the Block II
models), the shroud section was eliminated, and instruments were
housed in a separate instrument segment atop the upper stage. The
recovery section was no longer required; additional studies, completed by
early 1962, indicated that the recovery scheme would require extensive
                                                               40
modification to the stage, so the idea was finally dropped.
     In the process of refining the design of the Saturn I, two major
problems emerged: stability and base heating. As with most large rockets,
the Saturn I was highly unstable, with the overall center of gravity located
on the heavy, lower-stage booster, while the center of lift, in most flight
conditions, was high on the upper stages. The nature of the problem
called for more advanced control processes than used on aircraft and
rockets the size of ICBMs. The low natural frequency of the big vehicle
was such that when the gimbaled engines moved to correct rocket
motions, special care had to be taken not to amplify the motions because
the control system frequency was close to that of the vehicle itself.
     More worrisome, at least in the early design stage, was the problem
of base heating. Even with a rocket powered by only one engine, the flow
pattern at its base proved nearly impossible to predict for the various
combinations of speed and altitude. Base heating occurred when the
rocket exhaust interacted with the shock waves trailing behind the
vehicle. This clash created unpredictable regions of dead air and zones of
turbulent mixing. Heated by the rocket exhaust, the air trapped in these
areas in turn raised the heat levels at the base of the rocket to undesirable
temperatures. Worse, the fuel-rich exhaust flow from the engine turbopump
could get caught in these "hot-spot" regions, causing fire or explosion.
78
                          MISSIONS, MODES,       AND MANUFACTURING
    The base heating phenomenon became worse with multiengine
rockets.The eight-engine Saturn I cluster began to look like a Pandora's
box of base heating. To get an idea of what to expect, and to work out
some        ahead of time, the Saturn design team ran some cold flow
          fixes
tests,using scale-model  hardware, and called on NASA's Lewis Research
Center, in Cleveland, to run some unusual wind tunnel tests. These
investigations involved a booster model with eight operating engines,
each putting out 1100 newtons (250 pounds) of thrust. Following the
tests and extensive theoretical studies, designers in Huntsville came up
with several ideas to cope with the base-heating situation. Arranged in a
cross-shaped configuration, the engine pattern of the cluster was con-
ceived to minimize dead air regions and turbulent zones. The four inner
engines were bunched together in the center to reduce excessive heating
in the central area, and the remaining four were positioned to avoid
structural interference as the gimbaled engines swung on their mounts.
The lower skirt was designed to direct large streams of high-energy air
toward the four center engines in particular to prevent dead air regions
from developing in their vicinity. A heavy fire wall was installed across
the base of the booster near the throat of the engines, with flexible engine
skirts to permit gimbaling and, at the same time, keep the super-heated
gas   from flowing back upto the turbopumps and propellant lines above.
The problem of     the exhaust from the turbopumps received special
attention. For the four center engines, which were fixed, the fuel-rich
exhaust gases were piped to the edge of the booster skirt and dumped
overboard into a region of high-velocity air flow. In later vehicles, the
exhaust gases were dumped exactly into the "centerstar" created by the
four fixed engines. The gimbaled outboard engines required a different
approach. The turbopump was fixed to the gimbaled engines; therefore
an overboard duct for them would have required a flexible coupling that
could withstand the high temperatures of the turbine exhaust gases.
Instead, MSFC devised outboard engine attachments called aspirators,
which forced the turbine exhaust into hoods around the engine exhaust
area and mixed the turbopump exhaust with the engine's main exhaust
         41
flow.
     Successful ignition and operation of an eight-engine cluster of
Saturn's dimensions required extensive testing beforehand. In December
1958, ARPA released funds for modifications to one side of a two-
position Juno test tower in order to test-fire the Saturn I first stage.
Preparations for these static tests, as they were called, required extensive
reworking of the Saturn's side of the tower, including a new steel and
concrete foundation down to bedrock, a steel overhead support structure
and a 110-metric ton overhead crane, a new flame deflector and
fire-control system, and much new instrumentation. The job took a
whole year. By January 1959,     ABMA     crews installed a full-sized, high-
                                                                          79
STAGES TO SATURN
80
                                 MISSIONS, MODES,       AND MANUFACTURING
physical interface design, system integration, and system operation of the
total vehicle.During a flight, natural structural frequencies occurred the
result of vibrations of moving parts, aerodynamic forces, and so on. If the
control-force input of gimbaling engines, for example, reinforced the
structure's natural frequency, the amplification of such structural deflec-
tions could destroy the vehicle. So a dynamic test stand, large enough to
surround a complete two-stage Saturn I, was begun at MSFC in the
summer of 1960 and finished early in 1961. The dynamic test facility was
designed to test the vehicle either in entirety or in separate flight
configurations. Vibration loads could be applied to the vehicle in pitch,
yaw, roll, or longitudinal axis to get data on resonance frequencies and
bending modes. Saturn I tests uncovered several problem areas that were
then solved before launch. Matching frequencies in the gimbal structure
and hydraulic system were uncovered and "decoupled." Static tests
revealed weaknesses in the heat-shield curtains around the engines, so
the flexible curtains were redesigned. Structural failure of the outer
                                                                        43
liquid-oxygen tanks required a reworking of the propellant flow system.
     Historically, the style of       ABMAoperations emphasized in-house
fabrication and production, as Army arsenals had traditionally done. As
the scale of the Saturn program increased, MSFC made the obvious and
logical choice to turn over fabrication and manufacture to private
industry. At the same time, the center retained an unusually strong
in-house capability, to keep abreast of the state of the art, undertake
preliminary work on new prototype hardware, and to make sure that the
contractor did the job properly (for management details, see chapter 9).
The do-it-yourself idea was most strongly reflected in the development of
the Saturn I first stage. Ten Saturn I vehicles were built and launched;
the first eight used S-I first stages manufactured by MSFC, although the
fifth flight vehicle carried a contractor-built second stage (the Douglas
S-IV).   The   last       Is to be launched had both stages supplied by
                      two Saturn
private           Douglas supplied the S-IV upper stage, and the
          industry.
Chrysler Corporation's Space Division supplied the S-I lower stage.
    Late in the summer of 1961, while the first Saturn I was en route to
Florida for launch,       MSFC     began plans   to select the private contractor to
take over   its   S-I stage.   The manufacturing    site at Michoud was announced
on  7 September, and a preliminary conference for prospective bidders
occurred in New Orleans on 26 September. The first Saturn I was
launched successfully one month later (27 October), and on 17 November,
Chrysler was selected from five candidates to produce the S-I first stage.
The final contract called for the manufacture, checkout, and test of 20
first-stage boosters. Chrysler participated in the renovation of Michoud
as it tooled up for production. In the meantime, the shops at Marshall
turned out the last seven S-I boosters, progressively relinquishing the
primary production responsibility. During December 1961, for example,
                                                                                 81
              SATURN   H    STRUCTURE
Saturn I
82
                             MISSIONS, MODES,   AND MANUFACTURING
1954 producing Redstone rockets and their successor, the Jupiter.
Chrysler easily shifted from the Saturn I to the larger Saturn IB. In July
1962, when NASA announced its intention to use the lunar orbit
rendezvous, the space agency also released details on the two other
Saturn vehicles. The three-stage Saturn V was planned for the lunar
mission. A corollary decision called for development of an interim vehi-
cle, the Saturn IB, to permit early testing of Apollo-Saturn hardware,
such as the manned command and service modules, and the manned
lunar excursion module in Earth orbit, as well as the S-IVB stage of the
Saturn V. This decision permitted such flight testing a year before the
Saturn V would be available. Chrysler's initial contract, completed late in
1962, called for 13 first-stage Saturn IB boosters and 8 Saturn I
                        45
first-stage boosters.
    In most respects, the new S-IB first-stage booster retained the size
and shape of its S-I predecessor. The upper area was modified to take the
larger-diameter and heavier S-IVB upper stage., and the aerodynamic fins
were redesigned for the longer and heavier vehicle. The Saturn IB
mounted its eight H-l engines in the same cluster pattern as the Saturn I,
although successive improvements raised the total thrust of each engine
to 890000 newtons (200000 pounds) and then to 912000 newtons
(205 000 pounds). The thrust increase raised the overall performance of
the Saturn IB; the performance was further enhanced by cutting some
9000 kilograms of weight from the stage cluster. A more compact fin
design accounted for part of the reduction, along with modifications to
the propellant tanks, spider beam, and other components and removal of
various tubes and brackets no longer required. Additional weight savings
accrued from changes in the instrument unit and S-IVB, and the insights
gained from the operational flights of Saturn I. Many times, engineers
came to realize designs had been too conservative too heavy or unneces-
sarily redundant. The production techniques worked out for the Saturn
S-I stage were directly applicable to the S-IB, so no major retooling or
SUMMARY
                                                                        83
Saturn IB
Right, engineers in a Lewis Research Cen-
ter wind tunnel are aligning a model of the
Saturn IB prior to firing tests to determine
the   amount and   distribution of base heating
assembly at Michoud.
        vehicle was discarded, the major issue became Earth orbital rendezvous
        or lunar orbital rendezvous. One of the last holdouts against LOR,
        Marshall eventually opted for it because it averted the multiple launches
        of an EOR sequence and offered the best chances for a successful mission
        before the end of the 1960s.
              Once the issue of the mission profile had been settled, the task of
        developing the resources for manufacturing and testing of the Saturns
        became paramount, and engineers finalized the design of the Saturn I's
        first stage, which evolved into the first
                                                   stage of the Saturn IB as well.
              At this point, in the early 1960s, development of the Saturn I and IB
        loomed large in press releases and news stories, with special attention on
        84
                            MISSIONS, MODES,        AND MANUFACTURING
the lower stages.   The work                                     manufactur-
                                 in this area set the baselines for
ing procedures,                      of
                    static firing tests the multibarrel cluster, and the first
launches of the Saturn I, with a live lower stage and a dummy upper
stage. Because NASA and MSFC planners put
                                                   such special emphasis on
early static-firing tests of each stage, the engines had to be ready. From
the beginning, MSFC maintained a strong effort in research, develop-
ment, and production of Saturn propulsion systems. Meanwhile, parallel
work on other hardware of the Saturn program proceeded: R&D on the
upper stages for the Saturn I and IB (to be modified for the Saturn V);
R&D for the first two stages of the mammoth Saturn V; plans for unique
tooling required for production and fabrication; schemes for guidance
and control of the launch vehicle. The main effort leading to large
launch vehicles for manned lunar voyages was just beginning to build
momentum.
                  Smoke, and
                 Fire,
           Thunder: The Engines
                                   87
Conventional Cryogenics:                     The H-l and              F-l
enough to carry gaseous propellants, the size and weight of the tanks
would have made it impossible to construct and launch such a vehicle.
With the gaseous propellants converted to a liquid state, requiring less
volume, designers had the opportunity to come up with a design capable
of getting off the ground. In the 1960s, cryogenic technology experi-
enced a phenomenal rate of growth and state of development. In support
of the space effort, scientists and engineers accomplished a number of
major breakthroughs, not only in the field of cryogenics itself, but also in
the design and production of cryogenic rocket engines.
                                    89
                           SATURN
       ENGINE APPLICATIONS
I S-IVB
                  S-IV
                                             S-IVB
       i          SIX RL10
S-IC
     SATURN   I
                                   SATURN   IB                 SATURN   V
CRYOGENIC TECHNOLOGY
      Cryogenics is the discipline that involves the properties and use of materials at
  extremely low temperatures; it included the production, storage, and use of
  cryogenic fluids. A gas is considered to be cryogen if it can be changed to a liquid by
  the removal of heat and by subsequent temperature reduction to a very low value.
  The temperature range that is of interest in cryogenics is not defined precisely;
  however, most researchers consider a gas to be cryogenic if it can be liquefied at or
  below    240 F. The most common cryogenic fluids are air, argon, helium,
                                                           1
     In the early post- World- War-I I era, as the United States' military
services struggled to develop their own stable of launch vehicles, they
leaned very heavily on the German wartime experience in technical areas
90
                         CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:            H-l   AND   F-l
                                                                         91
STAGES TO SATURN
                                    THRUST CHAMBERS
        Manyearly liquid-propellant engines featured a conical nozzle.
Engineering improvements in thrust chambers were aimed at more
efficient shapes for increased performance and decrease in weight.
92
                       CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:             H-l   AND   F-l
TURBOPUMPS
                                                                        93
STAGES TO SATURN
94
                                CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:                   H-l   AND    F-l
low-pressure "flex lines" between the          pump    inlets and the vehicle tanks.
As   it      so happened,
                       improvements            in   the design and efficiency of
turbomachinery already made it compact and                 reliable   enough     to justify
                                  7
relocation on the thrust chamber.
expected        pitfalls did not follow. "In the development of liquid rocket
engines, problems occur at several distinct intervals," Bostwick contin-
ued. "The type of problem and the time phase can be predicted, but since
the exact nature of the problem cannot be so readily defined, a five to
seven year development program becomes a necessity." 9 In general, an
engine development program progressed through four distinct "prob-
lem phases" over the five- to seven-year period.
    The designers of each successive generation of rocket engines
commenced their work with facts and figures accumulated often
painfully from earlier designs and experience. If, however, the new
engine was expected to perform better than the old ones, the designers
very quickly found themselves in uncharted territory. They proceeded to
push ahead of the state of the art, seeking more flexibility in operations,
greater simplicity, increased thrust, and improved overall performance.
At this point, Bostwick pointed out, "The first problem phase occurs
because of the inability to totally extrapolate and build on existing
knowledge." Just as problems were predictable, so were the problem
areas. Bostwick was specific: "The problems will occur in the combustion
mechanics, propellant movement, or in the propellant control system."
The hardware evolved for this early development period often proved to
be less than adequate, and faults would sometimes not show up until the
engines        moved    past the initial firing sequence   tests,   perhaps     in the late
tests     to    maximum      projected duration and thrust            levels.   When   the
                                                                                        95
STAGES TO SATURN
problems then showed up, they were "often catastrophic," Bostwick wryly
observed. For this reason, the engines were subject to extensive test
programs    toexpose their inherent frailties.
      Some time   after the engine had successfully passed qualification
tests of the basic engine design, or even the preflight rating trials, the
second cycle of problems appeared. The difficulties involved the mating
of the propulsion systems to the vehicle or stage. Because the develop-
ment of the engines   usually preceded the development of the stage by
two or three years, the engines would not fit the mounting hardware and
multitudinous connections with the stage. In addition, there were the
peculiarities of late changes in the stage-engine interface requirements or
possibly in the operational environment introduced by new variations in
the flight plans. The stage contractors received prototypes or preflight-
rated engines and cooperated with the engine interface. Inevitably, new
sets of variables, which could not be anticipated from mating with a
nonexistent stage or for changes in mission requirements, created
problems.
     As the engines phased out of the developmental stage and into full
production, MSFC personnel and the manufacturer turned their atten-
tion to the third round of problems. They watched the elements of
quality control, tolerances in the manufacturing of components, vendor
selection, choice of manufacturing materials, and definition of the
integral manufacturing process. "A continuing development program is
planned during the period," Bostwick explained, "to provide the trained
personnel, facilities and hardware capabilities, to investigate these prob-
lems and to prove out the required corrective effort."
     Defying all these attempts to identify potential failures, to uncover
and correct weaknesses before a multimillion-dollar vehicle left the
launch pad, actual missions inevitably uncovered a fourth set of prob-
lems, because there was no way to duplicate the actual environment in
which the vehicle had to perform. With launch dates carefully scheduled
ahead of time to coincide with the launch "windows" and carefully paced
to the requirements of the Apollo-Saturn program, the problems uncov-
ered by one mission demanded a very fast response to keep the next
phase of the program on schedule. For this reason, NASA and the
contractors maintained a well-staffed cadre of specialists at the contrac-
tors' engineering and test facilities, backed up by the facilities available at
MSFC.
    With the four major problem phases successfully handled, the need
forongoing development and engineering monitoring continued. "When
engine systems are tested to longer durations and more extreme limits,"
warned Bostwick, "problems are uncovered that may have existed for a
long time but were not evident until the more severe testing on a larger
engine sample produced the failure mode." Other factors entered the
picture too, such as changes in process,   improvements   in   manufacture, or
96
                        CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:             H-l   AND   F-l
                                                                         97
STAGES TO SATURN
the same seven major systems: thrust       chamber and gimbal assembly,
exhaust system, gas generator and control system, propellant feed
system, turbopump, fuel additive blender unit, and electrical system.
Production of the H-l propulsion system involved several design aspects
unique to the Saturn program. For example, the Saturn H-l engine came
out of Rocketdyne's shops in two slightly different models. Each unit had
a gimbal assembly for attachment to the vehicle, but the inboard engines,
98
                        CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:              H-l   AND   F-l
not required for thrust vector control, were immobilized by struts which
held them rigidly in place. The outboard engines were equipped with
gimbal actuators, attached to outriggers on the thrust chamber, that
produced the gimbaling action for directional control for the vehicle.
Basically identical, the inboard and outboard engines possessed an
additional physical difference that necessitated a different label for each.
The exhaust system varied for the outboard and inboard engines,
although both types mounted a turbine exhaust hood, a turbine exhaust
duct, and a heat exchanger (with a coil system to convert liquid oxygen to
the gaseous oxygen required to pressure the oxygen tanks). The H-1C
engine, the fixed inboard unit, had a curved exhaust duct to carry the
turbine exhaust gases, and the H-1D engine, the gimbaled outboard unit,
mounted a unit known as an aspirator. The inboard engines simply
ducted the turbine exhaust overboard. The outboard engine exhaust was
ducted into collectors, or aspirators, located at the exit plane of the
nozzle. For the H-1D aspirator, designers chose a welded
                                                               Hastelloy C
shell assembly, mounted on the outside of the thrust chamber and
extending beyond the thrust chamber exit plane. The aspirator prevented
the fuel-rich exhaust gases of the gas generator from recirculating into
the missile boat tail during flight. Instead, the gases merged into the
engine exhaust plume.
     As developed for the Saturn program, the H-l also shed a number
of accessories carried over from the Jupiter engine system. Early versions
of the H-l relied on the Jupiter's lubrication system, which featured a
73-liter (20-gallon) oil tank. The H-l designers arranged for the vehicle's
own   fuel, RP-1 (along with some additives), to do the same job. This
arrangement eliminated not only the oil tankage, but also a potential
source of contamination. The new approach required a fuel additive
blender unit as part of the engine system, tapping RP-1 fuel from the fuel
turbopump discharge system. During development, the H-l shed other
remnants of its heritage from the Jupiter. A single-engine ballistic missile
needed complex thrust controls to ensure its accurate impact on target.
The Jupiter, perforce, carried considerable ancillary baggage to accom-
plish its mission pressure transducers, magnetic amplifiers, hydraulic
servo valves, and a throttling valve for the gas generator and liquid
oxygen. The H-l engine, by contrast, relied on simple, calibrated orifices
within the engine, because thrust control requirements were much less
severe when individual engines were clustered. In the Saturn, this
permitted a marked simplification of the H-l, accompanied by an
                               16
attendant gain in reliability.
                                                                          99
                                                    VEHICLI EFFECTIVITY
H-l ENGINE
                          THRUST (SEA LEVEL)        200,OOOLB 205,QOOLB
                          THRUST DURATION           155 SEC   155 SEC
                          SPECIFIC IMPULSE
                                (LB-SEC/LB)          260.5 MIN   261.0   MIN
                          ENGINE       WT DRY
                                (INBD)               1,830 LB    2,100 LB
                                (QUTBD)              2,100 LB    2,100 LB
                          ENGINE WT BURNOUT
                                (INBD)               2,200 LB    2,200 LB
                                (OUTBD)              2,200 LB    2,200 LB
                          EXIT-TO-THROAT
                             AREA
                             ARE A RATIO               8TO1        8TO1
                          PROPELLANTS                LOX&RP-l LOX&RP-l
                          MIXTURE RATIO               2.23*22     2.23*2
                          CONTRACTOR: NAA/ROCKETDYNE
                          VEHICLE APPLICATION
                              SATURN IB/S-IB STAGE (EIGHT ENGINES)
                        JUPITER                                  SATURN
                 S-3D ENGINE SYSTEM                     H-l   ENGINE SYSTEM
    The H-l engine statistics are shown at the top; the sketch above
    shows the drive for simplification of the H-l engine from its
    parent S-3D. Below, left, is the H-l injector plate and at right is
    the   H-l   liquid oxygen   dome     bolted in position above the injector.
                             CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:              H-l   AND   F-l
splits in the tubes of the regeneratively cooled thrust chamber. Not only
                                                                               101
STAGES TO SATURN
102
                          CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:               H-l    AND   F-l
its
    welding operations, Solar used Teflon buffers to protect the weld
piece  from abrasions caused by clamps. In fabrication and welding of
flexible joints in the liquid-oxygen line, Solar surmised, one of the Teflon
buffers could have slipped inside the line. They presented a
                                                                   sample of
the buffer, which had the same general markings, size, and
                                                                 shape as the
original culprit.   With  the source of  the  problem  localized, MSFC and
contractor officials agreed to call off the plans to inspect the other
engines, and the case of the Teflon intrusion was closed, although some
stricter fabrication   and handling procedures went      into effect.
      The December 1966 conference took up      other details affecting the
Saturn program, such as steel filings that lodged, thankfully, in the mesh
filter of the lubricating system for No. 6
                                                engine sometime during
short-duration firing tests on S-IB-8. The safety screen had done its
                                                                       job.
Still, the discovery of loose filings anywhere in the Saturn's lubrication
                                                                          103
STAGES TO SATURN
during  the x-ray  examination.  In addition, every blade was tested for
hardness, and a sample of the vendor's shipments of turbine blades was
                                                   21
subjected to a wider array of metallurgical tests.
    With this kind of quality control and inspection, the H-l engines
experienced only one serious problem in 15 launches of the Saturn I and
Saturn IB. During the flight of SA-6 in May 1964, one engine shut down
prematurely. The vehicle's "engine-out" design proved its worth, as the
mission continued to a successful conclusion. Based on information
transmitted during the flight, analysts located the failure in the power
train, "somewhere between the turbine shaft and the C-pinion in the
turbopump." The incident was not entirely unexpected: prior to the
flight, a   product improvement team had already developed an improved
power train design. In 22
                        fact, starting with vehicle SA-7, the     new   units   had
already been installed.
      The development of the H-l represented          a case study of predictable
engine problem        phases, as outlined by MSFCengine specialist Leonard
Bostwick.     True    to form, the larger F-lexperienced similar growing
pains. If these travails    seemed more acute, they reflected the size of a
much more substantial engine.
    Not long after its formation in 1958, NASA decided to opt for a
"leapfrog" approach in high-thrust engines, instead of the traditional
engineering procedure of measured step-by-step development. This
decision was bolstered by Russian successes in lofting large orbital
payloads into space and also by recent U.S. plans for circumlunar
missions and manned excursions to the moon. NASA's contract award to
104
At   left
            is   shown a 1963   test
                                       firing of an   H-l engine on a Rocketdyne test stand. At
right are        H-l engines   in Rocketdyne's assembly line at     Canoga Park, California.
space agency    1958 as part of the Air Force legacy. The F-l engine,
                      in
                                                                                           705
STAGES TO SATURN
of the vehicle was still uncertain. Not until 10 January 1962 did NASA
confirm that the advanced Saturn (named Saturn V in February) would
have a first stage (the S-IC stage) powered by five F-l engines. Since the
engine's application was not known at first, designers and engineers tried
to anticipate reasonable requirements, at the same time keeping the
nature of the interface features as simple as possible. The eventual
interface between vehicle and engines required changes, however, and
this aspect of the F-l resulted in redesign to eliminate problems
                                               25
unintentionally built into the original model.
     The original Air Force prospectus in 1955 called for an engine with
a capability of 4 450 000 newtons (1 000 000 pounds) of thrust or more.
Various studies went into comparisons of single engines and clustered
engines in terms of their availability and reliability. Parallel studies
included detailed consideration of engine subsystems to operate at thrust
levels of 4450000 newtons (1000000 pounds) and up. By 1957,
ignition. The trial run demonstrated stable combustion for 200 millisec-
onds and achieved a thrust level of 4500000 newtons (1000000
pounds). In conducting these tests, Rocketdyne used a solid-wall "boiler-
plate" thrust chamber and injector a far cry from flight hardware but
the unheard of mark of 4 500 000 newtons (1 000 000 pounds) of thrust
had been reached by a single engine. 26
     Engineers quickly sketched out the dimensions and general configuration
of the big new propulsion system, drawing on their prior experience
under the aegis of the Air Force and the results of the early "hot" test of
preliminary components. At Edwards Air Force Base, where much of the
early F-l research had been accomplished, Rocketdyne unveiled the first
full-scale F-l mock-up on Armed Forces Day, 1960. Edwards continued
as the center for full-scale   engine   testing. Basic research,   development,
and manufacturing took place at Rocketdyne facilities         in   Canoga Park,
California, and many component tests were conducted          at the   company's
106
                               CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:               H-l    AND    F-l
        The
        story of the F-l development embodied an apparent contradic-
tion:an awesome advance in engine performance and thrust, but an
advance based on conventional rocket propellants (liquid oxygen and
RP-1) and the existing state of the art. Designers and engineers, whether
at   government     installations or at contractor plants, always had to remem-
ber the       official   NASA   admonition about the F-l: keep within the
framework of past experience concerning the liquid-fueled rocket engines.
Joseph P. McNamara, a top executive at North American and early
                                              that the F-l was really "a big
general manager at Rocketdyne, remarked
dumb engine" when compared     to some  of its
                                               contemporaries that burned
exotic fuels and featured  more   sophisticated features. Still, it was big.
Despite its thoroughly conventional lineage, it was still a major step
forward in rocket engine technology. "The giant stride in thrust was to be
                                                                                   107
STAGES TO SATURN
108
                         CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:              H-l   AND   F-l
    The    injector sprayed fuel and oxygen into the thrust chamber,
introducing   it in a
                      pattern calculated to produce the most efficient
combustion.   To the casual observer, the final production model looked
simple enough. The face of the injector, or the combustion side,
contained the injection orifice pattern, determined by alternating fuel
rings and oxidizer rings, both made from copper. Across the face of the
injector, designers installed radial and circumferential copper baffles.
These baffles extended downward and divided the injector face into a
series of compartments. Along with a separate fuel igniter system, the
                                                                        109
                                                        VEHICLI       EFFECTIVITY
                                                                            SA-504 &
                                                       SAr501BUSA-503      SUBSQutNT
           F-l   ENGINE
                                 THRUST (SEA LEVEL) 1,500,000 LB 1,522,000 LB
                                 THRUST DURATION      150 SEC      165 SEC
                                 SPECIFIC IMPULSE
                                   (LB-SEC/LB)         260SECMIN 263 MIN
                                 ENGINE WEIGHT
                                   DRY                  18,416 LB         I8,500LB
                                 ENGINE WEIGHT
                                   BURNOUT             20,096 LB          20,180 LB
                                 EXIT-TO-THROAT
                                   AREA RATIO            16TO1             16TO1
                                 PROPELLANTS            LOX & RP      1   LOX& RP      1
        Engine start is part of the terminal countdown                    Fuel rich turbine combustion gas        is   ignited   by
        sequence. When this point in the countdown is                     flame from       igniters.
        reached, the ignition sequencer controls
        starting of   all   five engines.                                   a)     Ignition of this gas prevents backfiring
                                                                                   and burping.
        Checkout      valve   moves to engine return   position.            b) This relatively cool gas
                                                                                   o                        (approximately
                                                                                 550 C) is the coolant for the nozzle
                                                                                 extension.
        Propellants are ignited by flame of igniters.                     Fuel enters thrust chamber. As pressure increases
                                                                          the transition to mainstage is accomplished.
   8) Combustion    gas passes through turbopump, heat                    The thrust OK pressure switch (which senses fuel
   r
        exchanger, exhaust manifold and nozzle extension.                                         up at approximately
                                                                          injection pressure) picks
                                                                          74,500 grams per square centimeter (1060 psi)
                                                                          and provides a THRUST OK signal to the IU.
the outset, it
               might have seemed logical to scale up designs successfully
developed for smaller engines. However, development of a stable injec-
tor for the 1 780 000-newton (400 000-pound) thrust E-l engine required
18 months, and it seemed more than likely that the 4.5-million-newton
(1.5-million-pound) F-l would require something more than just a
"bigger and better" design concept.
     Rocketdyne's ability to run injector and thrust chamber tests with
full-scale hardware in March 1959, only two months from the date of the
original contract, derived from its earlier Air Force activities. Some
experimental hardware was already on hand, and Rocketdyne also had a
usable test stand left over from prior experiments. The first firings were
made with components several steps removed from what could be
expected as production models. Because the injector paced so much of
the overall design                   and because designers and engineers wanted                                            to start as
                                                                                                                                      111
STAGES TO SATURN
112
                            CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:          H-l   AND   F-l
                                                                          113
STAGES TO SATURN
Braun gave a   clear insight into the frustrations in searching for answers.
                   organizations had pursued combustion-instability
          various                                                    research
Although
for the past 10 years, nobody had yet. come up with an adequate
understanding of the process itself. Therefore, it had
                                                         not been possible to
use suitable criteria in designing injectors to avoid combustion instability.
"Lack of suitabledesign    criteria has forced the industry to adopt almost a
114
                          CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:             H-l   AND   F-l
                                                                           115
STAGES TO SATURN
                                                                                        43
causes of such instability are still not completely understood."  Even
though the F-l engine performed satisfactorily, uncertainty concerning
combustion instability persisted a decade later.*
       Although combustion           instability   and    injector   development became
the pacing items in the F-l program, other thrust chamber problem areas
required constant troubleshooting by Marshall and Rocketdyne engi-
neers. During the first half of 1965, MSFC monitors at Rocketdyne's
production facilities in Canoga Park, California, were worried about
cracks in the thrust chamber jacket, while MSFC monitors at the Edwards
Air Force Base test site were frustrated by cracks in the thrust chamber
tubes. Engine 014 had been in and out of the test stand more than once
for injector changes and thrust chamber tube repairs. In April 1965, the
MSFC monitor at Edwards reported to Huntsville that the engine was
back in the test stand once more. "Engine 014 apparently has a dog of a
                                                44
thrust chamber," he wrote in exasperation.         Another troubleshooting
effort that required considerable attention concerned a manufacturing
sequence for the injectors. Unhappily, the problem appeared after a
number of engine deliveries to the Boeing Company, the contractor for
the S-IC first stage of the Saturn V. The injector incorporated multiorificed
copper fuel and oxidizer rings, held by steel lands (rings) installed in a
stainless steel body. To attach the copper rings to the steel lands of the
    * In a
         note to the author (8 July 1976),
                                             John Sloop, a senior NASA propulsion engineer, noted
that combustion instability, like engine knock, has
                                                    long been studied, and engineers had learned to
deal with it. But neither was
                               yet fully comprehended.
116
                       CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:              H-l   AND   F-l
118
                              CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:          H-l   AND    F-l
                                                                             119
STAGES TO SATURN
120
                         CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:            H-l   AND   F-l
                                                                         727
        Above, a cutaway drawing of
        the F-l thrust chamber; right,
        the hugh furnace at Rocket-
disposal of the turbine exhaust gases into the thrust chamber by way of
the nozzle extension, Rocketdyne designers realized the advantages of a
neat, comparatively lightweight system. There was no need for extra
attachments such as a turbine exhaust duct, and the extension favorably
increased the expansion ratio. Designed with simple bolted attachments,
the extension could be conveniently removed for shipping and handling
of engines and stage. The simplicity of the design allowed the engine to
be easily test-fired following reattachment of the nozzle skirt at the test
site.
     To help keep the S-IC propellant tanks under pressure, the engine
contractor supplied elements of the propellant tank pressurization sys-
tem. The key to the system was the heat exchanger, which heated gaseous
oxygen and helium to pressurize the oxidizer tank and fuel tank,
respectively. Using the vehicle's own oxidizer as part of the propellant
tank pressurization system illustrated harmoniously integrated design of
many of the rocket systems and subsystems. Another good example
involved the use of the fuel as the fluid medium in the hydraulic control
system. The hydraulic design itself constituted a notable design advance-
ment for an engine the size of the F-l. The system cut out many sets of
722
                          CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:            H-l   AND   F-l
     From    the beginning, the most complete facilities for full-scale F-l
testing existed  at Edwards Air Force Base, where Air Force work on the
engine  first began. Their facilities included several engine test stands and
a thrust   chamber stand, also used for injector design studies. The first
engine tests using prototype hardware occurred in the test stand origi-
nally built for the Atlas program and converted to take the larger F-l
                                                                          123
STAGES TO SATURN
124
                                            The F-l     test   stand in the   Mohave
                                            Desert towered 76 meters (note       man
                                            at base).
system to pass   this   exam, and on 6 September the F-l received complete
qualification for manned missions. The final tests for         MSFC
                                                         occurred on
15 November, with the acceptance firing of the S-IC-3 first stage;
subsequent acceptance firings were earmarked for the Mississippi Test
Facility near the Gulf, a more convenient location in terms of logistics
between the test site and launch facilities at KSC. Before the epochal
voyage of Apollo 1 1 began on 16 July 1969, five Saturn V launch vehicles
lifted off from Cape Kennedy: one in 1967; two in 1968; and two more in
        The H-l and    F-l engines, as well as other engines in the Saturn
series   of vehicles, achieved remarkable records in operational reliability
and longevity during the Apollo program. Both the H-l and F-l
demonstrated consistent performance characteristics during flight mis-
sions, a credit to all the government and contractor personnel who
                                                                                 725
                                          The production   line for   F -I   engine
                                          thrust chambers at Rocketdyne.
contributed to their success. When the Saturn V took the central role in
the late 1960s and early 1970s, the remaining nine Saturn S-IB first
stages, along with their 72
                               H-l engines, went into storage. When they
were earmarked for use in the Skylab program, many people wondered
if such old equipment would still be reliable.
     In the spring of 1971, nine years after the delivery of the last
production unit, technicians pulled one of the H-l engines out of
hibernation, to test the "certified lifetime" of seals, gaskets, and other
components. The test was important, not only for the immediate purpose
of Skylab, but to know how other liquid-fueled rocket engines stored
away for future missions were faring. After an extensive pretest examina-
tion, the H-l was installed in a test stand at MSFC. Engineers put the
engine through its paces: three separate starts, followed by a full-duration
run of 140 seconds. The engine performed as well as at its qualification
test firing, 108 months earlier. MSFC personnel tore the engine down
after firing to see if they could discover any weaknesses, but all the seals
and other critical parts were still in good shape and fully serviceable.
Marshall officials sent the engine back into storage, satisfied that they
could all be called upon to serve any time within yet another 8-10 years.
A year later, during June 1972, Rocketdyne personnel did similar tests
on an F-l engine that had been delivered to MSFC in 1965, tested in
 1966, and put into storage. The engine was run through two extended
duration firings at Edwards Air Force Base, then subjected to rigorous
                                                                  56
inspection and analysis. The engine showed no abnormalities.         Faith in
 the engines' lifetime was justified by the successful launch of the Orbital
126
                        CONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:             H-l   AND   F-l
Workshop aboard    a two-stage Saturn V (S-IC first stage and S-II second
stage), followed by the three successful manned launches of the Saturn
IB in support of the Skylab program in 1973, followed by another Saturn
IB in the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project in 1975 (see chapter 13).
      To appreciate the efficiency and dependability of the H-l, the
contributions of engine technology from the Thor, Jupiter, and Atlas
programs must be remembered. These missile propulsion systems con-
tributed handsomely to the H-l engine's thrust chamber, turbopump
assembly, gas generator system, control valves, and other engine assem-
blies. But the H-l emerged from its R&D gestation period as a separate
and distinct engine system. Its components had been completely repackaged
for compactness and improved accessibility the latter a special problem
for the H-l, created by the first-stage "boat tail." Various components
were refined and strengthened for higher pressures, temperatures, and
propellant flow to achieve the higher thrust levels demanded for the
Saturn missions. Altogether, the designers contrived an assembly that
                                                                     57
was smaller and lighter in comparison to its enhanced performance.
     Although the F-l had its roots in early Air Force studies, it was a
"newer" engine than the H-l. Troubles with the F-l, however, were
primarily a function of proportions, not innovations. Both engines used
the same liquid oxygen and RP-1 propellants, but size and performance
characteristics made the F-l fundamentally different. The H-l experi-
enced   R&D problems as it was uprated in thrust. Taking proven H-l
components, such as the injector, and scaling them up to F-l require-
ments turned out to be not only difficult but basically impossible. The job
necessitated a fresh approach.    Reworking the engine and the injector to
cope  with combustion   instability entailed an R&D effort of notable scope,
embracing    scientific and   technical specialists from MSFC and other
NASA centers, the contractor, other government agencies, private indus-
try, and universities. In addition to other F-l complications, the nature of
the facilities for testing and manufacturing (furnace brazing, for example)
of the F- 1 also differentiated it from the smaller H- 1.
     The extent to which cryogenic oxidizers and fuels of the RP-1 type
had been used in earlier engines made the H-l and F-l conventional
propulsion systems. Other Saturn cryogenic engines used a different,
more potent fuel: liquid hydrogen. As the first large rocket engines to
use a cyrogenic fuel, the RL-10 and J-2 were unconventional.
                                                                         727
Unconventional Cryogenics: RL-10 and J-2
                                     129
STAGES TO SATURN
130
                         UNCONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:                 RL-10    AND       J-2
                                                                                       131
STAGES TO SATURN
132
                        UNCONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:             RL-10    AND   J-2
gen. In the late 1940s, the group was most attracted to the combination of
liquid fluorine oxidizer and diborane as fuel. On the first hot-firing test,
the engine melted. Interest in diborane fuels rapidly waned after this
unsettling experience, but interest in a fluoride oxidizer continued. After
several other candidate fuels were tried and set aside, fluoride and liquid
hydrogen came under intensive development in the latter half of the
1950s. The Lewis group kept a file on hydrogen work, so they were
aware of the Navy-JPL proposals, the Aerojet liquefaction plant and
engines, and the work being done at Ohio State under Herrick Johnston.
Consistent with the Lewis group's own activities in high-energy propel-
lants, experimental facilities for liquid hydrogen, among others, were
proposed in 1952, but the facility for extensive work in this field was not
put into operation until 1956.
     The group's work succeeded in technical refinements, such as
simulating altitude performance techniques, and in garnering growing
support from Lewis Laboratory's director, Abe Silverstein. He developed
increasing enthusiasm for liquid hydrogen for applications in high-
altitude aircraft, as well as high-energy rockets. Buttressed by Silverstein's
endorsement, the rocket research team rapidly progressed in the design
of lightweight, regeneratively cooled hydrogen engines of up to 90 000
newtons (20 000 pounds) of thrust. Much of this rapport and enthusiasm
was generated during free-wheeling, after-hours bull sessions, hosted by
Silverstein, which were honorifically dubbed as "design conferences."
The participants unwound and exchanged ideas over beer and pretzels.
From one of these diffuse sessions came an important Lewis design
known as the "showerhead injector" for liquid rocket engines. 8
     By the late 1950s, the rocket group at Lewis worked with both
hydrogen-fluorine and hydrogen-oxygen propellants, fired in a re-
generatively cooled engine. Liquid fluorine presented special problems
in operations,however, and Silverstein apparently had growing doubts
about    "Later, when he witnessed a hydrogen-oxygen rocket engine
        it.
                                                                              133
STAGES TO SATURN
designation for the RL-10 engine used in the Centaur and, later, in the
Saturn upper stages).
     Last but not least, the Lewis experience had a definite impact on the
direction of the Saturn program very early in the game. After the
organization of NASA, Silverstein went to Washington to serve as
Director of Space Flight Development. In anticipation of the Army's
transfer of Saturn to NASA, NASA's Associate Administrator tapped
Silverstein to chair a special interagency committee to consider the scope
of Saturn's development, and to submit recommendations on goals and
implementation, particularly the configuration of the upper stages.
"With a persuasive chairman occupying a key position and sold on
hydrogen-oxygen, it is not surprising that the group recommended that
the upper stages of Saturn be hydrogen-oxygen," observed Sloop,
somewhat sardonically. Perhaps the most notable contribution of the
Lewis rocket group, he concluded, lay in its influence on the decision that
                                                  9
shaped the design of the Saturn's upper stages.
134
                    UNCONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:                RL-10       AND   J-2
                                                                                135
                                            A   Centaur stage with   the two   RL-10
                                            liquid-hydrogen-fueled engines used
                                            on the S-IV stage of Saturn        I.
Flight Center (MSFC), Lewis Research Center, Edwards Air Force Base,
and two other Pratt & Whitney Centaur test areas in California. The
Douglas Aircraft Rocket Test area near Sacramento also test-fired the
Pratt & Whitney engines on the six-engined S-IV upper stage of the
           13
Saturn I.
      Even before the Silverstein recommendations in December 1959,
the channels that brought high-energy hydrogen-oxygen engines into
the Saturn program had begun to converge. At Huntsville, Alabama in
the spring of 1959, preliminary upper-stage vehicle studies for the
Saturn program included the Centaur as a third stage. The final
recommendations of the Silverstein committee, coupled with the prior
interest in the high-energy Centaur, finally locked liquid hydrogen into
the Saturn's development. Oswald Lange, a key figure in the early Saturn
program at MSFC, considered the Centaur's engines "a major technolog-
ical breakthrough." Before the Army Ballistic Missiles
                                                             Agency phased
out, the ABMA     Saturn project designated the Pratt & Whitney engines as
 the propulsion system for the Saturn's third stage. "The early choice of
 Centaur," said Lange, "had far-reaching effects on the Saturn develop-
 ment program." 14 Following the organization of the National Aeronau-
 tics and Space Administration, Centaur was
                                                assigned to the civilian space
 program    under  the aegis  of NASA's  MSFC.  Centaur was ticketed as one
136
                  UNCONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:                 RL-10   AND   J-2
of the upper stages for Surveyor and Mariner lunar and planetary
missions, and MSFC began to plan Centaur's role in the development of
the Saturn vehicles. MSFC's role in Centaur management was somewhat
controversial. Some people at NASA Headquarters argued that the Air
Force should manage the Centaur engine because of its original military
mission as a communications-satellite booster. At Huntsville, the Centaur
                                                                     15
engine effort might have been submerged by the Saturn program.
     The Saturn program's association with the development of liquid
hydrogen-oxygen engines      officially   commenced on      10 August 1960,
when MSFC signed     a contract with Pratt   &   Whitney for the development
and production of an engine, known as the LR-119, to be used in the
S-IV and S-V stages of the C-l vehicle envisioned in the Silverstein
report. Designed to give 66 700 newtons (17 500 pounds) of thrust, the
LR-1 19 was an uprated version of an early Centaur engine concept, the
LR-115. Problems with the development of this new version led to the
reconsideration of the original Centaur propulsion system, and in March
1961, the   management of MSFC recommended         the design of a liquid-
hydrogen   S-IV   stage using the original LR-115 hardware.   To compen-
sate for the loss of thrust, MSFC decided to cluster six engines instead of
four. On 29 March 1961, NASA Headquarters concurred, and the new
six-engine cluster became the official configuration. In the course of
development, Pratt & Whitney assigned various designations to the basic
liquid hydrogen-oxygen engine. The final design, RL-10-A-1, replaced
both the LR-1 15 and 119, and the RL-10 configuration became standard
for both the Centaur and S-IV vehicles by 1961. An early version of the
RL-10 design went through      its first successful
                                                    firing in August 1959, and
by  the winter of  1961,  technicians     finished  the last of the RL-10-A-1
preflight rating tests. The   engine's    66 700  newtons   (15 000 pounds) of
thrust performed 30 percent better than similar designs using hydrocarbon
fuels. The A-l designation identified a test article; on 9 June 1962, Pratt
& Whitney finished the preliminary flight rating tests on the RL-10-A-3,
intended for installation in operational flight versions of the second stage
                           16
of the C-l launch vehicle.    The nation's first operational liquid hydrogen-
oxygen engine   was  cleared   for production.
                                                                           137
STAGES TO SATURN
138
RLIOA-3   Propellanl Flo. Sckti.nl
                                     Top    left,
                                                    the   RL-10
                                                              statistics; above, right, the
                                     RL-10     injector,
                                                         with a textured surface of Rigi-
                                     mesh for transpiration cooling. At left is a sche-
                                     matic of RL-10 propellantflow. At bottom left is
                                     the   RL-10 production         line at Pratt   & Whitney in
                                     Florida. Bottom right shows a Saturn I                   S-IV
                                     second stage with      its   cluster of six   RL-10   engines.
STAGES TO SATURN
     This design offered two main advantages. First, the engine did not
                                              to service a gas generator
require a third propellant or a bipropellant
system (at a weight penalty) for the turbopump. Second, the designers
obtained an efficient performance advantage because the hydrogen
gases, after driving the turbine,
                                  were exhausted into the combustion
chamber. All propellants, then, contributed directly to maximum thrust
and highest specific impulse. The operation of the turbomachinery
incorporated another interesting design feature.
                                                  The RL-10 was the first
production engine to use liquid hydrogen
                                               in  place of conventional
                       21
lubrication systems.
     During the test program,       NASA and contractor personnel pushed
the design to extremes to verify the engine's capability. Designed for a
total firing time of 470 seconds, test engineers piled more than 3.5 times
that duration onto one engine, running it for a total of 1680 seconds.
Some of    the test engines successfully operated through 5 to 70 separate
firings with no maintenance or replacement of parts, equivalent in some
instances to 10 round trips to the moon. "This philosophy of 'limits'
testing has     proven successful in developing an engine with a high
reliability   and a high degree of confidence," explained key personnel in
MSFC's engine program office. They characterized the pioneering
RL-10 as a system of notable sophistication and versatility. 22
140
                       UNCONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:              RL-10   AND   J-2
Members, who met in Washington for six weeks, were chosen from
Marshall, Lewis, and NASA Headquarters. The full board, chaired by
MSFC's Hermann Weidner (a Peenemuende veteran and a senior MSFC
propulsion engineer), submitted its final recommendation to NASA
Administrator Glennan for approval. Glennan made the final announce-
ment. In competition with four other companies, Rocketdyne Division of
North American Aviation won NASA's approval on 1 June 1960 to
develop a high-energy rocket engine, fueled by liquid oxygen and
hydrogen, to be known as the J-2. Specifications for the liquid-hydrogen
engine originated at MSFC, and the contractor then went to work on the
initial design concepts and hardware. At
                                            every step of the way, the
contractor and the customer (MSFC) exchanged information and ideas
derived from earlier programs, modifying them for the requirements of
the LH 2 engine technology, and devising new techniques to implement
the design goals of the new rocket powerplant.
     The final contract, negotiated by Rocketdyne in September 1960,
included an especially notable feature. For the first time, a high-energy,
high-thrust rocket engine contract specified a design to "insure maxi-
mum    safety for manned flight." Beginning with the first specifications
through the subsequent stages of design, development, and final qualifi-
cation, planning for manned missions became a mainline theme for
Rocketdyne engineers. Other engines in NASA's space program stemmed
from propulsion systems engineered for unmanned satellites or ballistic
missiles such as the Vanguard, Redstone, Atlas, and Thor. From the
start,   exceedingly                                  for the J-2 reflected the
                       stiff reliability specifications
                                                                             141
STAGES TO SATURN
142
                      UNCONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:                  RL-10   AND   J-2
                                                                                143
STAGES TO SATURN
144
                  UNCONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:                RL-10   AND   J-2
                                                                          145
STAGES TO SATURN
146
                        UNCONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:                 RL-10    AND   J-2
 hydrogen gas with a storage capacity of 0. 1 cubic meter. Gas from the
 hydrogen sphere started the gas generator and achieved rapid accelera-
 tion and operation from the start. This "gas-spin" start could be initiated
 at will during the flight, important for reignition of the S-IVB stage in
Earth parking orbit. The only requirement involved a brief cycle during
the engine run, in which hydrogen gas was tapped to recharge the
                  35
hydrogen sphere. The design of the hydrogen storage tank constituted
a unique feature of the J-2 engine: it incorporated a "tank within a tank,"
combining hydrogen storage with a helium storage tank. The helium,
required for the pneumatic control system, tended to vent off unless kept
under pressure at a low temperature. In a neat solution to the problem,
Rocketdyne designed the helium storage tank as an integral unit inside
the hydrogen start tank, and thereby saved space as well as weight. Both
tanks were filled on the ground prior to launch the outside tank with
                                         36
hydrogen, the inner tank with helium.
     The l'/2-pass fuel circuit permitted another design variation, in the
disposal of the exhaust gas from the turbopumps. The gas delivered
from the gas generator to the propellant turbopumps passed in sequence
through the hydrogen axial flow turbines, then through a duct into the
radial turbine of theLOX pump. The series arrangement yielded a very
high efficiency and permitted easy control of the thrust and mixture
ratios. Having already performed double duty in both the fuel and
oxidizer turbopumps, the turbine gas exhausted into the thrust chamber
to be used as fuel. In this way, the engine handled the turbine exhaust
very conveniently and enhanced the engine's specific impulse at the same
        37
time.
       The high speeds     at   which the J-2's moving parts functioned required
some  special lubricants, which were acquired from the propellants
themselves. Ball bearings in the turbopumps present special problems in
lubrication        particularly the super-cold   LH 2   pumps. Normal lubricating
oilsproved troublesome because of the extremely low temperatures of
cryogenic operation, so Rocketdyne built the LOX and LH 2 turbopumps
to have their ball bearings lubricated by the respective propellants. At
Ohio State University, Herrick Johnston first demonstrated the potential
of LH 2 lubricants. The use of cryogenic lubricants in the RL-10 paved the
way    for this lubrication in the J-2. 38
                                                                                147
STAGES TO SATURN
stage for the Saturn  V called for an application of 500 seconds, but each
engine possessed   a  minimum   usable life of 3750 seconds. Even so, the
testing program  often  forced the engines beyond this. L. F. Belew, MSFC
engine program manager,     characterized  the philosophy of "limit testing"
as a combination of requirements for manned flight and cost control. "A
major emphasis is placed on limits testing as a means of demonstrating
reliability and confidence without
                                   a prohibitively large test sample," he
              39
explained.
    Intensive engine testing, including tests on MSFC's new S-IVB test
stand in Huntsville, and flight rating tests of the 890 000-newton
(200 000-pound) thrust engine for the Saturn IB and Saturn V at Santa
Susanna Field Laboratory, continued throughout the summer of 1965.
The last of the stringent qualification tests of the J-2 engine occurred
from December 1965         into
                              January 1966, conforming very closely to
Belew's estimate.    The J-2 proved its ability to perform well over its
specified operational range. One engine ignited successfully in 30
successive firings, including five tests at full duration of 470 seconds
each. The total firing time of 3774 seconds represented a level of
accumulated operational time almost eight times greater than the flight
requirements. As successful single engine tests moved toward their
climax, integration tests of the propulsion system with the S-IVB acceler-
ated with the availability of more production engines. Time schedules for
testing the flight stages of the S-IVB became ever more pressing. The
first operational
                   flight, AS-201, was scheduled in early 1966 for the
Saturn IB using the S-IB first stage and the S-IVB as the second stage.
     At Sacramento, the first tests of S-IVB-201 in July 1966 were
inconclusive when a component malfunction in one of the pneumatic
consoles prematurely ended the test after a successful
                                                       propellant loading
and automatic countdown. Test conductors regained confidence on 8
August, when the S-IVB-201 performed beautifully on a full-duration
firing of 452 seconds. The test commanded extra attention because of the
first use of
               computers to control the entire operational sequence,
                                                                    40
including automatic checkout, propellant loading, and static firing. The
successful test was no fluke. On 26
                                    February 1966, AS-201 went through
a flawless launch.
     In July 1966, NASA confirmed J-2
                                          production contracts through
1968, by which time Rocketdyne agreed to finish deliveries of 155 J-2
engines. The new contract included an uprated model of the J-2 engine
with a thrust of 1 023 000 newtons (230 000
                                             pounds). Rocketdyne began
work on the uprated version in 1965 and delivered the first            to
                                                                  engine
148
                        UNCONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:             RL-10   AND   J-2
MSFC          for testing during the spring of 1966. Mission planners intended
to use the new engine in the second stage of the Saturn IB beginning with
AS-208, as well as the second and third stages of the Saturn V beginning
with AS-504. Meanwhile, an intensive test program continued. Following
a preliminary series of simulated altitude tests using Rocketdyne facili-
ties, a more stringent series of tests was conducted using the advanced
jackets sufficed for most of the liquid hydrogen hardware, and similar
treatment, or moisture-sealed insulation, worked for pump fittings and
ducts. The main         LH
                     2 inlet duct, however, presented a more intricate
challenge. The duct had to move with the gimbal action of the engine
through 10.5 degrees, maintaining a full flow of fuel all the while. With a
diameter of 20 centimeters, and a length of 53 centimeters, the duct also
experienced extension and compression of -11.4 centimeters, with a
                                                                           149
STAGES TO SATURN
supports. Top engine program managers from NASA agreed that the
150
                                     VEHICLE EFFECTIVITY
                                                                       ]               5*2081
SPECIFIC IMPULSE
                                  418MIN                   419MIN                      421MIN
  LB-SEC/LB               I
                                               ;
ENGINE WEIGHT
  BURNOUT                 |
                                  3.609LB          I
3,609LB ; 3,621LB
EXIT TO THROAT A 1
RATIO i
                              ;
                                  27-5 TO1
                                  27.5TO1                  27.5TOli27.5TOl
                                                           2
PROPELLANTS                   |
                                   UX&LMj2 LOX&lHjLOX&LH,
                                  LGX&LH
                                  LOX&LH   L
                                           LWAaLnjItv-'^ "-nj
                                                       ,
The amount of this gas exceeded the rate of flow designed into the
injector, and this impeded
                           the rate of flow of fuel downstream in the
system while the engine was starting.  To solve the problem, the designers
developed   the prechill sequence  for the chamber and pumps alike and
established temperature  condition limits for the engine before attempting a
start.In these and other engine difficulties, Marshall and Rocketdyne
applied all the latest analytical methods and computer programs. It still
came down to the issue of making an adjustment, however, and then
                                      45
trying it out to see what happened.
      Rocketdyne  officials hoped to utilize existing engine facilities to test
the J-2 engines  and components. The unusual characteristics of liquid
hydrogen engines generated an excess of problems in the test equipment
valves, transfer lines, and tanks designed for the earlier liquid oxygen
technology. To use LH 2 at -253C, the available equipment had to have
its materials rechecked for insulation, sealing, and embrittlement with
752
                    UNCONVENTIONAL CRYOGENICS:           RL-10   AND   J-2
(although the stainless steel outer jacket retained a bellows section for
thermal movement). Rocketdyne installed 8-centimeter and 9-centimeter
pipe sizes in runs of up to 370 meters and used some welded pipe of up to
25 centimeters in diameter. Technicians also perfected methods for
                                                                  46
reliable ship welding and field welds of Invar at the test sites.
development of the stages, and that the engine program often became
the pacing item. The Saturn program generally reflected this trend,
although at one point it was a stage, not an engine, that threatened to
disrupt the tight schedule of Apollo-Saturn.
            Building the Saturn                            V
   might seem logical to narrate the story of Saturn V's various stages
Itfrom the bottom up, beginning with the S-IC stage. However, the
stages  were not built that way. The Saturn V third stage, the S-IVB,
evolved  first, based on upper stages of the Saturn I and Saturn IB. As the
first large unitary Saturn tankage (not a cluster of individual tanks), a
rather detailed discussion in chapter 7 of some of the procedures used in
S-IV-IVB fabrication and manufacture eliminates repetitious discussion
of similar procedures for other stages in succeeding chapters.
     The S-IC and S-II stages, while sharing a common diameter, used
different propellants. Although S-II contracts were let prior to those of
the S-IC, the S-II became the pacing item in the Saturn program,
completing its firing tests later than the other components. Chapter 8
explores S-IC and S-II commonalities and contrasts, emphasizing the
imbroglio of the S-II program and its eventual recovery.
     Computer technology played a consistent role in the evolution of the
Saturn vehicles. Chapter 9 surveys computer activity from manufactur-
ing, through stage test, to launch. In flight, the computers of the
instrument unit guided and controlled the Saturn V, including the fiery
separation of Saturn V stages during their journey into space.
                                   155
                 From          the S-IV to the S-IVB
       upper stage of both the Saturn IB and Saturn V evolved from the
The
  upper stage of the Saturn  I. All three
                                          upper stages were manufactured
by Douglas  Aircraft Company,    used  liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen
as propellants, and shared the same basic design concepts and manufac-
turing techniques. The Saturn I upper stage (the S-IV) used a cluster of
six engines, but the Saturn IB and Saturn V upper stages (designated the
S-IVB for both versions) possessed a larger diameter and mounted a
single engine of different design. During one early period of Saturn
planning (about 1958 1959), the S-IV was planned as the fourth stage of
a vehicle known as the C-4, but the changes and deletions involving the
                                                                     1
original "C" series left the S-IV in a different role. Instead of entering
service as a fourth stage, the S-IV became the second stage of the Saturn
I.
   During late 1959 and early 1960, NASA began plans to name a major
contractor for the S-IV stage.
     Because the S-IV was the first major Saturn stage hardware to be
built   under   contract,   NASA      proceeded very        carefully.    The   situation    was
even more delicate because Wernher von Braun and the Army Ballistic
Missile Agency (ABM A) team had not yet been officially transferred
from the Army into NASA, although the                   ABMA group was to be deeply
                                                   Saturn upper stage.*
involved in the contractor selection process for the
NASA     Headquarters assiduously followed the negotiations.
    *
       Although NASA assumed technical direction of the Saturn program on 18 Nov. 1958,
administrative direction was not completely transferred by the Department of Defense until 16 Mar.
1960. On 1 July 1960, the von Braun team was
                                                  formally transferred to NASA and MSFC began
official operations.
                                              757
STAGES TO SATURN
                                           5
final contract for the                Douglas* and Convair had been the
                            S-IV stage.
leading contenders, and Glennan       finally based his decision on certain
subjective factors. The  findings of the  Source Selection Board tended to
give Convair   a slight edge  in technical  competence, although Glennan
remarked that "the Douglas proposal, in some ways, seemed more
imaginative." Convair, however, scored lower in the business and man-
agement areas. No matter who was chosen, Glennan said, minor short-
comings in either the business or the technical areas could be easily
corrected. Other reasons, therefore, favored Douglas.
     Glennan pointed out that Convair would have a continuing business
in liquid hydrogen rockets because of its own Centaur program. More-
over, the Centaur was ticketed for use in proposed Saturn vehicles as an
upper stage    called the S-V.Glennan apparently had a strong reservation
about giving Convair      the S-IV  stage as well, because "a monopolistic
position in this field seems   possible." In short, Glennan chose Douglas
because "broadening the industrial base in hydrogen technology is in the
                         6
best national interest."
     The choice of Douglas, and the reasons for that choice, stirred a
minor controversy. On 12 May, the Committee on Science and Astronautics,
House of Representatives, asked the General Accounting Office to
investigate NASA's selection of Douglas. The report of the General
Accounting Office, dated 22 June 1960, generally sustained Glennan's
statements on the matter and noted that his decision "was consistent with
the written presentation of the Source Selection Board and other related
documents." The report also supported the NASA position on problems
concerning        and other questions. 7
               logistics
     During May and June, NASA, Huntsville, and Douglas went ahead
with the negotiations that preceded the signing of a final contract.
Meeting two or three times a week on the West Coast, conferees
hammered out details of costs for planning, tooling, engineering, testing,
and manufacturing. A second group worked out details of technical
design and engineering and set up continuing working panels that
included both government and contractor counterparts. This combina-
tion of close collaboration and monitoring by NASA set the pattern for
                                                                      8
future relationships with Douglas, as well as other stage contractors. (For
details of NASA-contractor relationships, see chapter 9.) During the
    *In 1967, Douglas Aircraft Co. and the McDonnell Corp. merged, becoming the McDonnell
Douglas Corp., with headquarters in St. Louis, Mo. The former Douglas division in California,
responsible for the S-IV and S-IVB, became McDonnell Douglas
                                                              Astronautics Co. (MDAC). For
convenience, the term Douglas is used in the narrative.
                                                                                        159
STAGES TO SATURN
     In August 1960, NASA announced that the S-IV would use a cluster
                                         9
of four Pratt & Whitney rocket engines. When the development of the
Pratt & Whitney LR-1 19 engines ran into snags, MSFC officials began to
lean more and more to the idea of using six less powerful versions.
Moreover, the cluster of six engines opened the possibilities of raising the
payload capability and promised better inflight control. Finally, the
RL-10 type was adopted (see chapter 4). By May 1961, Pratt & Whitney
had put together final mockup of the RL-10 and shipped copies to both
Douglas and Convair for installation and interface compatibility checks.
     On 25 January 1962, NASA Headquarters confirmed the role of
MSFC as the lead center to proceed with the two-stage C-l and to design
and develop a three-stage vehicle, the C-5. Mission planners envisioned a
series of development flights, testing each stage in successive combina-
tions before a    full-dress flight test of the three-stage C-5 vehicles.
part of an interim Saturn vehicle, between the C-l          and the C-5. 11 The
new Saturn               designated C-1B, relied on a uprated version of
              class vehicle,
the original C-l     stage but included the S-IVB as the second stage.
                   first
     NASA acquired the S-IVB under a sole-source procurement con-
tract with the Douglas Aircraft
                                Company. Plans for this variation of the
S-IV stage began with an ad hoc working group established at MSFC in
August 1961, and NASA Headquarters approved Douglas as the sole-
source contractor in December. The space agency seemed somewhat
sensitive about the S-IVB contract, because there had been no bidders'
conference or active competition by other firms. NASA awarded the
contract to Douglas for reasons of cost and schedules: "The
                                                               similarity of
the S-IVB and S-IV stages permits the
                                         exploitation of both facilities and
technical skills of the contractor now
                                       developing the S-IV stage, resulting
in substantial savings in both time and
                                          money to NASA." In a memo to
Associate Administrator Robert Seamans, D. Brainerd Holmes stressed
the similarities in configurations which
                                         permitted use of the same tooling
and   materials, as well as facilities for checkout, static testing,   and captive
        12
firing.
    Mission planners at NASA saw a means to accelerate the
                                                                 Apollo
program by using the high-energy S-IVB stage of the C-1B to launch
manned, Earth-orbital missions with a full-scale Apollo spacecraft. The
160
                                             FROM THE       S-IV    TO THE           S-IVB
new  vehicle, launched with the instrument unit (IU) segment used on the
C-l, also provided opportunities to refine the maneuvers for the lunar
missions. The        NASA
                        announcement of the C-1B on 1 1 July 1962
included word that lunar orbit rendezvous (LOR) was the technique
chosen for the manned lunar landing missions with the Saturn C-5
launch vehicle. The S-IVB, with its capability for heavier payloads and
reignition for translunar injection, was an important element of the                     LOR
scheme.   The C-1B   offered a fruitful method to try out the critical
transposition maneuver, docking of the command and service modules
(CSM) and the lunar module (LM), and the translunar sequence of the
S-IVB upper stage. During the summer of 1962, Douglas complied with
MSFC directives to make the comparatively uncomplicated modifications
of the S-IVB to fly on the C-1B vehicle. Early in February 1963, the "C"
designation was dropped once and for all. The three Saturns now
became the Saturn I, Saturn IB, and Saturn V. 13
through the Mercury and Gemini programs, these boosters had not been
designed for such missions. Nor were they capable of orbiting the
manned payloads expected          Saturn program. For these reasons, a
                                 in the
162
                                        FROM THE      S-IV   TO THE    S-IVB
orbital  phase left the S-IVB, instrument unit, and Apollo spacecraft in an
Earth orbit of 185 kilometers, where it remained for about four and a
half hours, or time for three orbits of the Earth. Following the powered
flight, which consumed
                           about half of the propellant, the stage relied on
its auxiliary propulsion system during the orbital coast, to ensure proper
support for the extra four to five hours. On the other hand, the
"one-shot" launch had to be precisely plotted for liftoff at a fleeting
instant of time within a given month. Injection in a direct lunar trajectory
could take place only at a time when the Earth and the moon were so
aligned that the liftoff point was precisely opposite the moon. The LOR
sequence, incorporating a period of coasting, made liftoff much less
time-critical. The time of departure from Earth orbit was also less critical,
since the "launch window" in Earth orbit lasted about four hours and
recurred twice daily. Moreover, the extra time in Earth orbit permitted
more accurate tracking of the vehicle and allowed the mission controllers
to plot a far more accurate start of the "burn" for insertion into the lunar
transit trajectory. The Earth-orbital coast path of 185 kilometers represented
some compromises. Although higher orbits would have reduced
aerodynamic heating, the orbit chosen allowed better tracking and
             17
telemetry.
     Other considerations affecting the design of the S-IVB and            its
                                                                          163
STAGES TO SATURN
ticsof liquid hydrogen altered the apparent logic of tank location. The
                                     87 200 kilograms of LOX and 18 000
weight of the propellants included
kilograms of LH 2 (with some variations, depending
                                                           on mission require-
ments). Logically, the layman might     assume     that the  smaller LH 2 tank
should be placed on top of  the LOX   tank,  as  was  done   with the RP-1 fuel
and LOX in the S-IC first stage. The  volume     of the lighter  LH  2 was much
designers placed the LH 2   tank  in the  aft  position,   with  the  LOX    tank
above, LOX feed lines would be longer and would have to be run
through the interior of the LH 2 tank (with additional problems of
insulating the LOX lines from the colder liquid hydrogen). Longer LOX
lines would have to be mounted externally between the LOX tank and
the engines. Either solution carried a high weight penalty for long lines
and associated hardware. It made more sense to put the fuel tank
containing the LH 2 in the forward location, making it easier to route the
LH 2 feed lines internally around the smaller and more compact oxidizer
        18
tank.
       Onefurther difference characterized the S-IV and S-IVB in com-
parison to the only other significant rocket stage that burned liquid
hydrogen, the Centaur. The Centaur, like the Atlas, relied on internal
pressure for rigidity and stiffness of the tank walls. With no pressure, the
Centaur would buckle and collapse. The Saturn S-IV and S-IVB, like
other stages, evolved as self-supporting structures that gave added
confidence in the man-rating requirements. Furthermore, the various
stresses placed on the oversized stages during erection and transporta-
tion to the launch pad, as well as the time-consuming checkout and
                                   19
countdown, were more tolerable. The S-IV and S-IVB structures owed
much to an earlier Douglas rocket, the Thor.
     Although the S-IV relied on six RL-10 liquid hydrogen engines and
the S-IVB mounted only one J-2, the choice of propellants remained the
same. The S-IVB carried more propellant for a longer time, and the
mission of the Saturn V, calling for restart in orbit, imposed some new
design requirements. Stage interfaces in different Saturn vehicles required
                                                20
different skirt        and
                       interstage designs.    The stages, however, were
essentially the same. The delivery of the first S-IVB flight stage to          NASA
in 1965 was the culmination of a
                                   single thread of the story of the design,
fabrication,       and manufacture of the S-IV and S-IVB          liquid   hydrogen
upper        stages.
164
                                          FROM THE     S-IV   TO THE    S-IVB
                                                                          765
STAGES TO SATURN
plants of its kind in the United States. As for the other major stage
contractors, Boeing operated out of the converted Michoud facility
owned by the government, and North American used a mixed facility at
Seal Beach. Executive and administrative offices owned by North Ameri-
can Rockwell were across the street from assembly and checkout areas
that   were leased from NASA. 23
       The designers of the domes  for the S-IV and S-IVB settled on a true
hemispherical shape.   This   design meant the domes were deeper and
increased the overall weight of the stage (in contrast to the elliptical
domes of the S-II stage). Douglas accepted this penalty in exchange for
the extra strength inherent in the design, the possibility of a smaller
diameter for the stage, and the resulting simplicity in tooling. The domes
were composed of nine triangular segments, or gores, that were stretch-
formed over special dies to accurate contours. With multiple contours,
the requirements for partial waffle structuring of the
                                                             gore segments
could not be met by the mechanical milling. Instead, Douglas used
chemical milling for this task, with masked segments dunked in large vats
of chemicals for carefully calculated periods of time to remove certain
areas of the aft LOX dome to a
                                  specified depth. Workers next moved the
separate gore segments    to  a special meridian welding jig for the auto-
matic welding sequence (under a plastic tent for cleanliness) that
                                                                     joined
together the various segments of the aft and forward domes.
    Technicians at Santa Monica performed the
                                                        demanding job of
welding   the  segments  of  the  common    bulkhead  and   propellant tank
domes. The triangular segments, which look like
                                                     pieces of orange peel,
were placed into a welding jig for what
                                             appeared to be a very simple
operation. Not so. "We cut our eye teeth on this phase of manufactur-
166
                                      FROM THE      S-IV   TO THE   S-IVB
bulkhead was designed to take the thermal stresses and reverse pres-
sures, as well as to survive a major loss of pressure from either side.
Douglas designer and engineer Ted Smith emphasized that the design of
the common bulkhead originated with Douglas, independent from
MSFC. Originally conceived for the S-IV, the bulkhead was adapted to
the second-generation S-IVB with only minor changes for larger diame-
                     2n
ter and attachment.
     The curved, concave aluminum shells were quite thin: 0.813
millimeters for the forward sheet and 1.4 millimeters for the aft sheet,
with a 6.63-meter diameter for the S-IVB. Working with such large
                                                                     167
STAGES TO SATURN
168
Top       S-IVB tank skins, the basic structural walls of this rocket
      left,
       are  milled on the inside in a wafflelike
stage,                                            pattern to reduce
weight  while retaining most of the structural strength. Top  center,
the dome of the tank is being fitted with gores before welding.
                                                                Top
right, the two dome sections of the S-IVB 's common bulkhead are
being precisely fitted before insulation is applied between them.
Above, the Douglas Airplane Co. facility at Huntington Beach,
California, is fabricating and assembling the S-IVB stages. At left
are major structural components of the S-IVB; at              is a
                                                              upper   left
complete hydrogen-oxygen tank; in the right foreground a straight-
sided Saturn IB interstage is flanked by a          skirts, with a
                                                      pair of aft
forward       skirt to the rear.   Below,   left,
                                                    shows production in full
swing: in towers at right and center, stages are being checked
before shipment to Sacramento for firing tests; in the left tower, a
tank section is being cleaned before insulation is
                                                   applied; in lower
right, a tank is being given its final interior work and the
completed tank at left is about to be hoisted into the tower from
which the photos were taken. Below, right, the intricate
                                                           job of
applying insulation to the interior of the liquid hydrogen tank
proceeds, as another individually numbered insulation tile comes
off the conveyor      belt.
STAGES TO SATURN
milling machine.
     Inside the labyrinth of the Vehicle Tower Complex at Huntington
Beach, the fabricated components of the S-IVB finally reached the nexus
of their journey, and emerged as a complete rocket stage. The Vehicle
Tower Complex reminded the observer of the Vehicle Assembly Build-
ing at Cape Kennedy. Although smaller in size, the complex had the
same immensity of scale. It was a single building, 36 meters high,
enclosing a total of 2230 square meters. The interior had provisions for
six large bays, each capable of holding a complete S-IVB vehicle, with two
overhead cranes (10.1 and 20.2 metric tons) to swing the stages to the
required station. Basically, the bays were internal compartments to house
a series of assembly towers, with movable work platforms at various levels
in each. The complex included a pair of
                                           assembly and welding towers, a
tower for hydrostatic testing, another for cleaning and degreasing, and a
final pair of checkout towers. To control and monitor the activities of
each tower, an elaborate vehicle checkout control room adjoined the
complex.
      The assembly of   the complete vehicle in one of the assembly and
welding   towers involved  the joining of the complete LOX tank and LH 2
cylinder.  The steps to accomplish the task were complex, requiring both
inside and outside welding, with the stage in upright, as well as inverted,
positions. The tank assembly techniques relied on many special maneu-
vers, including the mating of the LH 2 tank cylinder and the LOX tank.
With the LOX tank in position at the bottom of the assembly tower and
the LH 2 cylinder hanging overhead, workmen heated the base of the LH 2
tank cylinder, expanding it slightly. Then the heated cylinder was slipped
down over the LOX tank, creating a close "interference fit." When cool,
the LH 2 cylinder and LOX tank presented a minimum
                                                          gap for welding
and enhanced the prospects of a high-quality weld with minumum
distortion. The joining of the LH 2 forward dome and tank
                                                             cylinder (with
the assembly inverted) required special care to ensure
                                                           precise vertical
alignment. Douglas relied on a special support fixture at the top of the
assembly to bring the dome and cylinder together. Automatic controls
using beams of light verified alignment between the top and bottom of
              28
the assembly.
     During these final sequences, careful x-ray- tests   and   a penetrant dye
170
                                         FROM THE      S-IV   TO THE      S-IVB
pecking at the seeds, the pigeons sat quite still for a time, then finally flew
off, never to return. Cheerfully, the maintenance crews refreshed the
seed supply every 60 days just to make sure their feathered foes kept
their distance.
     Back in one of the assembly towers, the S-IVB's related structural
assemblies (forward skirt, aft skirt, interstage, and thrust structure) were
mated to the tankage. The last stop was one of the checkout towers,
where the J-2 engine was installed, and technicians concluded the last
installations and checkout of the vehicle. Aboard a special dolly, the
S-IVB rolled back to the main assembly building for painting. Finally,
                                                                           777
STAGES TO SATURN
      The  odyssey of the S-IVB third stage through the Vehicle Tower
Complex included one major interruption the installation in a nearby
                                                 insulation. This special
building of the liquid hydrogen tank's internal
installation process required a considerable amount  of individual fitting
by hand, and the search for the proper insulation materials absorbed
many months of time and effort. The story of LH 2 insulation for the S-IV
and IVB typifies many of the unexpected development problems that
cropped up during the Saturn program, and illustrates the considerable
amount of tedious handwork that went into sophisticated Saturn rockets.
     At the start of the S-IV program in 1960, the decision to use liquid
hydrogen in the upper tank presented designers with a formidable
insulation problem. The LH 2 tank was designed to hold 229 000 liters
(63 000 gallons) of LH 2 filling 296 cubic meters and weighing 17 000
                         ,
772
                                             FROM THE       S-IV   TO THE   S-IVB
(  423F) came into contact with tank walls at warmer ambient air
temperatures. If insulation was external, it was feared that the LH 2 would
create severe thermal stress and potential damage to the tank walls as it
was pumped in, because the aluminum walls possessed a very high
coefficient of expansion. Even if no serious weakening was caused by the
                                                                             173
STAGES TO SATURN
finally developed for the S-IV and S-IVB, an LH 2 tank topped off at 100
percent capacity before launch needed constant replenishment, since the
boil-off required compensation at rates up to 1 100 liters (300 gallons) per
minute.
      Even with the tank finally filled, the design team foresaw addi-
tional problems with external insulation. If it became damaged and the
metal underneath was exposed, that extremely cold area would tend to
pull air into the damaged section.   The air would liquefy and freeze,
making a larger cryogenic surface,   which would attract even more air,
liquefaction, and icing. The whole process threatened to create an
unacceptable situation of thermal losses around the damaged area,
thermal instability, and a hazardous problem during ground operations.
     The repeated fill-and-drain operations associated with testing and
boil-off conditions    raised   the requirements not only for insulation
materials, but also for adhesives. When Douglas began its catalog of
materials and alternative modes of installation, no satisfactory adhesives
could be found to bond external insulation to the outside walls of a tank
filled with cryogenic fuel. On the inside, however, where the fuel made
contact with insulation and not metal, the insulation created a warmer
bond line where it touched the interior wall surface. In this more
congenial environment, available adhesives would work. Even the plans
for the test-firing operations of the S-IV
                                              program presented special
problems to be solved. Because of the S-IV's volume of    LH 2 fuels, a new
system had to be devised to store large quantities of liquid hydrogen for
repeated test firings and to transfer it to the stages set up in the test
       34
stand.
      The process offrequently repeated testing and acceptance checks, as
well as final loading prior to launch,
                                       encouraged Douglas engineers to
shift toward internal insulation as a means of
                                                   minimizing potential
damage to the insulation from normal external              For
                                                   handling.      example,
external insulation    seemed   susceptible to degradation during the han-
174
                                         FROM THE       S-IV   TO THE    S-IVB
dling and transportation of the vehicle through the test and checkout
phase, to say nothing of the degradation and cracking to be expected
from atmospheric exposure as the rocket stage moved through these
procedures and into the long transportation phase from California to the
Cape for launch. Testing programs indicated that interior mounting
yielded extra margins of reliability even if an accidental break in the
insulation materials occurred. The cryogenic liquid coming into contact
with the warmer tank wall became gaseous, and itself acted as insulation
                                                                  35
against further contact, thus reducing the thermodynamic loss.       After
weighing  the alternatives, internal insulation was confidently chosen for
the S-IV stage.
quest for the perfect material, available in quantity. As Ted Smith put it,
                                                 3
"We   setout to manufacture synthetic balsa."
     After conducting tests of a number of potential materials, Douglas
technicians finally devised their own insulation. To form workable
masses of insulation material, they contrived a three-dimensional matrix
of fiberglass threads, woven onto a boxlike form reminiscent of a child's
weaving frame top to bottom as well as back and forth. After it was
strung, the matrix frame was placed in a mold, and polyurethane foam
was poured in and cured. The result was a reinforced foam block, 30
centimeters square and 20 centimeters deep, which could be sawed into a
pile of flat plaques, then machined to the required convex and concave
contours appropriate for the interior of the S-IV liquid hydrogen tank.
The recessed waffle pattern construction of the tank's interior required
special attention in shaping each tile to fit. Using a machine tool with
custom fixtures and    cutters, operators recessed    edges and cut steps on
                                                                           775
STAGES TO SATURN
each   tile.   The  then slipped into the appropriate indentation in the
                     tiles
waffle pattern and still covered the notched step cut of each adjoining tile
for a smooth surface. The waffle pattern included some variations in
design, requiring each of the
                                4300 tiles to be numbered and individually
                                                     37
                                           the tank.      In cutting the tiles,
shaped to its unique position inside
                                   of                 the   saw cuts left small
Douglas discovered a true     case    serendipity
ends of the fiberglass    threads  sticking  out  around     the edges, which
                                                                           38
served admirably to engage     the adhesive   as each  tile was installed.
       An
        insulation facility provided an environmentally controlled work
area during the installation process. Technicians with protective gloves
and shoe covers entered the tank through an opening in the forward
section, then began laying tile in the aft area near the common bulkhead,
working their way back to the entry point. The numbered tiles, attached
to a conveyor belt, were coated with adhesive by an automatic applicator
set up in an adjoining room, then traveled via the conveyor into the tank
to be affixed "by the numbers."
     During this procedure, the installation facility's environmental con-
trol equipment maintained the tank's interior temperature at 13C to
18C (55F to 65F) to extend the adhesive's effective life. Once a
section had been completely tiled, workers applied a special fiberglass
cloth liner, then retired while a vacuum bag pressed the tile further into
the waffle recesses and the tank temperature rose to 43C (1 10F) to set
the adhesive. Machinery then rolled the tank around its axis to a new
position, and another installation cycle began. Final steps in the operation
included application of a fiberglass cloth (impregnated with resin) as a
sealant over the insulation tiles, another curing period, and a concluding
cure cycle at 71C (160F) for 24 hours. Using mounts that remained
exposed above the insulation, fitters completed installation of valves,
helium bottles, and other hardware before a last cleaning cycle in the
degreasing tower. After the sensitive fuel-level probes were inserted,
technicians sealed off the fuel tank at the top with a big, circular piece of
tank skin aptly called the "dollar hatch." 39
     Throughout the Saturn program, an observer could count on the
recurrence of a familiar refrain use as much existing technology as
possible as design studies for a new stage or phase of the program
began. When internal insulation was first developed for the S-IV, it was
designed for a flight duration of no more than 10 minutes. With the
acceptance of the LOR mode for the manned Apollo mission, the S-IVB,
as the third stage, had a
                           planned flight time of up to 4.5 hours, with
enough LH 2 propellant for the second burn for translunar injection.
This fact presented an obvious question: could an insulation
                                                                 technique
for a 10-minute mission serve as well for a mission
                                                        lasting 4.5 hours?
Would designers and engineers have to repeat the process of selection
and fabrication of a new insulation material? Fortunately, engineers and
technicians found that the LH 2 insulation as
                                              originally developed for the
176
                                        FROM THE          S-IV   TO THE   S-IVB
S-IV could be easily adapted to the S-IVB. The LH 2 tanks of the S-IVB
were designed large enough to compensate for the anticipated boil-off
losses in flight, and only minor changes were required in fabricating
                                                     40
internal insulation for the   newer third   stage.
purge and  prechill cycle. For launch, the tank was filled in four separate
phases, calculated to accommodate the interaction of cryogenic propel-
lants with the tank walls and associated equipment. The slow fill
sequence, at 1800 liters per minute (500 gallons per minute), raised the
propellant volume to 5 percent capacity, and the fast fill sequence, at
3600   liters per minute (1000 gallons per minute), continued to 98
percent of the tank's capacity. The tank was topped off at to 1 100 liters
per minute (0 to 300 gallons per minute) and replenished as required at
to 1 10 liters per minute (0 to 30 gallons per minute) until launch. A single
fill-and-drain line could fulfill all requirements and disconnect automati-
cally at the time of launch. The fuel tank of the S-IVB carried 229 000
liters (63 000
                 gallons) of liquid hydrogen. Like the LOX tank, the LH 2
tank required purge, chilldown, and fill in four stages: slow fill, fast fill,
slow fill to capacity, and replenish. Its fill and drain connection also
                                         41
automatically disconnected at liftoff.
      The pressurization of each propellant tank during the boost and
restart phases not only enhanced propellant feed to the engine, but also
helped the stage withstand bending moments and other flight loads.
When Douglas designed the Thor, shortages in helium supply forced the
company to use nitrogen for pressurizing the tanks. However, the appeal
of helium's greater volumetric characteristics when heated, and its later
                                                                           777
STAGES TO SATURN
enough to maintain pressure during liftoff and boost, until the J-2 engine
started up. At this point, the fuel propellant
                                               pressurization system relied
on gaseous hydrogen bled directly from the engine system. During
orbital coast, the fuel tank pressure was maintained
                                                      by LH 2 boil-off, with
178
                                                                       S-IVB STAGE
SATURN IB SATURN V
 1.   FORWARD      SKIRT STRUCTURE      8.   ELECTRICAL MODULE PANEL                     15.   PRESSURIZATION LINE                   22.   ULLAGE ROCKET
2.    P.U.   PROBE (HYDROGEN)           9.   ANTENNA-RANGE SAFETY                        16.   APS MODULE                            23.   AMBIENT HELIUM SPHERES
3.    HYDROGEN TANK                    10.   COLD HELIUM SPHERES                         17.   INSTRUMENTATION PROBE (LOX)           24.   LOX FEED   LINE
4.    ANTI-SLOSH BAFFLE                11.   TUNNEL                                      18.   RETRO ROCKET                          25.   ENGINE RESTART SPHERE
5.    IOX TANK                         12.   LOWER UMBILICAL PANEL                       19.    HYDROGEN FEED LINE                   26.   AFT INTERSTAGE STRUCTURE
6.    THRUST STRUCTURE                13.    AFT INTERSTAGE                              20.    HYDROGEN VENT
7.    J-2ENGINE                       14.    INSTRUMENTATION PROBE (HYDROGEN)            21.    P.U.   PROBE (LOX)
                                                               IVB DIFFERENCES
                                                                SATURN          IB VS     SATURN V
                                                                                        FORWARD              SKIRT
                                                                         SATURN   IB   150 IBS LIGHTER       -   LIGHTER   PAYLOAD
                                                                                               -AFT SKIRT
                                                                        SATURN    IB   500 LBS LIGHTER       -   LIGHTER   PAYLOAD
                                                                                 PROPULSION SYSTEM
                                                                       SATURN IB 1500 LBS LIGHTER - LESS HELIUM STORAGE
                                                                       REQUIRED. ENGINE WILL NOT BE RESTARTED IN ORBIT.
                                                                                           INTERSTAGE
                                                                       SATURN IB 1300 LBS LIGHTER - 260 INCH DIAMETER.
                                                                        SATURN V FLARED FROM 260" DIA. TO 396" DIA.
                                                                     NOTE
STAGES TO SATURN
repressurized the     LH
                      2 tank simultaneously  with the  LOX  tank. Once the
                                              LH
J-2 engine reached steady-state operation, 44 2 pressures reverted back
to gaseous hydrogen bled from the engine.
     The J-2 engine created one unique problem for the S-IVB stage: the
"chilldown" cycle prior to engine start. As part of the propellant system,
the S-IVB stage included the chilldown sequence to induce cryogenic
temperatures in the     LOXfeed system and J-2   LOX turbopump assembly
before both the first J-2 burn and the restart operation in orbit. This
process enhanced reliable engine operation and avoided the unwelcome
prospect of pump cavitation, which might have caused the engine to run
dangerously rough. On command from the instrument unit, a               LOX
bypass valve opened and an electrical centrifugal pump, mounted in the
LOX   tank, began to circulate the oxidizer through the feed lines, the
turbopump assembly, and back into the main       LOX  tank. This chilldown
sequence began before liftoff and continued through to boost phase,
right up to the time of J-2 ignition. The equipment operated again
during orbital coast, anticipating the second burn of the J-2 for the
translunar trajectory, and a concurrent sequence ensured proper chilldown
for the LH 2 feed lines and turbopump assembly. The S-II second stage
used a similar operation. 45
180
                                         FROM THE        S-IV   TO THE   S-IVB
                                                                            181
STAGES TO SATURN
182
                                       FROM THE      S-IV   TO THE     S-IVB
    No   Saturn launch vehicle was ever lost during a flight mission. The
phenomenal    success of the Saturn program probably owed most to two
basic philosophies: (1) the stringent reliability and quality assurance
programs during manufacture, and (2) exhaustive ground testing. Emil
Hellebrand, of MSFC's Science and Engineering Laboratory, stressed the
significance and economy of comprehensive testing at a meeting of the
NASA Science and Technology Advisory Committee in           Houston   in   June
1964. At that time, the Saturn I had completed six flights, including two
launches with the S-IV second stage and its advanced liquid hydrogen
engines. Aside from a minimum of problems, the 100-percent record of
success vindicated the thoroughness of the drawn-out testing program,
and Hellebrand advocated similar stringent programs for the succeeding
generations of Saturn vehicles.     "Money spent on     well   planned and
                                                                           183
STAGES TO SATURN
184
                                         FROM THE      S-IV   TO THE     S-IVB
given extra scrutiny and analysis. In a countdown for the test firing of an
S-IV all-systems vehicle at SACTO on 24 January 1964, the vehicle
exploded and burned. Once before, large quantities of LOX-LH 2 propel-
lants had exploded, but that had been at several thousand meters during
the first Centaur launch, and the incident had not lent itself to close
observation and evaluation. So the incident at SACTO was carefully
scrutinized. W. R. Lucas and J. B. Gayle, both of MSFC, headed the
investigating team of 1 1 members from Douglas and NASA. They traced
the cause to an overpressurized    LOX   tank. At the time of the accident,
tape  records  showed    the pressure to be considerably above the design
limits of the S-IV tank. Watching films taken during the test sequence,
the investigators spotted a rupture in the peripheral area of the common
bulkhead, and the nearly instantaneous flash of the explosion. The         LH
                                                                           2
tank in all probability was ruptured within milliseconds of the      LOXtank
break. Previously, engineers had possessed no real data on the             TNT
equivalent of LOX-LH 2 explosions. The examination by the Lucas and
Gayle team had special significance for its acquisition of hard data, useful
                                                                       54
in future design of test sites and installations for maximum safety.
     In spite of the test accident, NASA officials decided to go ahead with
the launch of SA-5 on 29 January 1964. Because the recent S-IV test
stage explosion was caused by inadvertent overpressure of the        LOX
                                                                       tank,
mission planners conjectured that the SA-5 launch could reasonably
proceed, with special attention to  LOX  tank pressures during countdown
at   Cape Kennedy. The launch and subsequent         Saturn   I   launches were
successful.
     As the Saturn IB and S-IVB also got under way, Douglas began
fabrication of the first flight version in September 1964. In addition to
changes in some of the electronics systems, the basic evolution of the
                                                                           185
STAGES TO SATURN
S-IVB from the second stage of the Saturn IB      to the third stage   of the
Saturn   V involved interface requirements with the larger diameter of the
Saturn   V second stage and the controls to ensure the restart of the J-2
engine for the translunar trajectory burn.
                                            The S-IVB third stage profited
heavily  from  S-IVB  second-stage battleship tests. The tests went well
with one catastrophic exception. Just as the S-IV test program experi-
enced the loss of a complete stage, the S-IVB test program also lost a
stage. This time it was a flight stage,
                                        S-IVB-503.
     With the S-IVB-503 in position at Test Stand Beta III at SACTO,
the Saturn V's third stage was scheduled for acceptance testing on 20
January 1967. The terminal countdown went perfectly, but about 150
seconds into the simulated mission, and prior to stage ignition, the stage
countdown was aborted because of a faulty computer tape mechanism.
The Douglas crew successfully corrected the computer difficulty, recycled
the test, and began again. With the terminal countdown once more
unwinding, all systems reported normal. Eleven seconds before the
simulated liftoff occurred, however, the stage abruptly exploded in a
fiery blast of smoke and debris. Most of the stage was blown completely
out and away from the test stand, with only jagged shards of metal left
hanging. Adjacent service structures lost roofs and windows, and the
nearby Beta II stand was so severely damaged that it was shut down.
Within three days of the incident, another special investigation team
convened   at   SACTO   to analyze the  probable cause.
      The group    finally traced the source of the explosion to one of the
eight ambient-temperature      helium  storage spheres located on the thrust
structure of the J-2 engine. The exploding sphere ruptured the propel-
lant fill lines, allowing liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen to mix and
ignite, setting off an explosion that wrecked the stage. Further analysis
showed that the sphere had been welded with pure titanium weld
material, rather than the alloy material specified. The helium sphere and
the weld seam had been previously tested to withstand extremely high
overpressures, but repeated tests on the sphere prior to the acceptance
firing sequence had created the weakness that ultimately resulted in
disintegration of the sphere and destruction of the stage. With this
information in hand, Douglas and NASA personnel agreed on revised
welding specifications and quality control for the helium spheres. Replace-
ment spheres were built in-house at Douglas from then on. 55
     The loss of S-IVB-503 illustrated the ever-present probability of
human error. More stringent procedures on the production line could
help avert such problems, and NASA planners also hoped to achieve
high reliability in launch operations through the use of fully automated
checkout, countdown, and launch. With the introduction of automated
checkout, at least the final moments before launch were completely
insulated from human foibles. Developed in parallel with the
                                                                 production
of the first flight stages of the S-IVB, automatic checkout was
                                                                    inaugu-
186
                                                  FROM THE   S-IV   TO THE   S-IVB
rated with the full-duration acceptance test firing of the S-IVB flight
stage for launch vehicle AS-201 (the two-stage Saturn IB). At SACTO on
8 August 1965, a Douglas news release announced the milestone: "The
full-duration acceptance test firing of the first S-IVB flight stage marked
the first time that a fully automatic system was used to perform the
complete checkout, propellant loading and static firing of a space
vehicle." The burn of the S-IVB-201 stage lasted 452 seconds, and the
automatic checkout equipment not only manipulated the static firing but
also performed all the intricate operations for initial checkout of the
                                                                         56
stage at Huntington Beach, as well as the postfiring checkout at SACTO.
The static test of S-IVB-201 was a test of men as well as machines. All the
Douglas personnel were keenly anxious to have a successful demonstra-
tion of both the flight stage and the checkout equipment, and the end of
the test uncapped many weeks of keyed-up emotions. A group of gleeful
technicians began tossing their cohorts into the waters of a nearby pond
and, in an exuberant finale, included a waitress from one of the
cafeterias, along with an unsuspecting sales representative who happened
                                   57
to be visiting the SACTO facility.
188
                                          FROM THE     S-IV   TO THE        S-IVB
he had to fight hard to keep the Douglas S-IV from looking like another
Centaur. Nevertheless, Wilson affirmed the cooperation of Convair and
especially appreciated the collaboration of Pratt & Whitney technical
representatives in establishing the different
                                                 RL-10 format for the S-IV
         60
stage.
      Ted  Smith, another leading Douglas engineer, was less willing to
acknowledge a debt to Centaur. Douglas gained no substantial design
factors from Convair, he explained, primarily because the S-IV stage was
a much larger and more complex rocket system. The Centaur was closer
to the missile experience of its creator, Convair, and also to its immediate
predecessor, the Atlas. Atlas and Centaur parallels were evident in the
thin-skinned, pressurized-tank concept, as well as the basic philosophy of
the design of the common bulkhead in each. At Douglas, the S-IV design
absorbed the propellants, engine system, and even the common bulkhead
concept, but the Centaur and S-IV structures had marked differences.
The S-IV was much more akin to Douglas's earlier experience with the
Thor vehicle in terms of structural design materials and fabrication of
the tankage. Moreover, the Centaur was a comparatively small vehicle.
The S-IV was rather large, for its time, and the tankage concept was
                                              61
extrapolated from the Thor development.          Even though the Centaur
also featured a  common    bulkhead   separating LH 2 and LOX within the
same tankage structure,   Hal  Bauer   noted the different S-IV honeycomb
design. This feature relied on prior Douglas applications in aircraft wing
panels and some phases of earlier missile design, although the extent of
the   honeycomb   installation in a   concave form was unique for     its   time,
Bauer pointed   out.
      Thesize of the original S-IV was significant but largely overshadowed
in lightof subsequent evolution of the Saturn V stages, the S-IC and the
S-II. Itshould be remembered that the Saturn I and Saturn IB, with the
S-I and S-IB first stages respectively, relied on the somewhat makeshift
                                                                             189
STAGES TO SATURN
Earth orbit of the vital payload; then, a second burn for the translunar
trajectory. This was the role
                               of the eventual Saturn V third stage, the
S-IVB, whose technology sprang from the recent technological past.
"Just as Thor technology led us to the S-IV," Hal Bauer wrote, "the S-IV
led to the S-IVB." The technological knowledge and development
experience came from the half-dozen S-IV stages of the Saturn I
program. The S-IV and S-IVB possessed the same basic design funda-
mentals, including internal insulation, the forward and aft domes, and
the common bulkhead. S-IVB manager, Roy Godfrey, also underscored
the experience with the S-IV that established high NASA confidence in
its successor. "Of
                   prime importance has been the opportunity to observe
and analyze the performance of the S-IV stage," Godfrey stated, "which
formed the foundation upon which the S-IVB detailed design was built."
,,
      In comparing the S-IV to the S-IVB, there was a strong consensus
among those who worked on both that the 'more advanced' S-IVB was,
nevertheless, simpler. The earlier upper stage, with its cluster of six
engines, created more design tangles than the single-engine S-IVB, even
though the latter had to have the capability to restart in space. Some of
the instrumentation for the S-IVB was more sophisticated, but aside
from the engine, there were no major differences between the two. The
electronics, including the circuitry and design for the propellant utiliza-
tion probe, for example, passed easily from the S-IV to the S-IVB. 62
      This fortunate evolutionary advantage was not the case in other
Saturn V stages. The S-IC first stage and the S-II second stage shared a
common diameter, but there the resemblance stopped. They were built
by different contractors, used different propellant systems, and had
different mission requirements and development histories.
190
             The Lower        Stages: S-IC              and    S-II
         lower stages for the Saturn   I   and Saturn   IB, designed   and   built
The
  for Earth-orbital operations, traced their ancestry back to the Juno V.
Saturn  and IB technology was characterized by the "bargain basement"
         I
                                       797
STAGES TO SATURN
192
                                   THE LOWER STAGES:        S-IC   AND   S-II
                                                                         193
STAGES TO SATURN
point for the S-IC, with the Saturn Booster Branch, under George H.
Stoner, located there. From Michoud, Stoner presided over several
far-flung elements. In Seattle, the company's home office, Boeing
personnel carried out engineering and research support for Saturn, such
as wind tunnel studies and other specialized engineering data. At Boeing's
Wichita plant, the heavy tooling for Michoud was prepared, and
subassemblies used in making up the tankage and other components of
the booster were fabricated.
     Michoud itself operated under Richard H. Nelson, with four sec-
tions for operations, quality and reliability assurance, engineering, and
booster test. Engineering and manufacturing procedures were also laid
out and coordinated with MSFC, covering a multitude of items, ranging
from accidents, to test procedures, to the controlled use of precious
metals, to "unplanned event reports." MSFC received many volumes of
company reports, formal and informal, regarding the progress and
problems of both the S-IC stage and the Michoud operations. Annual
progress reports to the Marshall center summed up company activities.
Topics included road construction; lighting in conference rooms; electri-
cal troubles in the S-IC lifting derricks; and changes in stage design, test
stands, and production. The company also reported on its special
training programs for new employees in some of the esoteric arts of
welding large space vehicles, radiographic inspection, and several varied
courses in a    number of    specialized skills for production of booster
           4
rockets.
        This unusually intertwined work between government and contrac-
tor    prompted Stoner at one point to ask von Braun, somewhat plaintive-
ly,   why pick on Boeing? Why not allow the company to forge ahead on its
own, like Douglas and North American? MSFC stemmed from the
Redstone Arsenal, and MSFC managers intended to maintain an in-
house capability. As von Braun once explained, contractors might
 present beautifully turned out pieces of sample hardware, expounding
 the virtues of exotic lightweight alloys and advanced
                                                       welding technology.
 MSFC remained skeptical. Highly finished work on small samples was
one thing. What about welding very large, oversized segments together
where alignment and integrity of weld were very tricky to achieve? MSFC
wanted to maintain its expertise, to make sure that alloys and welds
would really work before the manufacturer began production. In this
respect, Matt Urlaub, MSFC's manager for the S-I stage, suggested
additional reasons for staying close to
                                            Boeing. All of Marshall's stage
contracts went to companies accustomed to
                                                 working under Air Force
              a  situation that      the
jurisdiction,                   gave     companies considerable latitude in
194
                                   THE LOWER STAGES:           S-IC   AND   S-II
                                                                            195
STAGES TO SATURN
     As     MSFC
               finished using the initial batch of tooling equipment, it was
sent on to Michoud for Boeing's subsequent use there, so that portions of
several stages were under construction at the same time. Approximately
7 to 9 months were required to fabricate and assemble the tanks, the
longest lead-time items, and about
                                      14 months for the complete assembly
of an S-IC. For its first unit, Boeing built a ground test dynamics model,
the S-IC-D, giving the company production team at Michoud some
experience   before starting on its first flyable booster. The S-IC-D was
planned to carry one genuine engine and four simulated engines. After
shipment to Huntsville, the plan was to join this first stage with the S-II
and   S-I   VB   for   dynamic   tests   of the   total vehicle "stack" in a test facility at
MSFC. One other            test unit was          produced at Michoud a full-sized
dummy model            of the S-IC stage, billed as the largest         mockup in the
world. Built of metal, wood, fiberglass, etc., the                mockup was primarily
used to help fix the sizes and shapes of parts, test the angles of tubes and
lengths, and see where wire bundles would run.
      Because Chrysler produced the last Saturn I and Saturn IB first
stages at Michoud, Boeing had to share the facility, but took 60 percent of
the available space for the larger S-IC stage. The girth of the first stage
also dictated removal of some of the overhead trusses and air conditioning
ducts to allow a 12.2-meter clearance for fabrication of the stages. This
left a slim 0.6-meter margin for the S-IC's 1 1.6-meter-diameter assembly
fixture.
    In addition, the heavy tooling required for the S-IC necessitated
reinforcement of some parts of the floor. Boeing made another notable
addition to the Michoud facility with the addition of a high bay area for
assembly of S-IC components. In the early stages of talks on S-IC
production, the question of horizontal as opposed to vertical assembly of
the tanks  and components came up. The vertical assembly mode was
selected,  even though a new high-bay area was required, because
horizontal assembly posed problems in maintaining accuracy of joints in
the heavy, but thin-walled tanks. In vertical assembly, gravity held the
huge parts together, although a 198-metric-ton crane was required to
hoist the parts atop each other, and to lower the
                                                  completed booster back
                                                   6
to the horizontal for final finishing.
    Major components for the S-IC included the thrust structure, fuel
                                                    7
                     oxygen tank, and forward skirt. As with nearly
tank, intertank, liquid
every other major segment of the towering Saturn V, these items were
elephantine in their proportions.
    The S-IC thrust structure absorbed the punishment of five F-l
engines at full throttle and redistributed the forces into uniform loading
around the base of the rocket. The thrust structure also provided
196
197
STAGES TO SATURN
presence of four engine fairings and fins at the base of the S-IC and
mounted on the exterior of the thrust structure. The fins added
considerable stability to the vehicle, and were fabricated from titanium to
withstand the 1100C heat from the engine exhaust. The four conical
engine fairings smoothed the air flow at the base of the rocket and
protected the engines from aerodynamic loads. In addition, each fairing
carried a pair of retrorockets to decelerate the big booster after separa-
tion from the S-II stage; the retrorockets exerted a thrust of about 400 000
                                                                         8
newtons (90 000 pounds) during a burn time of less than a second.
      The propellant tanks included special fill and drain points to handle
heavy-duty lines used to fill the big vessels at high rates; up to 7300 liters
(2000 gallons) of RP-1 per minute. If left to its own devices inside the
tank, the RP-1 would have settled into strata of varying temperatures, a
highly undesirable situation, so the S-IC incorporated a fuel conditioning
system to "stir" over 730 000 liters (200 000 gallons) of RP-1 gently by
continuously bubbling gaseous nitrogen through the feed lines and the
fuel tank prior to launch. To ensure proper engine start and operation, a
fuel pressurization system contributed to good pressure at the fuel
turbopump inlets where 10 fuel lines (two per engine) funneled RP-1 to
the engines at 4900 liters (1350 gallons) per second. During the count-
down, pressurization was supplied by a ground source, but during flight,
a helium pressurant was supplied from elongated bottles stored, not on
the fuel tank, but submerged in the liquid oxygen (LOX) tank. In this
medium, the liquid helium in the bottles was in a much more compatible
environment, because the cold temperature of the liquid helium contain-
ers could have frozen the RP-1 fuel. There were additional
                                                                advantages to
their location in the colder  LOX tank. Immersed in liquid oxygen, the
cryogenic effect on the aluminum bottles allowed them to be charged to
higher pressures. They were also lighter, because the cryogenic envi-
ronment permitted manufacture of the helium bottles with one-half the
wall thickness of a noncryogenic bottle. Produced
                                                    by the Martin Compa-
ny, the four helium bottles, 6 meters long and 56 centimeters in diameter,
were aluminum extensions of unique length. Ducts carried the
                                                                   cooling
helium down through heat exchangers on the F-l
                                                     engines, then carried
heated, expanded gaseous helium back to the top of the fuel tank for
                   9
ullage pressure.
198
                                     THE LOWER STAGES:          S-IC   AND   S-II
through the LOX lines, and kept the liquid mixed at a sufficiently low
temperature to avoid destructive boiling and geysering, or the creation of
equally destructive cavities in the    LOX
                                         pumps. To pressurize the tank,
the S-IC tapped a helium ground source prior to launch. In flight, the
LOX    tank pressurization system used a system that tapped off some of
the liquid oxygen, ran it through a heat exchanger to make it gaseous
(called, naturally, GOX), and routed it back into the       LOX
                                                             tank.
     Because   the immense  fuel and oxidizer vessels were separate items,
the S-IC required additional pieces of hardware to make an integrated
booster stage: the intertank and forward skirt. The intertank structure
was a full seven meters in height itself, because the large bulges of the
forward fuel tank dome and aft      LOX
                                      dome extended inside it. There was
a considerable amount  of space remaining inside the intertank structure,
which was given over        instrumentation cables, electrical conduit,
                             to
telemetry lines, and other miscellany. Unlike the smooth skins of the
propellant tanks, the unpressurized intertank structure required other
means to maintain rigidity and carry the various stresses placed on it
during launch. This requirement explains the distinctive appearance of
both the intertank and the forward skirt, fabricated of 7075 aluminum
alloy with corrugated skin and internal stringers (versus 2219
                                                               aluminum
for the tanks). Both structures also included   various access doors and
umbilical openings for servicing, inspection, and maintenance prior to
launch. The forward skirt, three meters in height, enclosed the bulge of
the LOX   tank's forward bulkhead, and its upper edge constituted the
separation plane between the S-IC and the S-II stages.
    While Rocketdyne supplied the five F-l engines, the hydraulic
system, used to actuate the gimbals, was included as part of the S-IC
design. The hydraulic system featured a somewhat unconventional but
                                                                             199
STAGES TO SATURN
problems,   and posed a safety hazard with its relatively low flash point.
Still,the use of RP-1 was appealing because it eliminated a separate
hydraulic system. The RP-1 was taken directly from the high-pressure
fuel duct, routed to the gimbal system, then back to the engine fuel
system. To compensate for the shortcomings of RP-1 as the fluid, special
care was taken in the design of valves, and a less volatile fluid (from an
external source) was used         when   testing indoors   and during prelaunch
activities.
         The S-IC    carried a heavy load of instrumentation, particularly in the
first    few           record and report information on its components,
                flights, to
temperatures, pressures, and so on, totaling about 900 separate mea-
surements. Much of the success of this complex web of instrumentation
rested on the stage's transmitters and Boeing's achievement of some
significant advances in the state of the art. A company team redesigned
and rebuilt a 20-watt transmitter with solid-state components, rather than
vacuum tubes. Relying on integrated circuits, such units were reduced to
half the size of a pea, doing the same job with higher reliability than older
units the size of a baseball.
     The first two flight stages of the S-IC also carried visual instrumen-
tation that yielded some unique and striking images. A
                                                                 pair of TV
cameras covered the fiery environment of engine start and operation.
The cameras were tucked away above the heat shield safe from the
heat, acoustic shock, and vibration of the open engine area          and the
lenses were connected to serpentine lengths of fiber                 bundles,
                                                              optic
focused on the engine area, and were protected by special quartz
windows. Fiber optic bundles also provided a field of vision into the LOX
tank, with a pair of motion picture cameras using colored film to record
behavior of the liquid oxygen in flight. The system offered a means to
check on wave and sloshing motions in the huge tank, as well as the
waterfall effects of LOX cascading off internal tank structures
                                                                   during the
boost phase. Another pair of color motion picture cameras
                                                                captured the
spectacular moment of separation from the S-II stage. Twenty-five
seconds after separation, the color cameras were
                                                     ejected in a watertight
capsule, attached to a parachute for recovery          downrangein the South
               10
Atlantic.
200
                                  THE LOWER STAGES:            S-IC   AND   S-II
walls weighed five metric tons each, before they were milled down to
weigh only one ton with walls about 60 millimeters thick. The tape-
controlled form milling exposed the integral stiffeners, configured so
that they were parallel to each other when the tank was in the curved
condition. Mathias Siebel, director of MSFC's Manufacturing Engineer-
ing Laboratory, remarked that many test panels had to be machined to
get the spacing and machine control tapes
                                            set up just right. Normally, the
fabrication technique involved taking  the 3.4 x 8-meter plates and rolling
them to shape, heat treating      in a restraining fixture, then further
processing to eliminate distortions. Using its electric furnace, the Wichita
plant turned out integrally stiffened fuel and LOX tank walls by
clamping the piece to a precisely curved fixture that was a built-in part of
the furnace. In this way, tank walls were age-hardened by heat and
formed in the same process. 13
     Eventually, the dozens of pieces of metal to make the S-IC tanks
arrived at MSFC or Michoud to be welded together. The outsized
dimensions of the pieces dictated modifications to standard welding
procedures in which the welding tool was stationary and the piece to be
welded was turned. Instead, the welding tools in most cases traveled
along tracks over the components, held rigidly in huge jigs. The big
problem was distortion, always a plague in the fabrication of light vessels
(such as the Saturn tanks), and the S-IC propellant tanks were among the
largest such lightweight vessels ever built. The primary cause of distor-
tion was heat, and heat was unavoidable on the extended welding passes
needed to make the vessel. Several actions were undertaken to reduce the
heat and distortion factors. To ensure maximum weld conditions, the
work was conducted in special areas with temperatures below 25C and
the humidity below 50 percent. Otherwise, too many weld defects
occurred in the work. In addition, special techniques were employed at
the welding surface, particularly the use of the
                                                   tungsten-inert-gas (TIG)
process. The TIG method had been used in other applications but never
to such a great extent as in the fabrication of aluminum tanks for Saturn.
The inert gas shield protected the weld from air, offered more control of
the process, and allowed anywhere from 2 to 30
                                                   passes over a single weld
joint. An S-IC had about 10 kilometers of welding with every centimeter
inspected. Under these constraints, welding teams numbered between 10
and 15 specialists, with procedures lasting up to eight hours and
                                                       14
sequenced like the countdown of a launch vehicle.
      Major welding operations entailed the joining of base and apex
segments of the bulkhead gore segments into complete domes for the
 fuel and LOX tanks. The domes
                                        presented some difficult welding
 challenges when it came to welding various fittings and the several duct
 lines, because high residual stress in the
                                                 huge curved components
occasionally created a distortion effect known as "oil-canning." The
distortions produced uneven surfaces that in turn
                                                     upset the close
202
                                    THE LOWER STAGES:           S-IC   AND   S-II
tolerances required for other welding operations. The         LOX duct lines,
for example, were welded to fittings in the curved bulkhead. Specifica-
tions allowed no more that 0.5 millimeter mismatch between the duct and
the bulkhead fitting, involving a bias-cut joint 63 centimeters in diameter.
Rather than return to a time-consuming process of age-forming in a
special fixture, MSFC developed a special "electromagnetic hammer" to
iron out the distortions. High voltage passing through a large coil created
opposing fields between the distorted part and the "hammer." The
opposing fields repelled, and because the mass of the coil was greater
than the mass of the part, the part actually moved to eliminate the
distortion. There was no physical impact between the part and the coil. In
fact, demonstrators liked to lay a sheet of tissue paper between the coil
and part, proceed with the "hammering," and remove the tissue undamaged.
     After several materials were rejected, the aluminum used in the fuel
and   LOX  tanks was a 2219 alloy, chosen because of its variations in size,
required  for the S-IC, its weldability, and its resistance to stress corrosion.
The propellant tank walls were welded into king-size hoops (10-meter-
diameter), two for the fuel tank cylinder and four for the             LOX  tank
cylinder.  The  tank  cylinders   included  numerous     circular  slosh  baffles
designed for structural circularity and for slosh control. Additional slosh
control was created by the installation of cruciform slosh control baffles
in the aft domes of the fuel and     LOX   tanks.
                                                   15
                                                                             203
Top  left, Boeing's
                    Wichita plant is bulge forming
the bulkhead of the S -1C first stage of the Saturn V.
Above, 23 numerically controlled programming tapes
control machining of the 3.4 x 7. 9 -meter alumi-
num alloy plates that become skin panels for the
S-IC stage. Opposite, top, the skin panel is being
positioned for attachment to the curved restraining
fixture.   Opposite,   center,   now curved    to
                                                   precise
contour on the fixture, the panel     is   rolled into an
electricfurnace for age -hardening. Bottom, the
finished panel emerges, ready for dipping treatment
to remove
           impurities.
STAGES TO SATURN
206
                                      THE LOWER STAGES:       S-IC    AND     S-II
stands were available, one at Huntsville      and the other at the Mississippi
Test  Facility; both  were  similar in size and construction. The MTF facility
was designed to include two test positions. Although MSFC conducted
the first static tests of the S-IC in the summer of 1965, the MTF stand for
the S-IC began operations about a year later and became the focus of the
               program. It seemed quite appropriate that the howling,
static test firing
thunderous roar of the S-IC cluster could so often be heard at an area
originally   known    as Devil's   Swamp.
       At the time was declared operational in 1966, the 124-meter-high
                     it
test stand at MTF was the tallest building in the state of Mississippi. The
concrete and steel tower rested on 1600 steel pilings, each 30 meters long,
and the S-IC was secured by four huge hold-down arms anchored to a
slab of concrete 12 meters thick. The massive jaws of the restraining arms
clamped onto the rocket tail by means of drive mechanisms geared to
move only 8 centimeters per minute. From a distance, the big test tower
looked like a concrete monolith; its hollow legs were the equivalent of a
20-story building with offices, machine shops, data centers, and elevators.
With the huge volume of LOX and kerosene in the rocket tanks, a
catastrophic fire during testing was always a consideration; as a result all
personnel were evacuated to remote bunkers before ignition. In case of a
fire during a test, a water deluge system, evidenced by the myriad of
pipes lacing up and down the structure, could spray 782 000 liters
(215 000 gallons) per minute over the stand. Moreover, engine tests
required a second water deluge system that supplied the stand with
1 100 000 liters (300 000
                          gallons) of water per minute through a double-
walled steel flame bucket directly below the F-l cluster. Thousands of
holes in the outer walls of the flame bucket allowed water to gush out to
cool the bucket  and keep it intact for the next test. During a five-minute
test run, the S-IC test stand got enough water to supply a city of 10 000
             19
for a day.
    Any problems in the S-IC program seem to have occurred mostly at
the start but were resolved before a serious impasse developed. Matt
Urlaub recalled early confrontations between various Boeing and Marshall
people over management issues. "Boeing           had a very strong sense of
                                                  .   .   .
accomplishment up     to that point, and  they   knew  they had built large
airplanes before, and this [S-IC] vehicle isn't  much  different  .   and we
                                                                      .   .
                                                                              207
At Michoud, the big S-IC                                    V is
                         stage of the Saturn
assembled, or "stacked," in the high bay.
                                                      Top   left,
the fuel tank   lowered into the lower skirt; at
                   is
                                                 top
center, the intertank assembly is fitted to the
                                                fuel
tank; at top right, the oxidizer tank is added;
above,        the forward skirt
        left,                   assembly is attached.
Then   the five F-l
                      engines   are attached (above,
right) and the completed stage is shipped to the
Mississippi Test Facility         and   hoisted into the    test
stand             for
         (left)         static-firing tests   before shipment
to the
         Kennedy Space Center where            the total
                                                         flight
vehicle will be stacked, checked               and   launched.
                                 out,
                                      THE LOWER STAGES:             S-IC    AND   S-II
    The vague     outlines of the S-II took shape within the report of the
Silverstein committee in December 1959, when its members recommended
the development of the high-thrust, liquid-hydrogen-fueled engine. In
less than a year, Rocketdyne won the contract for the J-2 engine. Because
                                                                                   209
STAGES TO SATURN
toward a bigger vehicle with an LH 2 stage, and not long after Webb's
confirmation as the new Administrator in 1961, NASA authorized the
Marshall center to proceed with contractor selection. MSFC's invitations
to a preproposal conference in Huntsville in April attracted 30 aerospace
firms. As described by MSFC at that time, the S-II second stage of the
Saturn C-2 vehicle was presented as the largest rocket project, in terms of
physical size, to be undertaken by American industry. Powered by four of
the new J-2 engines, the preliminary configuration of the second stage
was given dimensions of 22.5 meters in length and 6.5 meters in
diameter. The implied challenge must have been sobering, since 23 of
the companies did not submit proposals the following month for the first
phase of the S-II contractor selection process. The seven firms left in the
running included Aerojet General Corporation; Chrysler Corporation,
Missile Division; Convair Astronautics Division of General Dynamics
Corporation; Douglas Aircraft Corporation; Lockheed Aircraft Corpora-
tion, Georgia Division; Martin Company; and North American Aviation,
Incorporated. They submitted briefs to MSFC concerning their experi-
ence and capability as potential contractors for the S-II stage. 23
     By June the contractors had been rated by a source evaluation board
using a numerical scoring system geared to the phase one proposals.
Three firms were eliminated, leaving Aerojet, Convair, Douglas, and
North American. These four companies were about to receive a surprise,
because NASA had decided to change the configuration of the second
stage. On 8 June, Webb circulated a memo to his top advisors specifying
that the Saturn C-2 simply could not boost the Apollo spacecraft to the
escape velocity required for a circumlunar mission. NASA was now
considering the C-3, which consisted of a fatter first stage powered by two
F-l engines and a larger S-II stage. As Webb noted, the C-3 had not yet
been approved, 24 and the four contractors, gathering late in June for the
phase two conference, discovered they would have to grapple with some
very loose ends.
     The phase two conference opened with remarks by Oswald Lange,
Chief of the Saturn Systems Office. In his initial statement, Lange
explained why the C-2 configuration was going to be bypassed in favor of
the C-3. Recent research on the problem of radiation in space indicated
                 needed more shielding, which would increase space-
that the spacecraft
craft weightfrom the original 6800-kilogram estimate to 13 600 kilo-
grams. Moreover, Lange revealed, the original S-II diameter of 6.6
meters was   now enlarged  to 8.13 meters to be more compatible with the
C-3's first stageand allow better payload flexibility in the future. On the
other hand, Lange said, he was not able as yet to give the contractors hard
figures on the exact configuration of the stages above the 8. 13-meter S-II
(making it difficult to figure out the mechanics of boost, separation of
upper stages, and other aspects, as one contractor noted); indeed, MSFC
might decide on an even larger 9.14-meter stage! "It may be a little hard
210
                                       THE LOWER STAGES:           S-IC   AND   S-II
S-II CONFIGURATION
                                                                                211
STAGES TO SATURN
interstage between the oxidizer and fuel tanks; this reduced the total
length of the stage by over 3 meters and saved about 4 metric tons of
extra weight. In technical terms, the fabrication of the bulkheads called
for unusually demanding accuracy in meridian welds that joined the
bulkhead gores together. The welding operation joining the curved,
6-meter-long seams together had to be made to specifications allowing
less than 0.33 millimeter of a mismatch. Then there was the problem of
insulating the big liquid hydrogen tank, filled with thousands of liters of
the super-cold propellant. Otherwise, the basic design elements of the
S-II seemed conventional enough in that it consisted of eight major
structuralcomponents and six major systems, all of which reflected the
usual kind of basic elements associated with both the S-IC and the
         28
S-IVB.
       The vehicle was assembled at Seal Beach, where most of the major
structural elements   were fabricated. Exceptions were the interstage, aft
skirt, thrust structure, and forward skirt which were produced at North
American's plant in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The interstage, aft skirt, and
forward skirt, all of semimonocoque construction, had been designed for
structural rigidity. The thrust structure (in the usual inverted cone
shape) featured both high-strength riveting and thrust longerons to
handle the full thrust of the J-2 engine cluster. Fabricated in separate
pieces, the aft skirt and thrust structure were intended to serve as a single
structural entity when joined together. The combination served as a
mounting point for the five engines, the heat shield, and assorted
plumbing and black boxes.
     In a sequence known as dual-plane separation, the interstage,
although joined to the aft skirt, uncoupled from the S-II after staging
from the S-IC. Following burnout of the first stage, a linear-shaped
charge separated the S-II from the S-IC; this procedure was simultane-
ous with the firing of S-IC retrorockets and eight ullage motors on the
interstage of the S-II. About 30 seconds after first-stage separation, the
S-II interstage separated from the second
                                               stage itself. Initiation of the
dual-plane separation   maneuver    occurred when  the outboard J-2 engines
reached 90 percent of their maximum thrust; at this point, explosive
charges were triggered, which severed the interstage. The maneuver
required a precise separation that would propel the interstage (5.4
meters long) rearward, clearing the engines by approximately 1 meter,
while the S-II was accelerating to its blinding top speed. Once free of the
interstage mass, the performance of the S-II was greatly enhanced. The
dual-plane separation was an alternative to a method called "fire in the
hole," which involved ignition and separation of the S-II while still in
contact with the interstage but not attached to it.
                                                    Designers preferred to
avoid this alternative because of possible
                                           perturbations and oscillations at
the end of the first-stage boost phase. With the S-II
                                                         accelerating on an
even course, it was easier to drop the interstage
                                                  during that phase, rather
212
                                        THE LOWER STAGES:       S-IC   AND   S-II
than risk hitting a wobbling interstage attached to the S-IC as the S-II
pulled out.
     The LOX tank of the S-II stage, like that of the S-IVB, incorporated
the principle of the common bulkhead, which comprised the top half of
the LOX tank. With its 10-meter diameter and 6.7-meter height, the
ellipsoidal container had a squat appearance. Having no vertical walls to
speak of, the LOX tank was constructed by welding together a dozen
gores and finishing off the tank with "dollar sections," large circular
pieces joining the ends of the gores at the top and bottom. The top of the
LOX tank actually formed one half of the common bulkhead. After
welding this part of the LOX tank, the common bulkhead was completed
before adding the tank's bottom half to it. Early on, the forming of the
gore segments for all the bulkhead assemblies frustrated manufacturing
engineers, because no techniques existed for forming such large, unwieldy
pieces. Each gore was approximately 2.6-meters wide at the base and had
complex curvatures that were difficult to form accurately. After rejecting
numerous possible procedures, the manufacturing team finally chose a
somewhat exotic method underwater explosive forming. This tech-
nique quite literally blasted the wedge-shaped gores into shape. North
American's Los Angeles Division produced the gores, using a 2 1 1 000-liter
(58 000-gallon) tank of water at nearby El Toro Marine Base for
explosive, or "high-energy," forming. After positioning the gore segment
in the tank, engineers detonated a carefully located network of primacord
explosive, forming the metal by the blast transmitted through the water.
The formation of each gore required three separate blasts. 29
     At the start of the S-II program, MSFC questioned North Ameri-
can's proposals for a common bulkhead. Despite the S-IV stage common
bulkhead, engineers at Huntsville remained skeptical of North Ameri-
can's ability to produce a common bulkhead of the S-II diameter that
would also withstand the additional stresses and pressures of much
greater volumes of cryogenic propellants. Marshall insisted on parallel
backup schemes using more conventional bulkhead designs, in case
North American's idea failed. On the other hand, North American
insisted   on   its   common bulkhead
                                  to reduce stage length and weight from
the conventional form of two separate fuel and oxidizer tanks connected
by an interstage component. The company had to work out several new
                                      30
fabrication techniques to do the job.
    Beginning with the upper half of the          LOX   tank, fabrication of the
common bulkhead           required a   number of carefully timed and sequenced
operations. First, honeycomb phenolic insulation was fitted over the
upper surface of the       LOX
                            tank dome, called the aft facing sheet because
it served as the bottom of the common bulkhead. Then the insulation was
bonded to the aft facing sheet and cured in a gargantuan autoclave. Next
came the preliminary fitting of the forward facing sheet; this piece
became the bottom half of the LH 2 tank (also formed from large
                                                                             213
STAGES TO SATURN
214
                                  THE LOWER STAGES:         S-IC   AND   S-II
through grooves cut into the insulation surface next to the tank walls.
Helium flowed through the grooves from the start of hydrogen loading
through countdown and up to the instant of launch.
     Unfortunately, this design never worked very well. The purge
system was tricky, the insulation bonding repeatedly failed, and chunks
of insulation continued to fall off during tanking and test sequences.
Although several S-II stages were produced with the original insulation
concept, the results were so discouraging that North American spent
considerable time and money working up an alternative. Instead of
making up panels and affixing them to the tank, the company finally
evolved a process for spraying insulation material directly onto the tank
walls (eliminating the air pockets), letting it cure, then cutting it to the
proper contour. This technique turned out to32be much more economical
and much lighter than the insulation panels.
     Eventually, all the parts of the S-II came together in the vertical
assembly building at Seal Beach. Vertical assembly was chosen for its
advantages in joining major parts and ease of welding. In vertical
assembly, as opposed to horizontal assembly, it was easier to maintain
circumference of the large diameter parts to close tolerances and
gravitational force helped maintain stage alignment. Moreover, if the
various cylinders and bulkheads were horizontal, temperature diversion
about the circumference of the parts would produce distortions at the top
of the piece being welded. Throughout each welding sequence, techni-
cians employed a variety of special scopes, levels, and traditional plumb
bobs to make sure alignments were exact. Additionally, the stage was
subjected to hydrostatic, x-ray, dye penetrant, and other checks to ensure
proper specifications. One of the last items to be added was the systems
tunnel, affixed to the exterior of the stage. The tunnel, a semicircular
structure, ran vertically up the side of the S-II and carried miscellaneous
instrumentation along with wires and tubes that connected system
components at the top and bottom of the stage.
STAGES TO SATURN
S-II SYSTEMS
       Ofthe six major systems, the propellant system was the most
complex. The seven propellant subsystems included plumbing, hard-
ware, and control to accomplish the following: purge, fill and replenish,
venting, pressurization, propellant feed, recirculation, and propellant
management. Elements were largely designed to cope with the tricky
characteristics of the cryogenics carried on board the S-II stage. By using
helium gas, the purge subsystem cleared the tank of contaminants like
moisture (which could freeze and block valves or vents) in the   LOX  tank,
and oxygen (which could freeze and create danger of explosions) in the
LH 2 tank. The fill and replenish subsystem (along with the recirculation
cycle), helped relieve the tanks, valves, pumps, and feed lines of the
thermal shocks encountered from the sudden introduction of ultra-cold
propellants into the stage.
     The recirculation subsystem kept propellants moving through the
engine pumps and associated plumbing while keeping them properly
chilled and ready for operation. Similarly, the fill and replenish system
brought the propellant tanks and their related plumbing down to a
temperature suitable for loading of the cryogenic propellants. The
procedure began by circulating cold gas through the tanks and lines,
followed by a "chilldown" cycle slow pumping of propellants into the
tanks until they reached the five percent level. Even with the preliminary
cooling by chilled gas, the tanks were so much warmer than the
propellants that much of the liquid boiled off when it first gushed into
the tank; the "chilldown" dropped the tank temperatures to a point
where fast fill could then proceed. Because the propellants were pumped
into the tanks hours before liftoff and a certain amount of boil-off
216
                                  THE LOWER STAGES:         S-IC   AND   S-II
                                                                         277
STAGES TO SATURN
distortionproblems where none could be tolerated. "I had very little gray
hair         started," admitted Norm Wilson, manager of the Manufac-
       when we
turing Engineering Section for the S-II at Seal Beach. "But look at me
                       35
now," he said in 1968.
    Wilson's gray hair owed much to the multitude of variations and
requirements implicit in the plethora of tricky welding tasks all over the
           from the circumferential jobs. The various aluminum sheets
stage, aside
joined together in the welding process varied in shape, size, and
thickness, all of which caused different problems for the welder. One
such joint had skins that tapered from 16 millimeters thick down to
under 6 millimeters, then back up to 13 millimeters. The shifting
thicknesses frequently made temperamental men of normally even-
tempered welding engineers; weld speeds, arc voltages, and other
regimes had to be tailored for each variance during the welding pass.
Minuscule cracks, tiny bits of foreign material in the weld seams,
moisture, or other apparently innocuous imperfections could leak vola-
tile
     propellants or cause catastrophic weaknesses under the pressures and
loads experienced in flight.
    "You can't really say our work has been exotic," Wilson said. "But
when you consider the sizes, angles, lengths, designs, offset tolerances,
and overall specifications involved, you have one challenging welding
problem on your hands. We've had to tap our experience well dry and
tax our imagination to come up with the right answers, and it has been
only through the combined contributions of many that we have been
successful." 36 It was a genuine team effort, with increasing reliance on
automated welding technology. The virtuoso performances of the indi-
vidual welder, plying his torch with sparks flying around his visored
head, became an anachronism. In the case of the big bulkhead domes,
the gore sections were joined two at a time while held rigidly by vacuum
chucks in a precision-contoured welding jig. The welding torch, part of
an automatic power pack, moved along an apparatus called a skate track,
which was mounted on the exterior surface of the gores. Inching upward
at a carefully geared speed, the automatic power pack "remembered"
each detail of the three-step welding operation; trimming, welding, and
x-raying in sequence. Each program for the automatic power pack
evolved from elaborate trials on test panels; checking and rechecking the
accuracy of the trim procedure; precise current, arc voltage, and welding
speed for the torch head; and quality of the x-ray. A technician rode
along on the track to monitor the procedure or stop it if necessary, but
the machine basically did its own thing in its own way.
     The tank cylinder walls posed a far different set of problems. Each
wall was machined, formed, and assembled
                                               by many different manufac-
turing methods;   each varied because   of the  stresses of movement from
one industrial site to another, and exposure to different influences of
heat and climate. One of the most difficult aspects originated in the initial
218
                                  THE LOWER STAGES:         S-IC   AND   S-II
                                                                         219
The S-II stage of the Saturn V is shown in the
cutaway drawing at top left; at top right,
                         to bulkheads at North
gores are being applied
American's Seal Beach facility; above, left,
the automatic welding machine makes its slow
circuitaround the big second stage, carefully
monitored by a technician. Above, right, one
                                           as
of the early S-II stages nears completion
           hydrogen tank is lowered onto
the                                       the
    liquid
liquid oxygen
              tank   and   their   common   bulkhead.
get one  more  kilogram  of payload, the  laws of orbital mechanics required
that 14 kilograms be cut from the S-IC; or four to five kilograms from the
S-II; but only one from the S-IVB. The S-IVB stage was already in
production when the weight problem became acute it was too late to
slice anything from that stage, where the advantage was greatest. Trying
to scrape 14 kilograms out of the S-IC to save 1 kilogram of payload just
was not feasible in terms of time and effort. That left the S-II. As the
second stage became a more finely honed and thin-shelled vehicle, the
balance between success or failure became more delicate. This was
                                                                             38
especially true when welding the large, thin tank skins of the S-II stage.
      Manufacturing challenges such as reducing stage weight and the
unusually long welding runs were not the only situations that escalated
the S-II's troubles. Another persistent problem, for example, centered on
the insulation for the LH 2 tank. MSFC technical monitors became
increasingly concerned during the spring of 1964 and reported "consid-
erable difficulty" in perfecting adequate LH 2 tank insulation; the grow-
ing problem crept up unawares, so to speak, and was reported with a note
of surprise at MSFC. "The S-II stage insulation concept for vehicles 501,
502, 503 and to a somewhat lesser extent for S-II [ground-test vehicles]
has not been fully qualified as of this date," read a memorandum dated 2
222
                                  THE LOWER STAGES:          S-IC   AND   S-II
June 1964. The     memo candidly added, "This fact was discovered by
Marshall personnel and came as quite a shock to S&ID management and
needless to say, MSFC." The memo noted a number of anomalies, chief of
which was the debonding of the nylon outer layer from the honeycomb
material underneath when exposed to a simulated flight environment.
The insulation difficulties became symptomatic. More serious production
troubles appeared starting in October 1964, when burst tests revealed
welded cylinder specimens lower in weld strength than anticipated.
Then, on 28 October 1964, the first completed aft bulkhead for the
S-II-S ruptured during a hydrostatic proof test, although at a lower
pressure than specifications dictated. The fault was traced to a previous
repair weld, done by hand, along a recirculation system service plate.
While welding of a replacement bulkhead proceeded, a design change
eliminated the welded service plate, making it an integral part of the
                39
bulkhead gore.
     The continuing snags involving the S-II began to cause worry lines
in the brows of managers at MSFC and Headquarters; in particular was
the need to get the first S-II flight stage, S-II-1, out the door at Seal
Beach, tested, and delivered to Cape Kennedy for the first Saturn V
launch, AS-501, in 1967. Production troubles with the S-II ground-test
stages by late 1964 and early 1965 threatened the S-II-1 so
                                                                   much that
MSFC's director,    Wernher   von  Braun, proposed       a reworking of the
whole S-II test program  to make  up some  of the  slippages. Major General
Samuel C. Phillips, from    his vantage point   as   Director of the Apollo
Program in Washington,       concurred   and   set   in motion a series of
shortcuts in the spring  of 1965  to put the  S-II  schedule   back in shape.
Specifically, NASA decided to cancel   the dynamic    test stage (S-II-D) and,
instead, use the S-II-S for this purpose after its structural tests. This
decision greatly relieved both manufacturing and assembly pressures on
flight stages at Seal Beach and permitted
                                               use of S-II-D hardware in
follow-on stages. Further, the "all-systems" test stage bypassed its sched-
uled tests at Santa Susana and was scheduled for direct delivery to MTF.
Meanwhile, the S-II-F facility checkout stage was scheduled to bypass
MTF (where the all-systems stage would be used for facility activation
purposes) for delivery direct to the Cape. There, the S-II-F would be
pressed immediately into service to give Launch Complex 39 a thorough
and complete checkout before the first flight stage arrived. In addition to
relieving pressure on the schedule, these changes netted a savings of $17
million. 40
                                                                          223
STAGES TO SATURN
                                                                             41
Henceforth, only "absolutely mandatory!' changes would be tolerated.
During the spring and summer, there was reason to be encouraged by
the progress on the S-II: successful battleship tests at Santa Susanna Field
Laboratory, and accelerating work on the electromechanical mockup (the
progress in the latter case owed a great deal to the addition of a third
work shift, with each shift putting in six days a week).
     Welding continued to be troublesome. Early in July, the Space and
Information Systems Division (S&ID) began preparations for making the
first circumferential welds on the S-II-1        (destined to be the first
flight-rated stage). After completing   the operation   on 19 July, the weld
was found to be faulty and repairs stretched into the first week of August
                                                           42
before additional work on the S-II-1 could be started.
     Then the first incident in a chain of misfortunes occurred that
created one of the most serious times of trouble in the development of
the Saturn V. On 29 September 1965, the S-II-S/D (structures dynamic-
test stage) ruptured and fell apart during a loading test at Seal Beach.
Destruction of the stage transpired during a test to simulate the forces
acting on the stage at the end of the S-IC boost phase. MSFC quickly
organized an ad hoc group to determine the reasons for the accident,
tagging it with a rather dramatic title, the S-II-S/D Catastrophic Failure
Evaluation Team. Additionally, Marshall added a Debris Evaluation
Team to help pinpoint the component that caused the failure. While the
Catastrophic Failure Evaluation Team started sifting reports, Colonel
Sam   Yarchin, the S-II Stage Manager, instructed the people at Seal
Beach  to untangle the twisted metal debris in the test tower and lay it out
in orderly fashion inside a guarded enclosure for minute examination by
the debris evaluation team. It was eventually determined that the point of
failure had been in the aft skirt area at 144 percent of the limit load. Even
though considerable data had been accumulated on this particular test
and earlier tests, the loss of the stage left a void in the planned vehicle
dynamic tests at Huntsville; the test program was juggled43around to use
the S-II-T stage instead, following static testing at MTF.
     The loss of S-II-S and continuing difficulties with the S-II at Seal
Beach caused increasing consternation at MSFC. When the president of
North American, J. L. Atwood, visited von Braun in Huntsville on 14
October, he found an indignant mood prevailing at Marshall. Brigadier
General Edmund F. L. O'Connor, Director of MSFC's Industrial Opera-
tions, provided von Braun with some background data that included the
following judgment: "The S-II program is out of control. ... It is
apparent that management of the project at both the program level and
division level at S&ID has not been effective. ... In addition to the
management problems,       there are still significant technical difficulties in
                     44
the S-II stage. . ,".
                        Obviously concerned, von Braun extracted promises
from Atwood to put both a new man in charge of the S-II program and a
224
                                      THE LOWER STAGES:         S-IC   AND   S-II
                                                                             225
STAGES TO SATURN
                                                                 /
pants included George Mueller, George Low, and Joe Shea from
Headquarters, along with Eberhard Rees from MSFC. The issue was
North American's performance on the S-II. Rees briefed the group on
plans to send "a group of selected experts from MSFC" to check on
S&ID's operation on the S-II. The Marshall group, scheduled to leave on
18 October, was headed by Colonel Sam Yarchin, the program manager
at Huntsville. Phillips wanted more than that. Rees reported that aside
from MSFC's own S-II sleuths, Phillips wanted to take a close look at the
entire S&ID operation "after Yarchin's committee has done some spade
work." Phillips advocated a special survey team composed of top man-
agement from both MSC and MSFC; it was agreed to consider the matter          49
in detail   when von Braun         visited   Washington a few days   later.
      On    27 October, Associate Administrator Mueller wrote to Lee
Atwood advising him of what was coming. Mueller noted their mutual
concern that the Apollo program should stay on course to a successful
conclusion, but stressed severe problems in the rate of progress for both
the S-II stage and the command and service modules (CSM). The
purpose of the Phillips visit was to identify "those actions that either or
both of us should take." General Phillips took Joe Shea from NASA
Headquarters and Rees and O'Connor from MSFC. The group went to
North American on 22 November and their report was due before
             50
Christmas.
     The "Phillips report," as it became known, was dispatched to
Atwood over Phillips's signature on 19 December 1965. Briefly, Phillips
told Atwood, "I am definitely not satisfied with the progress and outlook
of either program.     The conclusions expressed in our briefing and
                       .   .   .
notes are critical." The overall report was a thorough analysis of S&ID
operations with various sub-teams investigating management, contracting,
engineering, manufacturing, and reliability-quality control. Including
Yarchin's "spadework" on the S-II, completed in early November, the
thick document represented an almost unrelieved series of pointed
criticisms of S&ID. Phillips offered one small ray of hope: "the right
actions now can result in substantial improvement of position in both
                                        51
programs in the relatively near future." At this crucial juncture, Arthur
Rudolph, head of MSFC's Saturn V Program Office, concluded that the
S-II should not be starved for funds in the midst of its vicissitudes, and
began massive infusions of dollars into the S-II project for overtime,
increased manpower, R&D, and whatever else was necessary to see the
                  52
job through.
    Eberhard Rees was prepared to invoke draconian measures unless
the situation at North American showed distinct improvement. On 8
December 1965, he had composed a 13-page memorandum, "Personal
Impressions, View and Recommendations," based on his S&ID reviews
from 22 November through 4 December. The operation was far too big
and bulky, Rees observed, making it unwieldy. It needed to be slimmed
226
                                    THE LOWER STAGES:            S-IC   AND   S-II
major general  with a lean, Lincolnesque aura about him, as his special
representative for the S-II. Greer had joined the company in July and
took this assignment in October. By January 1966, in the wake of the
                                                                              227
STAGES TO SATURN
228
                                   THE LOWER STAGES:              S-IC   AND      S-II
                                                                                  229
STAGES TO SATURN
230
                                     THE LOWER STAGES:        S-IC   AND   S-II
                                                                           231
STAGES TO SATURN
von Braun, Debus, O'Connor, Rudolph, and Yarchin came to the only
safe decision: take down the S-II-1 and conduct extensive dye penetrant
                                                                 69
and x-ray inspection of the welds in the LOX and LH 2 tanks.         The
inspection  uncovered   a  dozen  imperfections  requiring careful tank
232
                                THE LOWER STAGES:        S-IC   AND   S-II
                                                                      233
From Checkout to Launch: The Quintessential
                Computer
AUTOMATIC CHECKOUT
                                        235
STAGES TO SATURN
required only about 600 test points. The Apollo spacecraft, on the other
hand, included over 2500 test points on the command module and the
lunar module, and another 5000 on the Saturn itself. Further, these test
points were checked and monitored constantly from early manufacturing
checkout sequences, to pre-static-firing checkout, to post-static-firing
checkout. Test points were checked scores of times in the 12-14 weeks
required prior to a launch for complete checkout of the Apollo-Saturn
stack at Cape Kennedy. Without computer technology, such procedures,
even at the launch site, might have stretched out the checkout procedures
                      2
for more than a year. Checkout equipment and procedures went beyond
the point of merely pinpointing a fault in the equipment. The automated
checkout paraphernalia associated with the Apollo-Saturn program
additionally incorporated a diagnosis function; computer or screen
readouts would indicate to the test engineers and programmers not only
that a problem existed, but also the nature of the problem, its causes, and
                      3
possible solutions.
     In the evolution of automated checkout equipment, one of the most
interesting problems centered on the creation of a new language. The
language tapes incorporated in the computer programs had to be
functional for the designer of the vehicle as well as the test engineer.
Readouts on malfunctions had to make sense to persons reworking the
piece of hardware that failed or had not performed properly. Obviously,
                                                                       231
STAGES TO SATURN
238
                                        FROM CHECKOUT TO LAUNCH
Marshall's main interest was the actual stage checkout, with responsibility
for final launch vehicle checkout resting with Kennedy Space Center.
Originally, NASA  planners envisioned repeating the stage checkout after
                         Cape Kennedy, but it became apparent that
the delivery of each stage to
thisscheme compromised the time and resources required for final
checkout and launch. Therefore each stage received final checkout
before transport to the launch site. The procedure not only made it
easier to accomplish the final checkout and launch, but enabled MSFC
and the contractors to deal more efficiently with problem areas at the
stage test facility (where specialized personnel and equipment          were
present). This concept paid off on the first three Saturn V vehicles   when
stage checkouts uncovered 40 serious defects; these flaws would have
gone undetected had the stage checkout depended only on procedures
and facilities available at the launch site. 8
     Each booster stage was subjected to a post-manufacturing checkout,
a checkout prior to static-firing tests, and a post-static-firing checkout.
Static firing, the most dramatic test, tested the propulsion systems during
actual ignition     and operation. Checkout featured a "building-block"
sequence,   common      to all stages, with variations as necessary for    an
individual stage.   A typical sequence began with an independent electrical
system test and was followed by a simplified rundown of the launch
sequence. Next, other systems were run in succession; guidance and
control system tests; a second launch sequence run with these and other
electrical and propulsion systems tested; completion of ancillary system
tests; an all-systems test; and, finally, a "simulated flight" test, including
                                 9
ignition and a duration burn.
      The Saturn stages and the associated checkout equipment for each
were developed simultaneously with the goal of an integrated design of
the vehicle and its ground equipment. Some of the vehicle's mechanical
equipment such as sensing equipment for checkout of a number of
items operated by fluid, as well as fluid management subsystems did not
lend themselves to checkout with digital computers. Design engineers
succeeded in developing suitable checkout equipment for the electrically
actuated and measured equipment so that the great majority of stage
checkout tests would proceed automatically. The Saturn I vehicles
offered the first experiences in stage checkout for Saturn class vehicles.
Whereas the vehicle SA- 1 required manual checkout, by the end of the
Saturn series automatic equipment controlled over 50 percent of the
tests. The automatic capability improved during the S-IB vehicle series,
and checkout of the Saturn V stages, including the instrument unit (IU),
was about 90 percent automated?
      Checkout equipment for S-II and S-IVB stages of the Saturn V was
developed by the stage contractors under the direction of MSFC. For the
S-IC, Marshall collaborated with Boeing in developing the automated
equipment, because the first S-IC stages were fabricated in MSFC shops
                                                                         239
STAGES TO SATURN
puters. For checkout procedures on the Saturn V third stage, the S-IVB,
fully automated techniques replaced the manual checkout for the first
time.  Although the magnitude of testing rose by 40 percent per stage, the
new automated systems reduced the checkout time to about 500 hours
total. H. E. Bauer clearly remembered the occasion when men and the
new machines first confronted each other. "One seasoned switch flipper
came into the blockhouse after the equipment was installed; he watched
the blinking lights, the scanners, the recorders everything was working
automatically, heaving out wide and endless runs of data printouts.      ."
                                                                         .   .
240
                                      FROM CHECKOUT TO LAUNCH
human role, the man-behind-the-machine could still display some sem-
blance of individuality. Consider, for example, the case of the petulant
computer-printer when the machine apparently took umbrage during
the automatic checkout sequence in preparation for an acceptance firing.
The moment of truth for the test arrived the signal to fire. After
uncounted hours of preparation, hundreds of workers now stood by to
observe the climactic moment of ignition. In the crowded blockhouse, all
eyes focused on the rows of computers and monitor screens displaying
their last fragments of information. Finally, the test conductor typed in
his "request" to start the terminal countdown for static firing. The
     With computer data accumulated for each stage and subsystem, the
collected information was not only utilized for vehicle checkout at the
Cape, but also for the launch and for guidance and control during the
mission.
     After years of research and development on the individual stages,
involving thousands of workers and millions of man-hours, most of the
responsibility for the six-hour flight of a Saturn V devolved on a piece of
equipment known as the instrument unit the "IU." A thin, circular
structure, only 1 meter high and 7.6 meters in diameter, the IU was
sandwiched between the S-IVB stage and the command and service
modules. Packed inside were the computers, gyroscopes, and assorted
"black boxes" necessary to keep the launch vehicle properly functioning
and on     its   course.
    Historically, theproblems of traveling successfully from point A to
point B on the Earth's surface depended on some form of visual
references, such as tall trees, mountains, or some other easily sighted
                                                                      241
STAGES TO SATURN
242
                                       FROM CHECKOUT TO LAUNCH
to cut off the engines when the missile reached a predetermined velocity.
With   this pairof two-degree-of-freedom gyros, the LEV-3 was a three-axis-
stablized platform (an inertial guidance concept), the result of very high
EVOLUTION OF THE IU
                                                                       243
                                     PLATFORM GIMBAl CONFIGURATION
244
                                                 FROM CHECKOUT TO LAUNCH
                                                                             245
                                                                                   The instrument unit used
                    SATURN                                                         in Saturn IB and Saturn V
                                IB/V   INSTRUMENT           UNIT                   is shown in
                                                                                               component de-
  MAJOR        I.U.   SYSTEMS                                                      tail in the
       GUIDANCE & CONTROL                                                                        drawing at left;
       ELECTRICAL
                                                                                   below,    left, IBM's Hunts-
                                                                                                     in
BIBS
CAPACITOR PACKAGE
            PURGING VALVE
                                       FROM CHECKOUT TO LAUNCH
dynamic force in both the organization and buildup of the IBM complex
and won high praise from Wernher von Braun. Speaking at the dedica-
tion of the IBM facility in 1965, von Braun commented, "In this project,
a saying has developed at Marshall Center, 'When you're in trouble, say
                                                    " 25
'Grace' and Grace will take care of your problems.'
    The ground     rules for the design, research, and development of the
IU came      out of MSFC, and these concepts carried over into the
production models delivered by IBM. With cost constraints and tight
schedules limiting the number of test flights, the number of measure-
ments for each flight was expected to be quite high and to vary
considerably from one flight to another. For this reason, flexibility for
the instrument unit had a high priority and designers emphasized a
modular approach as means to provide both flexibility and ease of
servicing. Another strongly emphasized feature was reliability; a key
factor, particularly because the Saturn program was geared to manned
launches. In addition, liability was enforced by the high cost of each
vehicle   and limited   test flights, which naturally produces a reluctance to
                                                                         247
STAGES TO SATURN
maneuvers   to clear the S-I VB and IU from the flight path of the GSM on
                        27
itsroute to the moon.      The IU itself was viewed as five major systems:
structural, guidance and control, electrical, instrumentation, and envi-
ronmental control.
     The cylindrical IU structure did more than carry meters of cables,
black boxes, and other miscellaneous paraphernalia; it was a load-bearing
structure as well, with three major rocket stages stacked beneath it and
thousands of kilograms of spacecraft, lunar landing module (and three
astronauts) to support above it. The process of assembly of the IU began
with three curved (120) structural segments made of thin aluminum
sheets bonded over an aluminum honeycomb core (approximately equal
to the thickness of a bar of soap). In joining the three segments together,
workers used highly accurate theodolites, much like a surveyor's transit,
to align the three segments in a precise circle. Technicians joined the
248
                                         FROM CHECKOUT TO LAUNCH
boost phase. In ascent through the atmosphere, both the Saturn IB and
Saturn   V were subject to possible sudden stresses from gusts, wind shear,
and jet  streams.  If the guidance computer, acting on signals from the
stabilized platform, attempted to generate compensation maneuvers
during such turbulence, the added stress forces from the powerful
engines as they went through extensive gimbaling motions might cause
the rocket to break up. So, during the first-stage burn, the rocket flew
according to a predetermined program stored in its guidance computer.
If the vehicle was forced off its predetermined path, the ST-124 sensed
this displacement and fed the data into the computer for later retrieval.
During the second- and third-stage burns, the stored data were run
through the computer and into30the active guidance and control system to
put the rocket back on course.
     Information on yaw, pitch, roll, and acceleration provided by the
ST-124, as well as inputs from other electrical systems, were collectively
assimilated and processed by the digital computer and the data adapter
to give the rocket an optimum performance. There was a division of
labor involved. The computer took information and provided commands
such as orbital checkout of the vehicle. The adapter performed as an
input-output unit in conjunction with the digital computer, interfacing
with nearly all units of the astrionics system. Its digital section "buffered"
the digital quantities, and an analog section converted analog to digital
form and back again. The IU equipment for Saturn V was only slightly
heavier and larger than that for the Saturn I, but its computer-data
adapter combination was three times faster, possessed four times the
storage capacity, and was far more reliable. Although there were seven
times the number of electronic components in the Saturn V versions,
their total power consumption was 100 watts less than in the Saturn I.
Furthermore, the 460 000-bit storage design could be easily doubled by
plugging in additional memory modules. The following table offers a
                        31
quick comparison:
                              Equipment Comparison
          (Saturn   I   and   VComputer/Data Adapter Subsystems)
             Item
STAGES TO SATURN
I.
   They also reveal that, although original guidelines called for as little
new equipment as possible, the nature of manned missions and the quest
for reliability called   for advanced design techniques. To meet the
stringent reliability and operational requirements and also remain within
the rigid size and weight limitations, four new design concepts were
incorporated into the computer: a duplex memory system, unit logic
devices, triple modular redundancy, and a liquid-cooled magnesium-
                   32
lithium chassis.
   The duplex memory system incorporated two separate sets of
memory systems that operated in harmony during critical phases of the
mission.  This not only reduced the chances of system failure but
operated so that one memory system could correct the other if intermit-
tent failure should occur. The system consisted of six modules operating
as pairs of duplex memories, each with 4096 computer words of 28 bits
and designed to accept two additional modules for special mission
requirements. The unit logic devices featured microminiature circuitry,
resulting in a smaller, lighter system, having seven times more compo-
nents than earlier computers while operating at three times the speed.
Typically, each unit logic device was produced as a "wafer," 7.6 millimeters
square and 0.71 millimeters thick. A total of 8918 such wafers were
mounted on dozens of "pages," about 7.6 centimeters square, in the
computer.
      Further, the      IU featured the first computer application where all
critical circuits in    both the computer and data adapter were triplicated
triple   modular redundancy    giving near-ultimate operative reliability.
Designers selected  seven functional   sections where catastrophic failure
might occur  but,  for reasons  of reliability, could not be permitted to
occur.  Each selected section was then placed in three identical but
independent logic channels. Problems were presented to each module
simultaneously, and the results of each, independently derived, went to a
majority-rule voter circuit. Any dissenting "vote" was discarded as an
error, and the only signal passed along by the voter circuit consisted of
the identical signals from two of the modules. Voting disagreements did
not appreciably slow the system: a worst-case voting delay would tie up
the computer for only 100 nanoseconds (billionths of a second). More-
over, the computer unit, occupying 0.6 cubic meter and weighing 35
kilograms, could subtract and add (in 82 microseconds) while simultaneously
                                                      33
dividing and multiplying (in 328 microseconds).
     The unusually light weight of the computer was achieved by the use
of a magnesium-lithium alloy chassis, the first application of this alloy in
structural fabrication for an electronics application. Weight being extremely
250
                                        FROM CHECKOUT TO LAUNCH
even lighter beryllium because of toxicity and technical difficulties in
machining and boring. Magnesium-lithium was still quite light (25
percent less than conventional magnesium and 50 percent less than
aluminum) and possessed a very high weight-to-strength ratio, good
thermal qualities for operation in space, and minimal transfer of mechani-
cal vibration.
     In addition to sharing with the computer some similarities in the
fabrication and production of the chassis, the data adapter incorporated
concepts  similar to those of the computer's unit logic devices and triple
modular redundancy. The basic function of the data adapter was that of
a "gateway*' to the computer for all elements of the Saturn guidance
system. It received inputs from the ground control computer, radio
command channel, telemetry, multifarious communications from within
the vehicle, the inertial guidance platform, and the flight control com-
puter. For example, analog inputs from various sensors were taken by
the data adapter and digitized for the computer. Computer outputs were
relayed back to the data adapter for conversion to analog signals as
required. If the signals involved control commands, they went through
the analog flight control computer and were combined with additional
signals from the rate gyros. The resulting output included commands to
activate the engine gimbal systems, thereby changing the direction of
their thrust and the attitude of the launch vehicle.
     While some IU equipment maintained the rocket in flight, other
systems were involved in communications, tracking the booster in trajec-
tory and orbit, and transmitting reams of data back to the ground.
Several tracking and command systems were employed: an Azusa system
measured slant range and vehicle direction in relation to ground stations;
a C-band radar transponder aided radar ground stations in measuring
azimuth, elevation, and range; and a command and communications
system permitted updating of the computer, performance of tests,
addition or deletion of certain messages, and recall of certain portions of
the computer memory bank. During launch and orbital phases, trans-
ducers throughout the vehicle reported information on vibrations,
pressures, temperatures, and various operations; the measuring and
telemetry system transmitted these data to ground stations. This not only
furnished real-time data on vehicle performance during the mission but
provided a means of checkout for succeeding events, verified commands
to the vehicle, and created a bank of data for later analysis of the vehicle's
                      35
overall performance.
     The power to run this    complex electronic equipment emanated
from four 28-volt DC batteries, which consisted of special distributors
and regulators for both low-voltage components and higher currents for
the ST-124 inertial platform. The electrical system also included the
emergency detection network to analyze vehicle malfunctions. Depending
                                                                         251
STAGES TO SATURN
252
                                              FROM CHECKOUT TO LAUNCH
decided to take the clean-room environment to the IU instead. The
company used a trio of mobile clean rooms on casters, which had been
hung with heavy vinyl curtain walls and equipped with air filters and
blowers to maintain class IV working conditions. 37
    Installation of equipment within the IU was accompanied by a series
of checkout operations. Beginning with delivery of individual compo-
nents,   IBM personnel checked them against equipment specification
drawings and subjected them to acceptance tests, followed by functional
checks as items were mounted in the IU. As the various systems of the IU
began to shape up, components and systems were checked until the IU
was complete. Afterward, up to eight weeks of exhaustive simulation tests
were conducted; these simulations included preflight ground checkouts
and others for   liftoff, trajectory,   and   orbit.   When   the test   and simulation
phase was complete, the IU was ready for shipment. Critical components,
such as the ST-124, the computer, and the data adapter were taken out
and packaged separately, then flown along with the IU to the Cape. At
the Cape, these components were reassembled and rechecked before the
IU was stacked into the rest of the vehicle and prepared for complete
                      38
preflight checkout.
     Despite the great emphasis on clean room facilities and spotless
surroundings, IBM on one occasion finished production of an IU on the
deck of a barge while floating down the Tennessee and Mississippi rivers.
During 1965, work on the IU fell behind as a result of changes in
instrumentation. The schedule for "stacking" the first Saturn IB (AS-201)
for launch early in 1966 was apparently going to slip badly unless work
on the IU could be accelerated. Marshall executives pressured their own
IU  project managers by demanding to know what they were going to do
to   makethe launch date. Luther Powell and Sidney Sweat, from the IU
project office at MSFC, brainstormed the situation and proposed a way to
make up time. At that point, there was no aircraft large enough to deliver
the IU by air. Instead,. the IU was scheduled to be carried to the Cape via
a barge down the Tennessee and Mississippi rivers, one of the most
time-consuming elements in the IU delivery schedule.
     Powell and Sweat proposed finishing the IU while enroute aboard
the barge and submitted their idea to their IBM counterparts, who
agreed with the unlikely proposal. Because the enclosed barge was
equipped with internal environmental controls anyhow, it was no great
problem to set up a workable clean-room atmosphere by rigging a series
of heavy plastic shrouds for additional environmental control inside the
barge canopy. Marshall and IBM specialists agreed on specific jobs to be
done on the barge so that no critical areas or hardware would be subject
to environmental degradation during the trip. With detailed work
schedules set up, arrangements were made for delivery of key parts and
supplies at designated ports along the river. In case of unanticipated
                                                                                   253
STAGES TO SATURN
254
                                       FROM CHECKOUT TO LAUNCH
                  STAGE SEPARATION AND ORDNANCE
     For a Saturn V launch, the vehicle really began "thinking on its own"
five seconds before liftoff when the IU was activated. The vehicle's
control system first executed a series of time-programmed attitude
maneuvers. After rising vertically for about 12 seconds, the Ill's com-
puter used stored roll and pitch commands to activate the gimbaled
engines, thereby rolling the huge rocket to a proper flight azimuth and,
at the same time, pitching it to the prescribed angle of attack for the
                 When
first-stage boost.        the IU received a signal that the propellant level
in the S-IC fuel tank had reached a specified point, it initiated commands
for first-stage engine cutoff, followed by stage separation. Soon after the
start of second-stage (S-II) ignition, the vehicle was controlled by a
                                                                       255
STAGES TO SATURN
256
                                       FROM CHECKOUT TO LAUNCH
     The instrument   unit, using   many   theories   and design features   that
                                                                            257
                  Coordination:                       Men
                          and Machines
                of the multifarious elements of the Saturn program
Management
   entailed new  tasks and concepts beyond the scope of any previous
rocket program. As explained in chapter 9, MSFC's management was a
dynamic process. Although rooted in the experience of the von Braun
team, dating back to the 1930s, Saturn management responded to
internal stimuli as well as external influences, including the      prime
contractors,   NASAHeadquarters, and other sources.
    Almost     last,   but fat from    the challenge of transporting rocket
                                      least,
                                           259
                      Managing Saturn
                                  261
STAGES TO SATURN
                               4
now   actually       doing?"
      Throughout       tenure as Marshall's director, von Braun required
                            his
such "Weekly Notes" from the laboratory chiefs and program managers,
as well as from other personnel on an ad hoc basis when a problem was
brewing. He was adamant about the length of these Weekly Notes,
warning "notes exceeding one page will be returned for condensation."
As the notes crossed von Braun's desk, he emphasized various points with
check marks and underlined phrases and scribbled assorted messages in
the margins: a compliment; a request for information; dismay; encour-
agement; and miscellaneous instructions. Reproduced copies went back
to the originator with marginalia intact. Although curt and to the point,
the replies were invariably personal, and occasionally tinged with humor.
Informed of a possible strike by the janitorial contractor, von Braun
                                                             5
responded, "Get me a broom! I'll sweep my own office."
     At the innumerable-meetings attended by von Braun as chairman or
participant, he displayed a remarkable ability
                                                to distill complex technical
issues into terms that other participants could understand. Matt Urlaub,
S-IC Program Manager, recalled technical presentations "that lost me in
the first five (minutes)." After listening, von Braun would sum up the
presentation in language clear to everyone. Yet von Braun consciously
avoided dominating such sessions and attempted to bring out all opin-
ions. These techniques contributed to genuine "team spirit." Konrad
Dannenberg, a key manager and associate of von Braun since the days at
Peenemuende, stressed the point: "You have to get all the people
involved. Von Braun has a real good flair for that," he said. "Everyone,
when he has a meeting with him, feels like the second most important
man   .   .   .   and boy   that really gives   you a team
                                                     Everyone is willing to
                                                             spirit.
do   his best."       Von Braun employed                  during tours of
                                                  this trait effectively
Marshall laboratories and contractor plants. He met with senior execu-
tives, but he also took a personal interest in what was happening on the
                                                                              263
STAGES TO SATURN
shop floor        the problems, the progress,   and the   tools.   Von Braun   talked
just as easily with the "top brass" as
                                       with the "tin-benders." These tours
had  great   significance  in improving   morale, and von Braun made
periodic tours intentionally. The tours were helpful to him too, in sensing
the pace of the program as well as the nature of difficulties as they
              6
developed.
     This concern for technical aspects was a hallmark of Marshall
planning, and von Braun personified it. In the earliest phase of Saturn
design at ABMA, Frank Williams, an         ABMA  veteran, remembered von
Braun's consistently close involvement. "It was just a ball working,"
Williams said, "having him [von Braun] come down and literally pore
over the drawing boards with you, and look at the performance and
check the engineering work." Williams went on to say that when the
Saturn V design was being established, von Braun was in the forefront,
immersing    himself in the whole vehicle: structures, systems, and mis-
       7
sions. This is not to say that only the Director and a small handful of top
aides did the conceptual work and forced it through. One of the reasons
for the Saturn success, Dannenberg emphasized, was "because a lot of
real good down-to-earth planning was done at the beginning." Von
Braun solicited advice and suggestions from workers in the shops, taking
into account the realities of fabrication and manufacture as the design
evolved. In this way, Dannenberg explained, von Braun avoided the
pitfalls of having top-level managers making critical decisions among
themselves and making assumptions about production that might not
                      8
approach reality.
    These tenets, among others, guided von Braun and                    his staff at
Huntsville.  Many other issues of organization, administration, and ac-
countability had to be solved. The Saturn program was large, expensive,
and involved complex contracts. According to one source, von Braun
remarked that when he came into NASA, he knew how to go to the
                                                     9
moon, but he did not know what a billion dollars was. Like other NASA
administrators, von Braun soon learned to handle billion-dollar pro-
grams with aplomb.
264
                                                     MANAGING SATURN
organization and tools also evolved, changing the programs over the
years. As Rees observed, one of the axioms in the evolution of a large
development project was that no static system of management would
           10
suffice.
     During January 1960, when affiliated with ABMA, von Braun and
his staff began to set up a management plan that would meet the
approval of NASA Headquarters. The laboratories would continue to
report directly to von Braun, and a new organizational position for a
project director of the Saturn vehicle system was proposed. Details of
vehicle integration, planning for R&D, and mission payloads were
worked out through a separate Saturn coordination board, chaired by
von Braun. The arrangement was rather unwieldy, and was never
completely implemented. However, the correspondence from Huntsville
to Washington requesting approval reveals the strong influence of NASA
Headquarters in early Saturn planning, including details of contractor
selection. The early influence of the laboratories and their chiefs is also
evident in the membership of the "working groups" that made up the
                             11
Saturn coordination board.
     The management organization for the early period of the Saturn
program, when the Saturn I was the only launch vehicle being developed,
relied on the Saturn Systems Office (SSO). At the heart of SSO were
three project offices: Vehicle Project Manager; the S-I Stage Project
Manager; and the S-IV and S-V Stages Project Manager (the S-V was a
small third stage that was ultimately dropped from the Saturn I configu-
ration). The vehicle project manager cooperated with the stage managers
in overall vehicle configuration  and systems integration. The Saturn I
first stage  was  produced   and   manufactured in-house by MSFC at
Huntsville, and the production of the upper stages as well as the engines
and the instrument unit involved management of several other contrac-
tors. The SSO was a comparatively small office; in the spring of 1963 it
employed only 154 people. Its operation was based primarily on the
strength of other center administrative support offices and the work of
the "line divisions." The line divisions were based on the nine technical
divisions, or laboratories (each composed of several     hundred        people),
carried over nearly intact from the  ABMA days.
     The laboratories themselves carried significant prestige within the
center and benefited from very strong support from von Braun. In fact,
most technical decisions were reached by consensus during the "board
meetings" of von Braun and the laboratory chiefs in executive sessions.
For the lower stages of the Saturn I vehicles, produced in-house, this
arrangement proved workable; and it must be remembered that the
laboratory chiefs had worked this way for years, first at Peenemuende
and later at ABMA. Much of the work in SSO concerned funds and
liaison with NASA Headquarters. This was conducted in a very informal
                                                                   12
manner, with SSO personnel frequently     visiting   Washington.
                                                                            265
STAGES TO SATURN
266
                                                                        MANAGING SATURN
hands dirty and actively work on in-house projects selected specifically
for the purpose of updating their knowledge and increasing their
competence." These practices were necessary to enable MSFC to corn-
all phases of development, production, and
                                               shop work. Von Braun
emphasized that this policy was the best preparation for evaluating con-
tractor standards and proposals. The goal was to achieve the best
economics in overall work and to get the maximum results for taxpayer
               14
dollars.
     Von Braun noted       in a memo on the reorganization, "It is important
to spell   out the responsibilities of the project offices in contrast to those of
the technical divisions."                    The   project offices   managed   efforts involving
more than one                        and reported directly to von Braun. Because of
                            discipline
the technical             complexity and scope implicit in project management, each
office required technical support in depth. "It gets this support, not by
creating        it               its   own
                          organization, but by calling upon the technical
                        within
divisions," von Braun wrote. He left no doubt about the vigorous role of
project managers in the future operations of MSFC: "Since the direction
of the various projects assigned to our Center constitutes our primary
mission,            I   would      like   to   make    certain that Division Directors fully
understand and fulfill their responsibilities in support of the manage-
ment of those projects."
     The 1962 MSFC reorganization reduced the premier position of the
technical divisions, or laboratories, and marked a historic break in the
evolution of the Peenemuende group. As Bill Sneed recalled, the change
was "painful" for von Braun to make. In his three-page memorandum
explaining the change and the reasons for it, von Braun urged person-
nel, especially his division heads, to accept gracefully their changed
status."In the past, such a paper was needless," he wrote, and went on to
explain the requisite logic for the new management responsibility in the
program and project offices. "By keeping these principles in mind, and
maintaining the spirit of teamwork which has been our tradition, we can
adjust to our new conditions and retain our past performance stand-
          15
ards."
     As the momentum of the Apollo-Saturn program increased and the
activitiesof NASA Headquarters proliferated in response to the manned
lunar landing program and other programs, a major reorganization was
planned to cope with all the expanding operations. The reorganization
involved all the major centers taking part in the Apollo-Saturn pro-
       16
gram, and the change at Marshall Space Flight Center set the style for
its
    operations for the next six years, the major period of Saturn V
development. The change at MSFC strongly reflected past organizational
arrangements, but also increased the authority of certain segments of the
managerial structure. In addition, the change established successful new
working arrangements between NASA Headquarters and MSFC, as well
as within MSFC's new organizational framework.
                                                                                            267
                     APOLLO SATURN                                                1
                                                                                        v*PACE<
                                                                                      L/MSC
                VEHICLE CONTRACTORS
                                                                                         THIRD STAGE     iS-IVB!
                                                        jl.U.   INTEGRATION
                                                                                         MDC
                                                                 IBM
                                                                                        ^SECOND STAGE       1S-II)
NAR
                                                       ROCKETDYNE
                                                       NAR
                        IBM BENOIX
                                                  >HR5T  STAGE
                                                   FIRST 5TAOE    (S-IB)
                                                   :::RYSLER
                                                                                        /-] ENGINE
     PRATT &                                                                             ROCKETDYNE
     WHITNEY                                                                             NAR
                            ROCKETDYNE
                                   NAR
      Effective
              1
                September 1963, the center director's office (with appro-
priate staff and functional offices) directed two new operational ele-
ments: the Research and Development Operations (R&DO) and Indus-
trial Operations (IO). Both of the new organizations possessed equal
                                                                        269
STAGES TO SATURN
270
                                                   MANAGING SATURN
role in the   new program management structure, and that better commu-
nications with   Headquarters through IO were urgently required. Mueller
feltthat the centers in general were too independent in their relation-
ships with Headquarters and that lack of regular
                                                   communications was a
serious shortcoming. "So I put together this concept of a program office
structure, geographically dispersed, but tied with a set of functional staff
elements that had intra-communications between program offices that
were below center level and below the program office level so as to get
                                               25
some depth of communications," Mueller said.
     Following the 1963 reorganization, the new program office began to
formulate a mode of operations. As head of the Saturn V Program
Office, Arthur Rudolph called on considerable managerial expertise in
project management of rocket vehicles dating back
                                                         to the years at
Peenemuende, and especially during the     ABMA   period when he served
as project director for theArmy's Redstone and Pershing programs.
From 1961 through 1963, he had worked at NASA Headquarters, in the
Systems Engineering Division of the Office of Manned Space Flight. He
had watched the plans for the Saturn V evolve and was aware of such
                                                                 26
factors as schedules, funds, and performance requirements.       He also
had specific ideas of how his program was going to run and placed
considerable emphasis on what he called program element plans. Rudolph's
staff often  chafed under the requirements to write up these rather
specific documents,   which detailed what each office was going to do and
how it was going to be accomplished. Most of the skeptics finally came
around, however. The program element plans forced people to think
about the goals and mechanics of their respective operations and how
their operations interacted with the operations of other offices. Even if
the authors seldom referred to the documents, they proceeded with
greater success because they were forced to analyze the procedures from
the start of the project. "I think the major problem is that in a big
program like the Saturn V you have many people involved and usually
people want to go off on tangents," Rudolph explained. "And the biggest
problem is really to get them all to sing from the same sheet 27
                                                               of music, to
put  it in the
               simple   fashion. That's the biggest problem."    James T.
Murphy,    who  acted  as Rudolph's deputy manager    of the  management
division, summarized the role of his chief: "In its simplest concept, a
program manager, with a supporting staff, has been designated to
coordinate the efforts of all Government and private industry groups in
                                                           28
developing and producing the Saturn V launch vehicle."
     A major instrument in establishing a managerial approach was the
Saturn   V program control  system plan, originated by Rudolph's office in
1965,  and known      as DirectiveNo. 9. The objective was to establish a
"baseline definition," against which  progress could be plotted, problems
highlighted,  corrective actions taken, and management kept informed.
                                                                        277
          MSFC SATURN V PROGRAM
                       OFFICE
                            OF
                     MANAGER
                                 DR A RUDOLPh
              DEPMGR OPNS
                                   J.BRADFORD
PROGRAM
CONTROL
 OFFICE
Arthur Rudolph, manager of
MSPC's Saturn V Program Of-
fice.
                                                                         273
STAGES TO SATURN
274
                                                    MANAGING SATURN
to reach a decision (level A). In situations where the panel could not
reach a decision, an executive group, the Panel Review Board, supervised
and adjudicated the issues as necessary. The Board was chaired by the
Apollo Program Director at NASA Headquarters and channeled 31             its
groups varied from time to time, with each group chaired by a senior
technical authority from one of the laboratories, and including repre-
sentatives from the appropriate program offices. Group recommenda-
tions were channeled through the Program Office Configuration Control
         32
Boards.
     To gauge the status of the program and to assess its progress,
hundreds of MSFC personnel engaged in various levels of daily, weekly,
and monthly staff meetings. Although informal contact between Saturn
V Program Office personnel and contractor personnel occurred daily, in
addition to recurring visits to contractor plants, the most important
formal meeting was the Contractor Quarterly Project Review beginning
in late 1964. In these meetings, contractor and MSFC managers reviewed
not only the technical status of the project, but also the management
status. In the meantime, the Saturn V program manager's office custom-
                                                                         275
STAGES TO SATURN
276
    NASA     Office of Manned Space Flight Management Council: the
    principals, George E. Mueller (thirdfrom left), Associate Administrator for
    Manned Space Flight and chairman, with manned space flight center
            Wernher von Braun (MSFC), Robert R. Gilruth (MSC), and
    directors
    Kurt H. Debus (KSC).
                                                                              277
STAGES TO SATURN
they should be allowed to go their own way after the contract was
        37
signed.    The longing for more freedom of action was evidently a legacy
of the experience that most Saturn contractors had previously had with
Air Force contracts. Huntsville had great technical competence; at
certain managerial levels of design and manufacturing, grumped one
highly placed contractor executive, Marshall maintained a one-on-one
surveillance. The Air Force, he said somewhat wistfully, was "not in your
                      3   }
pants all the time."      But Rees maintained that loose reins on the
contractor had not always worked out well from the MSFC point of view.
"Consequently," he said, "it became clear that close and continuous
surveillance of the contractor operation was required on an almost
day-to-day basis." The extent of the surveillance was proportional to the
subtleties and problems of the program, its relative position in relation to
the existing state of the art, and the extent of expertise possessed by
MSFC. The contractor's reaction to this aspect of NASA monitoring was
not favorable at first, but eventually this "penetration and monitoring"
was perceived to be a mutual benefit characterized by the often repeated
phrase, the "government-industry team." "Contractor penetration" was
an important concept that ultimately involved the contractor's relation-
                                    39
ship with his own subcontractors.
     One of the most interesting aspects of contractor penetration was
the RMO    approach. NASA could exert considerable influence on techni-
cal decisions that affected the managerial organization of the contractors.
General Samuel C. Phillips, who directed the Apollo Program Office at
NASA Headquarters, revealed this leverage during one of the program
review sessions held at NASA Headquarters in 1964. He noted that
various contractors had strengthened their organizations during the
preceding year, "either on their own or due to appropriate influence by
NASA." 40
    Phillips's   comment on      the use of appropriate influence was an
understatement, since MSFC could, and did, force contractors to change
their modes of operation. In 1963, the development of the S-IVB was in
its dual role as the second
                              stage of the Saturn IB vehicle and as the third
stage  of the  Saturn   V.  This  duality posed something of a problem of
interfacing  for the  S-IVB   prime contractor, Douglas Aircraft Company.
Discussing   the  S-IVB    project during the 1964 program review, Lee
James pointed     out that   MSFC management wanted to make sure that
Douglas   did  "not see  two  faces at Marshall. It is important they see only
one." As far as the contractor was concerned, the Saturn IB/S-IVB
manager acted as deputy to the Saturn V/S-IVB stage        41
                                                              manager, placing
basic responsibility in the Saturn V Program Office.
278
                      MSFC/CONTRACTOR RELATIONSHIPS
REQUESTS
                SUPPORT
                                     PROGRAM MANAGER
                                                            1
STAGE MANAGER
                        DAY-TO-DAY
                      PROGRAM D RECTION
                                     RESIDENT MANAGER
                 TECHNICAL
             LABORATORY SUPPORT        ENGINEERS AND
                                      ADMINISTRATIVE
STAGES TO SATURN
manufacturing organization and once they get rolling, they are a good
organization," said James emphatically. "Our problem always is on the
initial stages. We have made a major effort to concentrate on
                                                                 getting the
first stage out the door,
                          knowing we can trust a contractor like Douglas to
                                       4
follow on with the succeeding stages."
      The technique of contractor penetration to maintain high visibility
obviously generated some thorny issues in government-contractor rela-
tions. Nevertheless, MSFC felt that industry had a strong inclination to
take control of the job and the funding and pursue the job with a
minimum of government intervention. MSFC management believed this
inclination allowed too much opportunity for slippage, unidentified
280
                                                    MANAGING SATURN
                                                                            281
STAGES TO SATURN
One such instance occurred in July 1964, when one of the welds of the
S-I   VB
       stage failed and the consequent rupture of the tankage caused the
lossof the entire structural test stage. As a result of this incident, MSFC
"caused Douglas to go into TIG welding with the higher heat input than
the MIG welding that they were using in certain areas." MSFC technical
personnel reported higher reliability after the change, and approved
Douglas's revision of weld inspection procedures, which MSFC judged to
have been somewhat weak. 48
    In pursuing reliability and quality control, the project managers
found that they had to exercise considerable diplomatic tact, making sure
that the contractor had sufficient leeway to develop valid design concepts
without overdoing it. "It is in the nature of experts that they become
beguiled by intriguing technological problems," warned Eberhard Rees,
and such beguilement could lead to excessive pursuit of reliability and
performance. This situation was sometimes tolerable in industry, in the
interest of better products for competition, but not in the space program.
282
                                                          MANAGING SATURN
It   was necessary  be constantly on guard against losing simplicity easy
                        to
to   do                      of a program that was complex, large, and
           in the early stages
simple,     make   it
                 simple!
      In the quest for high performance, reliability, and quality control,
incentive contracts constituted only one of a number of blandishments.
Several techniques were employed by MSFC, including cash awards and
special recognition for quality control, cost reduction, and other activi-
ties. At MSFC, the Saturn V
                                  Program Office cooperated with the
Manned Flight Awareness Office in a program to inform and remind all
workers in the Apollo-Saturn program about the importance of their
work and the need for individual efforts. By means of awards and
recognition programs, the Manned Flight Awareness concept became an
effective incentive technique. The prime contractors also conducted
special incentive programs, in collaboration with the project managers
and    RMO personnel. North American's program was known as PRIDE
(Personal Responsibility in Daily Effort), and Douglas had its "V.I. P."
campaign (Value in Performance). MSFC's Manned Flight Awareness
personnel and the contractors also participated in a program to make
sure that vendors and subcontractors shipped critical spare hardware in
special containers and boxes. These boxes were marked with stickers and
placards imprinted with reminders to handle with particular care,
because the hardware was important to the astronauts whose lives
                                           50
depended on the integrity of the hardware.
                                                                               283
STAGES TO SATURN
284
                                                          MANAGING SATURN
such analysis were embodied in the data organized for viewing in the
PCC. Thus, the PCC was an arena for comprehensive displays for use by
management a focal point for collection and presentation of informa-
tion concerning the status of the Saturn V program, and planned so as to
provide displays for various levels of detail. This approach permitted
managers to identify the problem, begin action for resolution, and
monitor progress.
     The PCC for the Saturn V Program Office was one of a network of
such rooms located in the Apollo Program Director's office at Headquar-
ters, at each of the three Apollo-Saturn NASA centers (Kennedy,
Marshall, and Houston), at each of the prime contractors' offices, and at
Mississippi Test Facility. The network allowed top management and
other personnel to keep up with a myriad of activities, including logistics,
astronaut training, scientific projects, selection of lunar landing sites, the
worldwide tracking network, mission planning, and the mission itself.
Each had the latest information and up-to-date displays for its appropri-
ate job, including general Apollo-Saturn program information as re-
quired, along with a sophisticated communications system to accelerate
                                 56
the decision-making process.
    The PCC provided two        basic   ways   to display information:   open   wall
displays   and projected   visual aids.   The open   wall displays were used to
portray information that was updated and          changed on a cyclical, day-to-
day, or new-problem basis. Most of the display charts were constructed so
that they could be moved in and out of position on horizontal tracks.
They were marked by coded symbols so the viewer could tell at a glance if
a project was lagging, ahead of schedule, or on schedule. Both the project
offices and the staff-functional offices submitted data and maintained
liaison with PCC personnel throughout the preparation and use of the
display charts, and the offices were responsible for having proper
attendance in meetings where their display material was to be discussed.
     Each display carried the name of the individual responsible for the
data. If the project office representative could not answer questions or
supply additional information, the person to contact was immediately
identifiable from the chart, and a quick phone call could make him       or
the information available during the meeting. Some charts concerned
items being covered by what MSFC called the problem resolution system.
The data indicated the criticality of the problem, the specific hardware or
operation involved, the originator of the data, the identity of the "action
manager," and the current status of the problem. Other charts showed
aspects such as costs and technical data (weight, performance, and
configuration management).
     Rudolph always insisted on having a name associated with the charts.
He wanted to work with a person, he said, not an anonymous office.
Backing up the charts was a comprehensive set of "management matri-
ces" in notebooks, listing all individual counterparts, by name, for all
                                                                                285
MSFC's Saturn V Program    Office operated out of this Program Control Center,
rimmed with   recessed,sliding status charts and double picture screens for
comprehensive, up-to-the-minute briefing on progress and problems in the far-
flung program.
286
                                                     MANAGING SATURN
the answers. If a gas generator exhaust line under test in California was
showing problems, how would this affect the static test schedule at the
Mississippi Test Facility (MTF), and a scheduled launch from Cape
Kennedy? What would be its cost impact?           How   would   it   affect other
                                       58
hardware? What would be done about it?
     Like the    PCC    network, PERT received a strong impetus in the
                                        59
Polaris   program     in the mid-1950s.    During the early phases of the
Saturn program,       MSFC management regarded PERT as a very success-
ful effort.   At a   NASA Management Advisory Committee conference in
1964, von   Braun said that PERT was the best source of information
available on the status of hardware programs. The PERT network did
not catch everything; for example, a parts problem on Boeing's S-IC-T
(test stage) had been missed. Still, MSFC managers in 1973 recalled
PERT as one of the most useful management systems, although the
PERT network was phased out about the time of the launch of the first
Saturn vehicle (AS-501) in the winter of 1967. One reason was that PERT
was tremendously expensive.      A   large   number of people    within   NASA
and from the contractor's special computer programs were needed to
make the network perform adequately. "It has some use as a preliminary
planning tool," said R. G. Smith, a Rudolph successor, "but when tens of
thousands of events per stage are used, it is difficult to analyze, usually
lagging in real time usefulness,  and subject to manipulation to avoid
                              6
exposure  of real problems."
     During launch operations and special activities, the PCC was linked
to KSC and Houston by closed-circuit television. Although conferences in
the PCC were not televised by closed circuit (because of space limitations
and technical problems), the communications arrangement permitted
discussions in the PCC to be heard instantaneously at NASA Headquar-
ters and other centers. The ceiling of the PCC room was studded with
extrasensitive microphones, so that anyone at the conference table in
Huntsville could interject a comment or respond without leaving his seat,
and nobody had      to wait until a speaker somewhere else had finished.
When a speaker in Huntsville was making a presentation, conferees in
Houston or Cape Kennedy could freely respond. In addition, conferees
visually followed the presentation at other
                                            locations by means of viewgraphs
                                                                             287
STAGES TO SATURN
landing program?
          James Webb,     NASA     Administrator from 1961 to 1968, warned that
in large-scale endeavors such as the Apollo-Saturn program, managers
needed to be especially flexible because many "unpredictable difficulties"
as well as          "unanticipated opportunities" would crop up. Many
                  many
traditional  management concepts were not applicable because the large-
scale R&D endeavor was so dynamic. Managers needed to have a sound
foundation in basic management principles, but also needed to be able to
work in an environment where the lines of communication crisscrossed
and moved in unusual directions, and where the job was not always
exactly defined in the beginning. The successful manager had to do more
than understand the organizational framework backward and forward.
He had to grasp the total dimensions of the effort and define his role in
the task. In this context, successful aerospace managers availed them-
selves of existing fundamentals of management, whatever their source of
           To   accomplish the   moon   landing within the time   set   by President Kennedy,
     Apollo's designers deliberately hewed to techniques that did not reach far beyond
     the state-of-the-art in the early Sixties. The really significant fallout from the
     strains,   traumas, and endless experimentation of Project Apollo has been of a
     sociological rather than a technological nature: techniques for directing the massed
     endeavors of scores of thousands of minds in a close-knit, mutually enhancive
     combination of government, university, and private industry.
         Apollo has spawned an intimate and potentially significant new sociology
     involving government and industry, an approach that appears to stand somewhere
     between the old arsenal concept favored by the Army and Navy and the newer Air
288
                                                             MANAGING SATURN
  Force concept that depends heavily upon private corporations to manage, develop,
  and build big systems. The NASA approach combines certain advantages of each,
  while enhancing the total abilities of both private and government organizations. 64
                                                                                    289
STAGES TO SATURN
290
                                                  MANAGING SATURN
and              During a visit to MSFC in 1965, not long after the
      versatility.
activation of thePCC, Webb was given a thorough briefing on the facility
by Rudolph   and Bill Sneed, who was head of the Program Control Office
at the time. Following the briefing, Webb addressed a select group of
MSFC personnel, and was obviously enthusiastic about the PCC concept.
"I saw here in the hour before you arrived," he exclaimed to his
audience, "one of the most sophisticated forms of organized human
                                         73
effort that I have ever seen anywhere."     Webb's remark was a special
compliment   to Huntsville's PCC; Huntsville later became the model for
NASA's Apollo Program Office in Washington as well as for other
centers  and prime contractors. Over a period of years, at Webb's behest, a
stream of executives from government and American and foreign
industry trouped through the PCC. The Saturn V Program Office also
received inquiries by telephone and letter from a wide spectrum of
sources, including the famed design group of Raymond Loewy and
Associates. A former member of the Polaris management team once
visited the PCC and came away thoroughly impressed. "This chart room
of yours is an amazing place," he said to Rudolph. "I used to think the
ones we had in the Polaris program were good, but this puts us to
        74
shame."
     The Marshall center's organization experienced several adjustments
after 1969 in response to new directions in NASA programs. By 1972,
the   IO segments operated   as individual program offices and reported
SUMMARY
                                                                      291
STAGES TO SATURN
head.
    The crux of Saturn V management was Arthur Rudolph's Saturn V
Program Office. Rudolph's missile management skills had been en-
hanced by the Redstone and Pershing programs; as a Peenemuende
veteran, he could also relate effectively to von Braun and other key
MSFC managers of similar backgrounds. Within Rudolph's organization,
the "GEM Boxes" provided an effective and crucial link to offices at
NASA Headquarters and developed and applied various management
systems serving Marshall and the contractor; the Program Control
Center provided the means for visibility and accountability in the Saturn
program.
      It   is
                impossible to pinpoint any single outstanding or unique
management concept that led the program to success. The NASA-MSFC
"style" seems to be more of an amalgam of various concepts, although
these concepts were refined for the unique scope and complexity of the
Saturn program. In general, the government-industry partnership was
notably successful, and the in-house capability at MSFC was highly
effective in monitoring contractor performance and providing backup
          facilities. The organization and operation exhibited
         and
skills
                                                                 by the
Program  Control     Center lent a theme  of "visibility" to the Saturn
program. Among the many managerial tasks, logistics was a major effort.
292
                        The     Logistics   Tangle
                                     293
STAGES TO SATURN
294
                                                    THE LOGISTICS TANGLE
on the spot, supported by conveniently               accessible laboratories      and
                                  5
machine shops at the launch site.
      The hopeful assumptions about the launch vehicles did not suffice.
Factors that required logistical management included the size and
complexity of vehicles, the wide geographic dispersal of launch and test
sites, the pace of the program, the armies of technicians involved, and the
number of suppliers around the country. "Misinterpretation then, caused
neglect of an integrated logistics program," Rudolph admitted. "Thus
we ... created for ourselves a considerable problem by not allowing
enough thought and planning toward logistics at the very outset."
Theoretically, once administrators pinpointed a basic weakness in the
Saturn program managerial structure, it should have been fairly eco-
nomical to borrow some techniques of weapon logistics and adapt them
to NASA's requirements. Comprehensive programs existed for the Min-
uteman and Pershing programs, but the logistics for an older, smaller
rocket did not always prove adequate for a newer, lar.ger one. As
Rudolph observed, "I am not at all sure that logistic support of a launch
vehicle program with its high rate of advancement in the state of
technology and its associated highly complex ground support equipment
is not more difficult than logistic support of a weapons system."
                                                                                  295
STAGES TO SATURN
296
                                              THE LOGISTICS TANGLE
MSFC's Project Logistics Office, remarked that "Kennedy always consid-
ered themselves a logistics-oriented center," with internal administrative
channels to handle the job, although Marshall occasionally provided
                        9
transportation for KSC.
    The cooperative aspects of the logistical program included the
Department of Defense, which supplied some of the propellants and
pressurants for the Saturn program. Some cryogenic production plants
were jointly operated under the auspices of the Department of Defense
and NASA, and MSFC monitored the specifications and construction of
other plants around the country. By 1965, the major plants were in
operation to supply cryogenics for the rising tempo of Saturn testing and
launch operations. This capability was especially important for liquid
hydrogen (LH 2 ). The space program helped raise the production levels
to 190 metric tons per day, with the Saturn program absorbing up to 95
throughout the United States and arrived at test sites and KSC by every
conceivable means of modern transportation. Rudolph remarked that it
was virtually impossible to illustrate graphically the full GSE logistical
                                            11
program and harder still to describe it.
    The GSE    delivery requirements had many parallels in the transport
logistical requirements for the various rocket stages of the Saturn
program. The development of this phase of Saturn logistics also involved
a transportation network from coast to coast and relied on a wide
spectrum of transport equipment.
                                                                       297
STAGES TO SATURN
     Because the Saturn vehicles were originally designed for the utmost
in vehicle integrity and manned missions, it would be inadvisable to
concept was eventually scrapped. The shallow draft raised doubts about
its seaworthiness in the Gulf, and its dimensions and difficult
                                                                maneuverability
would necessitate major modifications to existing buildings and manufac-
turing areas to accommodate the transporter alone. The engineers
concluded that it would cost $5 000 000 and would not be operational for
four years. The  ABMA      study recommended the construction of towable
transporters   for the Saturn   vehicles and planned to use proven, seawor-
thy  vessels on  the waterborne    leg of operations.
298
                                              THE LOGISTICS TANGLE
     In October 1959, the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA)
gave the go-ahead to the Army Ordnance Missile Command (AOMC) to
begin engineering studies on the Tennessee River for dock facilities that
would be conveniently accessible to the manufacturing complex at
Redstone Arsenal. By December,     AOMC     received further authorization
from ARPA not only to construct the docks but also to begin designs for a
barge to carry the oversize boosters to the launch site at Cape Canaveral.
The engineers decided to equip the dock areas with electrical winches for
a roll-on/roll-off operation that would use the ground transporter to
wheel the stage aboard the barge, ride with it to its destination, and wheel
it out
       again. This operation promised the least strain and damage to the
                                                                     13
stage during the strenuous handling and transportation phases.
     The size of the Saturn I first-stage boosters promised some head-
aches when the time came to move completed stages around the
manufacturing areas and between the ships and the static-firing areas of
Redstone Arsenal. The Saturn engineers in Huntsville devised a solution
to the problem. For the final assembly of the Saturn I first stage, workers
used a pair of huge circular assembly jigs to position the cluster of one
center tank and eight smaller tanks around it. These assembly fixtures at
either end of the rocket then became the load-bearing structures for
transportation. After the completed booster was raised with huge jacks,
wheel and axle assemblies were positioned at each end. With the stage
lowered onto these assemblies, they were affixed to the assembly jigs,
which now became support cradles for towing the stage. The wheel
assemblies, using aircraft tires, were designed for independent braking
and hydraulic steering. The transporter was towed by an army truck
tractor at five to eight kilometers per hour through successive phases of
checkout and test. NASA also used the transporter for loading and
unloading the stage from the barges that carried it from Huntsville to the
                                    14
launch site on Florida's east coast.
     For the S-IC first stage of the Saturn V, MSFC's Test Laboratory
designed a similar transporter in 1963. The S-IC transporter used a
modular wheel concept, based on a two-wheel, steerable unit and
clustered to comprise two dollies fore and aft a total of 24 wheels. The
wheels, similar to the 24-ply tires for earth-moving equipment, stood
about as high as a man. Each modular pair of wheels incorporated a
separate system for power steering, with all systems of a particular dolly
interconnected by a computer to correlate the steering angles for all
wheels in unison. Since the dolly units could be steered to 90 from the
axis of the transporter, the entire rig and its load could be maneuvered
sideways, into, and out of checkout bays and test areas. MSFC used a
modified Army M-26 tank retriever as the tractor unit for towing the
S-IC and its huge transporter. The M-26, a 179-kilowatt (240-horsepower)
model weighing 55 metric tons, included 27 metric tons of water ballast
                                                                       299
STAGES TO SATURN
to cope with the counterweight of the transporter. The total length of the
tractor and transporter unit came to about two-thirds the length of a
football field and was capable of rolling along at eight kilometers per
hour. In theory, the driver in the tank retriever's cab was in charge of the
direction of travel, but in practice, he acted as a coordinator of a crew of
other drivers and transporter personnel. When the S-IC transporter rig
"hit the road," its entourage included a cluster of observers who walked
along at each corner of the vehicle and alerted the driver coordinator
positioned in the front of obstacles and clearances that were blocked
from his view. The driver in turn relayed instructions to drivers on the
transporter who were riding in cabs front and rear and who could
manipulate the massive fore and aft dollies as required. Before taking
on an actual stage, the entire crew trained throughout the MSFC
complex on a tubular S-IC 15 simulator that was built to the dimensions and
weight  of the actual stage.
     The size of the stages aboard the transporters and the combined
loads they represented created some unique problems in hauling them
across country.    At Huntsville, highway engineers laid out a special
roadway stretching 13 kilometers down to the docks on the Tennessee
River. At Michoud, another Saturn roadway included the length of an
old airstrip that lay between the manufacturing complex and the docking
area for the barges. In California, where the Douglas and North
American contractor plants were situated        in urban areas, the state
cooperated  in granting special permits for the  use of public highways for
moving  the  S-II, S-IV, and S-IVB  stages. These   stages, though smaller
than the S-IC, nevertheless presented special           difficulties.   Douglas, the
The   first   S-IC flight stage is cautiously towed through Marshall Space Flight
Center on     its
                  way to the adjoining Tennessee River and its barge transportation.
                                               THE LOGISTICS TANGLE
manufacturer of the S-IV and S-IVB stages for the Saturn I and Saturn
IB, became the first major West Coast contractor to encounter such
inconveniences. As the S-IV second stage of the Saturn I began to take
shape in 1960, transport problems became pressing. A Douglas execu-
tive, H. L. Lambert, said that the problems of handling and
                                                                 transporting
Saturn S-IV stages had reached the point where such considerations
threatened to impose limits as a design factor. 16
      Each stage followed distinctive logistical patterns. After manufac-
ture in California, the S-II traveled to the Mississippi Test
                                                              Facility (MTF).
The S-IC stage, manufactured at nearby Michoud, was also tested at
MTF. Both stages, for all their prodigious bulk, could be transported
with comparative ease via seagoing barges that used the extensive river
and canal systems constructed around the Michoud and MTF facilities.
After testing, barges once more carried the S-IC and S-II stages (and
earlier S-I and S-IB vehicles) to Cape Kennedy.
                                                    Logistical patterns for
the S-IV and S-IVB were more complex. S-IVB was smaller than its
companions and presented some unique handling difficulties in moving
it
   through an especially congested area of Los Angeles to the shipping
facilities. Difficulties were also encountered in
                                                  loading the stages for a
barge trip and delivering the stages further north and even further
inland to the Douglas test facilities at Sacramento.
      Customized apparatus for handling and transportation of the S-IV
and IVB stages was paralleled by "customizing" the eventual routes to
test and reshipment facilities.
                                  Although logic compelled logistics engi-
neers to opt for canals and seaborne transportation instead of land
transport, the overland mode still had to be used. The overland mode
was the only way to move a stage from the manufacturing areas to the
loading docks for the canal and seaborne segments of its journey.
Douglas and NASA personnel in California began negotiations to move a
27 000-kilogram load on roads, subject to the various jurisdictions of
state, county, and city. The planning and coordination took days.
                                                                        301
STAGES TO SATURN
along the final route. Finally, Douglas had the responsibility to coordi-
nate the remaining myriad travel arrangements. NASA representatives
cooperated with various military personnel on sea transport, while all
three elements (Douglas, NASA, and the military) kept in touch on times
of arrival and departure, interior schedules, proper support equipment
to load and unload the cargo, and additional problems.
302
An   S-II stage on   its
                           transporter.
Covered Lighter (YFNB)    class during World War II, primarily during
the Pacific campaigns, as floating supply and maintenance centers for
forward operational areas. The vessels were originally designed to be
self-contained. The lower decks were divided into crew quarters, galley,
machine shop, and a machine room for a pair of diesel generators to
supply power. The NASA conversion essentially retained the lower deck
configuration, but the top deck was removed and covered over to house
the Saturn I first stage as it rested on its transporter. The structure was
"beefed up" at some points, and reinforcement strips on the floor helped
carry the weight of the cargo. At the forward section, the Palaemon
included a different berthing arrangement for a 1012 man crew on the
upper and lower deck levels, and included the radio shack and pilot
house.
      To  propel the barges, MSFC's Project Logistics Office relied on
commercial marine contractors       like the Mechling Barge Lines, Incorpo-
rated, of Joliet, Illinois. One of Mechling's tugs, the Bob Fuqua, played an
especially significant role in the Saturn program, beginning with the
Palaemon and the shipment of the first of the Saturn I first stages from
Huntsville to Cape Canaveral. Normally, river tugboats like the Bob
Fuqua pushed, rather than pulled, a string of barges. With the tug in the
rear, it was easier to maneuver the barges ahead and to drop off or pick
up   a barge at river docks.       The high pilot house on the tug made it easy to
see over the string of low,         broad-beamed barges and follow the channel.
The  Palaemon, however, featured a high, metal-canopied superstructure
for the protection of Saturn stages, reminiscent of a military quonset hut
set atop the barge. Because the tug captain and pilot could not see to
                                                                              303
STAGES TO SATURN
guide the barge, the Palaemon pilot house, not the tugboat's, became the
                              ?>
bridge for controlling the barge and tugboat while under way, although
the tug continued to supply power from the rear. In emergencies, control
reverted back to the tug. This remote-control procedure, unique in
barging operations, was ironed out in early 1961, based on water trials on
the Tennessee River using the Bob Fuqua and the Palaemon with a test
booster aboard. Barge captains and pilots had to relearn control tech-
niques and maneuvers from the forward pilot house on the barge.
     The Bob Fuqua possessed other advantages. It was also a seagoing
tug,   and the Mechling organization operated   it   under seaway   rights that
permitted the tugboat to move the Palaemon directly from port to
port from the Tennessee docks, down the Mississippi, across the Gulf,
and up the Atlantic Coast to the launch site at Cape Canaveral. After
leaving the Mississippi, the barge and tug followed the Gulf Intracoastal
Waterway to St. George Sound, located off the Florida panhandle; across
the Gulf of Mexico to San Carlos Bay (near Ft. Myers); through the
Okeechobee Waterway across Florida to Stuart, on the Atlantic Coast;
then up the Florida Intracoastal Waterway to the Cape Canaveral Barge
Canal. The complete voyage from Huntsville covered about 3500 kilome-
ters and took 10 days; by using the Intracoastal Waterway, the barge and
its
     cargo traveled only 452 kilometers in open seas, and the route kept
them no more than 80 kilometers from sheltered ports along the Gulf
Coast. The barge and tug entourage usually included a 12-man
complement: a five-man crew from Mechling to handle the barge and
tug, a half-dozen NASA personnel traveling with the stage, and one
government monitor with overall responsibility for the operations. The
leisurely pace of the cruise, with the amenities of a well-equipped galley,
showers, and air-conditioned quarters, often attracted upper-echelon
MSFC personnel, if they could find a good excuse to go along. 20
      The inaugural voyage of the Palaemon occurred in April 1961 when
it
    departed from Huntsville for Cape Canaveral. Its cargo included a
dummy S-IV stage for the SA-1 vehicle and a huge water-ballasted tank
that simulated the size and weight of the Saturn S-l first-stage booster.
Crews at MSFC and the Cape rehearsed movements for loading, unloading,
maneuvering the stage and its transporter, operating the barge. The
Palaemon made the return trip in May, in time for its first operational
cruise, carrying a dummy S-IV payload along with the first SA-1 flight
stage that had just completed static-firing tests and final checkout at
Huntsville. But on 2 June 1961, the single lock at Wheeler Dam on the
Tennessee River collapsed. All river traffic halted and the Palaemon and
its intended
              cargo were trapped upstream. The launch schedules were
endangered, and NASA and MSFC scrambled to find a way to get the
stage to Florida. The high national priority rating of the Saturn program
and the cargo operations of the Atomic Energy Commission at Oak
Ridge, Tennessee spurred prompt action. It did not take long for the
304
                                                    THE LOGISTICS TANGLE
     For transportation of the S-IV and S-IVB from the West Coast to
Huntsville   and then  to the Cape,    NASA at first relied on ocean freight-
ers.   Thelarger S-II  stage  needed  more  specialized treatment, since its
size did not allow it to be stored within the confines of a freighter's hold
or above deck. In December 1963, NASA concluded agreements with the
Military Sea Transport Service to use the Point Barrow for shipment
                                                                           of
S-II stages from California to test and launch sites in Mississippi and
Florida. The Point Barrow was a Navy LSD (Landing Ship, Dock) that had
seen extensive Arctic duty before its conversion for the space program.
Beginning in 1964, the Point Barrow carried some S-IVB stages as well as
the larger S-II under a protective canopy located in the rear of the ship.
     The other large vessels that operated for the Saturn program
included the U.S.N.S. Taurus and the YFNB barge Poseidon. The Taurus,
similar to the Point Barrow, carried S-IVB and S-II stages to Mississippi
test locations and to Kennedy Space Center, and the Poseidon was an
oversized barge built to carry the big S-IC first-stage boosters of the
Saturn V between MTF, MSFC, and Cape Kennedy. The open-deck
barges Little Lake and Pearl River shuttled S-IC stages directly
                                                                     from the
factory doors at Michoud    to the test stands at MTF.   The  barges were left
uncovered because the stages      were  hoisted  directly off the barges into
position at the vertical test stands. Because   neither barge had a forward
pilot house, the tugs that  moved   them  featured  a second  bridge perched
on a framework tower rising above the original pilot house on the tug.
The rig looked like a seagoing forest fire watchtower to most spectators.
The remainder of MSFC's fleet was on the West Coast for S-IV and
S-IVB    logistics.   In addition, a small   flotilla   of seven tanker barges was
                                                                              305
Saturn's Barges
                                                                        307
STAGES TO SATURN
308
                                                    THE LOGISTICS TANGLE
                                                                              309
STAGES TO SATURN
nonscheduled air carry operations, but airlift for Air Force rockets also
looked promising. By 1961, plans had progressed to fly NASA's new
                                 30
family of large launch vehicles.
      Drawing heavily on his own financial resources, Conroy pushed the
idea of his bulbous, "volumetric" airplane despite the considered opinion
of many aircraft engineers and aerodynamicists that no plane could be
distorted and distended enough to swallow an S-IV rocket stage and still
be able to fly. But Conroy was persuasive. R. W. Prentice, who managed
the S-IV logistics program at Douglas, remembered him as real "swash-
buckler," the sort of aviation character that reminded him of the cartoon
hero named "Smilin' Jack." Conroy apparently found some kindred souls
among influential Douglas executives, because he persuaded the com-
pany to go along with him on a presentation to NASA and MSFC. Some
of the NASA managers were unconvinced, but the energetic Conroy
touched a responsive chord in MSFC's visionary director, Dr. Wernher
von Braun. As John Goodrum, chief of MSFC's logistics office, recalled
the sequence of events, von Braun warmed to the idea from the start.
The idea was innovative and its boldness appealed to him. Neither MSFC
nor NASA Headquarters could allocate substantial funds to such a
project at the time. Nevertheless, buoyed by the interest evinced at both
Douglas and  MSFC, Conroy    decided   to plunge ahead, although there
                                31
was no guarantee of a contract.
      The   firstphase of the project called for lengthening the fuselage
(by inserting the cabin section of another Stratocruiser) to accommodate
the S-IV stage. After the flight test of that modification, phase two called
for the enlargement of the plane's cabin section to approximately double
its normal volume. The swollen, humpbacked addition to the
                                                                    original
Boeing airframe was originally fabricated as a nonstructural element
stuck on the top of the fuselage. This alteration allowed test pilots and
engineers to conduct flight tests and analyze the altered flying character-
istics in comparative safety. The first flight occurred on 19 September
310
                                              THE LOGISTICS TANGLE
      In the course of work on the Guppy, Conroy began running out of
cash and credit. He figured he needed some tangible support from
NASA in the form of an endorsement to keep his creditors at arm's
length. On 20 September 1962, only one day after the first air trials of the
reconfigured prototype cargo version, Conroy and an adventuresome
flight crew took off for a
                           demonstration tour. At this stage of the plane's
development, the B-377's original fuselage was still intact, and the
massive hump attached to the outside was held up by an interior
framework of metal stringers and wooden two-by-fours. Conroy had to
get a special clearance from the Federal Aviation Administration which
allowed him to proceed eastward from Van Nuys, as long as he avoided
major population areas en route. Following several interim stops, the
Pregnant   Guppy flew to Huntsville, where Conroy wanted to demon-
strate the plane to MSFC officials and perhaps get some form of
unofficial encouragement to enable him to continue the plane's devel-
opment.
       He landed at the airstrip of the Army's Redstone Arsenal, a facility
shared jointly by MSFC and the Army. The Guppy was visited by a mixed
group of scoffers and enthusiasts, including von Braun. While some
onlookers made sour jokes about the reputed ability of the awkward-
looking plane to fly Saturn rocket stages from the Pacific to the Atlantic
coast, von Braun was delighted. With both time and money in short
supply, Conroy wanted to pull off a convincing test of the Guppy's ability
to fly a heavy load. Because there was no time to install enough sandbags
in the hold to simulate the proposed cargo capacity, the plane was
                                                                        311
finances were in such bad shape that he reached Huntsville only by
borrowing some aviation gas from a friend in Oklahoma, and 34MSFC
agreed to supply him with enough gas to fly home to California.
      Conroy was able to supply information for more serious contract
negotiations by late fall of 1962. Conroy reported in a letter to von Braun
that performance of the Pregnant Guppy guaranteed cruising speed in
excess of 378 kilometers per hour. The correspondence also revealed the
growing extent of MSFC cooperation and support for the proposed
Guppy    operations involving cooperation from military bases, although
no                    had been signed. Aero Spacelines planned to keep
     official contracts
critical spares at strategic locations along its route structure to reduce
downtime in case of malfunctions. This arrangement included the special
allocation of a "quick-engine-change" unit at Patrick AFB, Florida, near
the launching sites of Cape Canaveral. NASA also planned to arrange for
Aero Spacelines to purchase supplies of fuel and oil at the military bases
                           35
along the Guppy's route.
       In the spring of 1963, the space agency was planning the first
two-stage launch of the Saturn I vehicle, designated SA-5. The first four
launches had carried inert second stages, and SA-5 had special signifi-
cance as the first of the giant Saturn boosters to have both stages "live"
and operational. The agency was growing anxious over the delivery of
the S-IV-5 stage because of a time slippage caused by test problems, and
the Pregnant Guppy would save considerable time by flying the stage
from California to the Cape in 18 hours, as opposed to 18-21 days via
ship. In a letter dated 25 April 1963, NASA's Director of Manned Space
Flight, D. Brainerd Holmes, emphasized the Guppy's importance to
Associate Administrator Robert Seamans. Holmes wanted to make sure
that the FAA was "advised of NASA's vital interest" in securing the
Pregnant Guppy's prompt certification so that lost time could be made up
in the delivery of the S-IV-5 stage. Holmes pointed out that NASA had
                                                              36
also   made   several telephone calls to   FAA   officials.
     As evidence of NASA's growing commitment to Guppy operations,
Aero Spacelines was finally awarded a contract from MSFC, to cover the
period from 28 May 3 1 July 1963, to complete the plane's tests and make
an evaluation as soon as possible. The FAA awarded the B-377 PG an
airworthiness certificate on 10 July, and MSFC immediately conducted a
transcontinental trial flight with a simulated S-IV stage aboard. Although
the Pregnant Guppy did not receive its final certification as a transport
craft until 13 November 1963, NASA relied on the plane to carry Apollo
spacecraft hardware to Houston during the late summer months, and in
mid-September the Pregnant Guppy took on the S-IV-5 stage at Sacramento
for delivery to Cape Kennedy for the launch of SA-5. Technical
problems in the first stage delayed the launch for many weeks, but the
                                                                        37
two-stage rocket finally made a successful flight on 29 January 1964.
312
                                                THE LOGISTICS TANGLE
     The Guppy saved up      to three   weeks   in transit time and effected
substantial savings in transportation costs,    and won endorsements and
long-term contracts from   NASA    officials.The plane was operated by
MSFC   but carried a variety of NASA freight including launch vehicles
for the Gemini program, Apollo command and service modules, hard-
ware for the Pegasus meteoroid detection satellite, F-l engines, the
                                                                       3
instrument unit for Saturn I, and "other general outsized NASA cargo."
      For these reasons, as well as NASA's concern for the larger space
hardware in the Saturn IB and V programs, NASA managers expressed
interest in correspondingly larger aircraft.Because the S-IVB stage was
larger than  the S-IV,  it would require a larger plane if air operations
were to be continued. A larger plane could carry the instrument unit for
both the Saturn IB and the Saturn V as well as the Apollo lunar module
adapter unit. Moreover, a second plane could serve as a backup for the
original Guppy. At one point in the discussions about a second-
generation aircraft, serious consideration was given to the conversion of
an air transport large enough to handle the S-II second stage of the
Saturn V.
      Even before the Pregnant Guppy had won its first NASA contract,
Conroy was writing to von Braun about a successor aircraft equipped
with powerful turboprop engines and large enough to transport the
S-IVB. NASA did not seriously consider the second-generation Guppy
until the original Pregnant Guppy had demonstrated its worth. Robert
                                                                        313
STAGES TO SATURN
S-II (or   S-IVB)               southern Mississippi and the Cape. "In any
                    to test sites in
case, the  program        be
                           is characterized
                                to          by austere funding and early
delivery  schedules."  Several companies proposed various schemes, in-
cluding  the use of modified  B-36 bombers or English-built Saunders-Roe
                       40
Princess flying boats.    None of these plans ever materialized. NASA
concluded that an S-II cargo aircraft would take too long to develop and
would cost too much. Also the number of planned Saturn V launches was
revised    downward, reducing the requirements              for S-II transportation.
The S-IVB, however, was programmed                 for frequent launches in both the
Saturn IB and Saturn V               class of vehicles, so the desire for a backup
                    41
airplane persisted.    With its Boeing Stratocruiser inventory, Aero Spacelines
proved  to be  ahead   of any competition in supplying a second volumetric
air transport.
      As before, Aero Spacelines developed the new aircraft with its own
resources, although personnel from MSFC came to California to cooper-
ate on the design studies, and a flight-test expert from NASA's Flight
Research Center at Edwards, California, worked very closely with the
design team. Originally dubbed the B-377 (VPG) for "Very Pregnant
Guppy," the second-generation plane finally emerged as the "Super
Guppy," or B-377 SG. The larger, heavier cargoes for the Super Guppy
required increased horsepower. Although parts of three other B-377
aircraft were incorporated into the Super Guppy, the cockpit, forward
fuselage and wing sections, and the engines came from a Boeing C-97J,
an Air Force transport version of the commercial Stratocruiser. This
aircraft had Pratt & Whitney turboprop engines. Conroy realized that it
was imperative for his big new airplane to have the more efficient and
powerful turboprop powerplants. Conroy had learned from his contacts
in the Air Force that the C-97J airplanes were headed for retirement, and
he had hoped to get the airframes as salvage and the engines on a
low-priced lease. Conroy succeeded, with NASA lending special assistance
in securing the engines. During the spring of 1965, NASA's Office of the
Administrator made overtures to the Air Force: "We definitely feel that it
would be in the public interest and advantageous to the government if
these engines were made available" to transport rocket stages, engines,
and other large cargoes. "Under these circumstances," NASA explained,
"we would appreciate it if you would approve the proposed lease." 42
Conroy got his engines, and the Super Guppy began acceptance tests
before the year was out.
      NASA wanted to put the aircraft in service early in 1966, after the
plane had proved its flying capabilities, although final FAA certification
came later in the spring. John C. Goodrum, chief of MSFC's Project
Logistics Office, felt that the utility of the Super Guppy was of such
importance that      it   should be considered operational for "critical cargoes"
on a "limited    basis" as   soon as possible. Although FAA examiners had not
yet flown the       Super Guppy by March, Goodrum urged operational
314
                                                   THE LOGISTICS TANGLE
                                                                              315
Saturn Air Transport
Top   left,
              an Army CH-47A    helicopter
arrives at the   MSFC dynamic test stand
with the Saturn    IB adapter unit it has
flown  970   kilometers from Tulsa, Okla-
homa. Top right, the Pregnant
                                   Guppy
aircraft is loading an S-IV stage into its
aft fuselage. Above, the Super Guppy
arrives at    MSFCin fall 1966.
                                Right,
the Super
            Guppy takes on an S-IVB
stage.
                                             THE LOGISTICS TANGLE
string of selected   SAC bases and other Air Force fields for fuel and
operational support, and these  installations were normally alerted ahead
of time for the appearance of the strange-looking Guppy in the landing
pattern. Not long after the start of Pregnant Guppy flights,
                                                              a misadven-
ture occurred, and NASA's S-IV rocket stage was temporarily impounded
by Air Force security personnel. Don Stewart, who represented MSFC as
a monitor for the early operational flights, recalled that the Guppy pilot
had been forced off his normal route out of Los Angeles to avoid bad
weather, and the plane had begun to run low on gas. Both Stewart and
the pilot thought their alternate field, a SAC base, had been notified of
Guppy operations. They were mistaken. After a night landing, the plane
was surrounded by     SAC   security police brandishing carbines     and M-l
rifles.   The SAC guardsmen were caught     off balance by the large and
unusual aircraft that carried a rocket, and they directed the plane to a
remote corner of the airfield until the intruder's credentials could be
verified. The Guppy crew dozed fitfully in the plane until the base
commander was convinced of Stewart's story, checked with the proper
authorities, and finally issued a clearance to refuel and take off in the
                              45
early hours of the morning.
     In flight, the Pregnant Guppy behaved normally, although Air
Force and NASA ground crews had to learn to cope with some of its
unusual idiosyncracies on the ground. During a stop at Ellington Air
Force Base at Houston, high winds swept into the vast hold of the
detached aft section, and caused light damage to the plane's tail. After a
couple of mishaps involving the Super Guppy, designers beefed up the
massive dome and redesigned the latching mechanisms on the hinged
nose section.   The Super Guppy experienced occasional engine       problems,
                                                                          46
and   NASA  wisely kept the plane on the ground during high winds.
      Despite these occasional incidents, the ungainly looking airplanes
routinely performed their duties week after week, and flew one-of-a-
kind, multimillion dollar cargoes between     NASA    facilities,   contractor
plants, and the launch site at Cape Kennedy.    The Guppies    transported
other diversified cargoes in addition to rocket stages and engines. During
1968, the Super Guppy carried the special environmental chamber used
for final preparation of the manned Apollo command module prior to
launch, as well as carrying cryogenic tanks for an experimental nuclear
rocket. As the Skylab orbital workshop progressed in the late 1960s and
early 1970s, the Guppies ferried such components as the multiple
docking adapter, the Apollo telescope    mount, and the Skylab workshop
                                 47
itself (adapted from the S-IVB).    The success of Aero Spacelines and its
original Pregnant Guppy attracted the attention
                                                       of other firms with
thoughts of diversification, and in July  1965  the company was acquired
by the Unexcelled Chemical Corporation.     The  new  organization not only
proceeded with the Super Guppy configuration; it also constructed a
                                                                         377
STAGES TO SATURN
SUMMARY
318
The Navy      assisted   NASA   with water transportation of Saturn
                                                                    stages. It   made
available the U.S.N.S. Point        Barrow, which first carried S-IVB stages     from
California through the Panama Canal to the Gulf coast; when the Guppy aircraft
took over S-IV transport, Point Barrow carried S-II
                                                    stages from California to the
Mississippi Test Facility.
       ITEM
                        Step by Step
                                     321
                                              1
              Qualifying the Cluster Concept
       Saturn   I
                    flight tests   were uniformly       and the unique size
                                                     successful,
The
  and complexity of the clustered rocket made          success all the more
                                                             its
                                             323
STAGES TO SATURN
Block   II versions.   The H-l engine was common    to all the vehicles, but a
number of significant differences distinguished Block I from Block II.
The most visible distinguishing feature for the Block I series, SA-1
through SA-4, was the absence of aerodynamic fins on the first stage.
Moreover, the Block I vehicles did not include live upper stages.
Consistent with NASA's building block concept and the requirements for
validating the clustered concept first, these first Saturn I launches used
live lower stages only. The dummy upper stages looked like the future
live versions, had the same approximate center of gravity, and had
identical weight. Inert S-IV and S-V stages, topped by a nose cone from
an Army Jupiter rocket, brought the typical height of the Block I series to
about 50 meters.
     The flight of SA-1 was remarkable for the small number of
modifications that were required for succeeding flights. Experience
gained from successive launches inevitably resulted in changes, but the
only major difficulty that turned up with SA-1 was an unanticipated
degree of sloshing of propellants in the vehicle's tanks. Beginning with
vehicle SA-3, additional antislosh baffles were installed, which brought
this undesirable characteristic under control. None of the Block I
missions called for separation of the upper stages after the S-l first-stage
engine cutoff, although the SA-3 and SA-4 vehicles experimentally fired
four solid-fuel retrorockets, anticipating the separation sequence of
Block II missions. Other preliminary test items on SA-4 included
simulated camera pods and simulated ullage rockets on the inert S-IV
stage. The last two vehicles also carried a heavier and more active load of
electronics  and telemetry equipment. The telemetry equipment and
associated test  programs varied with the goals of each mission, but the
total array of such gadgetry and the means of acquiring information help
explain not only the success of the Saturn program but also the
comparatively low      number of R&D    flights   required to qualify the vehicle
as operational.
      The       of SA-4 culminated with only seven engines firing instead
            flight
of eight.   One
              of the appealing features of clustered engines involved the
"engine-out capability" the prospect that, if one engine quit, the remaining
engines could compensate by burning longer than planned. So NASA
technicians programmed a premature cutoff of one engine 100 seconds
324
                              QUALIFYING THE CLUSTER CONCEPT
into the flight.   The experiment succeeded, the SA-4 performing as
hoped   on  the remaining seven engines.
     During   this  basically uneventful series of launches, the Saturn I
carried its first payloads. The missions of SA-2 and SA-3 included one
very unusual experiment, called Project Highwater, authorized by NASA's
Office of Space Sciences. The inert S-IV and S-V stages for these
launches carried 109000 liters (30000 gallons) of ballast water for
release in the upper atmosphere. As NASA literature stated, "release of
this vast quantity of water in a near-space environment marked the first
                                                                       325
                                      Top left, Saturn I SA-4 rises from the
                                      launch pad on 28 March 1963. The
                                      last
                                            of the Block I vehicles, it has no
                                      aerodynamic fins as does SA-5, which
                                      sits on the
                                                  pad at top, right. At left is an
                                      artist's
                                                 conception of S-IV stage separa-
                                      tion in space, with the six RL-10 en-
326
                               QUALIFYING THE CLUSTER CONCEPT
varied with the different missions they performed. With a
                                                          Jupiter nose
cone, SA-5 was about 50 meters high, but the remainder of the Block II
vehicles, SA-6 through SA-10, carried prototype Apollo capsules and
other payloads, which stretched them to approximately 57.3 meters. 4
     Although electronic instrumentation and telemetry provided reams
of pertinent information on the health and performance of the rocket
during a mission, flight-test personnel needed visual documentation as
well. For this reason, the Saturn vehicles all carried an invaluable array of
visual instrumentation equipment. The Block II series continued the
                                                              flights. MSFC
visual instrumentation that was begun during Block I
                                                                        327
STAGES TO SATURN
 motion picture and television coverage for the first stage of the SA-1
 mission in October 1961 on the basis of the Redstone camera technology.
 Lack of time and money prevented use of such equipment for the first
 Saturn launches, and effort was redirected toward the mission of SA-5,
the first live, two-stage Saturn I. Responsibility for the camera became a
joint program of MSFC's Astrionics Laboratory and the Propulsion and
Vehicle Engineering Laboratory. With approval for the project in
October 1961, Marshall named Cook Technological Center, a division of
the Cook Electric Company of Chicago, as the major contractor. Cook
Technological Center then proceeded with the development and manu-
facture of jettisonable and recoverable camera capsules to be flown on
SA-5,   6,   and   7.
      The camera capsules consisted of three sections: the lens compart-
ment, with camera lens and a quartz viewing window; the combined
camera and its control unit in a separate compartment; and a recovery
compartment, housing descent stabilization flaps and a paraballoon for
descent and flotation, a radio and light beacon for aid in recovery
operations, and more conventional recovery devices such as sea-marker
dye and shark repellant. The capsules were designed to cope with the
stresses of powered flight, ejection, reentry, impact into the sea, and
immersion   in saltwater. Four model "A" capsules were positioned to
record external areas of the Saturn vehicle, facing forward. Four more
model "B" capsules were mounted in an inverted position to record the
phenomena inside designated LOX tanks and around the interstage
between first and second stages. For the "B" models, technicians linked
the cameras with fiberoptic bundles to transmit images from remote
locations and used incandescent lights and strobe systems for illumina-
tion. Engineers preferred to use color film whenever possible because it
328
                                QUALIFYING THE CLUSTER CONCEPT
the engine problem in the number 8 engine turbopump, which shut
down at  1 17.3 seconds into the
                                 flight. When telemetered information was
analyzed, engineers  concluded   that the teeth had been stripped from one
of the gears in the turbopump, accounting for the abrupt failure of the
engine. Luckily, Marshall and Rocketdyne technicians, through previous
ground testing of the turbopump, had already decided that its operating
characteristics dictated a modified design. A change had already been
planned to increase the width of the gear teeth in this particular
turbopump model, and the redesigned flight hardware was to fly on the
next vehicle, SA-7. Consequently, there were no delays in the Block II
launch schedule and, incidentally, no further problems with any of the
                            7
H-l engines    in flight.
     Otherwise, the flight of SA-6 was eminently successful. The SA-6
was the first to carry a dummy Apollo capsule into orbit, and it tested the
capsule by jettisoning the launch escape system tower, part of the Apollo
spacecraft hardware development. The performance of the Block II
series progressed so well that the Saturn I boosters were declared fully
operational by NASA officials after the SA-7 flight (18 September 1964),
three launches earlier than expected. The unmanned Apollo spacecraft
on board met guidelines for design and engineering, compatibility of the
spacecraft and launch vehicle, and operation of the launch escape system.
The launch also confirmed the integrity of major critical areas of the
launch vehicle such as the Saturn I propulsion systems, flight control,
guidance, and structural integrity. For SA-7, the only event that might be
considered an anomaly involved the recovery of the cameras. After stage
separation, the jettisoned camera pods descended by parachute and
landed in the sea, downrange of the expected recovery area. Then
Hurricane Gladys blew in and closed the sector. Seven weeks later, two of
the ejected SA-7 camera capsules washed ashore, encrusted with barna-
                                               8
cles, but with the important films undamaged. The last three Saturn I
vehicles carried a redesigned instrument unit with more sophisticated
components that did not require separate, pressurized sections; the result
was a lighter and shorter vehicle with enhanced performance. With a
different environmental control system, the new instrument unit was the
prototype for the Saturn IB and Saturn V vehicles. The most significant
feature that set all three vehicles apart from their predecessors was the
payload the unusual, winglike meteoroid technology satellite known as
           9
Pegasus.
                                                                       329
STAGES TO SATURN
Center. The reputation of the Marshall center rested not on satellites, but
on the launch vehicles designed and engineered by the von Braun team.
The Pegasus was also unique because it was the only NASA satellite to use
Saturn boosters. It was especially significant from the standpoint of
designing later versions of the Saturn vehicles. Data collected by Pegasus
would either confirm the ability of existing designs to operate without
danger from meteoroid impact or require new designs to cope with the
dangers of meteoroid collisions. The Pegasus project was an example of
the painstaking scope of the Apollo-Saturn program research and
development to avert any sort of serious problem. Finally, the project
demonstrated several ways in which the operation contributed to the
general store of scientific knowledge, as well as to the design and
                                                            10
operation of boosters, spacecraft, and associated systems.
     Meteoric particles striking the Earth travel at speeds up to 72
kilometers per second. A dust-speck particle, weighing a mere 0.0085
gram, at such a speed packs the energy of a .45-caliber pistol fired point
blank. Meteoroid phenomena in the near-Earth space environment
commanded serious attention, the more so because many critical mo-
ments of manned Apollo-Saturn missions occurred in potentially hazardous
zones. The Gemini spacecraft experienced meteoroid impacts many
times during a 24-hour period, but the specks encountered in the lower
Gemini orbits were too small to cause a puncture in the spacecraft skin.
Higher orbits for the Apollo series raised concerns about heavier
meteoroid particles. "It is the stuff of intermediate size that concerns a
space-vehicle designer," Wernher von Braun emphasized. "Particles of
only a few thousandths of a gram, whizzing at fifteen to twenty miles a
second, can penetrate a spacecraft's wall or a rocket's tank. They
constitute a definite risk." A meteoroid puncture in a gas compartment
or propellant tank could cause a serious leak, and in the case of a highly
pressurized container create an explosive rupture. Particles also created
heat at the moment of impact. With highly volatile propellants aboard, as
well as the oxygen-enriched cabin atmosphere, penetration by a burning
meteoroid would touch off a destructive explosion. Even without com-
plete penetration, impacts could cause "spalling." The shock of impact
with the skin of a spacecraft could eject fragments from the skin's interior
surface to richochet inside the vehicle. These flying fragments raised a
serious possibility of danger to a crew or to vital equipment. The need for
information was clear. 11
     Late in 1962, designers of spacecraft of the Apollo-Saturn program
had very limited knowledge of the abundance of meteoroids in the
vicinity of Earth, where numerous manned flights were planned and
where crucial phases of the lunar missions would occur. Astronomers
could provide information on meteoroids with mass above 10~ 4 grams,
since they could be sighted optically from observatories or tracked by
radar. Vehicle sensors like those on Explorer XVI provided some statistics
330
                               QUALIFYING THE CLUSTER CONCEPT
on the abundance of smaller        particles, but the lack of data on the
intermediate-sized meteoroids caused persistent doubts, because infor-
mation on the intermediate range presented configuration criteria "of
utmost importance for the design of spacecraft." Pegasus was intended to
fill in the
            gap. As stated in the official report: "The objective of the
Pegasus   Meteoroid Project is the collection of meteoroid penetration data
in aluminum panels of three different thicknesses in near-earth orbits.
                                                                     5      3
... In fact, the abundance of meteoroids in the mass
                                                           range 10~ to 10~
will be decisive with respect to the
                                        necessary meteoroid protection for
future long-duration manned missions." 12
      Attached to the S-IVB second stage, Pegasus deployed in 60
seconds, extending two wings to a span of 15 meters, with a width of 4.6
meters and a thickness of about 50 centimeters. The Pegasus wing mount
also supported solar cell panels for powering the satellite's electronics. 13
In full deployment, the Pegasus in flight exposed about 80 times more
experimental surfaces than Explorer meteoroid detectors exposed. The
meteoroid impact sensor was a charged capacitor with a thin dielectric, a
metal foil on one side, and a sheet of aluminum on the other side.
Perforation by a meteoroid caused a momentary short between the metal
plates. The discharge burned off any conducting bridges between the
two metal layers; thus the capacitor "healed" after each perforation. The
                                                14
shorts, or discharges, were recorded as hits.      Special sensors carried by
the satellite provided information on (1) the frequency and size of
meteoroids capable of damaging the spacecraft structure and equipment,
and (2) the direction of the meteoroids as a function of frequency and
                      15
power of penetration.
PEGASUS MISSIONS
                                                                        331
STAGES TO SATURN
       To carry
              the Pegasus aloft, the S-IV second stage and the instrument
unit   underwent some minor modifications. Because heat absorption
could upset the satellite's thermal balance, Douglas supplied the S-IV
with a special coat of paint to reduce the heating factor. New equipment
consisted of an "auxiliary nonpropulsive vent system" to cut down
excessive tumbling and enhance the orbit stabilization. Designers also
incorporated the reworked instrument unit. NASA officials scheduled
the launch of SA-9 for 16 February 1965, and technicians at Cape
Kennedy worked hard          to   meet     their preflight deadlines. With the
332
Above, a Fairchild technician
checks out the extended Pegasus
meteoroid detection surface in
March 1964. At       right   is   an
artist's   conception of Pegasus
in orbit with meteoroid detec-
tor extended.
     the      seven days of flight, they were eagerly anticipating the first full
            first
     reports read out from the Pegasus memory banks. In the first two weeks,
     Pegasus  indicated almost a score of hits by interplanetary objects. By late
     May,  NASA     verified more than 70 meteoroid penetrations. NASA
     spokesmen unhappily verified extensive failures in the Pegasus      satellite
     as well, but MSFC and Fairchild personnel had just enough time      to solve
                                                                   20
     these difficulties before the launches of Pegasus II and III.
            The second of the meteoroid satellites, Pegasus II, arrived at KSC on
     21 April 1965.  The final countdown for SA-8 began on the afternoon of
     24 May. With a scheduled 35-minute hold, the countdown ticked on
     without a hitch into the early morning of the launch, 25 May. The flight
     of SA-8 marked two especially notable departures from past experiences
     in the Saturn program. For one, the SA booster was manufactured by
     Chrysler, and Saturn flew with a first stage supplied by a contractor for
     the first time. It symbolized the end of an era for the von Braun team and
     the long-standing arsenal "in-house" philosophy transferred from the
                                                                             333
STAGES TO SATURN
old   ABMA days to the young space program of NASA. For another,
SA-8 blasted off at 2:35 a.m. in the first night launch of a Saturn rocket.
Highlighted against the dark night skies, the winking lights of the launch
tower and the blinding glare of the floodlights around the base of the
launch pad gave the scene an unusual new fascination. The darkness
gave even higher contrast to the fiery eruption of ignition and the lashing
tongues of fire during liftoff. Always awesome, the thundering roar of
the Saturn I's ascent seemed mightier than ever before, as it seared its
way upward through the dark overcast above the Atlantic. NASA officials
timed the launch to avoid conflict in the communications with Pegasus I,
still in orbit.' Both satellites transmitted on the same
                                                             frequency, and the
fiery night    launch  of Pegasus   II put the second   satellite at an angle of
                                                     21
120, one-third of an orbit apart from the first.
      The launch illustrated the accuracy of the propulsion systems and
confirmed the reliability of the flight electronics, which were improved in
successive launches of the Saturn I series. Wernher von Braun praised
the flight as "a lesson in efficiency," and George Mueller, Associate
Administrator for Manned Space Flight, commented that the flight was
very significant to future space flights, with their need for very close
timing for rendezvous missions. Time magazine considered the flight
from other points of view. The magazine approvingly reported the
success of the cluster concept used on the S-l booster and the faultless
performance of the second stage with its six RL-10 engines: "The
smooth success of last week's launch suggests that LH 2 has at last become
a routine fuel." The editors acknowledged the need for more informa-
tion on meteoroid hazards in space flight but found the greatest
significance in the launch itself. "Far more encouraging for space
exploration," said Time, "was the smoothness with which the many-tiered
rocket was dispatched into the sky." So often a rocket vehicle spent weeks
or month on the pad with delays, but no setbacks occurred in the launch
of SA-8, "which left its pad as routinely as an ocean liner leaving its
       22
pier."    The second Pegasus satellite began returning data in short order.
Within one day after launch, it indicated two meteoroid penetrations.
Modifications on Pegasus II included successful refinement of the detec-
tor electronics   and a handful of minor readjustments. The second
Pegasus experienced some troubles during its mission, primarily with the
analog and digital telemetry channels. Technicians finally smoothed out
the digital failure, and even though the analog transmissions continued
intermittently, they worked well enough to rate the mission a success.
Tracing the source of trouble, workers finally decided it originated in a
thunderstorm during preparation of the spacecraft on the pad, because
the wettest section contained the circuit failure. 23
     On 21 June 1965, the Apollo command module and associated
hardware arrived at KSC for the launch of the last meteoroid detection
satellite,   Pegasus   III.   With planned modifications for Launch Complex
334
37-B to service the uprated Saturn IB launch vehicle, NASA officials
decided to move the flight of SA-10 ahead to 30 July to avoid delays in
both the launch and the modifications of the launch pad. Technicians ran
a series of checks to verify panel deployment and compatibility of
systems, then joined Pegasus III to the instrument unit of the SA-10
vehicle. On 27 July 1965, the KSC launch crew ran an uneventful and
successful countdown demonstration test for SA-10, the last Saturn I. By
29 July, the final phase of the launch countdown was under way and
proceeded with no technical holds to liftoff on the next day. The SA-10
vehicleperformed flawlessly, inserting the command module and Pegasus
           planned orbital trajectory. On the basis of data from all three
III into the
meteoroid detection satellites, NASA spokesmen announced in Decem-
ber that the Apollo-Saturn structure would be adequate to withstand
destructive penetration by meteoroids during space missions.   The Pegasus
                        24
project was successful.
     The information gathered by the Pegasus trio included much more
than variations in theoretical meteoroid penetration data. In his capacity
as Director of the Space Sciences Laboratory, Ernst
                                                      Stuhlinger praised
the secondary results, which returned scientific data valuable to the
design and engineering of future spacecraft, as well as knowledge of
specific scientific nature. "It sometimes occurs that an experiment,
planned for one specific objective, provides observational results far
beyond the single-purpose mission for which it was originally conceived,"
he said. "Project Pegasus, which has the primary objective of measuring
the near-Earth environment, is an example in case." For the benefit of
spacecraft designers, the 65 000 hours accumulated in all three missions
provided significant and valuable data on meteoroids, the gyroscopic
motion and orbital characteristics of rigid bodies in space, lifetimes of
electronic components in the space environment, and thermal control
systems and the degrading effects of space on thermal control coatings.
For physicists, the Pegasus missions provided additional knowledge
about the radiation environment of space, the Van Allen belts, and other
               25
phenomena.
    The last of the meteoroid detection satellites, Pegasus III, carried a
captivating experiment, one of the first intended to be left in space, to be
personally retrieved by an astronaut at some future date. Eight large
detector segments were removed from the Pegasus wings, replaced with
"dummy" panels and 48 temporary coupons, cut from samples of the
detector surfaces. The coupons, in turn, carried 352 items of test
materials and thermal samples, some of them in use, others considered as
candidates for future application. Examples of the test items included
aluminum skin specimens, ranging from sandblasted and anodized
surfaces to pieces covered with luminescent paint and gold plate. The
launch of Pegasus III put it into an orbit of 530 kilometers. After 12
months, NASA planners expected the orbit of Pegasus III to decay some,
                                                                       335
STAGES TO SATURN
                            SATURN    I   IN   RETROSPECT
     In terms of rocket development, the series of Saturn I launches was
remarkably successful. Most rocket programs had severe teething trou-
bles early in the game; up to two or three dozen test shots and loss rates
of 50 percent were not out of the ordinary. True, the Saturn I used
engines and tanks extrapolated from earlier programs, but uprating the
H-l engine had brought difficulties, and a cluster of this magnitude was
untried. Moreover, the later Saturn missions introduced a sizable new
LH 2  upper stage, powered by a cluster of six RL-10 engines.
     For all this, there seems to have been persistent criticism of the
Saturn I series of launches. Basically, it appeared to be a multimillion-
dollar launch vehicle program with no significant missions or payloads.
Even before the launch of SA-2 in the spring of 1962, NASA had
announced the Saturn V. It was this vehicle, not Saturn I, that had the
mission and payload that counted: a lunar voyage with a payload
equipped to land men on the moon and get them back again. As a
preliminary to Saturn V missions, plans were already in progress for the
Saturn IB, which would test a Saturn V third stage in orbit and begin
qualification of crucial hardware such as the command module and lunar
module.
     The Saturn I, as one NASA historian has written, was a "booster
almost overtaken by events." A number of individuals, within NASA as
well as on the outside, felt that Project Highwater and, to a lesser extent,
Project Pegasus were makeshift operations to give Saturn I something to
do and to placate critics who complained that the Saturn was contributing
little to science. There is
                               probably some truth in these allegations.
Highwater in particular seems to have been an impromptu operation,
revealing nothing new. Although NASA literature solemnly referred to
scientific aspects, von Braun called Highwater a "bonus
                                                        experiment," and
noted that the water was already aboard Saturn I stages as ballast. 27
     With hindsight, the apparently superfluous Saturn I launches still
contributed to the Saturn program, underscoring the innate conserva-
336
tism of Marshall Space Flight Center. Aware of potential
                                                           early failures in
a launch series, MSFC evidently planned for several, but to make the
series as successful as possible, Marshall also went into each launch with
vehicles tested and retested to the point where the possibility of failure
was virtually eliminated. Marshall's own thoroughness made the remark-
able string of 10 successful launches seem
                                            unnecessarily redundant. In
any case, the launches verified many concepts for systems and subsystems
applied to later Apollo-Saturn missions, provided valuable experience in
the operation of LH 2 stages, demonstrated the validity of the cluster
concept, and tested early versions of Saturn guidance and control.
Payloads for the Saturn I launches may not have been as dramatic as
those for other vehicles, but Saturn I missions, overall, were nevertheless
beneficial.
    In a      strict      the series of Pegasus launches was not very
                        sense,
earthshaking.     None of the three satellites promoted any fantastic new
discoveries; no dramatic design changes occurred in either the Saturn
launch vehicles or the Apollo spacecraft as a result of unexpected
information about meteoroid penetration. The value of the Pegasus
involved a positive, rather than a negative, reading of the test results. The
satellites confirmed basic estimates about meteoroid
                                                             frequency and
penetration in the operational environment of the Apollo-Saturn vehi-
cles. This confirmation provided a firm base of
                                                    knowledge to proceed
with basic designs already in the works. In fact, it was good that the
Pegasus series did not turn up significantly different data, which would
have entailed costly redesign and additional time and research into
meteoroid phenomena as related to boosters and spacecraft. Instead, the
effect was to add to the growing confidence of Apollo-Saturn
                                                                      designs
already in process and to permit NASA to plunge ahead toward the goal
of landing man on the moon within the decade. It would have been easy
to dismiss what was, in fact, a successful developmental phase in the
                                           28
overall Apollo-Saturn   program.
     In terms of subsequent programs, the legacy of Pegasus included
significant contributions in the development of thermal coatings used on
many major satellites, as well as on the Apollo spacecraft. The Pegasus
also had a significant impact on the development of the communications
satellite (comsat) project, because the results indicated that the comsat
satellites would indeed have a profitable lifetime in orbit, the probability
being high that they would survive or escape damage from meteoroids.
Wernher von Braun was emphatic on this point: "I would say the
Pegasus data have really become the main criteria of spacecraft design,
                                                                             29
ever since Pegasus, for          all   manned and unmanned    spacecraft."
                                                                                  357
STAGES TO SATURN
338
                               QUALIFYING THE CLUSTER CONCEPT
                                                                         339
STAGES TO SATURN
images verified the hopes for proper propellant behavior during venting
and for  settling of the propellants prior to reignition. Motion picture
color coverage of stage separation, recovered from the ocean in one of
the camera capsules, was also of high quality and showed the desired
performance.
    Following the satisfactory   TV   coverage of the behavior of liquid
hydrogen under weightless conditions and a simulated restart of the J-2,
technicians proceeded with the plan to break up the S-IVB stage in orbit.
This rather dramatic procedure was intended to verify ground tests that
had been carried out on structural test models at Douglas facilities on the
West Coast. Investigators from Douglas and MSFC wanted to establish
design limits and the point of structural failure for the S-IVB common
bulkhead when pressure differential developed in the propellant tanks.
Ground tests were one thing; the orbital environment of space was
another. Breakup occurred near the start of the fifth orbit when the
common bulkhead failed and the stage disintegrated. The results con-
firmed the Douglas ground experiments; the S-IVB stage could with-
stand tankage pressure differentials over three times that expected for
       ...
normal mission operations.
                           34
340
                              QUALIFYING THE CLUSTER CONCEPT
and AS-202 with Apollo spacecraft aboard had been unofficially known
as Apollo 1 and Apollo 2 missions (AS-203 carried only the aerodynamic
nose cone). In the spring of 1967, NASA's Associate Administrator for
Manned Space Flight, Dr. George E. Mueller, announced that the
mission originally scheduled for Grissom, White, and Chaffee would be
known as Apollo 1, and said that the first Saturn V launch, scheduled for
November 1967, would be known as Apollo 4. The eventual launch of
AS-204 became known as the Apollo 5 mission (no missions or flights
were ever designated Apollo 2 and 3). 36
    As   Apollo 5, the originalAS-204 vehicle lifted off from Launch
Complex 37 at KSC on 22 January 1968 in an unmanned test of the lunar
module in Earth orbit. The LM was enclosed in a spacecraft-lunar-
module adapter and topped by an aerodynamic nose cone in place of the
Apollo command and service modules (CSM). Evaluation of the LM
included ignition of the descent and ascent stages and LM staging and
structures. Engineers also intended to conduct an S-IVB propellant
dumping experiment in orbit, following separation of the stage from the
LM. Dumping was considered necessary to make the S-IVB safe before
docking of the   CSM   with the S-IVB-attached LM.
    Some months     prior to the AS-204 mission, NASA planners realized
that the vehicle was going to be sitting stacked on pad 37 for a
considerable period of time awaiting the arrival of the LM. NASA took
advantage of the opportunity to monitor the conditions of the launch
vehicle over a long period of time, as it stood on the pad exposed to the
elements on the Florida coast. On 7 April 1967, the first stage had been
erected; the second stage and the instrument unit were added in the next
four days. Marshall and contractor personnel devised a detailed set of
criteria for periodic inspections of the vehicle starting that same month.
No components had to be replaced because of corrosion; advance
planning had paid off. The vehicle was under constant nitrogen purges
to protect the engine compartment and other equipment areas from the
                                                                         341
          LAUNCH ESCAPE SYSTEM           -
              COMMAND MODULE-
 NORTH
AMERICAN                                      REACTION MOTORS
                                             -PROPELLANT TANK
                    SERVICE MODULE           -HELIUM TANK
                                             SERVICE MODULE
                                             PROPULSION
                                             ENGINE NOZZLE
                       SPACECRAFT.
                      LEM ADAPTER
      IBM INSTRUMENT UNIT
                                              HYDROGEN TANK
 DOUGLAS
  S-IVB
2nd STAGE
                                                                   224 FT
                                             -RETRO ROCKET
              J 2   ENGINE NOZZLE
LOX TANK-
                        FUEL TANK
CHRYSLER
  SIB
1st   STAGE
Hi ENGINE NOZZLES -
importantly  the  S-IVB upper stage and the instrument unit for the
                                               39
Saturn V were successfully qualified in orbit.    In less than a year, the
space agency expected    to land men on the moon.  That mission required
the giant Saturn V.
344
    With the exception of the S-IVB, every stage of the Saturn launch
vehicles depended on clustered engines. The feasibility of large, high-
thrust engine clusters was demonstrated by the first successful launch of
the Saturn I and verified in one mission after another. Later Saturn I
flights (the Block II series) proved the feasibility of using liquid hydrogen
fuels in Saturn upper stages. The Saturn I series also provided the
                                                                         345
                         The        Giant Leap
ground testing were necessary, and for this reason, the vast array of
telemetry was necessary to evaluate the performance of parts and systems
that could never be flown again or even recovered for postflight analysis.
                                       347
STAGES TO SATURN
        The AS-501     flight      had tremendous       significance. It was not only the
first   Saturn   V   but   it   also tested several   major systems for the first time in
an "all-up" configuration. As one observer described                     it,   "The   all-up
concept is, in essence, a calculated gamble, a leap-frogging philosophy
which advocates compression of a number of lunar landing preliminaries
into one flight. It balances the uncertainties of a number of first-time
operations against a 'confidence factor' based on the degree of the
equipment reliability achieved through the most exhaustive ground-test
program in aerospace history." If NASA had followed prior custom, the
S-IC first stage might have been launched by itself, testing the concept of
the five clustered F-l engines, each of which had a thrust nearly equal to
that of the entire first stage of the Saturn IB. Then a two-stage vehicle
would be launched to try out the clustered J-2 engines of the
liquid-hydrogen-fueled S-II second stage. Next the three-stage booster
would be launched, and finally the entire Apollo-Saturn vehicle including
the GSM. This program would have entailed four separate flights, 12
months extra for preflight preparations, and analysis of postflight data
                                                                          2
for each launch all this running into hundreds of millions of dollars.
     The concept of the all-up launch did not originate with von Braun
or with MSFC, but came from the experience of George E. Mueller, who
took up his new duties as Director of the Office of Manned Space Flight
for NASA on 3 September 1963. When Mueller took office, NASA was
faced with extreme budgetary pressures. The request submitted origi-
nally to President Kennedy had totaled $5.75 billion. In the hectic
months following Kennedy's assassination, President Johnson had a very
short time for making a multitude of decisions and experienced heavy
pressure from Congress to reduce federal expenditures. One influential
senator, not a friend of the space program, informed the President that
unless NASA expenditures were kept under $5 billion for the next year,
Johnson would lose the senator's vote for the tax bill and the President
wanted that bill very much. These financial pressures on the Johnson
administration constitute one reason for all-up testing. As James Webb
recalled, "Under these circumstances, NASA made a complete reevaluation
of its plans for the NASA program and decided to revise it, going to the
very advanced and, to some, risky approach of the 'all-up systems test'
procedure for the Saturn V-Apollo combination." It seemed to be the
only way to achieve the lunar landing within the decade. Moreover, it
imposed a stronger discipline on the contractors and on NASA itself.
Even so, Webb admitted, "It was a very bold move." 3
    Obviously, budgetary constraints played a large role in the all-up
decision.On the other hand, this procedure also matched Mueller's
background in rocket development and testing. Before joining NASA,
Mueller had been with the Space Technology Laboratories in Redondo,
348
                                                         THE GIANT LEAP
California, where he had been in charge of a number of technical
operations for various Air Force missile programs. These included the
Thor, Atlas, Titan, and Minuteman ballistic missiles. The all-up concept
had been introduced in the development of the Titan II missile and was
                                                                      4
being written into the development plan for the Minuteman ICBM.
     In the fall of 1963, the flight-test sequence for the Saturn launch
vehicles was based on a plan issued by Brainerd Holmes, Mueller's
predecessor. The Holmes plan reflected the conservative philosophy of
the Marshall Space Flight Center, which tested new vehicles step by
                                                                     step.
In the case of the Saturn IB, for example, the plan called for two
launches, one in August 1965 with both stages live but still utilizing a
guidance system from the Saturn I. The second Saturn IB would be
launched late in 1965 with the same configuration, and the operational
Saturn IB with a prototype instrument unit was not to be flown until
January 1966. The same plan called for the first Saturn V launch in
March 1966, with a live first stage, inert second and third stages, and a
prototype instrument unit. The second Saturn V launch, scheduled for
July 1966, was to have live first and second stages, an inert third stage,
and a prototype instrument unit. As Mueller settled into his new job, he
came to the conclusion that the financial consequences and the time
consumption of the step-by-step approach simply could not meet the
national goal of a lunar landing by the end of the decade. "It was pretty
clear," Mueller said, "that there was no way of getting from where we
were to where we wanted to be unless we did some drastically different
                                          5
things,   one of which was  all-up testing."
       It did not take Mueller long to act. On   1   November   1963, in office
less than a month, Mueller dispatched a priority teletype to the directors
of the Manned Spacecraft Center, Houston; Launch Operations Center,
Cocoa Beach, Florida; and Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville:
"Subject: Revised manned spaceflight schedule. Recent schedule and
budget reviews have resulted in a deletion of the Saturn I manned flight
program and realignment of schedules and flight mission assignments on
the Saturn IB and Saturn V programs." The teletype directed that the
first Saturn IB flight, SA-201, and the first Saturn V flight, AS-501,
should comprise all live stages, and both should carry complete space-
craft. Mueller also indicated that he wanted the first manned Saturn IB
                                                                          349
STAGES TO SATURN
   The initial consensus at MSFC was to oppose the all-up decision. Bob
Young recollected that both von Braun and Rees were low keyed in
voicing their doubts, but in the end they sided with Mueller. Rees, in
retrospect, stressed the time element in particular. He pointed out that
the original approach would have required reconfiguring the launch site
for every launch. The time involved in this reworking would have made a
landing on the moon within the decade very doubtful. Still, there was
considerable ambivalence on the part of the senior staff at Marshall Space
Flight Center. Dieter Grau seems to have summed up the situation most
accurately. "I'm not aware," he wrote years later, "that a consensus was
obtained on this subject in favor of the all-up concept, although I know
that Dr. von Braun went on record for the Center supporting this
concept eventually. Just as Dr. Mueller could not guarantee that this
concept would succeed, the opponents could not guarantee that it would
fail. Dr. Mueller wanted to eliminate the additional costs which a more
cautious approach would have required and Dr. von Braun decided
MSFC should share the risk with him." The decision was declared to be
MSFC    policy,    even though doubts continued to be expressed by many at
              7
Huntsville.       Without saying so, von Braun himself still harbored some
concerns.
    By 8 November, von        Braun was ready with the interim response that
Mueller had requested. "There      is no fundamental reason
                                                             why we cannot
350
                                                      THE GIANT LEAP
           on the first flight," von Braun wrote. Nevertheless, he urged
fly 'all-up'
the importance that a "fall back" position should also be maintained, if
some problem developed in a technical area with scheduling or in
                                           8
funding before the launch of AS-501. Before sending the letter,
however, von Braun called Mueller, read him the draft and discussed the
various issues involved. He reminded Mueller that details were somewhat
sketchy, because the program under discussion was a multibillion dollar
program with dozens of contractors, and it was difficult to rethink such a
radical change and reschedule everything in less than a week. Mueller
acknowledged the tentative character of the discussion and was reassured
by von Braun's description of Marshall's consensus. Stretching things a
bit, von Braun told him, "Our development team here with whom we
discussed everything in much detail is solidly behind the all-up flight
            9
concept."
     Although correspondence between Marshall and NASA Headquar-
ters continued to endorse the all-up principle and in-house memoran-
dums at Huntsville encouraged commitment to it, there was still some
sniping from von Braun's senior management. When Mueller and
Robert Seamans, NASA Associate Administrator, visited Marshall early
in December 1963, the Saturn V Program Manager, Arthur Rudolph,
raised the issue again. He steered Seamans over to a corner where a
model of the Saturn V was standing next to a model of the Minuteman on
the same scale and discoursed on the comparative simplicity of solid-
propellant rockets as opposed to the complexity of liquid chemical
rockets the size of the Saturn V. His doubts about the all-up concept were
implicit. He paused dramatically, turned to Seamans and said, "Now
really, Bob!" Seamans got the point. "I see what you mean, Arthur," he
said. Encouraged, Rudolph buttonholed Mueller, drew him over to the
same models and repeated his discourse about the relative merits and
                                                                         10
disadvantages of each. Mueller was unimpressed. "So what?" he responded.
The planning for the all-up flight of AS-501 continued. In the spring of
1964, following a visit to Marshall, Dr. Golovin reported to General Sam
Phillips at Headquarters that the all-up concept
                                                 was being supported with
enthusiam by MSFC management. 11
                AS-501 GETTING
                     :           TO THE LAUNCH ON TIME
                                                                      351
STAGES TO SATURN
    In the meantime, Saturn V stages began arriving at KSC. All did not
go well.Problems with hardware caused considerable delays and post-
ponement of the launch date. In March 1967, an agenda for a briefing on
AS-501, to be attended by General Phillips, included mention of 1200
problems resulting in 32 discrepancy reports. The memo to Phillips
indicated that work teams had divided the problems into four separate
categories and planned to work them off at an intensive rate of 80 per
day. A typical problem was the discovery of an errant bolt in one of the
F-l engines and the requirement to see how it got there to make sure that
                                          14
nothing similar would happen again.          Then in June 1967, after the
AS-501 vehicle had already been stacked, it was necessary to take it down.
On the West Coast, North American Rockwell had discovered some 80
weld flaws in the S-II second stage, designated S-II-6; it developrecMliat
S-II-1, already sitting in the AS-501 stack, had similar flaws. This costly
delay nearly escalated when Boeing decided to follow up on its own stage,
the S-IC, and discovered similar difficulties. Subsequent tests gave the
S-IC-1 a clean bill of health, but not without a flurry of concern for the
status of AS-501. Late in the month, NASA Headquarters issued a special
directive calling for better management of the hardware changes on the
AS-501 vehicle. In an attempt to keep the launch schedule on an even
track, the teletype message warned, "It is essential that change traffic of
all
    types be reduced to only those changes which are mandatory for safety
or mission success." 15 Finally, having overcome these and other numerous
                                                            16
difficulties, AS-501 was "rolled out" on 26 August 1967.
      The teething troubles of AS-501 were not over, however, even after
the vehicle reached the launch pad. Numerous preliminary test opera-
tions exposed a host of potential complications. 17
352
                                                        THE GIANT LEAP
    The countdown demonstration       test   (CDDT) on AS-501 brought out
additional difficulties which, as Program Manager Rudolph admitted,
"caused numerous holds, delays, crew fatigue, scrubs, and recycles."
Three recycles were required and instead of about one week, three weeks
were needed to complete the test. Everything, Rudolph said, encountered
difficulties   the Saturn V, the spacecraft, the launch facility, everything.
Rudolph    contended,  however, that he was not surprised. It was, after all,
the first time that a multitude of components were integrated into a
"super system." On the first stage, for example, a number of the
propellant valves opened simultaneously instead of in sequence as had
been intended. On the second stage, items within the S-II were damaged
             LOX
by filling the       tanks too rapidly. In the third stage, cable connections
were shorted as a result of the accumulation of moisture in the environ-
ment of the launch site. The instrument unit had difficulty in the
environmental control system designed to keep the electronics in black
boxes cool during operation of the vehicle. In the ground support
equipment, a malfunction prevented proper pressure in the helium
bottles, and the ground computer's problems included "intermittent
operation due to design deficiencies, loose connections, electronic com-
                                                    1
                                                                         353
STAGES TO SATURN
354
                                                                    THE GIANT LEAP
9000 copies of Explorer I, this country's              first satellite,   or 42   manned
Gemini spacecraft."
   To make the most of the first Saturn V              flight,   data collection was also
geared up to astronomical capabilities. During the Mercury test program,
for example, d,ata were received on the ground at a rate that would fill a
standard printed page every second. The Apollo-Saturn vehicle was
designed to relay some 300 pages of data in one second. The research,
design, manufacturing, test, and preparation leading to the moment
when the rocket was poised for its leap into space had required the
services of over 300 000 scientists, engineers, technicians, and craftsmen,
representing over 20 000 companies. The estimated cost for the AS-501
vehicle was $135 million for the rocket and $45 million for the space-
         22
craft.
                                                                                      355
            the first
Top left,               flight-ready Saturn V,
AS-501,     is   rolled    out of the Vehicle
Assembly Building at KSC on 20 August
1967. Above, the AS-501 stands
                                  for
weeks on the pad at Launch        39,
                                 Complex
bedeviled by minor problems.      Then (left)
on 9 November      1967, it lifts off to a
perfect flight; the "all-up" concept has
been vindicated.
                                                       THE GIANT LEAP
                                                                         357
STAGES TO SATURN
358
                                                      THE GIANT LEAP
from the launch pad. Before     ignition of the J-2 engines of the second
stage, mission  personnel closely watched the second-stage ullage maneu-
ver. Following separation of the first and second stages, the nearly
                                                                       359
STAGES TO SATURN
360
                                                        THE GIANT LEAP
the faltering second stage into a recomputed trajectory to reach the
programmed altitude for third-stage separation. After some overtime
firing, the S-II finally shut down its three remaining engines and fell back
from the S-IVB. The third stage fired up normally, and the S-IVB, IU,
and payload finally made it into an Earth parking orbit, although a
somewhat lopsided one. After two orbits, the bird received a command
for the third stage to reignite. Nothing happened. The J-2 engine just
would not restart, despite repeated efforts. Salvaging all that was
available from the flight, mission controllers succeeded in separating the
GSM from the malfunctioning third stage, got a couple of burns out of
the service module engine to get the command module into better
position for the reentry tests, and finally brought the CM through
reentry and splashdown to verify the heat shield.
     "Had the flight been manned, the astronauts would have returned
safely," von Braun emphasized afterward, "but the flight clearly left a lot
to be desired. With three engines out, we just cannot go to the Moon."
     In the aftermath of the marginal flight of AS-502, teams went to
work to find answers to the problems. Pogo had been encountered
previously in Titan-Gemini and other launch vehicles, and a fix was likely
in the future. However, the J-2 engine failures involved a problem of
unknown origins and causes, indicating the need for some intensive
sleuthing.
     Armed    with reams of reports and telemetry data from the AS-502
flight,the J-2 problem team assembled, including engineers from MSFC
and Rocketdyne. The record of temperature readings from thermocou-
ples in the S-II tail section provided the tipoff, beginning at the 70th
second of flight, when investigators discovered telltale indications of a
flow of cold gas. Such a phenomenon could only come from a leak of
liquid-hydrogen fuel, and the leak was located in the upper regions of the
number two engine. Even more conclusive was the coincidence of
increased cold flow from about the 110th second on, when ground
controllers first noticed the falter of thrust. Clinching the theory of a fuel
leak, the J-2 team found indication that a split second before the number
two engine shut down, hot gas had erupted in the area of the leak. The
only theory to explain a hot gas eruption, followed by engine shutdown,
was the failure of the J-2 igniter line in the upper part of the engine.
     These data allowed the J-2 group to reconstruct the sequence of the
failure. The leaking fuel line, leading to the igniter, sprayed the upper
engine section with liquid hydrogen, even though some fuel continued
through the line and the engine kept burning. Finally, the line broke
completely, and fiery, high-pressure gas from the combustion chamber
backed up and spurted through the rupture. Combustion chamber
pressure began to fall off, so that the low-thrust sensing equipment
triggered a sequence to shut down the engine by closing
                                                           the fuel and
oxidizer valves. The electrical sequence to close number two LOX valve
                                                                          361
STAGES TO SATURN
went erroneously to number three. Closing the fuel valve for engine
number two and the LOX valve for engine number three shut down both
engines. Telemetry from the J-2 engine on the third stage told the same
story as engine number two of the second stage: a failed igniter line. The
S-IVB had arrived in orbit before the failure was complete, but could not
restart the engine.
      The MSFC and Rocketdyne             investigation team now knew how the
engines and       igniter fuel lines failed, but no one could say why. Engineers
set   up   special test stands to wring out the fuel lines again. The tests began
by subjecting the igniter fuel lines to successively higher pressures, flow
rates, and vibration, surpassing the extremes that might reasonably be
encountered during a mission. The lines survived the punishment. Next,
the investigators checked into the possibility of resonance failures,
concentrating on the bellows sections in the lines. The accordionlike
sections, located near either end of the line, were intended to provide
flexibility for    expansion and contraction, and engineers wondered             if
some flow    rates could induce "buzzing" in the bellows   a phenomenon
that, if sufficiently severe, could cause metal fatigue and failure. There
was buzzing, but the lines held. Finally, Rocketdyne technicians decided
to test the lines in a vacuum chamber, in close simulation of the
environment where failure occurred. Eight lines were set up for test in a
vacuum chamber, and engineers began to pump liquid hydrogen through
them at operational rates and pressures. Before 100 seconds elapsed,
each of the eight lines broke; each time, the failure occurred in one of the
bellows sections. By using motion picture coverage acquired during
repeated vacuum chamber           tests,   Rocketdyne   finally   could explain the
failures.
     The igniter fuel lines were installed on the engine with protective
metal braid around the bellows section. When tested in a chamber that
was not in a vacuum condition, the surrounding air was liquefied by the
extremely cold liquid hydrogen flowing through the lines and was
trapped between the bellows and the protective metal braid. This
condition damped subsequent vibration in the fuel line. When tested in
the vacuum chamber, where the environment simulated the conditions of
space, there was no liquefied air to dampen the destructive resonance. A
redesigned igniter fuel line eliminated the bellows sections, replacing
them with bends in the line to allow for expansion and contraction
during the mission.
     Concurrent with the J-2 failure investigation, a Pogo task force, with
representatives from MSFC and other NASA agencies, the contractors,
industry, and universities, analyzed the first-stage F-l engines and the
overall Saturn V vehicle. The Pogo phenomenon, they reported, origi-
nated from two sources. While F-l engines burned, the thrust chamber
and combustion chamber of each engine developed a natural vibration of
some 5.5 hertz. Further, the whole vehicle vibrated in flight with a
362
                                                        THE GIANT LEAP
varying frequency that peaked at 5.25 hertz around 125 seconds into the
flight. When the engine frequency closely matched the structural fre-
quency, Pogo vibrations appeared up and down the entire vehicle. The
vibration was not in itself destructive, but it did increase the stresses on
the vehicle and the astronaut crew, because the lighter
                                                                 spacecraft,
perched at the tip of the tall rocket, was buffeted more than the engines
at the bottom. The team investigating
                                         Pogo concluded that they should
"detune" the engine frequencies away from those of the structural
frequencies.
      The group explored     a number of possible fixes before
                                                                 settling on
             "shock  absorbers"  in the LOX lines
pneumatic                                         leading to each of the five
F-l engines in the first stage. The so-called shock absorbers made use of
cavities in the LOX line prevalve
                                         assembly. The prevalve assembly
contained a bulging casting in the LOX line to accommodate the move-
ment of a big valve that opened or closed the LOX line. During engine
operation, with the valve in the open position, liquid oxygen filled the
casting's cavity to about half its volume. Engineers tapped the first stage's
ample helium supply (used to pressurize the fuel tank), and filled the
remainder of the valve cavity with helium gas. The helium gas in the
cavity acted as a shock absorber by damping the engine pulsations into
the   LOX lines and into the vehicle structure.
    At Mississippi Test Facility, engineers successfully demonstrated the
two fixes during August 1968, with test firing of the S-IC first stage
equipped with the Pogo suppression equipment on the F-l engines, and
the S-II second stage with the redesigned igniter fuel lines on the J-2
engines. The demonstration cleared the way for a manned launch of
AS-503, as Apollo 8. The AS-503 was planned to place the manned
GSM in a low Earth orbit. If the interim Apollo 7 mission, boosted by a
Saturn IB, verified the redesigned GSM and its new safety features, then
the Saturn V-Apollo 8 mission could be revised boldly. "There is even a
remote possibility of a spectacular swing around the Moon by the
manned spacecraft," von Braun said in the autumn, a little over a month
before the scheduled launch. "That a mission as bold as the last is even
considered, for the first Saturn V to be manned, bespeaks planners'
                                                   32
confidence that all about it has been set aright."
                                                                        363
STAGES TO SATURN
364
                                           -
                                      ..       ,
early 1969. With only 18 months to get to the moon before the decade
ended, the schedule  slippage of Apollo 8 was extremely serious.
    But George Low, the spacecraft manager at Houston, came up with
what Phillips called a "daring idea." Low proposed to skip the Earth-
                                                                 365
STAGES TO SATURN
orbital      phase and postpone lunar module trials until the next
              test
366
                                                                           THE GIANT LEAP
and     people in the Quality and Reliability Laboratory finally gave trie
      his
                                        41
green light for the launch of Apollo 8.
     "Wet" and "dry" countdown demonstration tests began for AS-503
on 5 December 1968, and concluded by 11 December, clearing the way
for the final countdown for launch, which began four
                                                       days later. As the
launch countdown proceeded, the final Pogo suppression test took place
on the S-IC-8 stage at Mississippi Test Facility during a 125-second
static-firing test on 18 December.                        On   the same day, MSFC engineers
finished a series of tests on the                         S-IVB   battleship unit to verify the
redesigned fuel    lines. The program included three hot tests, from 4
December        14 December, ranging from about 122 seconds to 435
               to
seconds. The last of the miscellaneous component tests was completed on
18 December, with Apollo 8 poised on its pad, only three days away from
launch.
     For the premier launch of a manned Saturn V, NASA prepared a
special VIP list. The fortunate individuals on the list received an
invitation in attractively engraved and ornate script: "You are cordially
invited to attend the departure of the United States Spaceship Apollo
VIII on its voyage around the moon departing from Launch Complex
39A, Kennedy Space Center, with the launch window commencing at 7
A.M. on December 21, 1968." The formal card was signed "The Apollo
VIII Crew" and included the notation, "RSVP."
     With the primary objectives to verify the manned spacecraft, sup-
port systems, and lunar orbit rendezvous procedures, Apollo 8 lifted off
from KSC at 7:51 a.m. EST, on 21 December, 1968, crewed by Frank
Borman, commander; James A. Lovell, Jr., command module pilot; and
William A. Anders, lunar module pilot. In contrast to its predecessor,
AS-503 performed without a hitch. The telemetry readings from the
S-IC indicated that the Pogo suppression system worked as planned, and
no longitudinal vibrations were reported. Staging of the first and second
stages went smoothly, followed by the staging of the S-II and S-IVB near
the top of the launch trajectory. The S-IVB, IU, and spacecraft went into
Earth parking orbit 11.5 minutes after launch. During the second orbit,
the S-IVB stage reignited, boosting the vehicle into translunar trajectory
at over 38 600 kilometers per hour. After separation of the spacecraft,
the spent third stage was directed into a trajectory for solar orbit and
Saturn V's job was done. At 3:29 p.m. EST, on Monday, 23 December
1968, Apollo 8 crossed the dividing line that separates the Earth's
gravitational sphere of influence from that of the moon, propelling men
beyond control by Earth for the first time in history.
     On Christmas Eve, Apollo 8 slipped behind the moon, and the three
                                                    TV
crewmen became the first to see the far side. The last   transmissions of
the day were verses from the first chapter of Genesis, read by the
astronauts. From earlier transmissions, the vivid image of the emerald,
brown, and cloud-wreathed Earth-rise above the barren gray surface of
the moon gave the broadcast unusual drama. Some 400 000 kilometers
away in space, the passengers in Apollo 8 beamed a special message:
"Good night, good luck, a Merry Christmas and God bless all of you all
of you on the good Earth." On Christmas Day, the spacecraft's main
engine fired a three-minute burst to push Apollo 8 out of lunar orbit and
into trajectory for return to Earth. Swaying under its parachutes, the
command module carrying the three crewmen settled safely into the
                                              42
Pacific late in the morning of 27 December.
     A preliminary review of AS-503 data confirmed the faultless per-
formance of the Saturn V launch vehicle. The fix for Pogo problems had
worked; the J-2 engines of the S-II and S-IVB stages had worked; the
modified igniter lines had worked. The Saturn V was in good shape for
the next two flights leading up to "the big one" the moon landing, less
than seven months away.
    As the next Saturn V in the   series, the AS-504 vehicle for Apollo 9
comprised the first complete Apollo-Saturn configuration, with the lunar
module aboard. Manned by astronauts James A. McDivitt, David R. Scott,
and Russell L. Schweickart, Apollo 9 rose from KSC's Launch Complex
39A on 3 March 1969, for a low-Earth-orbit flight to check out docking of
the CSM and   LM    in space. After the launch had been postponed for
three days because of minor illness among the crew, the mission
proceeded smoothly. All launch vehicle stages performed normally, with
S-IVB reignition taking place after the CSM-LM docking maneuver and
removal of the  LM    from the spacecraft lunar-module adapter (SLA).
With the S-IVB in an Earth-escape trajectory, mission control officials
were unable to perform third-stage propellant dumps. The remainder of
the mission proceeded with great success, including firing of the    LM
engines for descent and ascent maneuvers, transfer of two of the crew
(McDivitt and Schweickart) to the LM  and back again, a "space walk" by
Schweickart, and splashdown on 13 March.
    Apollo 10, launched on 18 May 1969, again carried the full Apollo-
Saturn configuration with the Saturn V launch vehicle AS-505. After the
second burn of the S-IVB to place the S-IVB, IU, and spacecraft into
translunar trajectory, T. P. Stafford, J. W. Young, and E. A. Cernan com-
pleted the docking maneuver, shown live on commericial television for
368
                                                                      THE GIANT LEAP
the first time. The third-stage propellant dump came off
                                                            normally, and
the S-IVB went into an Earth-escape trajectory. The
                                                        spacecraft contin-
ued toward the moon and entered into a low, circular lunar orbit.
Stafford and Cernan undocked the                        LM
                                         and flew even closer to the lunar
surface, testing the descent stage, which was jettisoned before the ascent
stage rendezvoused with the GSM. The mission demonstrated the lunar
orbit  rendezvous technique and verified LM operations in the lunar
environment, along with Apollo mission guidance, control, radar, TV
transmission, and other mission systems. The crew completed the eight-day
                                                           43
flight with splashdown in the mid-Pacific on 26 May 1969.
     Meanwhile, the Saturn V vehicle AS-506 neared its special date in
history,     when Apollo           1 1   lifted off to carry three astronauts to a
                                                                                     landing
on the moon.
     By the time of Apollo 1 1 (AS-506), the Saturn V launch vehicle had
been considerably eclipsed in the public eye. Although television cover-
age and still photography inevitably portrayed the towering white rocket,
the attention of the press and public was primarily fastened on the crew
itself.   Commander                    command module pilot Michael
                                Neil A. Armstrong,
Collins,     and lunar module
                           pilot Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr., spent the last few
days prior to the flight in the fish bowl of public attention. It was
symptomatic that the standard chronology of such aerospace events,
Astronauticsand Aeronautics, 1969, in recapitulating the mission of Apolloll,
devoted only a few lines to the Saturn V launch vehicle. The stars of the
show were the crew, the spacecraft, and the spiderlike lunar module to
land Armstrong and Aldrin on the surface of the moon. Understandably,
the crew members themselves gave most of their thought and attention to
the details of the spacecraft and the details of the lunar mission, leaving
the care and feeding of the launch vehicle to the technicians from
Marshall and their contractors.
    This is not to say that the astronauts had no thoughts whatsoever
about the vehicle. Early on the morning of 16 July 1969, riding in the van
on the way to the launch pad, Michael Collins was struck again by the
enormity of the vehicle that was to carry them aloft:
        Last night the Saturn V looked very graceful, suspended by a cross fire of
   search lights which made it sparkle like a delicate opal and silver necklace against
   the black sky. Today it is a machine again solid and businesslike, and big. Over three
   times as tall as a Gemini-Titan, taller than a football field set on end, as tall as the
                                                   44
   tallest   redwood,   it is
                                truly a monster.
     AS-506 lifted off at 9:32 a.m. EOT, 16 July 1969. The number of
observers around the launch site was conservatively estimated at a
million, including 200 congressmen, 60 ambassadors, 19 governors, 40
mayors, and other public figures. Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew and
former President and Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson were there. Live televi-
sion coverage of the liftoff was beamed to 33 countries on six continents
                                                                                         369
STAGES TO SATURN
During the boost phase, the crew watched the gimbaling rates of the F-l
engines to make sure that no dangerous deviations from the course
occurred, the flow rates of the propellants, and the thrust levels of the
rocket engines.   The     10 seconds of the liftoff concerned the astronauts
                        first
somewhat because the Saturn    V rose so close to the umbilical tower. After
that point, the crew relaxed a bit, and the noise and motion of the rapidly
climbing rocket abated. Collins noted to himself that all the lights and
dials indicated no problems. "All three of us are very quiet     none of us
seems to feel any jubilation at having left the earth, only a heightened
                                      4
awareness of what   lies    ahead."
     During the long months of astronaut training, the emphasis had
been on operations and control of the spacecraft. It had not been
necessary for the crew members to become experts on each of the booster
stages. Still, because the Saturn V was going to be the prime mover of the
mission, the crew picked up odds and ends of information and formed an
opinion about it.
     As far as Collins was concerned, the Saturn V vehicle itself had been
the largest question mark in the Apollo-Saturn program. If there had
been trouble with the command module or with the lunar excursion
module, it would have been possible to have found a fix on it in a matter
of months. If one of the huge, complex, Saturn V's had blown up,
however, during one of the R&D launches, for example, then several
years would have been required to have made a fix. According to Collins,
"the Saturn V loomed in our minds as being the biggest single unknown
factor in the whole lunar landing program." Now, as the Apollo 11 vehicle
soared upward, consuming tons of propellants in the S-IC booster, the
next concern was the S-II boost phase. "Staging, it is called, and it's always
a bit of a shock, as one set of engines shuts down and another five spring
into action in their place," Collins explained. "We are jerked forward
against our straps, then lowered gently again as the second stage begins
its
   journey. This is the stage which whisperers have told us to distrust, the
stage of the brittle aluminum, but it seems to be holding together, and
besides, it's smooth as glass, as quiet and serene as any rocket ride can
370
                                                        THE GIANT LEAP
be."   Although Collins and others had the feeling that the         S-II   was
probably going to be the weakest link in the chain of the three stages of
the Saturn V, Collins had been very much encouraged with the fervor of
workers at North American Rockwell. He was impressed by their hard
work and impressed by the way they caught up with the time lags in the
S-II program. Still, all that talk about brittle aluminum and cracks in the
S-II tankage left a few nagging thoughts. The S-II performed beautiful-
ly, however, leading up
                           to the end of its boost phase and the staging of
the S-IVB.
      Nine minutes into the mission, the second stage shut down, and the
crew waited, weightless, for the ignition and acceleration of the S-IVB
third stage. Although third-stage ignition occurred on schedule, the
momentary wait seemed interminable to the expectant astronauts. When
the S-IVB ignited, the acceleration softly pushed the crew back into their
contoured seats. The third stage, as Collins described it, had "a character
all its own," with more crispness and rattles than the second
                                                                 stage. After
 1 1 minutes and 42 seconds, the S-IVB
                                             single J-2 engine completed its
first burn and switched itself off. The astronauts were in orbit, gently
restrained by the couch straps, with a stunning view of the world through
                           47
the spacecraft windows.
     Over Australia the crew received word that they were "go" for the
translunar injection (TLI) to boost the spacecraft out of Earth parking
orbit into the trajectory to take it to the moon. This procedure required a
second burn of the S-IVB. As the spacecraft swept out over the Pacific
Ocean, the Saturn prepared to pump hydrogen and oxygen to the J-2
engine and meticulously dictated the orientation of the spacecraft by
computers. The crew had no control over the vehicle at this point and
were merely observers of the flickering lights on the panel indicating that
the Saturn was counting itself down to ignition. When the J-2 finally
started up, Neil Armstrong emitted a heartfelt "whew." Collins felt both
relief and tension that they were on their way to the moon, one more
hurdle behind them, as long as the S-IVB continued to burn. "If it shuts
down  prematurely," Collins speculated, "we will be in deep yogurt,"
ending up in a kind of odd-ball trajectory that would take some fancy
computations on the part of Houston and the crew members to get back
on track and set up for a reentry to Earth. Collins was amazed to see
flashes and sparks of light, evidence of the thrusting engine mounted on
the tail of the vehicle 33 meters below him. Abruptly a sudden lurch, like
the shifting of gears, indicated that the Saturn had gone into a pro-
grammed     shift in the ratio  of fuel to oxidizer flowing to the engine.
"Marvelous machine!" Collins thought to himself. "It's pushing us back
into our seats with almost the same force we are accustomed to on earth
(one G), although it feels like more than that. It's still not smooth, 'just a
little tiny bit rattly,' says Buzz, but it's getting the job done and our
                                                                           577
STAGES TO SATURN
The shaking was more    noticeable in the final   moments of   the ride, but
ended with a good shutdown of the engine. "Hey, Houston, Apollo 11.
That Saturn gave us a magnificent ride," Armstrong-exclaimed. 48
     On 20 July, as the spacecraft passed around the far side of the moon,
Armstrong and Aldrin separated the lunar module from the command
and service modules and began their descent for the lunar landing,
leaving Collins in a station-keeping orbit above. During the final ap-
proach, the crew realized that the lunar module was headed toward a
large, inhospitable crater filled with boulders. Taking over manual
control of the descent rate and horizontal velocity, Armstrong steered
toward a landing site several kilometers away from the original target
area. At 4:18 p.m. EDT, the lunar module touched down. Armstrong
reported to Earth: "Houston, Tranquility Base here the Eagle has
landed." With obvious relief, Mission Control in Houston called
back: "Roger, Tranquility.We copy you on the ground. You got a bunch
of guys about to turn blue. We are breathing again. Thanks a lot."
Television cameras attached to the lunar. module were oriented to catch
Armstrong as he crawled out of the spacecraft. At 10:56 p.m. EDT,
Armstrong stood on the lunar surface. "That's one small step for
man    one giant leap for mankind."
     Armstrong was joined by Aldrin several minutes later, and the two
men carried out a brief ceremony, unveiling a plaque fixed on one of the
LM struts ("Here men from the planet earth first set foot on the moon
July 1969, A.D. We came in peace for all mankind."), and set up a small
U.S. flag. During their stay on the moon, Armstrong and Aldrin
deployed a series of scientific experiments and picked up assorted
surface material and chunks of rock, along with two core samples, all
totalling about 24 kilograms. Their tasks accomplished, the pair of
astronauts took off in theLM  early in the afternoon of 21 July. Following
the rendezvous in lunar orbit, Armstrong and Aldrin joined Collins in
the CSM. The  LM   ascent stage was jettisoned, and a CSM engine burn on
22 July put them on a trajectory back to Earth. The command module
made its programmed separation from the service module on the
morning of 24 July 1969, and Apollo 11 splashed down in the middle of
the Pacific, only 24 kilometers from the recovery ship U.S.S. Hornet, at
                                                      49
12:51 p.m. EDT. The first moon mission was over.
372
Apollo   1 1 reaches the thin air on the edge of
space (above, left); in the control room, NASA
leaders (above, right to left) Charles W. Mathews,
Wernher von Braun, George E. Mueller, and
Samuel C. Phillips celebrate the orbiting of
Apollo 11;     Astronaut Edwin E. Aldrin,Jr.,
               left,
is
   photographed by fellow astronaut Neil A.
Armstrong as he prepares to take his first step
onto the lunar surface; below, left to right,
George M. Low, Samuel C. Phillips, Thomas O.
Paine, and Robert R. Gilruth admire the first box
of lunar samples       to be   returned   to   Earth.
STAGES TO SATURN
observation   is   not to say that there were no variations   among   vehicles or
changes from one       vehicle to the next. Adjustments   were made
                                                                  in timing,
systems took over and the instrument unit of the Saturn V launch vehicle
kept the rocket operating. As the huge Saturn continued to climb,
technicians on the ground helped the astronauts weed out their prob-
lems, resetting circuits and making sure that operating systems had not
been harmed by the sudden, unexplained electrical phenomenon. Apollo
12 went on to complete a successful mission, and NASA scientists
explained later that Apollo had created its own lightning. During the
rocket's passage through the rain clouds, static electricity built up during
374
                                                      THE GIANT LEAP
its ascent through the cloud cover had suddenly discharged and knocked
                                                        51
out the spacecraft's electrical systems in the process.
      The Apollo 12 mission survived the lightning charge for a number of
reasons, but one significant factor was related to the ingrained conserva-
tism at Huntsville in designing the rocket booster engines. During one
early phase in planning the Apollo-Saturn vehicle, there had been
considerable debate about designing spacecraft guidance and control
systems to take charge of the entire launch vehicle, including the booster
stages. Marshall had opposed the idea, arguing that the requirements of
translunar guidance and control, lunar orbit control, lunar module
rendezvous, and other jobs would be plenty for the spacecraft computer
to handle. The peculiarities of the booster stages predicated quite
dissimilar computer functions and schemes for guidance and control.
Marshall finally won its case: the booster stages got their own guidance
and control equipment, represented by the instrument unit. Besides, this
approach provided redundancy, because the spacecraft got a separate
system. An external umbilical connection between the command and
service modules made the spacecraft guidance and control system
vulnerable to the lighting charge. When the spacecraft gear was knocked
out on Apollo 12, the booster guidance and control system, a separate
piece of hardware, kept the vehicle operating and on course while the
spacecraft electronics were reset and put back in operation. This vignette
of Apollo-Saturn operational lore was a favorite of several MSFC
            52
managers.
    Apollo 13 got off successfully on 11 April 1970. Because Thomas
                                                                        K.
Mattingly II had  failed to develop immunity   after exposure  to German
measles, there was a last-minute substitution in the three-man crew, with
John L. Swigert replacing him as command module pilot, joining Fred
W. Haise, Jr., as lunar module pilot, and James          A Lovell, Jr., as
commander. The launch vehicle created some consternation among the
mission officials monitoring AS-508 in flight, because the center engine
of the S-II stage cut off 132 seconds too early, and the remaining four J-2
engines burned 34 seconds longer than predicted. This left the space
vehicle with a lower velocity than planned. Therefore, the S-IVB had to
burn nine seconds longer than predicted to achieve proper orbital
insertion. This hiatus in the boost phase of the mission led to questions
about adequate propellants remaining in the S-IVB for the translunar
injection burn. Double-checked calculations
                                                  indicated that there were
adequate propellants,    and  the  second  S-IVB    burn put Apollo 13 into
trajectory  toward  the  lunar  surface. The  remainder    of the flight was
normal until about 56 hours after liftoff, when Swigert tensely called
back to Mission Control, "Hey, we've got a problem here." With sudden
concern, ground controllers responded, "This is Houston, say again
please." This time Lovell replied. "Houston,
                                                 we've had a problem."
     An explosion had occurred in the No. 2 oxygen tank of the service
                                                                       575
STAGES TO SATURN
module. As a                      power was lost, as well as other CSM
               result, all fuel-cell
failures, including dangerously  low  oxygen supplies. Astronauts and
mission controllers quickly agreed to abort the mission and concentrate
on getting the three-man crew safely back home. Apollo 13 went into a
"lifeboat mode" with emergency measures to stabilize the spacecraft
environment and stretch the consummable items for life support as far as
possible. Using the descent engine of the lunar module after completing
a lunar flyby, Apollo 13 went into a return trajectory at a faster rate.
Happily, the tense six-day mission ended successfully on 17 April, with
splashdown in the Pacific Ocean. In the aftermath of the near disastrous
flight of Apollo 13, NASA convened a special Apollo 13 review board.
Working   inhigh gear, the board's painstaking research pinpointed the
problem  as a pair of defective thermostatic switches that permitted
dangerously high heat levels in a heater tube assembly associated with the
oxygen tank equipment. The board stated that combustion probably
occurred as the result of a short circuit from faulty wiring, resulting in a
combustion in the oxygen tank. Following release of the board's report,
there was extensive redesign of the oxygen tank, wiring, and related
materials with a high combustion probability. There was an impact on the
launch of Apollo 14, which was slipped to 31 January 197 1. 53
     An interesting sidelight of the flight of Apollo 14 involved the
three-man crew, which included astronaut Alan B. Shepard, who had
flown on the first U.S. suborbital launch in the Mercury program back in
1961. A decade later, Shepard was going to the moon. The countdown
and launch of AS-509 proceeded according to the book, with the only
delay caused by high overcast clouds and rain that postponed the ignition
by 40 minutes and 3 seconds. Failure of a multiplexer in the instrument
unit meant that some information on the condition of the vehicle during
flight was lost, and there were some minor problems during the docking
maneuver in orbit. Aside from that, Apollo 14 was a perfect mission. 54
     The last three vehicles, AS-510 through AS-512, performed without
a hitch. The payload, however, was continuously climbing. These last
three launches included the lunar rover vehicle, which added almost 225
kilograms to the payload of the Saturn V. The rover turned out to be
extremely significant, permitting astronauts to extend greatly the range
of surface explorations and increasing their stay time. 55 The uprated
engines of the Saturn V, which permitted it to boost this additional
weight into orbit, turned out to be a function of thoughtful long-range
planning by NASA engineers. In the evolution of rocket vehicles, the
actual payload requirements almost always turned out to be greater than
originally planned. As a result of bitter experience, engine designers kept
in mind the likelihood that their creations would have to be
                                                              uprated from
time to time. In addition to this consideration, engine designers normally
incorporated a certain degree of margin in setting up the specifications
for engine development. If the specifications called for an engine of 4.5
376
                                                             THE GIANT LEAP
million newtons (1 million pounds) thrust, it might be designed for 5.3
million newtons (1.2 million pounds) thrust to be sure tnat' the original
specification line was met. With operational experience, it was then
possible to uprate the engine by relatively minor changes improving the
turbopump and the tubing    (to improve flow rates), adjusting the injector
for better mixing (to get a higher percentage of the fuel burned and
increase the specific impulse) these all were contributing factors to the
success of uprating the engines of the Saturn V vehicle. In this way, the
Saturn V was able to absorb not only the increasing weight of the
command and service modules early in the program, but the added
weight of   scientific    equipment and other paraphernalia such as the rover
in the later stages      of the Apollo-Saturn program. 56
SUMMARY
    Saturn    I and Saturn IB missions had been intended to clear the way
for Saturn   V  launch vehicles. Normally, the worst difficulties would have
shown up in the R&D flights of the former. Instead, one of the most
baffling periods came early in the Saturn V flight series.
     Saturn V development began auspiciously, with the calculated
gamble on AS-501's "all-up" launch. The mission garnered precious time
and raised confidence in the reliability of Saturn stages. The time and
reliability factors seemed to slip away, however, with the perplexing flight
of AS-502 and slipping schedules for the lunar module to be flown on
AS-503. Recovering quickly, NASA and contractor personnel kept the
momentum of Apollo-Saturn through diligent sleuthing to resolve the
problems uncovered          in   AS-502 and responded       flexibly to revise the
spacecraft and lunar module whose weight had spiraled upward from
original guidelines, but accommodated additional equipment such as the
lunar rover. The added payload capability of the Saturn V also permitted
delivery of more scientific gear to the moon, enhancing the scientific
                                       57
results of the Apollo-Saturn missions.
378
                           Epilogue
         the Soviets and the Americans used their man-rated space
Both
  rockets   for a variety of missions. NASA used basic Saturn hardware
for launching the Skylab space station; Skylab itself evolved from the
Saturn V third stage. The last Saturn rocket to be launched culminated
in the linkup of a manned American spacecraft with its manned Soviet
                                   379
COMMONALITY OF
SATURN HARDWARE
                                Legacies
                                       381
STAGES TO SATURN
linkup of    manned   spacecraft   one from the U.S. and the other from the
U.S.S.R.
    Skylab was the final version of several plans to modify the Saturn
S-IVB stage so that it could be occupied by astronauts in space. The
Skylab assembly consisted of several modules, including the orbital
workshop (a modified S-IVB stage), airlock module, multiple docking
adapter, and Apollo telescope mount. This modular payload was launched
to low Earth orbit aboard a two-stage Saturn V, with the Skylab in the
382
                                                                   LEGACIES
                                                                         383
STAGES TO SATURN
 384
Left, a Saturn IB lifts from Launch        Complex 39send Skylab 4 on the final
                                                        to
                                                                               385
STAGES TO SATURN
The Russians designated this propulsion system the RD-107. The RD-107
burned kerosene-type fuel and liquid oxygen, and the cluster of four
combustion chambers and exit nozzles produced a total thrust of 1 000 400
newtons (224 910 pounds). The turbopump was fueled by hydrogen
peroxide. This engine system did not have a gimbaling capacity, but
included two small steering rockets. The Soviets produced a variant of
this engine system known as the RD-108, which differed from its cousin
only in the fact that it had four small steering rockets instead of two.
     The combination of these engine systems as a single booster pow-
ered the series of large Soviet launch vehicles, including the Sputnik, and
386
                                                                LEGACIES
with further variations in the upper stages, the Vostok, the Soyuz, and
the Salyut space station. The basic launch vehicle was known in the
United States as the type "A" booster, and,it was also used by the Russians
for   some unmanned payloads.
      The   booster design situated the   RD-108 as the central core engine,
also acting as a sustainer engine.   Then  four RD-107 engines, with long
streamlined fairings, were clustered about this central core. Integration
of the parts of the launch vehicle and attaching the payload took place in
the horizontal position. Still horizontal, the entire vehicle was rolled out
on a conveyor that resembled a railroad flatcar and positioned in the
upright launch position at the launch pad. The Sputnik booster was a
single-stage vehicle, although the Vostok, Soyuz, and Salyut vehicles
incorporated upper stages that apparently used similar liquid oxygen
and kerosene propellants. In the launch sequence, all the first-stage
engines were ignited on the pad. The ignition meant a striking liftoff,
with 20 main engine nozzles spouting flame, accompanied by the exhaust
plumes of the 12 steering rockets. All 20 main engines continued to
function during the boost phase. As propellants were depleted in the
four outboard RD-107 engines, these fell away, leaving the RD-108 (the
central sustainer unit), which continued to fire. Depending upon the
nature of the mission programmed for the upper stages, the central core
then separated from the upper-stage combination late in the boost phase,
and a combination of upper stages put the payload into orbit or a space
trajectory. The Russian launch vehicle, with its four elongated RD-107
streamlined units, looked rather graceful, more like a Buck-Rogers-type
                                              7
rocket than some of the American boosters.
     In retrospect, these Russian launch vehicles of the A series appear to
be somewhat less sophisticated than their American counterparts, but no
less effective in getting heavy payloads into orbit. As ex-Soviet engineer
and editor Leonid Vladimirov pointed out, the RD-107 system took up
more space than a comparable single-chamber engine of the same power.
This meant that the diameter of the first stage of the launch vehicle was
also larger, resulting in a considerably greater   launch weight. For this
reason, the jettison of the four outboard engine systems, leaving the
sustainer to carry the vehicle into orbit, was an important design feature
of the Russian launch vehicles. "It was, of course, a very complicated,
costly and clumsy solution of the problem," Vladimirov admitted. "But it
was a solution nonetheless; all launchings of Soviet manned spacecraft
and all the space-shots to Venus and Mars have been carried out with the
aid of this monstrous twenty-engined cluster."
     There were other interesting variations in U.S. and Soviet booster
technology. The tank skins and structural elements of American vehicles
were kept at minimum thicknesses, shaving the weight of the structure as
much as possible to enhance the payload capability. The first Western
insight into the style of Soviet vehicle structure occurred in 1967, when
                                                                        387
STAGES TO SATURN
the Vostok spacecraft    and booster system were put on display in Paris.
The  Russians series of A-type vehicles appear to have been exceedingly
heavy. The Vostok launch vehicle arrived via Rouen, France, by sea,
prior to shipment to Paris. To move the tank sections of the launch
vehicle, workers hooked up cables to the opposite ends of the tank
sections and picked them up empty, surprising many Western onlookers
who expected them to buckle in the middle. Their amazement was
compounded when the Soviet technicians proceeded to walk the length
of these tank sections, still suspended in mid-air, without damaging them
in the least. The Russian vehicles were, if anything, extremely rugged.
The launching weight of the Vostok and spacecraft is still a matter of
conjecture because the Soviets have not released specific numbers.
Vladimirov estimated around 400 metric tons on the ground, with the
greater part of the weight accounted for by the heavy engines. He drew
an interesting comparison between the Soviet type A vehicle and the
American launch vehicle known as the Titan:
         [The Russian vehicle] had a total thrust from the engines of its first stage of 500
    tons which put into orbit a load weighing only 40-45% more than the weight of
    Gemini. You simply have to compare the Titan's 195-ton thrust for a three and a half
                                                                                       8
    ton useful load with the Soviets rockets 500-ton thrust lifting a five ton load.
388
                                                                    LEGACIES
ASTRONAUTICS IN HUNTSVILLE
390
                                                                 LEGACIES
                                                                        391
STAGES TO SATURN
392
                                                                 LEGACIES
always reminded people: 'Don't get too used to this NASA money that's
                          "
flowing into this area.'    He warned against becoming a single-business
town and    advocated  the attraction  of other industries during a period of
good stability,  with attention  to nonaerospace companies in particular.
     The development       of  the  industrial  character of Huntsville fre-
quently reflected   the  high-level technology represented by NASA and
the U.S. Army Missile Command, on the site of the old Redstone Arsenal.
The continuing development of the Cummings Research Park character-
ized this high-level technology. Located near the University of Alabama
campus, the Research Park comprised over 30 companies that offered
unique management services and research facilities and employed over
6000 people with an annual payroll of over $93 million by 1974. In the
 1960s, the emphasis was on space, but the farsightedness of von Braun
and other Huntsville industrial executives maintained a healthy diversity
in the city's manufacturing companies in the 1970s. At the Research Park
and elsewhere, including an industrial center located near the new
Jetport, Huntsville's products included automobile radios, digital clocks,
electronic parts, computers,      TV   cameras, ax handles, flags, aircraft
specialty glass, tools and dies, telephones,   rubber tires, and a host of
                           18
other goods and services.
    One of the most visible results of the von Braun team's sojourn in
Huntsville was the new Von Braun Civic Center located downtown near a
                                                                         393
STAGES TO SATURN
Spinoff
394
Part of the legacy of the space program and Marshall Space Flight Center to
Huntsville, Alabama: top left, the Research Institute of the University of Alabama
in Huntsville; top right, Cummings Research Park; lower left, the Von Braun
Civic Center; lower right, the Alabama Space and Rocket Center.
                                                                             395
STAGES TO SATURN
396
                                                                 LEGACIES
Saturn in Retrospect
also in hardware. Laboratories and test stands at Huntsville were not just
                                                                        397
STAGES TO SATURN
398
                                                                 LEGACIES
business, and the military. What   NASA (and particularly Marshall Space
Flight Center) apparently added was "visibility," in terms of progress and
problems, as well as of the individual responsible for handling these
aspects. Visibility, both for the product and for personnel, was the prime
concern of the Program Control Center of Arthur Rudolph's Saturn V
Program Office. Its success in tracking the myriad bits and pieces of
Saturn vehicles impressed even NASA Administrator Webb, who prided
himself on managerial techniques and skills. Claiming that MSFC was
unusually thorough in its management may seem like a simplification.
Given the diversity of the prime contractors and their armies of subcon-
tractors and vendors, however, the clockwork efficiency and the reliabil-
ity of the Saturn vehicles were remarkable. Meticulous attention to
details, and keeping track of them, was a hallmark of MSFC.
     It is worth noting that even after the Saturn V
                                                       program was over,
MSFC still received many requests from businesses and managers asking
"how did you do it?" Here again it is probably wise to remember Bauer's
admonition that space management, just like space hardware, has been
frequently developed to meet particular and complex problems, not
always compatible with the outside, or commercial, world.
     In retrospect it seems that the impact of the Saturn program, in
terms of spinoff, was best observed in improved industrial technique, in
basic shop practices, and in the frequently prosaic but necessary areas of
how   to   run machine tools, how to bend tubes, how to make and apply
fasteners,and simply how to get around in a machine shop. This was part
of Marshall's heritage anyhow. It must be remembered that the von
Braun team came directly out of the Army tradition of the in-house
arsenal philosophy, and that Marshall not only built the first of the
Saturn I vehicles, but the first few S-IC first stages as well. Even though
they did not get into the construction of S-II, S-IV, and S-IVB stages and
their engines, Marshall consistently retained the in-house capability of
duplicating test programs and even major parts of such hardware. As Lee
James noted, it was difficult to make this kind of concept acceptable, and
work effectively with the contractor. Marshall somehow carried it off.
     The Apollo-Saturn program frequently used the overworked phrase,
"government-industry team" in explaining how the Saturn program was
carried out successfully. It would be easy to underestimate this phrase as
a bit of public relations flak put out by the space centers as well as the
manufacturers themselves. Such does not seem to be the case. It was not
unusual, in the course of interviews with contractor and NASA person-
nel, to name someone who had been interviewed previously on a related
topic. The mention would bring about a quick smile and a brightening of
the eyes and a response like "Oh, do you know so and so? Yes, we worked
on ... ," followed by one or two anecdotes indicating a feeling of exceed-
ingly strong partnership. Government and contractor personnel actually
did relate to each other, especially at the technical levels. This ingredient
                                                                        399
STAGES TO SATURN
had  to be important to the success of the program. It meant that
individuals could easily call each other on the phone, discuss a problem,
agree on a solution, and continue the work without major interruption.
     The overall success of the Saturn program depended on a signifi-
cant number of key decisions. One of these would have to be the decision
in   1957 to   start   consideration of the clustered engine concept as a   means
to get heavy payloads into orbit. As natural as this concept seems today, it
has to be remembered that the tricky nature and recalcitrant operating
characteristics of rocket engines at that time suggested clustering of two
or   more engines would be courting absolute            disaster.   Next was the
decision to use liquid hydrogen as one of the propellants. The application
of this high-energy fuel made all the difference in the performance of
the Saturn I, Saturn IB, and Saturn V vehicles. The use of the fuel
allowed optimum sizing of the stages while keeping the weight to a
minimum,       so that a three-astronaut payload could be carried successfully
into orbit   and boosted   into lunar trajectory. The controversy of EOR-LOR
also stands out as a major period of decision early in the program. The
choice of LOR led to the successful Saturn IB interim vehicle and
stabilized the design configuration of the Saturn V. Finally, the decision
to adopt the all-up concept stands out as one of the steps that permitted
the United States to achieve the manned lunar landing on the moon
before the end of the 1960s.
     It is interesting to note that the von Braun team
                                                        argued about the
acceptance of three of these four major program milestones. On the
other hand, the argument seems to have been one of degree rather than
one of substance. Despite the strong recollections of individuals who say
that von Braun opposed liquid hydrogen from the beginning, one must
remember  that         LH
                 2 had been included very early by MFSC   in terms of
the Centaur upper stage in some of the early Saturn system studies.
      The    collective technological   experience of the Saturn program was
effectively applied in planning the Shuttle program, most notably in the
Shuttle's propellant and propulsion systems. Marshall's experience in the
handling and pumping of cryogenics, construction of fuel tanks, and
development of the LH 2 engines were directly applied to the Shuttle
        29
concept.
     In one respect, the technology of the Saturn vehicle represented the
closing of a circle in international space partnership and cooperation.
Allies in World War II, the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. both borrowed heavily
from the technological storehouse of their defeated foe, Germany. In the
early postwar years, both the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. learned from firing
their respective stocks of captured V-2 rockets and perfected significant
sectors of their own new rocket technology out of the V-2 experience
common to both. This propulsion technology was further elaborated
during the Cold War era along an escalating front of improved ICBM
weaponry. When landing on the moon became an acknowledged race,
400
                                                                 LEGACIES
                                                                         401
Appendixes
                   Appendix                                A            Schematic of Saturn                                                                             V
                                                                                                  '
                                                                                                          THIRD STAGE
                                         253 200 LITERS LIQUID   HYDROGEN'
                                                                                                                                                                THRUST EACH
                                                                                                  .       6       ATTITUDE CONTROL ENGINES (LIQUID) 654 NEWTONS
                                            92 350 LITERS LIQUID    OXYGEN
                                                                                                              2   ULLAGE MOTORS                 (SOLID) 15 100   NEWTONS THRUST EACH
                                      95 LITERS NITROGEN TETROXIDE
                                                                                                      ,
                                                                                                                              SECOND STAGE
                    101.6   METERS
                                            331 000 LITERS LIQUID   OXYGEN
                                                                                                                          '
                                                                                                                                        ENGINES (LIQUID) 889 600 NEWTONS THRUST
                                                                                                                                                                                EACH
                                                                                                                              5 J-2
                                                                                                                                                (LATER UPRATED TO 1 023 000 NEWTONS)
FIRST STAGE
                                                                                                                                                                                    EACH
                                                                                                                                  5 F-1   ENGINES (LIQUID) 6 672 000 NEWTONS THRUST
                                                                                                                                                    (LATER UPRATED TO 6 805 000 NEWTONS)
                                                                                 405
APPENDIX A
Average R&D Costs for One Saturn I, IB, and V Launch Vehicle
Saturn I The initial development and production of the Saturn I was accomplished in-
             house; only the latter stages were placed on contract. Army projects assumed
             the initial FY 1958 and 1959 costs; NASA's total costs were not accumulated,
             during the development phase, to provide a true average unit cost (i.e., the
             original plan for S-I stages was to procure 21 each). At the conclusion of the
             program shown on the funding history, the total cost to                  NASA
                                                                           of the 10 Saturn
             Is actually      launched was $753 million.
S-IC
                     Appendix B Saturn V
                  Prelaunch Launch Sequence
              Event                                         Completed
LM   Operations                                              30 Oct 70
  Combined System Test                                        4 Dec 70
  Unmanned Altitude Run                                      5 May 70
  Manned Altitude Run                                        18 Sep 70
  LM/SLA Mate                                                22 Oct 70
CSM    Operations                                             3 Nov 70
  Combined System Test                                        4 Dec 70
  Unmanned Altitude Run                                     27 Aug 70
  Manned Altitude Run                                          3 Sep 70
  GSM/SLA Mate                                               31 Oct 70
  Ordnance    Installation                                    7 Nov 70
LV VAB Low Bay        Operations                            12 May 70
  IU Low Bay Checkout                                       12 May 70
  S-IVB Low Bay Checkout                                    12 May 70
  S-II Low Bay Checkout                                     11 May 70
  CDDT-Wet/Dry                                               18   Jan 71
  SV Countdown Prep                                          25 Jan 72
Countdown                                                    31 Jan 71
                                                                     407
APPENDIX B
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Appendix C   Saturn Flight History
APPENDIX C
Saturn Family/Mission Data
Commander      Schirra
CM   Pilot     Eisele         N/A     3-28-68             3-28-68 4-11-68                   4-7-68
LM   Pilot     Cunningham
                                                                                                415
APPENDIX C
Saturn Family Mission Data    Continued
Saturn IB   SA-208     SL-4       11-16-73   CSM-118   Third manned launch            Duration 60 days
                                                       to the   Earth orbiting        Open-ended  to 85
Crew
APPENDIX C
Saturn Family Mission Data       Continued
Crew
Appendix   D   Saturn   R&D Funding History
APPENDIX D
Appendix E   Saturn   V   Contractors
APPENDIX E
     SATURN V SUBCONTRACTORS
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Appendix G   NASA   Organization During
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     APPENDIX G
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                                               Notes
CHAPTER 1
1.   The name of the      locale,   Cape Canaveral, was    officially   changed on 28 Nov. 1963 to honor the
     late   President John   F.   Kennedy, and the   NASA    facility   was henceforth called John F. Kennedy
     Space Center (KSC).
2.   The  official NASA history of Kennedy Space Center and the launch facilities and
                                                                                      concepts is by
     Charles D. Benson and William B. Faherty, Moonport: A History of Apollo Launch Facilities and
     Operations, NASA SP-4204 (Washington, 1978). Material for this section was compiled from the
     following sources: KSC, The Kennedy Space Center Story (Kennedy Space Center, Fla., 1969);
     NASA, Astronautics and Aeronautics, 1969: Chronology on Science, Technology, and Policy, NASA
     SP-4014 (Washington, 1970); MSFC, "Chronology of MSFC 1969" (draft copy), (1972); NASA,
     Saturn V News Reference (1968); MSFC, Saturn V Flight Manual, SA-506 (1969).
3.   MSFC,     Saturn   V Flight Manual, SA-506,     passim;    MSFC,     Chronology of   MSFC   1969, passim;
     NASA,     Saturn   V News Reference, passim.
4.   There are many books covering         this period.   For a readable and authoritative summary, see the
                                      by Wernher von Braun and Frederick I. Ordway, History of
     well-illustrated historical survey
     Rocketry and Space Travel (New York, 1969), pp. 2240, which also includes an excellent
     bibliography. See also Eugene M. Emme, A History of Space Flight (New York, 1965), passim.,
     which includes a bibliography. For the lifesaving rocket, see Mitchell R. Sharpe, Development of the
     Lifesaving Rocket, Marshall Space Flight Center, Historical Note no. 4, 10 June 1969. The
     bibliographical study by Katherine Murphy Dickson, History of Aeronautics and Astronautics: A
     Preliminary Bibliography, NASA HHR-29 (Washington, 1968), features annotated entries, and
     lists
           many government documents, as well as articles from scholarly journals and periodicals of
     both European and American origin.
5.   For an overview of this era and its leading personalities, see the histories by Loyd S. Swenson, Jr.,
     James M. Grimwood, and Charles C. Alexander, This New Ocean: A History of Project Mercury,
     NASA SP-4201 (Washington, 1966); von Braun and Ordway, History; and Emme, History.
     Tsiolkovsky's collected papers are available in translation as NASA Technical Translations
     F-243, 326, 327 and 328 (1965). For an authorized biography of Goddard see Milton Lehman,
     This High Man: The Life of Robert H. Goddard (New York, 1963); but see also Esther Goddard and
     G. Edward Pendray, eds., The Papers of Robert H. Goddard (New York, 1970), 3 vols. Willy Ley,
                      and Men in Space (New York, 1968) includes considerable historical information.
     Rockets, Missiles,
     Ley not only knew Oberth and other pioneering figures of the twenties and thirties, he also
     participated in many experimental projects. Frederick C. Durant, III, and George S.James, eds.,
     First Steps Toward Space, Smithsonian Annals of Flight, no. 10 (Washington, 1974), includes a
     memoir by Oberth, as well as contributions concerning Goddard and the Smithsonian, and
     essays on rocket research in Europe and the U.S. in the twenties and thirties. Eugene M. Emme,
                                                      457
NOTES TO PAGES 11-19
      ed.,   The History of Rocket Technology: Essays on Research Development and Utility (Detroit, 1964),
      includes   summary essays on U.S. rocket technology in the pre-World War II years.
6.                   von Braun and Ordway, History; Emme, History of Space Travel; and Swenson,
      See, for example,
      Grimwood, and Alexander, This New Ocean. Wartime Russian rocketry is analyzed in Coleman
      Goldberg, An Introduction to Russian Rocketry: History, Development, and Prospects, Off. of the Asst.
      Chief of Staff, Intelligence. U.S. Army Field Detachment R, 1 June 1959. Copy in JSC files.
7.    Ernst Stuhlinger, et al., eds., Astronautical Engineering and Science: From Peenemuende to Planetary
      Space (New York, 1963), pp. 366-367; von Braun and Ordway, History, pp. 63-74.
8.    Dornberger summarizes the V-2 work in Emme, Rocket Technology, pp. 2945, and has published
      his own memoir, entitled V-2 (New York, 1954). This book is one of the most authoritative works
      on the V-2 and Peenemuende generally available, in addition to Dieter K. Huzel, Peenemuende to
      Canaveral (Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1962); and Krafft A. Ehricke, "The Peenemuende Rocket
      Center, Part 2," Rocketscience, 4 (June 1950):35. See also, Mitchell Sharpe, "Evolution of Rocket
      Technology: Historical Note, Saturn History Project," Jan. 1974, pp. 15-20 (copy in SHP files);
      von Braun and Ordway, History, 104117. Practically every aspect of the V-2, from basic
      research to its early design and testing to its deployment, can be found in a large collection of
      technical reports from Peenemuende, located in the Redstone Scientific Information Center,
      U.S. Army Missile Command, Redstone Arsenal, Ala.
 9.   Von Braun and Ordway, History, pp. 1 141 17; Dornberger, V-2, passim. Plans for rounding up
      German scientific and technical personnel were in progress by early 1945. During the spring, the
      idea was known as Operation Overcast. In 1946, the program was renamed Operation Paperclip,
      the designation which    became the most    familiar.   See Clarence Lasby, Operation Paperclip (New
      York, 1971).
10.   Von Braun and Ordway, History, p. 18; Sharpe, "Evolution," pp. 42-48. Between May 1945 and
      Dec. 1952, the U.S. recruited 642 foreign technicians and specialists under Paperclip. Lasby,
      Operation Paperclip, gives the absorbing details of their utilization by the Air Force, Army, and
      Navy. Generally, most of the specialists served individually or in very small, close-knit groups.
      The von Braun team of 132 was by far the largest single group.
11.   For an overview of the early postwar era, see von Braun and Ordway, History, pp. 120-139;
      Swenson, Grimwood, and Alexander, This New Ocean, pp. 18-31. More specific studies include
      J. L. Chapman, Atlas: The Story of a Missile (New York, 1960); James Baar and William Howard,
      Polaris (New York, 1960); and Julian Hartt,
                                                     Mighty Thor (New York, 1961). See also Ernest G.
      Schwiebert, ed., A History of the U.S. Air Force Ballistic Missiles (New York, 1965), and Michael
      Armacost, Politics of Weapons Innovation: The Thor-Jupiter Controversy (New York, 1969).
12.   Von Braun and Ordway, History, 120 ff.
13.   On the origins of the Redstone Arsenal, see David S. Akens, Historical Origins of the George C.
      Marshall Space Flight Center, MSFC Historical
                                                    Monograph no. 1 (December, 1960). For accounts
      of the struggle between the Army and Air Force about the IRBM, see Armacost, Politics
                                                                                                  of
      Weapons Innovation, and John B. Medaris's memoir, Countdown for Decision (New York, 1960). On
      the role of   ABM
                      A, Jupiter, and Polaris, see von Braun and Ordway, History, pp. 130-132; Baar
      and Howard, Polaris; Wyndham D. Miles, "The Polaris," in Emme, ed., Rocket
                                                                                     Technology.
14.   Von Braun and Ordway, History, 132-136; Schwiebert, History, passim; Chapman, Atlas; Hartt,
      Mighty Thor. See also, Robert G. Perry, "The Atlas, Thor, and Minuteman," in Emme, ed., Rocket
      Technology.
15.   The most    detailed and objective
                                          description of the events leading to the selection of Vanguard
      over other competitors is found in Constance M. Green and Milton Lomask,
                                                                                      Vanguard A History
      (Washington, 1971). See also von Braun and Ordway, History, pp. 150 et seq.; Emme, History of
      Space/light; R. Cargill Hall, "Early U.S. Satellite Proposals," Wernher von Braun, "The Redstone,
      Jupiter, and Juno," and John P. Hagen, "The Viking and the Vanguard," in Emme, ed., Rocket
      Technology.
16.   Walter Haeussermann to Robert G.
                                         Sheppard, "Comment Edition of History of Saturn Launch
      Vehicles," 22 June 1976. For the story of the Jupiter launch vehicle and the
                                                                                   Explorer satellite,
      see, Medaris, Countdown, passim.; von Braun, "Redstone,
                                                                 Jupiter, and Juno," in Emme, ed.,
      Rocket Technology; Stuhlinger et al., Astronautical
                                                          Engineering, pp. 203-239.
17.   See, for example, the essay by John P. Hagen,
                                                        "Viking and Vanguard," cited above; Milton W.
      Rosen, Viking Rocket Story (New York, 1955); Green and Lomask,
                                                                            Vanguard. On IGY, Sputnik,
      and the    NASA story, see Emme, History of Spaceflight, pp. 120-130; Swenson, Grimwood, and
458
                                                                                    NOTES TO PAGES 21-32
       Alexander, This         New    Ocean, pp. 18 et seq.; and Robert L. Rosholt,               An   Administrative History of
       NASA, 1958-1963,              NASA   SP-4101 (Washington, 1966).
18.    For summaries of the era,        von Braun and Ordway, History, pp. 163 passim; Emme, History of
                                           see,
       Space Flight, 153 passim.          The            of the Mercury program is Swenson, Grimwood,
                                                   official history
       and Alexander, This New Ocean. For the NASA history of Gemini, see James M. Grimwood and
       Barton C. Hacker, On the Shoulders of Titans, NASA SP-4203 (Washington, 1977). On the Apollo
       spacecraft and lunar lander, see Courtney G. Brooks, James M. Grimwood, and Loyd S.
       Swenson, Jr., Chariots for Apollo: A History of Manned Lunar Spacecraft, NASA SP-4205 (Washing-
       ton, 1979).
CHAPTER 2
 1.
       Eugene M. Emme,       ed., Aeronautics and Astronautics: An American Chronology of Science and
       Technology in the Exploration of Space, 1915-1960 (Washington, 1961), pp. 81-92; Eugene M.
       Emme, "Historical Perspectives on Apollo,"/ourna/ of Spacecraft and Rockets (Apr. 1968), p. 371;
       Armacost, Thor-Jupiter.
 2.    H. H. Koelle et al., Juno V Space Vehicle Development Program, Phase I: Booster Feasibility
       Demonstration, ABMA, Redstone Arsenal, Rept. DSP-TM- 10-58, 13 Oct. 1958, p. 1. Cited
       hereafter as Juno V Feasibility. Oswald H. Lange, "Development of the Saturn Space Carrier
       Vehicle," in Stuhlinger et          al.,   Astronautical Engineering, pp.      223.
 3.    Koelle,   Juno V       Feasibility, p.     1;   Lange, "Development,"           The
                                                                                   p. 3.          ABMAproposal is cited in
       David    S.   Akens, Historical Origins of          the   George C. Marshall Space Flight Center, MSFC Historical
       Monograph        no.    1   (Dec. 1960), p. 58.
 4.    Robert D. Sampson, "Informal Working Papers: Technical History of Saturn," Saturn Systems
       Office (1961), pp. 3-4; Swenson, Grimwood, and Alexander, This New Ocean, p. 79; Senate
       Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences, Subcommittee on Governmental Organization
       for Space Activities, Investigation of Governmental Organization for Space Activities, 86th
                                                                                                   Cong., 1st
       sess.,   pp. 108-111, 121, 125-128, 628-629.
 5.    Koelle, Juno     V Feasibility,   pp.    12;     William A. Mrazek, "The Saturn Project," Astronautics, 5 (July
       1960):    26-27; von Braun, "The Redstone, Jupiter, and Juno,"                        in   Emme,   ed., History of Rocket
       Technology, pp.        107119.
 6.    Von Braun, "Redstone, Jupiter, and Juno,"                      p. 120.   Copy of    ARPA    Order no. 14-59      in   SHP
           and recopied in NASA, Documents in the
       files,                                                         History of NASA:     An Anthology, NASA     History Off.,
       HHR-43, Aug. 1975, pp. 238-239.
 7.    Koelle,   Juno V    Feasibility, p. 4.
 8.    A. A. McCool and G. H. McKay, Jr., "Propulsion Development Problems Associated with Large
       Liquid Rockets," MSFC, TMX-53075, 12 Aug. 1963, p. 5.
 9.    David    S.          Illustrated Chronology: Saturn's First Eleven Years, April 1957 Through
                     Akens, Saturn                                                                  April
       1968,               5th ed. (1971), pp. 2-3. William A. Mrazek, "The Saturn Launch Vehicle
                MSFC, MHR-5,
    Family," lecture at Univ. of Hawaii, June 1966, p. 2.
10. Quotations from Mrazek, "Saturn Family." William A. Mrazek interviews, MSFC, 3
                                                                                              Sept. 1971,
       and 30 July 1975; Koelle, Juno V Feasibility, p. 10.
1 1.
       John B. Medaris and Roy Johnson, "Memorandum of Agreement: ARPA and AOMC. Subject:
       High Thrust Booster Program Using Clustered Engines," 23 Sept. 1958; Akens, Saturn
       Chronology, p. 3; Mrazek interview, 3 Sept. 1971; Mrazek, "Saturn Family," pp. 2-3. Quotation
       from the latter. Interviews with Konrad Dannenberg, MSFC, 30 July 1975, and with William A.
       Mrazek, 30 July 1975, were extremely useful in clarifying many details of Saturn I's origins and
       development. See also, interviews with D. D. Wyatt, NASA, 2 Dec. 1971, and Homer E. Newell,
       NASA,     2 Dec. 1971.
12.    For brief summaries of this period, see Frank W. Anderson, Jr., Orders of Magnitude: History of
       NACA and NASA, 1915-1976, NASA SP-4403 (Washington, 1976), pp. 14-17; Swenson,
       Grimwood, and Alexander, This New Ocean, pp. 53, 82-83. A more detailed review is in Rosholt,
       Administrative History, especially Chaps. 1 and 3. Overtones of national security and a space race
       with the Russians are obvious in contemporary memoranda. See, for example, Arthur A.
       Kimball to Nelson A. Rockefeller, Chmn., President's Advisory Comm. on Government Organi-
       zation, "Organization for Civil Space Programs," 25 Feb. 1958, JSC files.
                                                                                                                             459
NOTES TO PAGES 33-42
13.   Anderson, Orders of Magnitude, pp. 14-18; Swenson, Grimwood, and Alexander, This New
      Ocean, pp. 75-106; Rosholt, Administrative History, pp.                   40-47; Emme, "Perspectives,"             p. 371.
14.   NACA, Aerodynamics Committee,      "Minutes of Meeting: Committee on Aircraft, Missile and
      Spacecraft Aerodynamics," 21 Mar. 1958, JSC files; NACA, memo, "Suggestions
                                                                                        for Space
      Program (For Internal Use Only)," 28 Mar. 1958, JSC files. Ea: ly NASA moves towards ABMA
      and JPL are discussed                 in Rosholt, Administrative History, pp.    45-47.
15.   Emme,      "Perspectives," p. 372.
16.   Working Group on Vehicular Program, "Report to the NACA, Special Committee on Space
      Technology: A National Integrated Missile and Space Vehicle Development Program," 18 July
      1958, pp. 1-7, 11-23, copy in JSC files.
17.   Ibid., pp.        26-30, 34-35.
18.   H. Guyford Stever interview,                   NASA,   7 Feb. 1974, copy in     JSC   files.
460
                                                                                      NOTES TO PAGES 43-55
40.   Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp.                 46.
41. Mrazek, "Saturn Family," p. 3.
42. Mrazek, "Saturn Project," pp. 17, 74. Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp.                         56.
43. John L. Sloop interview, NASA, 14 Nov. 1969; Rosen interview, 1969; Walter T.                            Olson   to   John
      Sloop, 21 Jan. 1972.
44. Senate      Comm. on              Aeronautical and Space Sciences, "Investigation of Space Activities," Johnson
      testimony, p. 123.
45.   Abraham Hyatt to Abe Silverstein, 24 Aug., 1959.
46. Saturn Vehicle Team, "Report to the Administrator, NASA, on Saturn Development                                  Plan," 15
      Dec. 1959.
47.   Abraham Hyatt              to   Thomas O.     Paine, 25 Nov. 1969; Hyatt to       Eugene Emme, 21 Mar. 1973; von
      Braun, "Saturn the Giant,"               p. 41.
48.   Von Braun, "Saturn: Our Best Hope," p. 13; Mrazek, "Saturn Family," pp. 3, 4.
49.   Eldon W. Hall and Francis C. Schwenk, "Current Trends in Large Booster Developments,"
      Aerospace Engineering, May 1960, p. 21.
50. Saturn Vehicle           Team, "Report,"           pp.   18.
51.   Quoted in Emme, "Perspectives," p. 373.
52.   House Committee on Science and Astronautics, Review of the Space Program, 86th Cong., 2d                            sess.,
      Jan.-Feb. 1960, pp. 167-190.
53. President      Dwight D. Eisenhower               to T. Keith   Glennan, 14 Jan. 1960; Akens, Saturn Chronology,         p.
      8.
    (Cambridge, Mass., 1970), p. 106; Hugh Sidey, "Soviet Spacemen," Life, 21 Apr. 1961, pp.
      26-27.
67. Cited in     Emme,           "Perspectives," p. 378.
68.   House Committee on Science and                    Astronautics, 1962       NASA Authorization Hearings,   87 Cong.,   1st
      sess.,   Mar.-Apr. 1961, pp. 1-5, 31, 374-378.
69. Public Papers   Kennedy, 1962 (Washington, 1963), pp. 688-674. For additional background,
                     .   .   .
    see Courtney Brooks, James Grimwood, and Loyd S. Swenson, Jr., Chariots for Apollo: A History of
    Manned Lunar Spacecraft,                NASA
                                  SP-4205 (Washington, 1979), Chapter 1. For a thorough review
      and assessment of this era and Kennedy's                     historic decision, see the fine study   by Logsdon, The
      Decision to Go to the Moon.
                                                                                                                          461
NOTES TO PAGES 57-65
                                                            CHAPTER           3
 1   .   Akens, Saturn Chronology, p. 12; Donald H. Heaton, "Miniites of the Executive Meeting at                             AFBMD
         on October  28, 1960," memo for record, 2 Nov. 1960, JSC files.
2.       MSFC, Saturn Systems Off., Saturn Quarterly Progress Report January-March 1961, p. 42, cited
         hereafter as MSFC, SSO, Saturn QPR. These documents are housed in the files of the Historical
         Off., Marshall       Space Flight Center, cited hereafter as               MSFC        files.
 3.      NASA,   "Minutes: Space Exploration Program Council," pp. 5-6 Jan. 1961, JSC files.
                                                                            1961 by MSFC, Saturn
4.       See, for example, various Quarterly Progress Reports issued during
         Systems Off.,       MSFC     files.
5.       The Dyna-Soar persisted     within the Air Force for two more years until the program was canceled
         in   1963 for lack of funds, and, more conclusively, because it was overtaken by newer technology
         in    the form of Gemini two-man missions. See, for example, Swenson, Grimwood, and
         Alexander, This        New   Ocean, pp.        532-533,   fn. 61.
         JSC    files.   See also Rosholt, Administrative History, pp. 83           ff.;   Swenson, Grimwood, and Alexander,
         This   New      Ocean, pp.   114116.
14.      Robert R. Gilruth to         Staff,    "Advanced Vehicle Team," 25 May 1960, JSC                       files.
15. J.T. Markley, "Trip Report: Project Apollo," 30 Oct. 1960, JSC files.
16. NASA, "News Release: STG," 3 Jan. 1961; T. Keith Glennan, "Instructions, Management
    Manual: Functions and Authority Space Task Group," 1 Jan. 1961; Paul E. Purser, "An-
    nouncement to NASA Employees: Designation of STG as Manned Spaceflight Center," 1 Nov.
    1961, copies in JSC files.
17.      "Discussion Notes,         Lunar Landing Steering Group," memo, 31 July 1961.
18.      Emme,      "Perspectives," p. 376.
19.      Robert R. Gilruth to Nicholas E. Golovin, 12 Sept. 1961. The Earth parking orbit did, in fact,
         become established Apollo-Saturn mission procedure. Gilruth's additional recommendation for
         a "single-burn" stage for translunar injection (TLI) was not followed, however, since the S-IVB
         third stage of the Saturn V placed the Apollo spacecraft into parking orbit, then refired for the
         TLI phase.
20.      John M. Logsdon, "Selecting the Way to the Moon: The Choice of the Lunar Orbital
         Rendezvous Mode," Aerospace Historian, 18 (June 1971): 66-68. For full details, see Brooks,
         Grimwood, and Swenson, Chariots for Apollo.
21.      John    C. Houbolt to Robert C. Seamans, 15 Nov. 1961,                           JSC   files.
22. Milton          W. Rosen      Brainerd Holmes, "Large Launch Vehicle Program," 6 Nov. 1961, JSC
                                   to D.
         files. For details and
                                membership of these various groups, see Logsdon, "Selecting," and Brooks,
         Grimwood, and Swenson, Chariots for Apollo.
23.      Combined Working Group on Vehicles                        for    Manned Space            Flight, "Report,"      20 Nov. 1961,
         attached to Rosen-Holmes                memo,    cited above.
24.      Logsdon, "Selecting," p. 68.
25.      Milton Rosen, interview, NASA, 14 Nov. 1969.
462
                                                                                         NOTES TO PAGES 66-74
26.      Quotedin Logsdon, "Selecting," p. 68.
27. A. T.    Mattson to Charles J. Donlen, "Report on Activities 16 Apr. to 19 Apr. 1962, Regarding
         Manned Spacecraft Projects," 20 Apr. 1962, JSC files.
28. D. Brainerd             Holmesvon Braim, 4 June 1962, JSC files.
                                        to
29.      Von Braun, "Concluding Remarks by      Dr. Wernher von Braun About Mode Selection for the
         Lunar Landing Program Given to Dr. Joseph F. Shea, Deputy Dir. (Systems) Off. of Manned
         Space Flight," memo for the record, June 1962, pp. 1-5.
30.      Logsdon, "Selecting," pp. 69-70; interview, Robert C. Seamans, Jr., NASA, 27 Mar. 1964.
         According to von Braun, Wiesner said later that he felt all three modes (direct, EOR, LOR) were
         feasible, but that more study and more effort might have been given to a Saturn V direct mode
         mission.      Von Braun,       "Saturn the Giant" in Cortright, ed., Apollo Expeditions (1974),           p. 5. (draft
         copy).
31   .   Ivan D. Ertel and        Mary Louise Morse, The Apollo Spacecraft: A            Chronology, vol. 1,
                                                                                                               NASA SP-4009,
         (Washington, 1969), pp.              165-166, 201-202. See               also Brooks, Grimwood,        and Swenson,
         Chariots for Apollo.
32.      For dates of initiation and completion of new installations, and costs, see MSFC, "MSFC
         Technical Facilities History and Description," 30 June 1968. For photos and illustrations of
         installations, including brief technical descriptions, see MSFC, Technical Facilities and Equipment
         Digest, January 1967. For details of the transfer, including figures, see David S. Akens, Historical
         Origins of the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center, MSFC Historical Monograph no. 1
         (Huntsville, Ala., 1960), especially Appendix C. Additional data are noted in David S. Akens, An
         Illustrated Chronology of the NASA Marshall Center and MSFC Program, 1960-1973 (Huntsville,
         Ala., 1974),      MHR-10,        pp. 404, 406-407.
33.      Kurt H. Debus, "The Evolution of Launch Concepts and Space Flight Operations,"                          in Stuhlinger
         et al., Astronautical Engineering, pp.            25-41 MSFC,
                                                              Historical Off., History of the George C. Marshall
                                                                     ;
                                                                                                                        463
NOTES TO PAGES 76-91
39.    H. H. Koelle, F. L. Williams, W. G. Huber, and R. C. Callaway, Jr., Juno V Space Vehicle
       Development Program, Phase I: Booster Feasibility Demonstration, ABMA,
                                                                              Redstone Arsenal, Rept.
       no. DSP-TM-10-58, 13 Oct. 1958; H. H. Koelle, et al., "Juno V Space Vehicle Development
       Program (Status Report 15 November 1958)," ABMA, Redstone Arsenal, Ala., Rept. no.
       DSP-TM-11-58, 15 Nov. 1958; von Braun presentation in ABMA, "ABMA Presentation," pp.
       63-125; Myron Uherka, "System Description for Saturn Vehicle (SA-1 Through SA-4),"
       ABMA,     Rept. no.     DSL-TM- 10-59,   2 Apr. 1959.
40.    The   basic technical     document   for the Saturn     I   is   MSFC, Saturn Systems   Off., "Saturn C-l,
       Project Development Plan," 10 Aug. 1961, a comprehensive and hefty overview. A useful
       companion study is MSFC, Saturn        1962, basically a photographic history, with excellent
                                                 .   .   .
       technical photo coverage of design details and fabrication. See also Lange, "Development," in
       Stuhlinger et   al.,   Astronautical Engineering; Frederick E. Vreuls,    "The S-I Stage," Astronautics,      7
       (Feb. 1962): 33, 70, 71; Chrysler Corp., "This         is   Your Chrysler Saturn Story," 1964.
41. Homer B. Wilson, "Saturn Base Heating Review," 1967; J. S. Butz, "Safety, Simplicity Stressed in
    Saturn Design Approach," Aviation Week, 9 May, 1960, pp. 52-55, et seq.
42. Karl L. Heimburg, "Saturn Developmental Testing," Astronautics, 7, (Feb. 1962): 54, 56, 58;
    Konrad L. Dannenberg, "The Saturn System Develops," Astronautics, 7, (Feb. 1962): 106; Akens,
    Historical Origins, p. 63; Akens et al., History of MSFC, July 1-December 31, 1960, MHM-2, May
    1961, pp. 44-45; MSFC, "MSFC Technical Facilities History and Descriptions," 30 June 1968;
    MSFC, Technical Facilities and Equipment Digest (Jan. 1967); von Braun interview, NASA, 17 Nov.
       1971.
43.    Heimburg, "Saturn Testing," pp. 49, 54, 58; B. J. Funderburk, Automation             in Saturn I First Stage
       Checkout,   MSFC, NASA        TN   D-4328, Jan. 1968, passim; Akens, Historical Origins,      p. 8; Akens,
    Saturn Chronology, p. 8; MSFC, Technical Digest, p. 8.
44. MSFC, Saturn I Summary,            TMX
                                    57401, 15 Feb. 1966, unpaged; Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp.
    2831; Lange, "Development," Astronautical Engineering, pp. 1516.
45. Chrysler Corp., Space Div., "Saturn IB Orientation: Systems Training Manual," no. 851-0, 15
    Feb. 1965, pp. 2-3; Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp. 39, 42; MSFC, Saturn IB News Reference, Sept.
       1968, pp. 1.2-1.3; MSFC, Historical Off., History of MSFC, July 1 -December 3 1           ,   1962,   MHM-6,
       May  1963, pp. 169-181.
46. For    an explanation of the Saturn IB weight saving program, see H. D. Lowrey, "The Saturn IB
       Launch Vehicle System," speech     to Soc. of Automotive Engineers, Detroit, Mich., 9 Nov. 1964.
       For overall system description, manufacturing, and operations, see Chrysler, "Saturn IB
       Orientation"; MSFC, Saturn IB News Reference; MSFC, Saturn IB Launch Vehicle Project Develop-
       ment Plan, NASA-TM-X-60121, 1 Jan. 1967; MSFC, Technical Digest, pp. 76-77, 81-82. For
       detailed description, and cut-away drawings of major
                                                                  systems and components, see MSFC,
       Saturn IB Vehicle Handbook, vol. 1, "Vehicle Description," vol. 2, "S-IB Stage," CR-81077, 25 luly
       1966.
                                                         CHAPTER 4
       Michael T. Davis, Robert K. Allgeier, Jr., Thomas G.
                                                                       Rogers, and Gordon Rysavy, The
  1.
464
                                                                  NOTES TO PAGES 92-102
      Chandler, "Development Trends of Liquid Propellant Engines," in Ernst Stuhlinger         et al., eds.,
      From Peenemuende to Outer Space (Huntsville, Ala., 1962), pp. 294-96.
 6.   William  J. Brennan, "Milestones in Cryogenic Liquid Propellant Rocket Engines," AIAA Paper
      67-978, Oct. 1967, passim.
 7.   For an overview of these and related topics, see Brennan, "Milestones," pp. 1013. For a
      technical discussion of early thrust chamber designs, consult Heinz H. Koelle, ed., Handbook of
      Astronautical Engineering (New York, 1961), pp. 20.6920.75. Theories on thrust chambers
      prevalent in the late sixties are discussed in Dieter K. Huzel and David H. Huang, Design of Liquid
      Propellant Rocket Engines, 2d ed. (Washington, 1971), pp. 81-120. See especially the illustration
      on p. 113, depicting variations in tube cross sections. Koelle, Handbook, pp. 20.90-20.99,
      includes analysis of turbopump design parameters. For a more extended treatment, see Huzel
      and Huang, Design, pp. 176-261. Gas generators are also described in Koelle, Handbook, pp.
      20.102-20.105, and in Huzel and Huang, Design, pp. 131-36.
           For clarification of many details of propulsion system design and operation covered in
      Chapters 4 and 5, the author wishes to acknowledge interviews with Leonard Bostwick and
      Milan Burns, MSFC, 31 July 1975, and with Joseph Attinello, Robert Fontaine, and Paul Fuller,
      Rocketdyne, 4 Mar. and 10 Mar., 1971.
 8.   A. J. Burks, "Development of LOX-Hydrogen Engines for the Saturn Apollo Launch Vehicles,"
      MSFC, Engine Program Off., 10 June 1968, p. 1. At the time, Burks was the assistant manager of
      the office. Although this report applied specifically to LOX-LH 2 systems, his comment on
      engines as the pacing item applied to propulsion systems in general.
 9.   Leonard C. Bostwick, "Development of LOX/RP-1 Engines for Saturn/Apollo Launch Vehicles,"
      AIAA   Paper for Propulsion, Joint Specialist Conf., June 1968, p. 1.
10.   Bostwick, "Development of LOX/RP-1 Engines"; Belew, Patterson and Thomas, "Apollo
      Propulsion Systems."
11.   Akens, Saturn Chronology, p. 3; MSFC, Launch Vehicle Engines: Project Development Plan (MA
      001-A50-2H), 1 July 1965, p. 2.5. The direct antecedents of the H-l included not only the Thor
      and Jupiter engine system designs, but also designs from three other engine development
      programs, known as the MA-3, the X-l and the S-4.
12.   "Saturn H-l Engine Design Features and Proposed Changes," ORDAB-DSDE, 21 Sept. 1959,
      DSDDE memo no. 2017; MSFC, Launch Vehicle Engines, pp. 2.1, 2.6; Rocketdyne, "News from
      Rocketdyne: Data Sheet, H-l Rocket Engine," 15 July 1968.
13.   Emme,    Aeronautics and Astronautics, p. 109; Rocketdyne, "News/Data Sheet, H-l"; Straub, "The
      H-l Engine," pp. 39, 96. Straub was a Rocketdyne engineer involved with the H-l engine from
      its
          inception. Engine production continued under NASA cognizance after the formal transfer of
      specified ARPA and ABMA projects on 16 Mar. 1960.
14.   MSFC    Saturn Off., Saturn Monthly Progress Report, 16 Nov.- 12 Dec. 1963, pp. 5-6; MSFC
      Engine Project   Off., H-l Engine Project Development Plan, 1 Dec. 1963, pp. 33-38; MSFC Engine
      Project Off., Engine Quarterly Report, Apr.-June, 1964, p. 21; MSFC, Michoud Assembly Facility
      Historical Report, 1 Jan. -30 June 1965, pp. 5, 23; MSFC Industrial Operations, Engine Program
      Off., Quarterly Progress Report: F-l, H-l, J-2 and RL-10 Engines, January-March, 1965, 15 Mar.
      1965, pp. 15-16; Paul Anderson, Contracts Off., MSFC, "Contract NAS8-18741," 30 June
      1967.
15.   MSFC, Launch     Vehicle Engines, p. 9.5;   Bostwick and Burns interview; Attinello, Fontaine, and
      Fuller interviews.
16.   MSFC, Launch Vehicle Engines, pp. 2.6, 3.23; Rocketdyne, H-l Rocket Engine Technical Manual
      R-3 620-1: Engine Data, 1968, pp. 1.1, 1.8, 1.28; Belew, Patterson, and Thomas, "Apollo Vehicle
      Propulsion Systems," p. 2; MSFC, Saturn IB News Reference, Sept. 1968, pp. 4.1-4.2, 4.6; Straub,
      "H-l Engine," pp. 39, 36.
17.   Belew, Patterson, and Thomas, "Apollo Propulsion Systems," p. 3; Bostwick, "Development of
      LOX/RP-1 Engines," pp. 3-4.
18.   Charles E. Cataldo, H-l Engine LOX Dome Failure, NASA        TM
                                                                  X-53220, July 1964, pp. 1-4; KSC
      to Apollo Program Dir., Hq., teletype, "SA-7 Launch Schedule," 17 July 1964; Apollo Spacecraft
      Program Off., Hq. to KSC, teletype, "SA-7 Launch Schedule," 22 July 1964; Belew, Patterson,
      and Thomas, "Apollo Propulsion Systems," p. 3; Bostwick, "Development of LOX/RP-1
      Engines," p. 4.
19.   Belew, Patterson, and Thomas, "Apollo Propulsion Systems," p.        3;   Bostwick, "Development of
      LOX/RP-1 Engines," p. 5.
                                                                                                     465
NOTES TO PAGES 103-115
20.   Arthur W. Thomson, "Meeting Held December 1, 1966 to Review Problems with the H-l Engine
      on S-IB-7 and S-IB-8," 1 Dec. 1966 memo for record.
21.   Ibid; Bostwick, "Development of LOX/RP-1 Engines," pp. 5-6.
22.   Belew, Patterson, and Thomas, "Apollo Propulsion Systems," p. 3; Bostwick, "Development of
      LOX/RP-1 Engines," pp. 6-7.
23.   Akens, Saturn Chronology, p. 4; David E. Aldrich, "The F-l Engine," Astronautics, 7 (Feb. 1962):
      40; David E. Aldrich and DominickJ. Sanchini, "F-l Engine Development," Astronautics, 7 (Mar.
      1961):24. Aldrich at the time was Rocketdyne's manager and chief engineer on the F-l engine
      project; Sanchini              was the   assistant engineer.
24. Belew, Patterson,  and Thomas, "Apollo Propulsion Systems," p. 5; MSFC, Launch Vehicle Engines,
      p. 2.3; Emme,
                    Aeronautics and Astronautics, p. 77.
25.   Belew, Patterson, and Thomas, "Apollo Propulsion Systems," p. 4; Bostwick and Burns
      interview;       MSFC, Launch            Vehicle Engines, p. 2.3.
26. Aldrich     and Sanchini, "F-l Development,"                  p. 25;   MSFC, Launch       Vehicle Engines, p. 2.3;   Brennan,
      "Milestones," p.           9.
27. Franklin L. Thistle, "Rocketdyne: The First 25 Years," North American Rockwell Corp., 1970,
    pp. 22, 25, 28; Aldrich, "F-l," p. 96; Belew, Patterson, and Thomas, "Apollo Propulsion
    Systems," p. 5; Rocketdyne, "Data Sheet: F-l Rocket Engine," 12 Dec. 1967; Aldrich and
    Sanchini, "F-l Development," p. 47; MSFC, Launch Vehicle Engines, pp. 9.4-5.
28. Joseph P. McNamara interview, North American Rockwell, 5 Mar. 1971; Brennan, "Milestones,"
31. Aldrich and Sanchini, "F-l Development," pp. 46-47; Aldrich, "F-l," p. 69; MSFC, Saturn V
    News Reference, 3.1-2; Aldrich and Sanchini, "Design and Development of a 1 500 000-Pound-
    Thrust Space Booster Engine," Rocketdyne Report, July 1963, pp. 2 3.
32. Bostwick, "Development of LOX/RP-1 Engines," p. 9.
33.   Hugh Dryden               to   Hugh Odishaw,      6 Mar. 1961.
34.   Bostwick, "Development," p. 9; Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp. 49, 88; MSFC Historical Off.,
      History of the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center From July 1 Through December 31, 1962, MHM-6
      (1963), p. 131; von Braun to Seamans, draft of memo, 1962. Although the                itself is            memo
      undated, internal evidence indicates it was prepared late in Nov. 1962, following a meeting of
      the Off. of Manned Space Flight on 17 Nov. Copy in the personal files of Jerry Thomson, MSFC,
      examined by the author on 27 July 1972. Cited hereafter as MSFC, Thomson files.
35. Jerry   Thomson to multiple addressees, "Activities CSAHC from Inception to September 1,
      1962," 21 Sept. 1962; Jerry Thomson to multiple addressees, "Minutes 2nd Meeting CSAHC
      2-3 October at Rocketdyne," 17 Oct. 1962. MSFC, Thomson files.
36.   Von Braun                to Seamans, draft of memo, 1962; Jerry Thomson to
                                                                                  multiple addressees,
      "Minutes     .   .   .
                               Meeting on F-l Engine Combustion Instability December 4, 1962." MSFC,
                                                                                          .   .   .
      Thomson files.
37.   Jerry Thomson   to Rocketdyne, letter draft, Dec. 1962; S.F. Morea, "Presentation to Mr. D.
      Brainerd Holmes on F-l Combustion Stability Effort January 31, 1963," memo for record, 18
      Feb. 1963; A. O. Tischler, "Meeting on F-l Combustion
                                                               Stability Effort January 31, 1963,"
      memo for record, 18 Feb. 1963; A. O. Tischler, "Meeting on F-l Combustion Instability at
      NASA HQ, 31 January 1963," memo for record (all in MSFC, Thomson files); Holmes to
      Seamans, 4 Feb. 1963, copy in SHP files.
38.   Holmes    to     von Braun, 25 Mar. 1963. MSFC, Thomson                    files.
39. Bostwick,
              "Development," p. 9; Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp. 49, 88.
40. Crocco to von Braun, 13 May 1963;
                                        Jerry Thomson, memo for record, autumn 1963;                                        Hugh
    Dryden to von Braun, 4 Feb. 1964. MSFC, Thomson files.
41. Jerry  Thomson, "Minutes of 6th Combustion Ad Hoc Committee          4-5 December 1963,"          .   .   .
      memo for record;Crocco and Harrje to Thomson, 29 July 1964; Crocco to P. D. Castenholz, 16
      Aug. 1964. MSFC, Thomson files.
466
                                                                         NOTES TO PAGES 115-130
42.   Brennan, "Milestones," p. 9; Bostwick, "Development," p. 9; McNamara interview; Robert
      Fontaine interview, 4 Mar. 1971, and 10 Mar. 1971; Bostwick and Burns interview, 3 1 July 1975.
43.   Brennan, "Milestones,"         p. 9;    contractor briefing session, Rocketdyne, 4 Mar. and 10 Mar. 1971.
44.   NASA/MSFC           Resident Off., Rocket Test
                                               Site, Edwards, Calif, to S. F. Morea, MSFC, "Weekly
      Report Ending 15 April 1965," teletype; NASA/MSFC F-l Project Off., Rocketdyne/Canoga
      Park, Calif., to S.F. Morea, MSFC, "Weekly Report Ending 15 January 1965," teletype.
45.   NASA/MSFC       F-l Project Off., Rocketdyne/Canoga Park, Calif, to S. F. Morea, MSFC, "Weekly
      Report Ending 25 June 1965," teletype; Leland Belew to General S. C. Phillips, "Apollo Flash
      Report," telegram, 1 July 1965 and 9 July 1965; NASA/MSFC F-l Project Off., Rocketdyne/Canoga
      Park, Calif., to S. F. Morea, MSFC, "Weekly Report Ending 20 August 1965," teletype; Bostwick,
      "Development,"        p. 10.
46. Aldrich, "F-l," p. 69.
47.   MSFC,   Saturn      V News   Reference, pp. 3.4-5.
48. Bostwick,   "Development," pp. 910; McNamara interview; contractor briefing sessions,
    Rocketdyne, 4 Mar. and 10 Mar. 1971.
49. Belew et al., "Apollo Propulsion Systems," pp. 5-6; Aldrich, "F-l" p. 40; Aldrich and Sanchini,
    "Design and Development," pp. 8- 10; David E. Aldrich, "Saturn V Booster The F-l Err^.ne,"
    Rocketdyne Report, Mar. 1965, p. 18.
50.   Aldrich, "SaturnV Booster," p. 4; Aldrich and Sanchini, "Design and Development," p. 2;
      Belew   et "Apollo Propulsion Systems," p. 6; MSFC, Saturn V News Reference, pp. 3.12.
                   al.,
51. Aldrich, "Saturn V Booster," p. 13; Francis X. de Carlo, "Furnace Brazing," Rocketdyne Report,
    undated, pp. 1, 5, 7, 10.
52.   DeCarlo, "Furnace Brazing," pp. 1 1, 14, 17, 32, 33; Ernst G. Huschke, Jr., "Furnace Brazing of
    Liquid Rocket Engines," Rocketdyne Report, 1963, passim.
53. Aldrich, "Saturn V Booster," pp. 4, 18; Aldrich and Sanchini, "Design and Development," pp. 5,
    6; Bostwick, "Development"; MSFC, Saturn V News Reference, pp. 3.2-3, 3.6-7, 3.10.
54. Aldrich    and Sanchini, "F-l Development"; MSFC, "Launch Vehicle Engines," pp. 9.4-5.
55. Akens, Saturn Chronology, passim; Thistle, "25 Years," pp. 35, 40, 44; Rocketdyne, "Data Sheet:
    F-l," p. 1.
56. Marshall Star,   "Engine Storage Lifetime Extended by Tests Here," 2 June 1971; Marshall Star,
      "F-l Engine Is Static Fired After Storage," 12 July 1972. Apparently, selected J-2 engines were
      also fired about the same time.
CHAPTER 5
 1.
      Rocketdyne, "Propulsion: The Key to Moon Travel," 1964. For a richly detailed history of LH 2
      development by an engineer who participated in many of the key research programs and knew
                                       John L. Sloop, Liquid Hydrogen as a Propulsion Fuel, 19451959,
      virtually all the participants, see
      SP-4404, (Washington, 1978).
 2.   There are numerous books on dirigible technology and the use of hydrogen gas. See, for
      example, Douglas H. Robinson, Giants in the Sky (Seattle, WA, 1973). A translation of
      Tsiolkovsky's 1903 treatise, discussing liquid hydrogen fuels, is included in NASA, Collected
      Works ofK. E. Tsiolkovsky, vol. 2, NASA TTF-237, pp. 72-117. For a brief discussion of LH 2
      research, see John D. Clark, Ignition: An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants (New
      Brunswick, N.J., 1972), pp. 103-114.
 3.   George H. Osburn, Robert Gordon, and Herman L. Coplen, "Liquid Hydrogen Rocket Engine
      Development, 1944 1950" (a paper presented at the 21st International Astronautical Congress,
      Constance, West Germany, 1970), p. 1; R. Cargill Hall, "Early U.S. Satellite Proposals" in Emme,
      The History of Rocket Technology, p. 75 passim; Richard S. Lewis, Appointment on the Moon (New
      York, 1968), p. 28. The story of von Karman's achievements is recounted in his autobiography,
      The Wind and Beyond (Boston, i967).
                                                                                                          467
NOTES TO PAGES 131-142
 4.   General Dynamics/Astronautics, A Primer of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's
      Centaur (San Diego, 1964), p. 3. Osburn, Gordon, and Coplen, "Liquid Hydrogen Develop-
      ment," pp. 3-4, 9; Sloop, Liquid Hydrogen, pp. 64 ff.
 5.   Osburn, Gordon, and Coplen, "Liquid Hydrogen Development," pp. 3, 9-10, 12. The Osburn
      paper also includes detailed explanations of the production and handling of liquid hydrogen in
      the pioneer   facility.
 6.   The quotation    is   from Lewis, Appointment, p. 34. Sources for this portion of the narrative include
      Lewis, Appointment, pp.     29-34; and Hall, "Early Proposals." See also Constance M. Green and
      Milton Lomask, Vanguard:           A   History (Washington, 1971), pp.        1-24.
 7.   John Sloop, "NACA High Energy Rocket Propellant Research in the Fifties" (a paper presented
      at the AIAA 8th Annual Meeting, Washington, D.C., 1971), unpaged. See also, Sloop, Liquid
      Hydrogen, pp. 71      ff.,   for early Lewis   work and      for Krafft Ehricke's        work    at   GD/A.
 8.   Sloop,   "NACA   Rocket Research," John             L.   Sloop interview,   NASA        Hq., 2 Dec. 1971.
 9.   Sloop,   "NACA   Rocket Research"; Sloop, Liquid Hydrogen, pp. 187                      ff.
468
                                                                             NOTES TO PAGES 143-158
27.   Rocketdyne, "J-2 Rocket Engine," pp. 35; Belew, Patterson, and Thomas, "Apollo Vehicle," p.
      10; MSFC, Saturn Systems Off., Saturn Monthly Progress Report, 12 Apr.- 12 May 1962, pp.
      12-13; ibid., 14 May- 12 June 1962, p. 11; MSFC, Saturn Off., Saturn MPR, 15 Sept.- 15 Oct.
      1962, pp. 5-6.
28. Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp. 39, 50; NASA News Release, July                     11, 1962.
29. Rocketdyne, 'J-2 Rocket Engine," pp. 4-5.
30.      Paul Fuller, "Liquid Hydrogen Technology, J-2 Engine" (a paper presented to a meeting
      Ibid.;
          AIAA, July 1965), pp. 4-5.
      of the
31. Thomson interview; Christensen interview; Drummond interview; Robert Pease interview,
    MSFC, 3 Sept. 1971; Richard N. Rodgers interview, MSFC, 24 Aug. 1971.
32. Rocketdyne, "Existing Technology," p. 2; Rocketdyne, "J-2 Engine," p. 4. MSFC, Saturn V News
                  6.16.2; Fuller, "Liquid Hydrogen Technology," p. 2.
      Reference, pp.
33. Studhalter, "J-2 Rocket Engine," pp. 5-8; MSFC, Saturn V News Reference, p. 6.1.
42. Studhalter, "J-2 Rocket Engine," pp. 5, 7; Belew,                   Drummond, and      Stewart, "Recent             NASA
      Experience,"     p. 3.
43. Studhalter, "J-2 Rocket Engine," p. 17.
44.   Drummond     interview; Pease interview; Rodgers interview.
45. Belew, Patterson,          and Thomas, "Apollo Vehicle,"       p. 1;     Pease interview.
46. Rocketdyne, "J-2 Rocket Engine," p. 4; Studhalter, "J-2 Rocket Engine," pp. 20, 26.                                   The
      composition of Invar included Fe 63%; Ni 36%; other 1%.
CHAPTER 6
 1.   William A. Mrazek, "Launch Vehicle Systems," in NASA, "Science and Technology Committee
      for Manned Space Flight," (MSC, Houston, Tex., 29 June 1964), I: 1-2, cited hereafter as
      STAC Conference; Akens, Saturn Illustrated Chronology, p. 50.
 2.   Abraham Hyatt       to the Associate Administrator, "Meeting with Director, Development Opera-
      tions Division,   ABMA,    Huntsville," 11 Jan. 1960; von Braun to Maj. Gen. Don F. Ostrander
      (USAF),   NASA,     8 Jan. 1960; Abraham Hyatt to von Braun, 18 Jan. 1960.
                                                                                                                        469
NOTES TO PAGES 158-165
 3.   Maj. Gen.   Don     Ostrander,    NASA, to von Braun, 26 Jan. 1960; minutes, "Saturn Orientation
      Conference,"   26-27 Jan.     1960.  The latter is a verbatim copy, taped during the two-day session.
 4.   Abraham Hyatt to O. H. Lange, 22 June 1960.
 5.   T. Keith Glennan, "Administrator's Statement on the Selection of a Contractor for the Saturn
      S-IV Stage," memo, 28 Apr. 1960; Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp. 8, 10, 13.
 6.   Glennan memo, "Administrator's Statement." By the fall of 1960, Convair won the S-V contract,
      but the future of this third stage became marginal. In Jan. 1961, von Braun recommended a
      change in the C-l, from three to two stages, and NASA management concurred. The
      development of the S-V subsequently was canceled.
 7.   Controller General of the U.S. to Overton Brooks, Chmn., Comm. on Science and Astronautics,
      22 June 1960; Committee on Science and Astronautics news release, 18 July 1960. Evidently,
      there were questions about the significance of Chrysler's proposal to build its own plant near
      Cape Canaveral. This would have entailed government funds and equipment, the                GAO
                                                                                                 noted.
      In any case, Chrysler's technical proposal received very low ratings. See, for example, Milton W.
      Rosen, "Technical Evaluation of Saturn S-IV Proposal; Comments On," memo, 8 June 1950. For
      additional comment on NASA procurement policies, see Vernon van Dyke, Pride and Power
      (Urbana: University of      Illinois Press, 1964),   pp.   21416.
 8.   John Mazur, "Chronological Summary of Negotiations of Saturn      Vehicle Stage S-IV
                                                                              .   .   .
                                                                                               ,"       .   .   .
      memo, May 1960; von Braun to Ostrander, 18 May 1960; von Braun to Ostrander, "Agreements
      and Design Assumptions of First Saturn S-IV Coordination Conference," with attachments, 15
      June 1960.
 9.   Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp. 8, 10, 13.
10.   Oswald H. Lange, "Development of the Saturn Space Carrier Vehicle," in Stuhlinger, et                     al.,
      Astronautical Engineering, pp. 8, 18; Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp. 14, 16-17, 20, 31, 35.
11.   The S-I  first-stage booster for Saturn I made 10 launches, including 5 with a live S-IV stage. The
      S-IVB third stage made 5 launches with the Saturn IB, and 6 more on the Saturn V through the
      first lunar landing (AS-506). By the time of the final
                                                             Apollo-Saturn mission (AS-512), the S-IVB
      notched 6 more launches for a total of 17 flights. The first two stages of the Saturn V, the S-IC
      and the S-II, had an even dozen launches on Apollo missions. The S-IC/S-II combination also
      launched the Skylab orbital workshop. The last 4 Saturn IB/S-IVB launches involved three
      Skylab crews and the ASTP crew, for a grand total of 21 S-IVB flights.
12.   MSFC, "S-IVB Summary Chronology: Contract NAS7- 101      Douglas Aircraft Company,"
      1963; D. Brainerd Holmes to Robert C. Seamans, "S-IVB Sole Source Procurement with
      Douglas Aircraft Company," 15 Dec., 1961.
13.   Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp. 39-40, 43, 50; H. E. Bauer, "Operational Experiences on the
      Saturn S-IVB Stage," Society of Automotive Engineers Reprint no. 680756, Oct. 1968, p. 1;
      Mrazek, "Launch Vehicle Systems," vol. 1, pp. 1-2.
14.   Ludwig Roth and W. M. Shempp, "S-IVB High Energy Upper Stage and                    Its   Development,"
      Douglas Aircraft Corp., Douglas Paper no. 4040, 1967, pp. 1-2.
15.   Bauer, "Operational Experiences," p. 11.
470
                                                                                   NOTES TO PAGES 165-178
      3155, 12 Nov. 1964, pp. 3, 10, 19-20, 31. Harpoothian at the time was Chief Engineer,
      Structures Dept., Development Engineering, Douglas Aircraft Co.
22.   Tour of   contractor          Mar. 1971; Bauer interview; Harpoothian, "Production of Large
                                facilities,
      Tanks," pp.   4,   6-7,             H. Boucher, "Saturn Third Stage S-IVB Manufacturing," p.
                                10, 26, 31; K.
      4; contractor briefing and tour of facilities, McDonnell Douglas and North American Rockwell,
      Mar. 1971. For examples of typical aerospace construction techniques of the mid-1960s, see
      Frank W. Wilson and Walter R. Prange, eds., Tooling for Aircraft and Missile Manufacture (New
      York, 1964),
23.   Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp. 49, 58; Bauer, "Operational Experiences," pp. 3-5; Boucher,
      "Saturn S-IVB Manufacturing," p. 4; contractor briefing and tour of facilities, McDonnell
      Douglas and North American Rockwell, Mar. 1971.
24.   Boucher, "Saturn S-IVB Manufacturing," pp. 6, 9, 11; Harpoothian, "Production of Large
      Tanks," pp. 6-7, 13-14, 35; Theodore Smith interview, MDAC, 3 Mar. 1971; Bauer,
      "Operational Experiences," pp.            3, 4.
ff.
37. Bauer, "Operational Experience," pp.                 8-9; Boucher, "Saturn S-IVB Manufacturing," pp.
      44-46.
38.   Theodore Smith       interview.
39.   D. L. Dearing, "Development of the Saturn S-IV and S-IVB Liquid Hydrogen Tank Internal
      Insulation," Douglas Paper no. 351 1, Aug. 1965, pp. 2-3; Boucher, "Saturn S-IVB Manufactur-
      ing," pp. 46, 5455; tour of contractor facilities, Mar. 1971.
40.   Dearing "Development Internal Insulation," pp. 2-3.
41.   MSFC,    Saturn    V News    Reference, pp. 5.4-5.6.
42.   Roth and Shempp, "S-IVB Development," pp. 1819; Harpoothian, "Production of Large
      Tanks," p. 26; Earl Wilson interview; H. R. Linderfelt interview, McDonnell Douglas, 9 Mar.
      1971.
43.   MSFC,    Saturn    V Flight Manual, SA-506, MSFC-MAN-506,                      10 June 1969, pp. 6.11-6.12;           MSFC,
      Saturn   V News    Reference, pp.       5.55.6.
                                                                                                                             471
NOTES TO PAGES                          180- 192
44. Ibid., 5.6-5.7. As a back-up concept, the S-IVB carried seven extra ambient helium spheres on
    the thrust structure. Two provided redundancy for                      LOX
                                                                tank pressurization, and five provided
    redundancy for the          LH
                            2 tank (ibid.). O. S. Tyson, one of MSFC's resident managers at Douglas
      during S-IV/IVB development, commented that the availability of significant amounts of helium
      in this country constituted a special advantage in the U.S space program, since the efficient
      helium system permitted lower design weights and plumbing for stage pressure systems and
      other functions. Tyson interview, 3 Mar. 1971.
45. J. D. Shields interview,         MDAC,      11   Mar. 1971; Roth and Shempp, "S-IVB Development,"                      p. 19;
      MSFC    Saturn    V News    Reference, pp. 5.5-5.6, 5.8;           anonymous      MDAC memo to author,         1 1
                                                                                                                           June
      1976.
46.   D. J. Allen and L. G. Bekemeyer, "Design of the Saturn S-IV Stage Propellant Utilization
      System," Douglas Paper no. 1292, Mar. 1962, pp. 2, 15-16; MSFC; Saturn V News Reference, p.
      5.9; Lorenzo P. Morata interview, MDAC, 8 Mar. 1971.
47. Morata interview; Allen and Bekemeyer, "Design of PU System," pp. 19, 21. For                              details   of the
    PU System design and operation, see Allen and Bekemeyer, pp. 314, 1622.
48. MSFC, Saturn V News Reference, p. 5.9.
49.   MSFC,    Saturn       V News   Reference, pp. 5.9-5.10;            MSFC,    Saturn   V   Flight   Manual, SA-506, pp.
      6.19-6.20; Robert Prentice interview.
50. Refer to    News Reference and        Flight   Manual, cited above, passim. See        also,   Godfrey, "S-IVB Stage,"
      STAC    Conference,       pt. 5.
51. E. A. Hellebrand, "Structures              and Propulsion,"         pt. 2, p. 6.
52.   Harpoothian, "Production of Large Tanks," p. 30; Roth and Shempp, "S-IVB Development,"                                   p.
      14; Godfrey, "S-IVB," STAC Conference, pt. 5, pp. 5-8.
53.   John D. Clark,        Ignition:   An   Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants (New Brunswick, N.J.:
      Rutgers Univ. Press, 1972),            p. 108; Harold E. Felix interview, MDAC, 9 Mar. 1971.
                                                               NASA TND-563, Sept. 1964, passim.
54. J. B. Gayle, ed., Investigation of S-IV All Systems Explosion,
55.   Edmund F. O'Connor to     Maj. Gen. Samuel C. Phillips, telegram, 9 Feb. 1967; Felix interview;
      MSFC Saturn V Program     Off., Semiannual   Report, January-June 1967, pp. 33, 52-56, MSFC
                                                            .   .   .
files; Douglas Aircraft Co., S-IVB Quarterly Report, Mar. 1967, pp. 51, 54-55, MSFC files;
57. O. S.     Tyson    interview,    MSFC      Resident Mgr. at McDonnell Douglas, 3 Mar. 1971.
58.   Edmund     F.    O'Connor      to   Samuel
                                         Phillips (day                  and month obscured), 1966.          Static firing    was
      discontinued, however, later in the program.
59.   Theodore Smith, Harold Bauer, and O.                S.    Tyson     interviews.
60. Earl Wilson interview. Nevertheless, the Centaur became a
                                                              highly reliable upper stage mated to
    both Atlas and Titan boosters and was used in a wide
                                                           variety of planetary and Earth-orbital
    missions.
61.   Wilson interview; Theodore Smith interview.
62.   Bauer, "Operational Experiences," pp. 2-3; Godfrey," S-IVB," STAC Conference,                                      5, p. 8.
                                                                                    part
      Theodore Smith, Harold Bauer, Robert Prentice, and J. D. Shields interviews.
CHAPTER 7
 1.   Akens, Saturn Chronology,    p. 33; MSFC, "Saturn V, Project Development Plan," Nov. 1967, pp.
      2.2, 3.10, cited hereafter as "Saturn V PDP"; von Braun, "Saturn the Giant" in
                                                                                            Cortright, ed.,
      Apollo Expeditions to the Moon, pp. 42, 46.
      It would have been
                            interesting to learn more of the contractor selection process, but a search for
472
                                                                       NOTES TO PAGES 193-207
      these records at  MSFC in Oct. 1975 was unsuccessful. The S-IC contract negotiations were
      probably similar to those described for the S-IV and S-II, which the author pieced together from
      available   documents.
2.    Milton W. Rosen interviews, NASA, 14 Nov. 1969 and 1 Dec. 1971; Rosen to D. Brainerd
      Holmes, "Large Launch Vehicle Program," 6 Nov. 1961, with attached report interview, 20 Nov.
      1961.JSC     files.
3.    Von Braun interview, MSFC, 17 Nov. 1971; von Braun, "Saturn the Giant," p. 42; Ernst Geissler
      interview, MSFC, 7 Sept. 1971; John M. Logsdon, "Selecting the Way to the Moon: The Choice
      of the Lunar Orbiter Rendezvous Mode," Aerospace Historian, 18 (June 1971): 66.
4.    George Alexander, "Boeing Faces Unique Fabrication Challenge," Aviation Week and Space
      Technology, 77 (13 Aug. 1962): 52, 59, 63; MSFC,
                                                       Saturn V News Reference, p. 11.4; Boeing Co.,
      Launch Systems Branch, "Controactor Program Procedures," 1966, 1967, 1968; Boeing Co.,
      Launch Systems Branch, "Saturn S-IC, Annual Progress Report," FYs 1964 through 1968.
5.    Von Braun interview, 17 Nov. 1971; Matthew Urlaub interview, MSFC, 29 July 1975; Rosen
      interview, NASA, 1 Dec. 1971.
 6.   Alexander, "Boeing Faces," pp. 55, 59; Alexander, "S-IC Heavy Tooling Installed at Marshall,"
      Aviation Week and Space Technology, 78 (25 Mar. 1963), unpaged reprint in SHP files; William
      Clarke, "Roll Out the Booster," Boeing Magazine, 35 (Aug. 1965): 13; William Clarke, "Try This
      On for Size," Boeing Magazine, 35 (Feb. 1965): 9; William Sheil, "Saturn Stands Up," Boeing
      Magazine, 34 (Apr. 1964): 6; MSFC Saturn V News Reference, p. 2.5.
          For clarification of many details of design, development, and manufacturing of the S-IC stage,
      the author wishes to acknowledge interviews with Matthew Urlaub and Hans F. Wuenscher,
      MSFC, 3 Sept. 1971, and Mathias P. Siebel, MSFC, 9 Sept. 1971. Wuenscher and Siebel were
      both top managers in MSFC's Manufacturing Engineering Lab during this period.
 7.   MSFC, Saturn V News Reference, pp. 2.1-2.5; MSFC, "Saturn V PDF," p. 3.7.
 8.   Alexander, "Boeing Faces," p. 53; Darrell Bartee, "Hitching Posts for Saturn," Boeing Magazine,
      35 (Jan. 1965): 6; Whitney G. Smith, "Fabricating the S-IC Booster," AIAA Paper 65-294, July
      1965, p. 6; MSFC, "Saturn V POP," pp. 3.10, 3.18; MSFC, Saturn V News Reference, p. 2.4.
 9.   MSFC, Saturn V News Reference, pp. 1.7 1.9; Smith, "Fabrication in S-IC," pp. 56; Alexander,
      "Boeing Faces," p. 53; J. E. Kingsbury, MSFC, to author, 21 June 1976.
10.   MSFC, "Saturn V PDP," pp. 3.7-3.15; MSFC, Saturn V News Reference, pp. 2.3-2.4, 2.9-2.16;
      Alexander, "Boeing Faces," p. 55; M. A. Kalange and R. J. Alcott, "Saturn V S-IC Stage Engine
      Gimbal Actuation System," 18 May 1965, passim; William B. Sheil, "Migration to Huntsville,"
      Boeing Magazine, 35 (May 1965): 6.
11.   Whitney G. Smith, "Fabricating the Saturn S-IC Booster," AIAA Paper no. 65-294, July 1965,
      p. 1; Alexander, "Boeing Faces," p. 52; Alexander "S-IC."
12.   Smith, "Fabricating S-IC," pp. 23; Eugene M. Langworthy and Leland Bruce, "Chemical
      Milling on Apollo and Saturn Gore Segments," Society of Aeronautical Weight Engineers,
      Technical Paper no. 477,         May   1965, pp.   1,   5   7.
13.   Alexander, "Boeing Faces," p. 55; Darrel Bartee, "Curves Cured to Order," Boeing Magazine, 34
      (Nov. 1964): 12-13; Darrel Bartee, "Lunar Look," Boeing Magazine, 33 (July 1963): 10-11;
      Mathias Siebel, "Building the Moon Rocket" (paper presented to meeting of National Machine
      Tool Builders Association, 3 Nov. 1965), pp. 11-13.
14.   William Clarke, "The           Uncommon
                                            Welder," Boeing Magazine, 35 (March 1965): 12; Alexander,
      "Boeing Faces,"         Alexander, "S-IC"; Smith, "Fabricating S-IC," pp. 4-5; MSFC, Manufac-
                            p. 59;
      turing Plan: Saturn V Booster Stage, S-IC 15 January 1963, vol. 1 (with change inserts through July
      1965), pp. 2.1-2.54.
15. Smith, "Fabricating S-IC," pp. 2-4; Siebel, "Building," pp. 18-20; Alexander, "Boeing Faces,"
    pp. 53, 55; Bartee, "Lunar Look," pp. 10-11; MSFC, Manufacturing Plan, vol. 1 pp. 3.1-3.40.
16. William Clarke, "Purity Surety," Boeing Magazine, 34 (Dec. 1964): 11.
19. William B. Sheil, "Countdown to Liftoff," (reprint) Boeing Magazine, 1966, pp. 12-13; William
                                                                                                     473
NOTES TO PAGES 209-222
      Clarke,                           (reprint) Boeing Magazine, 1966, p. 3; MSFC, news release,
                  "The Immovable Object."
      "Saturn   Rocket Booster Test Stand," 5 Aug. 1965; MSFC, Saturn V News Reference, p. 8.9.
                   V
20. Matthew Urlaub, interview. The author wishes to express his thanks to Mr. Urlaub for
    permission to review his personal files relating to the S-IC stage. There were the usual design
    and engineering problems, but no disastrous problems, such as tank explosions or other major
    setbacks. Representative copies of Urlaub's weekly memos to Dr. Arthur Rudolph, the Saturn V
    Program Manager, are in the SHP files. See, for example: "S-IC Stage Weekly Status Report," 9
    Jan. 1964; 31 Jan. 1964; 14 Feb. 1964; 28 Feb. 1964; 6 Mar. 1964; 9 Apr. 1964. See especially the
    weekly reports for 13 Oct. 1964, and 4 Nov. 1964.
21.   Elmer      L. Field,   "The      S-II Stage," Astronautics, Feb. 1962, p. 35.
    Manufacturing Plan for Saturn S-II Stage, 1 June 1969. Unless otherwise noted, the physical
    description of the S-II stage structures and systems is based on these documents.
29. NAA, The Saturn S-II, p. 22, NAA, "Saturn S-II: Annual Progress
                                                                       Report," Aug. 1963, pp. 135,
    138-40; A. C. van Leuven interview, NAR, 12 Mar. 1971.
30.   Van Leuven interview; H. Raiklen interview, NAR, 11 Mar. 1971; William F. Parker interview,
      NAR, 8 Mar. 1971; interview, William F. Parker, NAR, 8 Mar. 1971; P. Wickham interview,
      NAR, 9 Mar. 1971; Richard E. Barton (Dir. of Public Relations, Rockwell International) to
      author, 18 June 1976, with attached anonymous memo dated 10 May 1976.
31.   For details of the bulkhead assembly sequence, see Tony C. Cerquettini, "The Common
      Bulkhead for the Saturn S-II Vehicle," NAA Report, 1967; NAR, Manufacturing Plan, 1969,
                                                                                              pp.
      15-25; interviews cited in note 30 above.
32.   For description, photos, and drawings of the foam process, see NAR,
                                                                               Manufacturing Plan, 1969,
      pp. 89-90; NAR, Manufacturing Development Information Report, 1968, pp. 45, 55, 83-85. The
      company   also had to devise special phenolic cutter heads to trim the insulation to shape, and use
      integrated electronic sensors to measure the desired insulation thickness during the cutting
      procedure. See also interviews with van Leuven and Wickham.
33. Refer to the sources cited in note              28 above.
34.   Ibid; Raiklen interview; G. A. Phelps interview,               NAR,   12 Mar. 1971.
35.   Quoted in "The Toughest Weld of All" Skyline, 1968, unpaged reprint in SHP files. Skyline was
      the company magazine of North American Rockwell. Other
                                                                         manufacturing details and
      description from NAA, Saturn S-II; Annual Progress Report, 1963, 1964, 1965; NAR,  Manufactur-
      ing Development Information Report, 1968, NAR, Manufacturing Plan, 1969; contractor facilities
      tour and briefing given the author in Mar. 197 1 interviews with van
                                                                 ;         Leuven, Wickham, Raiklen,
      and Parker.
36.   Quoted       in   "The Toughest Weld of        All."
37. Refer to the sources sited in note                35 above. See also Charles Jordan and Norman Wilson
      interviews, both of        NAR,      2 Mar. 1971. An executive at North American who reviewed a draft of
474
                                                                                          NOTES TO PAGES 222-230
      the manuscript maintained that over a period of time, the NASA welding concepts were not
      appreciably superior to North American techniques. Barton to author, with attachment, 18 June
      1976.
38.   Ray Godfrey and Bill Sneed interviews, MSFC, 28 July 1973.
39.   H. G. Paul to Cline, "S-II Insulation Status," 2 June 1964; NAR, Saturn                                 S-II: Chronology of Events,
      1958-1970 (no date, unpaged). This is a remarkably comprehensive and candid record of
      NAR's S-II program, comprising a two-inch thick document typed on notebook-size paper.
      Apparently prepared for management reference.
40.   Samuel C.           Phillips to    von Braun,       1
                                                              Apr. 1965.
41.   Arthur Rudolph              to   Herman Weidner,              10      May   1965.
42. Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp.                    109-120; NAR, Saturn                 S-II Chronology, passim.
43. Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp.                    120-121; NAR, Saturn           S-II Chronology, passim;        Samuel Yarchin     to
      William        F.   Parker, 6 Oct. 1965; Yarchin                  to Parker, 11 Oct. 1965.
44.   O'Connor to von Braun, "Background Data for Dr. von Braun Mr. Atwood Meeting," 14 Oct.
      1965. Housed in MSFC History Off. in file drawer marked Eberhard Rees, "NAR Organization,
      S-II Stage." Cited hereafter as                 Rees    files.
54.   Eberhard Rees memo, 9 Dec. 1965, attached to 8 Dec. memo cited above.
55.   NAA, news release, 1961; NAA, news release, 25 Jan. 1966.
56. Robert E.    Greer interview, NAR, 5 Mar. 1971. The story of "Black Saturdays" is from an
      interview with one of Greer's close associates at North American, W. E. Dean, 8 Mar. 1971. Dean
      and      P.   Wickham       (interview cited above) both                commented on enhanced morale.
57.   George E. Mueller to Lee Atwood, 23 Feb. 1966; Harold G. Russell to Gen. Phillips, "S-II-T
      Program at MTF," 15 Apr. 1966; George F. Esenwein to Dir., Apollo Test/copy to Phillips, "May
      25, Attempted S-II-T Full Duration Static Firing," 26 May 1966; transcribed log of phone call,
      Atwood to von Braun, von Braun daily journal, 27 May 1966 (housed in Alabama Space and
      Rocket Cr., Huntsville, Ala., cited hereafter as von Braun daily journal); Akens, Saturn
      Chronology, p. 141.
58.   Log of phone           calls,    Storms   to   von Braun, 31 May 1966, and von Braun                    to Gilruth, 1 June 1966,
      invon Braun            daily journal; Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp.                     142143; NAR,         S-/7 Chronology. See
      also, E.      Mims     interview, NAR, 12 Mar. 1971.
59. Gerald E.             Meloy   to    Robert C. Seamans, "Saturn                    V   S-II-T Stage Explosion," 31 May 1966;
      George   E. Mueller, "Congressional Inquiry (S-II-T),"                                memo and attached preliminary draft
      letter, Webb to Sen. Clinton Anderson, 21 Mar. 1967.
60.   Samuel Yarchin to Gen. O'Connor, "Weekly Notes Dr. Rees,                                      S-II   Notes for Dr. Rees to Mr.
      Storms Telecom," 7 Oct. 1966.
61.   Samuel Yarchin to Rees, "Weekly Notes to Storms Telecom," 11 Sept. 1966; O'Connor to
      Phillips and Rees, "S-II-1 Delays at MTF," 27 Sept. 1966; Frank Magliato to Webb, Seamans, and
    Shapley, "Static Test of S-II-1," 27 Oct. 1966.
62. NASA, Program Review, 15 Nov. 1966, transcription of remarks by Samuel Phillips, pp. 3742.
63. Samuel Phillips to Associate Administrator, "S-II-T Failure Corrective Action," 9 Jan. 1967.
64.   Alibrando to Phillips             (memo    dealt with         MSFC's        special technical force visit to Seal Beach), 5 Jan.
                                                                                                                                   475
NOTES TO PAGES 231-240
    1967; Phillips to Associate Administrator, "Enclosures: S-II Stage Status," 27 Jan. 1967;                  NAR,
    Saturn S-II Chronology.
65. Dale Myers interview, NASA, 17 Mar. 1970.
66. See, for example,Courtney Brooks, James Grimwood, and Loyd S. Swenson, Jr., Chariots for
      Apollo:   A     Manned Lunar Spacecraft, NASA SP-4205 (Washington, 1979); Charles D.
                     History of
    Benson and William B. Faherty, Moonport: A History of Apollo's Launch Facilities and Operations,
    NASA SP-4204 (Washington, 1978).
67. "North American Tries to Advance Under Fire," Business Week, 3 June 1967, pp. 154-56, 158.
68. George E. Mueller to J. L. Atwood, Jan. or Feb. 1967 (date partially obscured).
69.   Arthur Rudolph to John G. Shinkle,            TWX,   24   May   1967; Phillips to Ctr. Directors   (MSFC, KSC,
      MSC), TWX, 25 May 1967.
70.   Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp. 181, 192, 196, 199.
71. See, for         example von Braun   daily journal, for the year 1963.
72. Parker interview; Sneed and Godfrey interviews.
73. While much of this involves the personal judgment of the author, the conclusions are based on
                                                               Bill Sneed, cited above, and Robert
    personal interviews with Matthew Urlaub, Roy Godfrey,
    Greer, 5 Mar. 1971. See also Rudolph interview, 26 Nov. 1968. For sympathetic accounts of
    North American personalities, see Beirne Lay, Jr., Earthbound Astronauts (Englewood Cliffs, N. J.,
      1971), pp.       100-117.
CHAPTER 8
 1.
      Sidney Sternberg, "Automatic Checkout Equipment                     The Apollo     Hippocrates," Bulletin of   the
      AtomicScientists, 25 (September 1969): 84-87.
 2.   Paul Alelyunas, "Checkout: Man's Changing Role," Space/Aeronautics, Dec. 1965, p. 66.
 3.   Sternberg, "Automatic Checkout," pp. 8487.
 4.   Alelyunas, "Checkout: Man's  Changing Role," pp. 66-73.
 5.   Sternberg, "Automatic Checkout," p. 87. For additional general discussion of Saturn automatic
      equipment and operations, see, Robert L. Smith, Jr., "Practicalities in Automated Manufacturing
      Checkout," MSFC, Oct. 1963.
 6.   D. Morris Schmidt, "Automatic Checkout Systems for Stages of the Saturn V Manned Space
      Vehicle," a paper presented to IEEE International Conference, New York, Mar. 1965, and
      published in Proceedings of      the   IEEE   International Conference, 13, pt. 4 (1965):    85-86.
 7.
               Sternberg, "Automatic Checkout," p. 85; D. Morris Schmidt, "Survey of Automatic
      Ibid., 86;
      Checkout Systems for Saturn V Stages," MSFC, 10 July 1968, p. 3. For procedures at KSC, see
      Benson and Faherty, Moonport.
 8.   Schmidt, "Automatic Checkout,"           p. 86;   Schmidt, "Survey,"       p. 4.
 9.   Schmidt, "Automatic Checkout,"           p. 87.
10.   Ibid.,         91; Schmidt, "Survey," pp. 6, 27. For discussion of the Saturn I experience, see, Robert
                p.
      L. Smith, Jr.,      "Automatic Checkout for Saturn Stages," Astronautics, February 1962, pp. 46-47,
      60; Jack        W. Dahnke, "Computer-Directed Checkout               for   NASA's Biggest    Booster," Control
      Engineering, August 1962, pp. 84-87. For the Saturn IB vehicle, see William G. Bodie,
      Techniques of Implementing Launch Automation Programs (Saturn IB Space Vehicle System), MSFC,
      NASA TMX-53274, 30 July 1975.
11.   Schmidt, "Survey," pp. 7-8; Smith, "Practicalities," p. 3. For additional descriptions of the
      checkout operations and the equipment involved for each
                                                                 stage, see Schmidt, "Survey." The
      sectionon the S-II (pp. 12-17; 33-39) is the most detailed,
                                                                    containing several representative
      flow diagrams and descriptions of the test
                                                 operations for all three stages and the IU. See also
      Frank R. Palm, "A Real Time Operating System for the Saturn V Launch
                                                                                     Computer Complex,"
       Huntsville, Ala./IBM, July 1966.        MSFC, "Survey of Saturn Stage Test and Checkout Computer
      Plan Development," 1 June 1966,
                                      provides a technical overview of the systems for both the
      Saturn V and Saturn IB.
476
                                                                NOTES TO PAGES 240-247
12.   William Sheil, "Breadboards and D-Birds,"
                                                Boeing Magazine, 35 (October 1965): 10-11; J. W.
      Moore, J. R. Mitchell, and H. H. Trauboth, "Aerospace Vehicle Simulation and Checkout,"
      MSFC, Apr. 1966; J. R. Mitchell, J.    W
                                           Moore, and H. H. Trauboth, "Digital Simulation of an
      Aerospace Vehicle," MSFC, 9 Mar. 1967.
13.         F. Meister, "The Role of Simulation in the
      George                                           Development of an Automatic Checkout
    system," Douglas Paper no. 4010, Aug. 1966, p. 19.
14. H. E. Bauer,
                  "Operational Experiences on the Saturn S-IVB Stage," Douglas Paper no 5268
    Oct. 1968, pp. 11-12.
15.   Charles Stark Draper, Walter Wrigley, and John Hovorka, Inertial Guidance (New York,
                                                                                                  1960),
      pp. 1, 2, 4. Other means of guidance include (1) command guidance: data sent to the vehicle
      from an operator or computer; (2) homing: may home in on natural radiation or from infrared
      wavelengths emanating from the target; (3) beam riding: vehicle steers itself along the axis of
      radar or other system pointed at the target.
           Draper was a leading researcher in the field of guidance and control, and his book is a basic
      treatise in the literature. For a
                                        survey of the state of the art during the period of the Saturn
      program, see Frederick I. Ordway III, James Patrick Gardner, and Mitchell R. Sharpe, Basic
      Astronautics (Englewood Cliffs, N. J., 1962),
                                                    pp. 366, passim.
16.   Draper, Guidance, pp.    1418. Important work on     gyroscopes was done on both sides of the
                                      advances were accomplished by Elmer Sperry. See, for example,
      Atlantic. In the U.S., significant
      the exemplary biography by Thomas Parke Hughes, Elmer Sperry: Inventor and Engineer
      (Baltimore, 1971). Aspects of European progress are summarized in Durant and James, First
      Steps Toward Space. For the evolution of long-range aerial navigation in the prewar era, see
      Monte Wright, MostProbablePosition: A History ofAerial Navigation to 1 941 (Lawrence, Kan., 1972).
17.   F. K. Mueller, "A History of Inertial Guidance," ABMA, Redstone Arsenal, Ala., 1959,
                                                                                                pp. 1, 4,
      6, 7. One of the Peenemuende veterans, Mueller was one of the principals who developed the
      V-2 guidance and control systems.
18.   James  S. Farrior, "Inertial Guidance, Its Evolution   and Future   Potential," in Stuhlinger, et   al.,
      Astronautical Engineering, pp. 15052.
19.   Ibid., pp. 153-54; Ernst A. Steinhoff, "Early Developments in Rocket and Spacecraft Perfor-
      mance, Guidance, and Instrumentation," in Frederick C. Durant III, and George S.James, eds.,
      First Steps Toward Space, Smithsonian Annals of Flight, no. 10 (Washington, 1974), pp. 227-85;
      Wernher von Braun, "Redstone, Jupiter, and Juno," in Emme, ed., The History of Rocket
      Technology, p. 110.
20.   Farrior, "Inertial Guidance," p. 154; von Braun, "Redstone," p. 120; IBM, "Instrument Unit
      Program Review," IBM, Huntsville, Ala., 26 July 1966, p. 3; Oswald H. Lange, "Saturn C-l
      Vehicle: Project Development Plan," MSFC, 1 June 1962, p. 4.61.
21.   Lange, "Saturn C-l Vehicle,"     p. 3.6;   von Braun, "Saturn the Giant,"   in Cortright, ed., Apollo
      Expeditions, p. 52.
22. Lange, "Saturn C-l," pp. 4.14-4.18, 4.57-4.63. In a  memo to the author dated 22 June 1976,
    Walter Hauessermann, who directed MSFC's Astrionics Lab., said that ST-124 components were
    more like those of the ST-120, used in the Pershing missile.
23. MSFC, Saturn I Summary, MSFC,          TMX
                                           57401, 15 Feb. 1966 (unpaged).
24. IBM, "Saturn IB/V Instrument Unit System Description and Component Data (Technical
    Manual)," 1 June 1966, p. 2; IBM, "Program Review," p. 1; Missile/Space Daily, 8 Oct. 1965;
    George Alexander, "Saturn IB Proving Saturn V Control Unit," Aviation Week and Space
      Technology, 18 Apr. 1966,   unpaged reprint in SHP files.
25.   IBM, "Program Review," pp. 58, 10, 16; IBM, "Instrument Unit to Navigate Saturn IB's First
      Flight," news release, 17 Feb. 1966; Huntsville Times, 7 Oct. 1965.
26.   IBM, "Program Review," passim; Ernst D. Geissler and Walter Haeussermann, "Saturn
      Guidance and Control," Astronautics, February 1962, p. 44; Haeussermann, "Guidance and
      Control of Saturn Launch Vehicles," AIAA Paper 65-304, July 1965, passim; James T. Powell,
      "Saturn Instrumentation Systems," a paper presented at the Third International Symposium on
      Flight Test Instrumentation, Cranfield, England, June 1964, pp. 6-9.
           For clarification of many details of the Instrument Unit, here and in the following pages,
      the author is indebted to interviews with Luther Powell, Sidney Sweat, Therman McKay, and
      others, at   MSFC, 29 July   1975.
                                                                                                     477
NOTES TO PAGES 248-255
27.   IBM, "Instrument       Unit,"                    news       release;   MSFC,   Astrionics Lab, "Saturn IB/V Instrument Unit,"
    1965 (unpaged).
28. IBM, "Saturn IB/V            .       .       .
                                                     (Technical Manual)," pp. 4-5, 12;          MSFC,     Saturn       V News   Reference, pp.
      7.1-7.2.
29.   IBM, "Saturn IB/V      .
                              (Technical Manual)," pp. 5-9, 15- 16; Bendix Corp., "Saturn ST-124-M
                                     .       .
      Inertial   Guidance Platform," news release, 21 Feb. 1969, pp. 1-3; Herman E. Thomason, A
    General Description of the ST-124-M Inertial Platform System, MSFC, NASA     D-2983, Sept. 1965,                TN
    pp. 44-51.
30. Bendix Corp., "Saturn ST-124-M," p. 2; B. J. O'Connor, "A Description of the ST-124-M
    Inertial Stabilized Platform and Its Application to the Saturn V Launch Vehicle," Bendix Corp.,
    26 May 1964. These documents, along with Thomason, General Description of the ST-124-M,
    include drawings, schematics, formulae, and operations of the ST-124. For the theory,
    equations, and methodology of computation and handling of error signals, see B. J. O'Connor,
      "An ST-124 Instrument Error Analysis                                   for Saturn S-l Vehicle,"   Bendix Corp., Engineering          file
      MT-8094 Issue A (no date).
31. Charles D.       LaFond,             "First                          V
                                            Guidance Computer, Data Adapter Prototypes Due at
                                                                Saturn
                                                  unpaged copy in SHP files.
      Marshall," Missiles and Rockets, 2 Nov. 1964,
32.   Ibid., "IBM Computer Will Direct Saturn Orbital Test Flight," June 1966, pp. 3-4.
33.   MSFC, Saturn V News Reference, p. 7.5; IBM, "IBM Apollo/Saturn Press Information," 1968,
      unpaged; IBM, "IBM Computer," pp. 37; La Fond, "First Saturn V Guidance Computer." For
      further details of IU theory, formulae, and schematics, see MSFC, Astrionics Lab, "Astrionics
      System Handbook," 1 Aug. 1965, and change sheets, 15 Aug. 1966; Walter Haeussermann and
      Robert Clifton Duncan, "Status of Guidance and Control Methods, Instrumentation, and
      Techniques As Applied in the Apollo Project," a lecture to the Advisory Group for Aeronautical
      R&D, NATO, Dusseldorf, Germany, 21-22 Oct. 1964. For photos and description of all
      components, see IBM, "Saturn IB/V Instrument Unit System Description and Component
      Replacement Data," IBM no. 66-966-0006, Huntsville, Ala., 1 Mar. 1966.
34.   IBM, "IBM Apollo/Saturn Press Information," 1968; IBM, "IBM Computer Will                                                 Direct," p. 7;
      La Fond, "First Saturn V Computer"; MSFC, Saturn V News Reference, p. 7.4.
35.   IBM, "Saturn IB/V      (Technical Manual)," pp. 10-11; MSFC, Astrionies Lab, "Saturn IB/V
                                 .       .       .
      Instrument Unit"; Alexander, "Saturn IB Control Unit." MSFC telemetry rested heavily on
      experience from the Redstone, Jupiter, and Pershing rocket programs. See, for example, Walter
      O. Frost and Charles D. Smith, "Saturn Telemetry," MSFC, 1962. For a technical overview of
      rocket telemetry from the V-2 era through Saturn I, see Otto A.
                                                                        Hoberg and James E. Rorex,
                                  .," in Ernst Stuhlinger, Frederick I. Ordway III,
      "Telemetry Development                            .   .
                                                                                    Jerry C. McCall,
      and George C. Bucker, eds., From Peenemuende to Outer Space: Commemorating the Fiftieth Birthday
      ofWernher von Braun, March 23, 1962 (MSFC, 1962), pp. 487-516.
36.   MSFC,      Saturn   V News                     Reference, p. 7.2-7.7;        MSFC,   Astrionics Lab, "Saturn IB/V Instrument
      Unit"; Alexander, "Saturn                             IB Control Unit"; IBM, "Saturn IB/V.           .   .
                                                                                                                   (Technical Manual)," pp.
      5-6.
37.   Harvey Heuring and E. Wayne Davis, "The IBM Clean Room Comes of Age," IBM/Huntsville,
      IBM no. 68-U60-0036, Dec. 1968, pp. 1-3, 5, 12; Heuring, "IBM Mobile Room Lends
      Flexibility to Apollo Saturn Unit Fabrication," IBM/Huntsville, IBM no. 67-U60-0026, 28 July
      1967, pp. 2-5; Heuring, "Methods for Cleaning Electronic Components and Subassemblies,"
      IBM/Huntsville, IBM no. 67-U60-0009, 1967.
38.   IBM, "Saturn IB/V        (Technical Manual)," pp. 2, 12, 14-15; IBM, "Program Review," p. 12;
                                 .       .       .
478
                                                                     NOTES TO PAGES 255-265
      Paper 65-304, July 1965, pp. 5-7; Walter Haeussermann, F. B. Moore, and G. G. Gassaway,
      "Guidance and Control Systems for Space Carrier Vehicles," in Stuhlinger, et al., Astronautical
      Engineering, p. 163 ff.; MSFC, Saturn V News Reference, 7.4-7.5.
44.   MSFC,   SaturnV Flight Manual, SA-506, 10 June 1969, pp. 4.19-4.24, 5.25-5.30, 6.31-6.32.
45.   Ibid.; R.N. Eilerman, "Saturn Auxiliary Propulsion Applications," paper presented at AIAA
      Meeting, Boston, 29 Nov.-2 Dec. 1966, pp. 1-3, 12-13; R. N. Eilerman telephone interview,
      10 Aug. 1972.
46. Eilerman, "Saturn Auxiliary Propulsion," pp. 1-2,            5-6.
47.   MSFC,   Saturn   V NewsReference, pp. 7.4-7.5. Operations of the IU in the Saturn IB missions
      were quite similar. See, for example, IBM, "Instrument Unit to Navigate Saturn IB's First
      Flight," news release, 17 Feb. 1966; Alexander, "Saturn IB Control Unit."
CHAPTER 9
 1.   Wernher von Braun, "Management in Rocket Research," a speech to the Sixteenth National
      Conference on the Management of Research, held at French Lick, Ind., 18 September 1972.
      Reprinted in Business Horizons, Winter 1962, unpaged copy in the SHP files.
 2.   See, for example, "Director's Weekly Notes," from lab directors and program office directors to
      von Braun, MSFC/Records Holding Area files; von Braun daily journal, a log of visits,
      conferences, phone calls, and so on, with memos frequently attached (housed in files of Alabama
      Space and Rocket Center, Huntsville, Ala.).
 3.   Akens, Historical Origins of the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center, MSFC Historical Monograph
      no. 1 (Dec. 1960), pp. 7173; von Braun, "Management"; D. Wyatt interview, NASA, 2 Dec.
      1971.
 4.   See, "Director's   Weekly Notes,   1 1   -20-67, Brown," Box      III,   MSFC/Records Holding Area     files.
 5.   See, "Director's Weekly Notes, 1961-68, MSFC/RHA files, boxes I-IV. The one-page rule is
      from "Notes, 12262, Haeussermann," Box I; the broom remark is from "Notes, 11 1361,
      Gorman," Box I.
 6.   Quotation from interviews with Mat Urlaub, MSFC, 29 July 1975, and Konrad Dannenberg,
      MSFC, 30 July 1975. Various individuals from NASA Hq. and MSFC, and the contractors noted
      the visits by von Braun and their net positive effect. See, for example, interviews with Frank
      Williams,NASA, 3 Dec. 1971; Wyatt, NASA; Dannenberg,                 MSFC; Robert   Pease,   MSFC,   3 Sept.
      1971; A. C. van Leuven, NAR, 12 Mar. 1971.
 7.   Williams interview.
 8.   Dannenberg    interview.
 9.   Williams interview.
10.   Eberhard Rees, "Project and Systems Management," a speech to the XVI World Management
      Congress, held at Munich, Germany, 25 Oct. 1972, housed in the files of the Saturn V Program
      Off., cited hereafter as SPO files. For the early years of NASA's managerial development, see
      Robert L. Rosholt, An Administrative History of NASA, 1958-1963, NASA SP-4101 (Washington
      1966). Wernher von Braun left in 1970 to take a position at NASA Hq. Eberhard Rees had been
      one of the early members of the von Braun team in Germany and for many years, both at      A         ABM
      and MSFC, had served as deputy director for technical operations in von Braun's office. Rees
      headed MSFC from 1970 to 1973 and was succeeded by Rocco Petrone, who was followed by
      William Lucas.
11.   Von Braun    to Maj.    Gen.   Don   R. Ostrander, 8 Jan. 1960;       Abraham Hyatt to the Associate
      Administrator,     NASA,   11 Jan. 1960;      Hyatt to the Associate Administrator, 15 Jan. 1960, with
      attachments.
12.   Wyatt, Williams, and Dannenberg interviews, William H. Sneed interview, MSFC, 28 July 1973;
      James W. Wiggins interview, MSFC, 31 July 1973; Normal L. Cropp, "Evolution of Marshall
      Space Flight Center Program Management Organization," pp. 89, SPO files. The Cropp piece
      is an
            unpublished document, prepared in 1972, as part of a management study series for the
      Program Management Directorate. The author was a veteran MSFC executive. See also Oswald
      H. Lange, "Saturn Systems Management," Astronautics, 7 (Feb. 1962): 31, 110.
                                                                                                            479
NOTES TO PAGES 266-276
13.   Cropp,    "Evolution,"         pp.       3-4;                von   Braun,    "Management"; Krafft A. Ehricke, "The
      Peenemuende Rocket Center,"                          Rocketscience,        4 (Sept.1950): 60-61; Rocketscience, 4 (Dec.
      1950): 81.
14.   Von Braun, "Management."
15.   Von Braun to Div. Directors and Off. Chiefs, "MSFC Management Policy #1," 16 Aug. 1962;                                            Bill
      Sneed interview, MSFC, 26 July 1973.
16.   Von Braun, "Management"; Rosholt, Administrative History, offers a detailed analysis of                                            the
      reorganization, including organizational charts for both Hq.                              and center       levels.
17.   Herman Weidner         interview,        MSFC, 24 Aug.                 1971; von      Braun   interview,   MSFC,     17 Nov. 1971.
18.   Dannenberg        interview.
19.   See, for example,      von Braun daily journal, 5 July 1963; 12 July 1963; 31 July 1963; 13 Aug.
      1963.
20.   Dannenberg        interview.
21. William J.    Normyle, "A. F. Officers to Bolster Apollo Management," Aviation Week and Space
      Technology, 81  (24 Aug. 1964): 22; anon, memo to Gen. Phillips, NASA, "Press Inquiries
      Regarding Assignments of NASA Personnel to Air Force Programs," 1 Sept. 1964; anon, memo
      to Gen. Phillips, NASA, "Response to Senator Symington's Inquiry on Attached Article in
      Aviation Week," 4 Sept. 1964, with attached draft of letter, Webb to Sen. Symington.
22. See Saturn  V Program Off., "Saturn V Program Element Plan for Financial and Manpower
      Management," Oct. 1967. Annex "C" of this document includes the basic guidelines for
      IO/R&DO      relationships.     SPO          files.
25.   Cropp, "Evolution," pp. 36-37; George E. Mueller interview,                                        NASA, 27 June           1967; Ray
      Godfrey interview, MSFC, 29 July 1975.
26.   Rudolph   interview.
27.   Mack   Shettles interview,       MSFC, 27 July                     1973;   Rudolph    interview.
28. Saturn   V Program Control Off., "Saturn V Program Element Plan for Program Management,"
      Aug. 1966, SPO files.
29.   Arthur Rudolph, "Saturn V Program Directive #9: Saturn V Program Control System," memo,                                               1
480
                                                                                            NOTES TO PAGES 277-284
      of transcriptions of the complete remarks made by the participants, accompanied
                                                                                       by the charts
      and slides used in their presentations. For the Apollo Executive Group, see Mueller interview,
      JSC      files;   NASA
                           Management, 1: 3.6, SPO files.
                                     .       .       .
38.   Interview, privileged source.                              Many   contractor personnel remarked on the very close manage-
      ment exercised by NASA, and Marshall                                   in particular, in contrast to the Air Force.
48. Transcription of                 remarks by Lee James, Program Review, 23 Nov. 1964, pp. 58, 60; Rees, "Project
      Management," pp.                                   910; Rudolph   interview.
49.   Hughes, "Saturn Concept"; Rees, "Project Management,"                                      p.   11;   Sneed interview; Rudolph
      interview.
50.   Mitchell R. Sharpe interview, 6 Aug. 1973. It would be easy to dismiss such sloganeering, but it
      was very pervasive and seems to have been taken very seriously. During a tour of contractor
      facilities in the Los Angeles area in 1971, the author could not help but notice the
                                                                                           prominently
      displayed stickers and placards in engineers' drafting rooms, shop areas, and offices, and the
      huge banners, proclaiming PRIDE, VIP, etc., hung across the walls of the cavernous buildings
      where the Saturn V stages were assembled. In cafeterias, and even in executive conference
      rooms, the coasters for coffee cups and water glasses carried appropriate slogans for "Manned
      Flight Awareness." For further details of the Manned Flight Awareness program, see Mitchell R.
      Sharpe, "Manned Flight Awareness Zero Defects for Man-Rated Space Vehicles," Industrial
      Quality Control, 12 (June 1966):                            658-661.
52.   James Baar and William Howard,                                Polaris!   (New York,   1960), pp.   41-42, 49-51.
53.   The Boeing               "Management Control Center System," D5-15710, 8 Nov. 1967, pp. 1.3-1.4,
                              Co.,
      SPO      files.   While this document does not analyze and describe the PCC at MSFC, it was intended
      as a  comprehensive guideline for control centers in general. It includes the philosophies
      involved, sample charts, and even detail drawings of sample hardware.
54.   Saturn   V Program Control Ctr., "Saturn V PCC: Program Control Center," n. d., unpaged, SPO
      files; Arthur Rudolph, "The Program Manager's Problem," in NASA/MSFC, First Annual
      Logistics Management Symposium, September 13 8c 14, 1966, NASA TMX-53566, 16 Jan. 1967, p. 59.
                                                                                                                                        481
NOTES TO PAGES 284-293
55. Saturn       V              V PCC"; Sidney Johnson interview, MSFC, 26 July 1973.
                     Program, "Saturn
56.                 Management," pp. 15-16; Arthur Rudolph, "Saturn V Management Instruction
       Rees, "Project
       #14; Saturn V Program Control Ctr.," 15 Apr. 1966, pp. 1-2, SPO files.
57.    Rudolph, "Saturn V Management Instruction #14," pp. 3-5, 8-9, 14, SPO files; Rudolph
       interview; Shettles interview.
58.    Johnston interview; William            Sheil, "Guidelines for Administrators," Boeing Magazine,    36 (Janu-
       ary 1966): 6-7.
59.    Norman Cropp, "Saturn," p. 8; Baar and Howard, Polaris, pp. 221-223. The former is a
       companion manuscript with Cropp, "Evolution."
60.    Kline, memo for record, 1964; R. G. Smith to J. A. Bethay, 12 June 1973, SPO files; Shettles
       interview.
61. Interviews    and demonstrations by Mack Shettles and Merrell Denoon, MSFC, 10 July 1973;
       Smith to Bethay, 1973; Shettles interview. Arthur Rudolph, Saturn V Management Instruction
       #19, "Saturn V Resource and Contract Management Reports," memo, 24 Sept. 1965, pp. 2-4;
       Saturn V Program Control Off., "Saturn V Program Element Plan for Schedule Control
       System,"      1   Oct. 1965, pp. 4-8, SPO          files.
62.    Thomas E.Jenkins to         R. F. Freitag,     NASA Hq., "Parts Count Breakdown of the Apollo-Saturn V
       Space Vehicle," 25 Oct. 1968.
63.    Gordon     Milliken      and Edward
                                       Morrison, "Management Methods from Aerospace," Harvard
                                                J.
                                             ff. Based on a NASA
       Business Review, Mar.-Apr. 1973, pp. 6                    study done by the authors, this
       article summarizes 25 significant methods and includes a significant bibliography of key
       documents.
64.    Tom   Alexander, "The Unexpected Payoff of Project Apollo," Fortune, July 1969.
65.    The                                         on Saturn management is largely drawn from
               significance of these various influences
       observations and conversation with personnel of the Saturn V Program Office during the
       summer of 1973, when the author was associated with the office as part of the NASA- American
       Society for Engineering Education, Faculty Fellowship Program. See also, Cropp, "Saturn,"
       passim.
66.    Lee James interview, MSFC, 21 May 1971.
67.    Von Braun memo, 16 Aug.                1962.
68. Kline   memo, 26 June 1964.
69.    Von Braun to O'Connor      (IO) and Weidner (R&DO), "R&D Operations and Industrial
       Operations: Charters and Guidelines for Cooperation," 19 Feb. 1965, SPO files, See also Saturn
       V Program Control Off., "Saturn V Program Element Plan for Financial and Manpower
       Management," Oct. 1967, SPO               files.
                                                      CHAPTER       10
  1.                in NASA, First Annual
       George Mueller,                      Logistics Management Symposium, 13-14 September 1966,
       NASA, TMX-53566, 16 Jan. 1967, p. 9; Arthur Rudolph, in NASA, Logistics Management, p. 60.
482
                                                                                 NOTES TO PAGES 294-307
 2.       Von Braun, in NASA, Logistics Management, p. 3; O'Connor in Logistics Management, p. 7; John C.
          Goodrum and S. M. Smolensky, "The Saturn Vehicle Logistics Support System," AIAA Paper
          65-268, Apr. 1965, pp. 5-8 passim.
 3.       Goodrum and Smolensky, "Saturn Logistics," p. 2; Mueller, in NASA, Logistics Management, p. 8.
 4.       Rudolph,       in Logistics      Management,      p. 59.
 5.       John   Goodrum interview, MSFC, 31 Aug. 1971.
                  C.
 6.       Rudolph, in NASA, Logistics Management, pp. 5859.
 7.       O'Connor,       in Logistics      Management, pp.      67.
 8.       Rudolph,       in Logistics      Management, pp.      5960.
 9.       Goodrum and Smolensky, "Saturn Logistics," p. 4; Goodrum interview; Carl D. DeNeen
          interview, MSFC, 23 Aug. 1971. Logistical considerations at KSC are further discussed in Kurt
          H. Debus, "Logistical Support for Launch Site Operations" in NASA, Logistics Management, pp.
          1217. See also the voluminous KSC logistics manual, Apollo/Saturn Logistics Support Requirements
          Plan, NASA, Kennedy Space Center, K-AM-02, 31 May 1966. This document includes
          guidelines for logistical interface              and changeovers   at the   Cape.
10.       Goodrum and Smolensky,                                         19; Goodrum interview. For a
                                                       "Saturn Logistics," pp.   16-17,
          discussion of        some of the more
                                         technical considerations in transporting and handling cryogenic
          propellants, see also R. D. Walter and B. J. Herman, "Saturn Vehicle Cryogenic Programs,"
          Cryogenic Engineering Conf., Rice Univ., Houston, 23-25 Aug. 1965.
1 1   .
          Rudolph,       in    NASA,       Logistics   Management, pp. 58, 60.
12.       Konrad Dannenberg                 interview,    MSFC, 30 July 1975.
13.       Akens, Saturn Chronology, p. 6; Goodrum and Smolensky, "Saturn Logistics," pp. 14 15; MSFC,
          Saturn Systems Off., "Saturn C-l, Project Development Plan," 10 Aug. 1961, p. 4.91, cited
          hereafter as MSFC, "Saturn C-l, POP"; Georg von Tiesenhausen, "Ground Equipment to
          Support the Saturn Vehicle" a paper presented at a meeting of the American Rocket Society,
          Washington, D.C., 5-8 Dec. 1960, pp. 1-2; Georg von Tiesenhausen, "Saturn Ground Support
          and Operations," Astronautics, 5 (Dec. 1960): 33, 78.
14.       Tiesenhausen, "Saturn Operations," p. 33; William A. Mrazek, "The Saturn Project," Astronautics, 5
          (July 1960): 75; Akens, Saturn Chronology, p. 9; MSFC, "Saturn C-l PDP," p. 4.90.
15.       Akens, Saturn Chronology, p. 58; Goodrum and Smolensky, "Saturn Logistics," p. 13; William B.
          Sheil, "Big Wheels Carry Big Bird," Boeing Magazine, 34 (Dec. 1964): 6-7. For details of the
          steering actuators for each modular pair of wheels, see also John Carlson, "Steering Mechanism
          for Saturn Transporter," Ground Support Equipment, Jan. -Feb. 1964, pp. 32-33.
16.       Goodrum and Smolensky,     "Saturn Logistics," p. 15; "Saturn S-IV Hints at Future Problems in
          Transport, Handling," Missiles andRockets, 10 (16 Oct. 1961): 32-33; R. W. Prentice, "Transpor-
          tation of Douglas Saturn S-IVB Stages," Douglas Paper no. 3688, p. 6.
17.       Prentice, "Transportation of S-IVB," pp. 3, 5, 19-20; H. E. Bauer, "Operational Experiences                      on
          the Saturn  S-IVB Stage," Douglas Paper no. 5268, Oct. 1968, p. 10.
18.       Goodrum and Smolensky,                       "Saturn Logistics," pp. 11     13; briefing    and tour of contractor
          facilities,   North American Rockwell, Mar. 1971.
19.       Franklin L. Thistle, "Rocketdyne: The First 25 Years," Rocketdyne, 1970, unpaged; Akens,
          Saturn Chronology, pp. 189, 212; Goodrum and Smolensky, "Saturn Logistics," p. 14. For
          illustrations and descriptions of the vast array of handling and auxiliary equipment for servicing
          and checkout of the Saturn V, see NASA-MSFC, Saturn V Launch Vehicle Ground Support
          Equipment Fact Booklet, NASA Technical Manual, MSFC-MAN-100, 25 Aug. 1967.
20.       MSFC, "Saturn               C-l, PDP," p. 4.93; Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp. 14, 16; Carl D. DeNeen
          interview; briefing            and tour of MSFC barges and facilities with Carl L. Pool, MSFC, 26 Aug.
          1971.
21.       MSFC     Historical Off., "History of the             George C. Marshall Space Center From January 1 to June
          30, 1961," vol.            1,   MHM-3,   Nov. 1961, pp. 51-52;      ".
                                                                                 .July 1 to December 31, 1961," vol. 2,
                                                                                 .
23. William A.                Mrazek, "The Saturn Launch Vehicle Family," lecture             at   Univ. of Hawaii, June 1966,
          p. 7.
                                                                                                                       483
NOTES TO PAGES 307-317
24.   Bauer, "Operational Experiences,"            p. 10;   "Saturn S-IV Hints     at   Future Problems,"      p. 32;   John
      Goodrum          interview.
25. William B. Sheil,     "Up the River           to the    Moon," Boeing Magazine, 34       (Sept.   1964):    6-7; Pool
      briefing;    De Neen and Goodrum            interviews.
27.   Robert W. Prentice interview,              MDAC,      11   Mar. 1971;   Goodrum and Smolensky,               "Saturn
      Logistics," passim.
28.   Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp. 17-18; H. L. Lambert, "Can Saturn S-IV be Piggy-backed by
      C-133 from Santa Monica to Canaveral," Society of Automotive Engineers Journal, 69 (Dec. 1961):
      70-71; Frank G. McGuire; "Airship Studied as Booster Carrier," Missiles and Rockets, 12 (4
      March 1963): 16; "Saturn S-IV Hints at Future Problems," pp. 32-33.
29.   H. E. Bauer, "Operational Experiences," pp. 10-11; Julian Hartt, Mighty Thor (New York,
      1961), passim.
30.   Donald   L. Stewart interview,     MSFC, 1 Aug. 1972. Formerly an engineer              at   Boeing, Stewart came
      to   MSFC    in 1961       and became associated with logistics management,             particularly the      Guppy
      operations. Conroy's final acquisition of the Stratocruisers evidently came from Transocean
      Airlines, an active nonscheduled airline from 1946 to 1960, when it went bankrupt. See, for
      example, Bill Eaton, "Transocean's Stratocruisers Languish," Journal of the American Aviation
      Historical Society,    9   (Fall 1964):   229-230.
31.   Goodrum          interview; Prentice interview; Stewart interview.
                                  (London, 1909), for 1955/56 and 1971/72, respectively. Details of
32. Jane's All the World's Aircraft
      the conversion job are given in Harold D. Watkins, "Boeing 377 Undergoes Flight Test,"
      Aviation Week and Space Technology, 78 (24 June 1963): 80-81, 84.
33.   Bauer, "Operational Experiences," p. 11; R. W. Prentice, "Transportation of Douglas Saturn
      S-IVB Stages," Douglas Paper no. 3688, Nov. 1965, pp. 14-15.
34.   John M. Conroy             to   von Braun, Enclosure A, 29 Oct. 1962; Stewart interview; Goodrum
      interview.
35.   John M. Conroy to von Braun, 29 Oct. 1962.
36. D.   Brainerd Holmes to Robert Seamans, 25 Apr. 1963.
37.   MSFC   Historical Off., History of the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center January 1-June 30,
      1963, Nov. 1963, pp. 1, 4, 57-58; July 1 -December 3 1 1963, vol. 2, July 1964, 47. The contracts
                                                                       ,
      included a complicated pay schedule, formulated as to mileage and time, ranging from $5.80 to
      $3.95 per kilometer (Conroy to von Braun, 29 Oct. 1962). By Nov. 1968, NASA had paid Aero
      Spacelines a total of $11 591 633 in contracts. (Akens, Saturn Chronology, p. 203); additional
      Guppy flights noted in Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp. 65, 71-73.
38. Prentice, "Transportation of   S-IVB," p. 15; Goodrum and Smolensky, "Saturn Logistics," p. 10.
39.   Conroy    von Braun, 29 Oct. 1962; Robert Freitag to von Braun, 3 Feb. 1964.
                  to
40. D. L. Stewart personal files, notes and memoranda, 2 Feb. 1964; "B-36
                                                                             May Tote Saturn Stage,"
    Huntsville Times, 1 Dec. 1963; J. H. Overholser, Aero
                                                          Spacelines, to Maj. Gen. Samuel C. Phillips,
    Deputy Dir. Apollo Program, NASA, Washington, D.C., 9 May 1964. See also, "Aero Spacelines
    Seeking Options to Buy Saunders-Roe Flying Boats," Aviation Week and Space Technology (20 Ian.
      1964), 34.
41.   Telephone interview with Donald L. Stewart, 11 Aug. 1972.
42.   Harold D. Watkins, "Larger Guppy Aimed at S-IVB
                                                               Transport," Aviation Week and Space
      Technology, 82 (19 Apr. 1965): 43, 45; Harold D. Watkins, "Super Guppy to Make First Flight
      August 25," Aviation Week and Space Technology, 83 (23 Aug. 1965): 42-43; Stewart interview;
      Earl D. Hilburn, Deputy Assoc. Administrator, NASA
                                                           Hq., to Robert H. Charles, Asst. Secretary
      of the Air Force, 20 May 1965. For details on the
                                                        C-97J, see Jane's for 1955/56.
43.   John C. Goodrum to Maj. Gen. Samuel C. Phillips, TWX, 4 Mar. 1966; Akens, Saturn Chronology,
      pp. 135-136.
44. Prentice, "Transportation of S-IVB,"   15- 19; Richard W. Trudell and Keith E. Elliott, "The
                                         pp.
      Dynamic Environment of the S-IV Stage During Transportation," Douglas Paper no. 1780, 4
      Dec. 1963, pp. 28, 30, 34, 43.
45. Stewart interview.
46.   De Neen      interview; Stewart interview; Stewart personal          file,   notes and photos. See also "Super
484
                                                                                    NOTES TO PAGES 317-329
           Guppy," Product Engineering, 8 Nov. 1965, p. 75; Harold E. Felix interview, MDAC, 9 Mar. 1971;
           Ruth jarrell, comp., A Chronology of the Marshall Space Flight Center, January 1-December 31, 1967,
           MSFC, Apr.          1970, p. 108; Akens, Saturn Chronology, pp. 162, 170, 226.
47.        Leo         L. Jones,comp., A Chronology of the Marshall Space Flight Center January 1-December 31, 1968,
           MSFC,          Feb. 1971, pp. 21, 83, 102-104; MSFC photo archives and Marshall Star, 1970-1972.
48.        New York   Times, 31 July 1965; Watkins, "Super Guppy," p. 43; "Johnston to Head Aero
           Spacelines," Aviation Week and Space Technology, 83 (20 Nov. 1967): 30. Conroy left the company
           in 1967 to engage in other aircraft conversion operations. The original firm built three more
           Guppies. For details, see Roger E. Bilstein, "Aircraft for the Space Age: The Guppy Series of
           Transports," Aerospace Historian, 21               (Summer    1974):   85-86.
49.        Goodrum           interview.
CHAPTER 11
 1.        F.      A. Speer, "Saturn      I
                                                  Flight Test Evaluation,"   AIAA   Paper 64-322, July 1964, pp.      1, 8.
           I/IB Launch Vehicle Operational Status and Experience," Society of Automotive Engineers,
           Paper no. 680739, 1968. James P. Lindberg, "Saturn I Flight Test Evaluation," MSFC, 1966,
           includes mission summaries and technical diagrams. Propulsion aspects are treated more
           specifically in B. K. Heusinger, "Saturn Propulsion Improvements," Astronautics and Aeronautics,
           2 (Aug. 1964): 20-25. For information more specifically related to the Block I vehicles, see
           O. Hoberg, "Saturn SA-1 Flight and Its Instrumentation," MSFC, Apr. 1966; F. A. Speer,
           "Saturn I Flight Test Evaluation," AIAA Paper 64-322, July 1964; Fernando S. Garcia, An
           Aerodynamic Analysis of Saturn I Block I Flight Test Vehicles, MSFC: NASA TND-20002, Feb. 1964.
           Unless otherwise noted, information for the composite summaries of the Saturn missions was
           abstracted from the documents noted above.
 4.        For description and discussion of the Block II series, see MSFC, Saturn I Summary; Heusinger,
           "Saturn Propulsion Improvements"; Lindberg, "Saturn I ... Evaluation"; Duran, "Saturn I/IB
           .
               Experience."
               .   .
 5.        Carl T. Huggins, "Saturn Television System for SA-6,"                    MSFC,   Internal Note,   M-ASTR-IN-63-6,
           25 Feb. 1963, pp. 1-13.
 6.        Lindberg, "Saturn I ... Evaluation," pp. 4-6; A. J. Davis and                    P. L. Hassler,   "Saturn IB Inflight
           Photographic Instrumentation System," MSFC, Sept. 1966.
  7.       Lindberg, "Saturn I ... Evaluation," p. 9.
  8.       Duran, "Saturn I/IB            .
                                           Experience' MSFC, Saturn I Summary.
                                              .   .             ;
                                                                                                                          485
NOTES TO PAGES 330-338
10.   Arthur C. Clarke, The Promise of Space (New York, 1968), pp. 83-84.
11.   Ibid.; Fred L. Whipple, Earth, Moon, and Planets (Cambridge, Mass., 1963), pp. 71, 74; Wernher
      von Braun, Space Frontier (New York, 1967), pp. 90-91, 184-185.
12.   Ernst Stuhlinger, "Meteoroid Measurements with Project Pegasus," paper presented at North-
      east Electronics Research and Engineering Meeting, Bostbn, 4 Nov. 1965, pp. 1-2; NASA, The
      Meteoroid Satellite Project Pegasus, First Summary Report, NASA TND-3505, Nov. 1966, pp. 1-2;
      von Braun, Space Frontier, p. 91. The problem of meteoroid penetration of booster tank walls, as
      well as spacecraft, was also noted in interviews with von Braun, NASA, 30 Nov. 1971;
      Stuhlinger, MSFC, 25 Aug. 1971; Bucher, MSFC,
                                                             30 Aug. 1971. Stuhlinger had been chief of
      MSFC's Space Science Lab; Bucher was a top aide during the Pegasus project. For discussion of
      meteoroid research, see also "Satellites: Manned and Unmanned, Report of Conference at
      Virginia Polytechnic Institute," Science, 22 Nov. 1963, p. 1091; Joseph
                                                                               H. Wujek, "Experiments
      in Space," Electronics World, July 1965, p. 48. Although many scientific books and journals refer
      to "micrometeoroids," NASA consistently used the term "meteoroid," with diminutive size
      inherently implied. The author has followed NASA's style in this case.
13.   NASA, Meteoroid Satellite, pp. ix, 2-3; M. Getler, "Hope Grows for Follow-on Pegasus," Missiles
      and Rockets, 22 Feb. 1965, p. 15; C. D. La Fond, "Meteoroid Detection Satellite Mock-up Shown,"
      Missiles and Rockets, 24 June 1963, p. 32; William G. Johnson interview, MSFC, 23 Aug. 1971.
      Launchings, p. 121.
                                                 Jr., Orders of Magnitude: A History of NACA and NASA,
27.   The quotation  is from Frank W. Anderson,
      1915-1976, NASA SP-4403 (Washington, 1976), p. 55. Skepticism about the Saturn I launches,
      and Highwater in particular, was expressed to me by NASA employees at Huntsville and
      elsewhere. The persistence of such allegations
                                                     prompted me to question several Saturn I project
      managers; they tended to reaffirm the presumed value of Highwater and later Block II launches
      in particular. Von Braun's
                                  response seemed to be the most candid. See von Braun interview,
      NASA, 30 Nov. 1971.
28. This was the consensus expressed in interviews with William
                                                                 Johnson, head of the project; Ernst
    Stuhlinger, former Dir. of the Space Sciences Lab.; and Stuhlinger's deputy, George Bucher.
29. Gerhard Heller interview, MSFC, 3
                                           Sept. 1971; von Braun interview, MSFC, 30 Nov. 1971.
30. Information concerning Saturn IB missions AS-201
                                                             through AS-205 can be found in the
    continuing series of reports, such as: MSFC, Saturn Flight Evaluation Working Group, Results of
486
                                                                               NOTES TO PAGES 338-352
      the First   Saturn IB Launch Vehicle Test Flight, AS-201, and subsequent, housed in the                      files   of the
      MSFC   Historical Off. In addition, see Lockyer, A Summary of Major NASA Launchings (cited for
      the Saturn I mission narratives); NASA-MSFC, Saturn IB News Reference, Sept. 1968; and Duran,
      "Saturn I/IB     Experience." Unless otherwise noted, information for the composite summaries
                        .   .   .
    of the Saturn IB launches was compiled from the assorted documents noted above.
31. Savage to Dir., Apollo Program, 3 Mar. 1966; Kurt Debus to Gen. Phillips, 8 June 1966.
32. Davis and Hassler, "Saturn IB Photo System," pp. 90-96; MSFC, Saturn IB News Reference,
    passim.
33. Akens, Saturn Chronology, p. 138; Duran, "Saturn IB ... Experience"; Eberhard Rees to Gen.
36. Akens, Saturn Chronology, p. 163; Lockyer,   Summary of Major NASA Launchings, p. 117.
37.   MSFC,  Saturn IB News Reference, pp. 12.5 12.6; Lockyer, Summary of Major NASA Launchings, p.
      123; KSC, "Apollo/Saturn Consolidated Instrumentation Plan for AS-204/LM-1," K-IB-029/4,
      16 Oct. 1967; NASA, "Press Kit: Apollo 5," 11 Jan. 1968, pp. 20-21; NASA, "Apollo 5
      Pre-Launch Press Conference," 21 Jan. 1968, pp. 8-9; NASA, "Apollo 5 Post-Launch Press
      Conference," 21 Jan. 1968, pp. 8-9; NASA, "Apollo 5 Post-Launch Press Conference," 22 Jan.
      1968.
38. Apollo      News     Ctr.,      "Apollo 7 Mission Commentary,"       1 1   Oct. 1968, pp. 12.1-12.4, 22.1, JSC          files.
39. Lockyer, Summary of Major NASA Launchings, p. 126; Leo C. Jones, comp., A Chronology of the
    George C. Marshall Space Flight Center January 1 -December 3 1 1968, MSFC, MHR-8, Feb. 1971, pp.
                                                                                  ,
109-13; NASA, "Press Kit: Apollo 7," 6 Oct. 1968, pp. 8, 29, 33-34.
CHAPTER 12
 1.
      Quoted      in   James J. Haggerty, "Apollo          4: Proof Positive," Aerospace, 5 (Winter 1967): 4.
 2.   Haggerty, "Apollo 4,"             p. 3;   NASA,   "Apollo 4 Pre-Launch Press Conference," 8 Nov. 1967, pp.
      3-4,9-10.
 3.   Webb     to R. Cargill Hall,         20 Dec. 1974.
 4.   Sharpe, "Saturn and All-up Flight Testing: Historical Note, Saturn History Project," Jan. 1974,
      p. 2.
 5.   NASA,       Off. of Manned Space Flight, "Apollo Flight Mission Assignments," 9 Apr. J963, pp.
      5-7,     cited in Sharpe, "Saturn." Mueller interview, NASA, 21 Apr. 1971, copy in JSC files.
 6.   Mueller to Directors,            MSC, LOC, MSFC,       teletype,   1   Nov. 1963.
 7.   R. B.Young to Mitchell R. Sharpe, 1 1 Jan. 1974; Walter Haeussermann interview, 14 Dec. 1973;
      Frank Williams to M. R. Sharpe, 20 Feb. 1974; Eberhard Rees to Robert Sherrod, 4 Mar. 1970;
      Dieter Grau to M. R. Sharpe, 12 Dec. 1973. The conservative approach to launch vehicle testing
      is inherent in all of the sources noted above. The decision of von Braun and Rees to back
      Mueller, as the boss, was noted by Bob Young, who also remembered continuing reluctance by
      some MSFC chieftains. The decision by von Braun to back up Mueller, forcefully overriding his
      staff, was also remembered by another individual from the senior management level (privileged
      source).
 8.   Von Braun         to Mueller, 8       Nov. 1963.
 9.   Transcribed telephone conversation appended to von Braun daily journal, 8 Nov. 1963,                                 ASRC
      files.
                                                                                                                           487
NOTES TO PAGES 352-363
      Summary of Status         for Items   on Agenda for AS-501 Meeting     at   KSC   Friday,   March     10, 1967";
      anon., "Minutes of      March1967 Meeting at KSC to discuss AS-501"; Gen. O'Connor to Gen.
                                      10,
16.   NASA, "Press Conference: Roll-out of Apollo 4 (Apollo/Saturn 501)," KSC, 26 Aug. 1967.
17.   See, for example, Schneider and Wagner, "Memorandum to Maj. Gen.                   S.   C. Phillips   on Purging
      of the S-II LOX Fill and Drain Line," 1 Sept. 1967.
18.   Bill   Schneider to Gen.     Phillips,   "Helium Pressure Regulator   in the   Pneumatic Console,"          memo
      of   call,   10 Oct. 1967; Rudolph, "Operational Experience," p. 4.
   -Manual, SA-501, and subsequent. For a postmission analysis, see the continuing (and more
    voluminous) series of reports, such as MSFC, Saturn Flight Evaluation Working Group, Saturn V
    Launch Vehicle Flight Evaluation Report AS-501, Apollo 4 Mission, and subsequent. All of these
    documents may be consulted in the files of the MSFC Historical Off. In addition, see Lockyer, A
    Summary of Major NASA Launchings (cited for Saturn I and IB mission narratives), and MSFC,
    Saturn V News Reference, Dec. 1968. The annual issues of NASA, Astronautics and Aeronautics
    include pertinent summary information on the successive Apollo-Saturn launches and missions.
    An excellent survey of Apollo-Saturn vehicles and operations, covering AS-50 1/508, is David
    Baker, "Saturn V," Spaceflight, Jan., Feb., and Mar., 1971,     16-22, 61-65, 100-107. Unless
                                                                pp.
    otherwise noted, information for the composite summaries of the Saturn V launches was
    compiled from the assorted documents noted above.
28.    For a clear and concise summary of vehicle AS-50 1 mission operations, see Haggerty, "Apollo 4,"
       pp. 5-7; Baker, "Saturn V," Spaceflight, Mar. 1971, p. 100.
29.    Von Braun        daily journal, transcript of telephone call 15   Nov. 1967,     ASRC      files.
488
                                                                              NOTES TO PAGES 364-377
      MSFC, 3 Sept. 1971. The ASI line failure in particular is analyzed in Beirne Lay, Jr., Earthbound
      Astronauts (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1970), pp. 142146.
33.   Anon., "Manned Space Flight Program Progress," draft, 8 June 1967.
34.   Robert O. Aller to Dir., Apollo Program, 9 June 1967.
35.   Gilruth to George E. Mueller, 19 Sept. 1967.
36.   Von Braun      daily journal,      von Braun and Mueller teleconference, 11 Apr. 1968, ASRC files.
37.   NASA, Astronautics and Aeronautics,       1968, pp. 92-93; Arthur Rudolph to Gen. Phillips, telegram,
      29 Apr. 1968.
38.   Arthur Rudolph to Gen. Phillips, "Replacement of F-l engine on AS-503," 14 May 1968, and
      attachment, William D. Brown, Mgr., Engine Program Off. to Arthur Rudolph," "Leaking F-l
      Primary Fuel     Pump      Seal   on Engine F-4023, AS-503," 13 May 1968.
39. Phillips' recollections are recounted in his essay,          "The Shakedown Cruises,"          in Edgar M.
    Cortright, ed., Apollo Expeditions to the Moon,                NASASP-350 (Washington, 1975), pp. 171-175.
    All quotations are from this source. See also Brooks,             Grimwood, and Swenson, Chariots for Apollo,
      chap. 12; Frank W. Anderson, Jr.,             Orders of Magnitude: A History ofNACA and NASA, 1915-1976,
      NASA    SP-4403 (Washington, 1976),                p. 69.
40. Mueller to Acting Administrator, "Request for Approval to Man the Apollo/Saturn           Launch                 V
    Vehicle," 5 Nov. 1968; Mueller to Dr. Thomas O. Paine, 11 Nov. 1968, with attachments;
    Phillips to Mueller, "Apollo 8 Mission Selection," 1 1 Nov. 1968; Paine to Mueller, 18 Nov. 1968.
41. Dieter    Grau   interview,    MSFC, 24 Aug.            1971.
42.   NASA,    Astronautics     and     Aeronautics,     1968, pp. 318-320; Lockyer, Summary of Major                     NASA
      Launchings, p. 128.       Copy of Apollo       8 invitation housed in      JSC files.
43. Lockyer,   Summary of Major NASA Launchings, pp. 127,                     129; NASA, Astronautics and           Aeronautics,
      1969, pp. 62-65, 142-145.
44.   Michael Collins, Carrying         the Fire:   An   Astronaut's Journeys    (New York,        1974), pp.   358-359.
45.   NASA,   Astronautics      and Aeronautics, 1969, pp. 209-210.
46.   Michael Collins interview, 17 Oct. 1975; Collins, Carrying                     the Fire,   pp. 364-365.
47. Collins interview; Collins, Carrying the Fire, pp.                371373.
48. Collins, Carrying the Fire, pp.         371-373.
49.   The most convenient summary of                 the AS-506 mission         is   contained in    NASA,      Astronautics   and
      Aeronautics, 1969, pp. 212 ff. It includes a wide range of editorial and public comment on the
      flight of Apollo 11, its significance and results. For published accounts see, for example, Neil
      Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Edwin Aldrin, First on the Moon (New York, 1970); Young, and
      others, Journeyto Tranquility; Collins,
                                              Carrying the Fire; Norman Mailer, Of a Fire on the Moon
      (Boston, Massachusetts, 1969). See also Brooks, Grimwood, and Swenson, Chariots for Apollo.
50. See, for  example, Boeing Co., "Saturn                  V     Flight Evaluation      Trend Report: AS-501 Through
      AS-506," 30 Sept. 1969.
51.   NASA,   Astronautics      and Aeronautics, 1969, pp. 372            374; "Towards the Ocean of Storms," Time,
      21 Nov. 1969, p.     8.
52.   Von Braun  interview, MSFC, 17 Nov. 1976; Roy Godfrey interview, MSFC, 29 July 1975; Walter
      Haeussermann, MSFC, to author, "History of Saturn Launch Vehicles," 22 June 1976.
53.   NASA, Astronautics and Aeronautics, 1970, pp. 119 ff., 201 ff. See also, Edgar M. Cortright,
      "Report of the Apollo 13 Review Board," 15 June 1970. The report includes a one-volume
      narrative summary, and three volumes of appendices. Copies in JSC files. See also Brooks,
      Grimwood, and Swenson, Chariots for Apollo.
54.   NASA, Astronautics and Aeronautics, 1971, pp. 25 ff.; MSFC, Public Affairs Off., news release, 5
      Feb. 1971.
55.   Commentary on the LRV can be found in David S. Akens, An Illustrated Chronology of the NASA
      Marshall Center and MSFC Programs, 1960-1973, MSFC, MHR-10, May 1974. On manned
      exploration of the lunar surface, including use of the LRV, see Richard S. Lewis, The Voyages of
      Apollo: The Exploration of the       Moon (New York,           1974).
56.   Interviews with von Braun,  MSFC, 30 Nov. 1971; Richard N. Rodgers, MSFC, 24 Aug. 1971;
      Leonard Bostwick and Milan Burns, MSFC, 31 July 1975. See also Jonathan Eberhart, "Saturn V
      Only a Beginning," Science News, 1 1 Nov. 1967, pp. 472-473.
                                                                                                                           489
NOTES TO PAGES 378-390
57.   For a review of the scientific gear, experiments, and results, see Richard                       S.   Lewis, The Voyages of
      Apollo:The Exploration of The Moon (New York, 1974).
CHAPTER 13
 1.   David     S.   Akens, Skylab Illustrated Chronology, 1962-1973, MSFC, 1 May 1973, pp. 1-7; James T.
      Murphy         toRobert G. Sheppard, "Comment Edition of History of Saturn Launch Vehicles," with
      enclosures, 15            June 1976.
 2.   Akens, Skylab, pp. 32-34.
 3.   Akens, Skylab, pp. 4143; David S. Akens, An Illustrated Chronology of the NASA Marshall Center
      and MSFC Programs, 1960-1973, MSFC, MHR-10, May 1974, pp. 328, 332.
 4.   Akens, Skylab, pp. 55, 70-71.
 5.   Akens, Chronology of MSFC, pp. 333-341. For the full story of Skylab, see Charles D. Benson and
      W. David Compton, Skylab: A History, the forthcoming official NASA history.
 6.   For   details       of the     ASTP      launch and background, see         NASA,     Apollo-Soyuz Test Project: Press Kit
      (1975).    Copy          in   JSC   files.
 7.   The most                          volume on Soviet launch vehicles and other Soviet space
                          authoritative single
      technology      Senate Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences, Soviet Space Programs,
                          is
      19661970, staff report, 92nd Cong., 1st sess., 9 Dec. 1971. This document includes a general
      discussion of the standard launch vehicle series, known as the A version, p. 135 ff. The
      discussion is preceded by a highly useful table of the characteristics of Soviet launch vehicles, on
      pp. 133-134. Illustrations are included on pp. 560-561, 563, 572-573. See also, Peter L.
      Smolders, Soviets in Space (New York: Taplinger Publishing Co., 1974). This book is translated
      from the Dutch edition which appeared in 1971. The author used no footnotes, but apparently
      he had access to an unusually large amount of unpublished information, and had opportunities
      for interviews with a number of leading Russian cosmonauts and scientists. A good, brief
      discussion of Soviet rockets appears on pp. 59-69, a useful illustration on p. 64, and a
      numbered, cut-away diagram of the Salyut vehicle on pp. 70-71. A recent survey of rocket
      technology, including the Russian vehicles, is Kenneth Gatland, Missiles and Rockets (New York:
      Mac mil Ian Co., 1975), pp. 184-199 especially. This discussion includes comments on some of
      the later engines and on the range of Soviet rockets, as well as photographs of the engines
      themselves. Useful and detailed illustrations, done by a professional illustrator team,
                                                                                                appear on
      pp. 76-82. These include a very useful illustration of the RD-107 engine (p. 77) as well as a
      launch profile of a Soyuz mission (p. 81). A noted expert and writer on space technology,
      Gatland is editor of the authoritative British magazine, Spaceflight. See also Nicholas Daniloff,
      The Kremlin and the Cosmos (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1972); and Leonid Vladimirov, The
      Russian Space Bluff (New York: Dial Press, 1973). The latter was written
                                                                                  by a former mechanical
      engineer and scientific editor from the Soviet Union, who decided to defect in 1966. His
      intriguing thesis is that the Russians remained one step ahead of the U.S. during the 1960s
      because they felt that American space programs were further ahead than
                                                                                   they actually were, and
      the Russians undertook a series of very risky
                                                           space shots to maintain their propaganda
      advantage. The publisher included a comment by von Braun that the book was "fascinating,
      informative and worthy of a wide readership in the United States" (cited
                                                                                  opposite the book's title
      page).
      See Vladimirov, Russian Space Bluff,
                                            pp. 79-80. The comment on the heavy gauge of Soviet
 8.
490
                                                                         NOTES TO PAGES 391-400
      established, city. MAP occupied existing facilities within the New Orleans metropolitan area,
      whereas     MTF was largely a huge buffer zone for testing, different in concept from all of the
      above, employing a smaller number of permanent civil service and contractor personnel. Thus,
      the subtleties of NASA impact were different in each case, despite general patterns in terms of
      jobs, construction, and so on. See also Raymond A. Bauer, Second-Order Consequences: A
      Methodological Essay on the Impact of Technology (Cambridge, Mass.:               MIT   Press, 1969). Huntsville
      and Brevard County are        specifically contrasted     on pp. 92101.
            S. Beltz, "Huntsville and the Aerospace Age,"
12.   John                                                paper presented at the annual meeting of the
      Southern Historical Assn., Houston, 1971. Copy in SHP files. The Huntsville Times, "25 Years
      Since," 3 Nov. 1974. This was a special 16-page supplement to the Times, commemorating the
      25th anniversary of the decision to locate the Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville in 1949. The
      supplement included numerous signed articles on various phases of the impact on Huntsville in
      the ensuing two and one-half decades. Cited hereafter as Times, Supplement.
13.   Bob Ward, "Famed von Braun Remembers               Huntsville His Personal Choice," Times, Supplement,
      p. 4.
14.   Bauer, Second Order Consequences,      p. 93; Beltz, "Huntsville,"        pp. 18-21.
15.   Beltz, "Huntsville," 21-22. Don Eddins, "City Schools," p.                  11,   John Park, "Medical Help
      Boomed," p. 15, in Times, Supplement.
16.   Don Eddins, "University of Alabama Spreads Wings," Times, Supplement, p. 13. The prior
      existence of a primarily Black state college, Alabama A&M, founded in 1873, seemed to
      underscore lingering racial divergences. Nevertheless, Huntsville's civil rights issues remained
      less volatile than elsewhere in the South during the turbulent 1960s. See Bauer, Second-Order
      Consequences, p. 98.
17.   Bob Ward, "Small Error Turned Out          to   Be More     Fact   Than   Fiction," Times,   Supplement,    p. 2.
18.   Times,
          Supplement, passim.
19. Alan Moore, "Von Braun Civic Center Heralds Future," Times, Supplement,                        p. 14;   information
    supplied by the Alabama Space and Rocket Center.
20. Bauer, Second Order Consequences, pp. 171-172, 174.
21. For a      popular account of these and other aspects of the national space program in general, see,
      Frederick    I. Ordway III, Carsbie C. Adams, and Mitchell R. Sharpe, Dividends from Space (New
    York, 1971).
22. Bauer, Second Order Consequences, p. 174.
23. William R. Lucas, "The Past, Present, and Future of Metals for Liquid Rockets," Metals
                                                                                                                  491
 Sources and Research Materials
                            DOCUMENTARY SOURCES
                                        493
STAGES TO SATURN
during later phases of the Saturn history, are housed with the SHP files,
although they still await indexing and location within the original files.
    Finally, the SHP files include tapes, transcripts, and notes of 128
interviews with   NASA and contractor personnel who worked on the
Saturn rockets. Unhappily, some of the interviews were recorded on
tapes of inferior quality and the transcriptions are only marginal or frag-
mentary. A number of other transcriptions, although prepared from
audible tapes, were so poorly transcribed as to be unusable. Notes were
taken of several interviews when use of recording equipment was either
impractical or impossible. Other interviews, housed in the files of
Johnson Space Center or at NASA Headquarters in Washington, B.C.,
are so identified in the backnotes.
     In identifying authorship or affiliation with government agencies
and contractors, the following abbreviations have been used:
                                                                                     495
STAGES TO SATURN
                                    OTHER SOURCES
     The manuscript's bibliography is represented in its backnotes. These
notes frequently include annotations on the direct citation, in addition to
a brief discussion of other relevant sources. Because of the extent and
nature of modern governmental documentation, this short bibliographical
essay describes classes of documents in place of an extensive and
                                                                    formal
listing of sources. It is
                          a summary of selected sources already discussed
within the backnotes themselves. The titles that follow are those that the
author most frequently consulted as a starting point, or for guidelines,
enlightenment, and specifics, particularly as they pertained to                  NASA and
the Saturn programs.
phases of the von Braun team, ABMA, and the Saturn program. Eugene
M. Emme,            The History of Rocket Technology: Essays on Research,
                  ed.,
Development, and   Utility (Detroit, 1964), features essays by historians, as
well as participants, including von Braun. Two other edited works, with
contributions by key engineers and managers themselves, are of special
value. Ernst Stuhlinger, Frederick I. Ordway III, Jerry C. McCall, and
GeorgeC.Rrovfn,eds.,AstronauticalEngineeringandScience:FromPeenemuende
to
   Planetary Space (New York, 1963), includes a variety of semitechnical
discussions, prepared by engineers, that provide a good feel for the state
of astronautics in the early 1960s. The book was a                     festschrift   honoring
Wernher von Braun on his 50th birthday, and its contributors had been
his associates at Peenemuende, Fort Bliss, and Huntsville. Most of the
                                      PART   Two
      Through    its   history office,    MSFC sponsored its own series of
historical reviews.     Volume    I   was published as Historical Origins of the
George C. Marshall Space Flight Center (1960), designated as           MHM-1.
Subsequent titles,     numbered sequentially, were called History of the George
C. Marshall Space Flight Center  and issued semiannually through MHM-1 1
(1965). Companion     volumes    (designated as "Volume II" for each title)
reproduced key documents       cited  in these histories. Beginning in 1966,
the semiannual histories became annual Chronologies, designated MHR-6
and subsequent, ending in 1969. Based largely on these publications,
MSFC issued a convenient chronology, David S. Akens, Saturn Illustrated
Chronology: Saturn's First Eleven Years, April 1957 Through April 1968
(MSFC, 1971), which furnished appropriate dates and titles of relevant
documents for further research.
                                                                               497
STAGES TO SATURN
498
                                        SOURCES AND RESEARCH MATERIALS
Automatic Checkout Systems for Saturn V Stages," MSFC, 10 July 1968.
C. Stark Draper, Walter Wrigley, and John Hovorka, Inertial Guidance
(New York, 1960), is a basic treatise. A study closely related to the Saturn
program and its immediate predecessors is F. K. Mueller, "A History of
Inertial Guidance," ABMA, Redstone Arsenal, Ala. (1959), written by
one of the originators of the guidance systems for the V-2.
PART FIVE
PART Six
     The       best single      reference for all Saturn I, Saturn IB, and
                             summary
Saturn     V           the tabulation by William A. Lockyer, Jr., ed., A
                launches     is
Summary of Major NASA Launchings, Eastern Test Range and Western Test
Range: October 1, 1958 to September 30, 1970, Kennedy Space Center, Fla.,
Historical Report No. 1 (Revised, 1970). A readable and instructive
account of launch activities at Cape Kennedy and the launch of a Saturn
V is Gene Bylinsky, "Dr. von Braun's All-Purpose Space Machine,"
Fortune, 75       (May     142-49. For dimensions, weights, duration,
                           1967):
and other   specifics of Saturn V launches, see MSFC, Saturn V Flight
Manual, SA-501, through SA-509, which was the last flight manual
issued. Astronaut Michael Collins has written a marvelous, colorful
memoir, Carrying the Fire: An Astronaut's Journeys (New York, 1974), that
includes his account of what it was like to ride a Saturn V into space.
PART SEVEN
                                                                           499
STAGES TO SATURN
500
                                                                 Index
All-up concept, 347-49, 351, 356                      ill.,   357, 360,         AS-504 (Apollo 9), 149, 364, 368
  377                                                                           AS-505 (Apollo 10), 368-69
Allen, William M.,             360                                              AS-506 (Apollo 11), 3, 321, 369-72, 378
Alloy, 194;aluminum, 101, 119, 165,201,203,                                     AS-507 (Apollo 12), 374-75
  217, 396; beryllium 248, 250-51, 257, 398;                                    AS-508 (Apollo 13), 375-76
  magnesium-lithium, 250-51, 257, 397-98;                                       AS-509 (Apollo 14), 376
  nickel, 102,       119                                                                           ), 376
STAGES TO SATURN
                                                                    Atlantic Missile Range, 16 ill.
Apollo Saturn V, continued
                                                                    Atlas (ICBM missile), 14, 17, 19, 20, 21,              34-36,
  AS-511     (Apollo 16),
                            376
                                                                      164, 189; liquid fuel use, 14, 44, 91; satellite
  AS-512     (Apollo   17), 376, 377           ill.
 502
                                                                                                                                INDEX
Camera  capsules, 328, 338, 340                                    Cosmonaut,           19, 21, 54, 388. See also                names of
Canright, Richard B., 39, 134                                        individual cosmonauts.
Cape Canaveral, 14, 15, 70, 73, 80, 323. See                       Crocco, Luigi, 114
  also   Cape Kennedy.                                             Cronkite, Walter, 357
Cape Kennedy,             21, 101, 123, 125, 239, 317,             Crypgenics, 89, 90, 91, 94, 127, 130, 184, 198,
  318, 332, 388-89                                                   297, 398
Cargo aircraft, 309-18                                             Cummings Research                Park, 395        ill.
                                                                                                                                         503
STAGES TO SATURN
F-l engine, continued                                                      Grumman           Aircraft Engineering Corp., 68
  C-5 configuration, 58-59, 65, 192-93;                                    Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory,                                     Cali-
  Saturn V, S-IC stage, 5, 106, 196, 198-99;                                 fornia Institute of Technology, 10
   207-08; 348, 352, 354, 357; testing program,                            Guidance and control system, 7, 8, 52, 241,
   106-07, 108, 111-12, 115, 117, 119, 123-                                   242, 247, 278, 250, 251
   26. See also Combustion instability, Fuel in-                           Gyroscope, 242
  jector, Pogo effect, Thrust chamber, Turbo-
  pump.
Fairchild Corp.,        333
                                                                           H-l engine, 29, 39, 48, 87, 91, 94                            ill.,   100   ill.,
Felix,   Harold   E.,        185
                                                                              105   ill.,   120, 125, 127, 142, 153, 398; innova-
Flight Operations Office (GEM box), 274                                       tions, 99,         1   19;   problem phases, 95, 101-04;
Ford Instrument Co., 243
                                                                              Saturn        I,       77, 97, 324, 325, 326,    328-29,
Frietag, Robert F., 313
                                                                              336; Saturn IB, 83, 97, 338, 344; testing
Friendship 7, 20
                                                                              program, 98, 1 13, 1 15, 126. See also Combus-
Fuel injector, 109-16, 138, 142, 145, 151                          ill.
                                                                             tion instability, Fuel injector, Teflon,                            Thrust
Fuller, Paul N., 144
                                                                             chamber, Turbopump.
                                                                           Haeussermann, Walter, 38                        ill.,   350
                                                                           Haise, Fred W.,Jr., 375
Gagarin, Yuri A., 19, 54                                                   Hall, Eldon W., 45, 47
Gates,Thomas S., Jr., 41                                                   Hamilton, Julian S., 311
Gayle.J. B., 185                                                           Harrje, David, 114
Geissler, Ernst D., 38              ill.,   59, 163                        Haynes Stellite Co.,                     div.   of Union Carbide,
GEM      boxes, 270, 272            ill.,   273, 289, 290, 292               103-04
Gemini program,              21, 161, 294, 330, 336, 355,                  Heimburg, Karl                  L.,     38
  381                                                                      Helicopter, 308, 316                    ill.
504
                                                                                                                               INDEX
Injector, See Fuel injector.                                                    Kennedy Space Center (KSC),               3,    4,    6   ill.,
Instrument unit (IU), 161, 241-57, 315, 386;                                      184, 236 ill., 239, 332, 349, 351, 356 ill.,
  automated checkout, 239-40; production                                          386, 390
  procedures, 242-54; Saturn 1, 244-45, 249;                                    Kerosene-based propellant, 5, 89, 99, 102, 105,
  Saturn IB, 245, 246 ill., 247, 344; Saturn V,                                   127, 129, 232, 386, 387
  241-42, 246          ill.,   247-50, 255-56, 358-59,                          Kerwin, Joseph P., 384
  360-61                                                                        Killian,   James   R., 27,    31
Insulation, 149,         172-77, 212, 213-15, 222-                              Killiancommittee, 27, 31
  23,   358                                                                     Klute, Dan, 113
Intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM), 13,                                 Kroeger, Herman W., 311
  91, 386,     400-01. See         also Atlas,         Minuteman,               Kubasov, Valery, N., 388
  and Titan.                                                                    Kuers, Werner R., 219, 392
Intermediate range               (IRBM), 1 6
                               ballistic missiles
                     and Thor.
  91. See also Jupiter
International Geophysical Year (1957-1958),
  17                                                                            Lambert, H.       L.,   301
Invar piping, 15253                                                             Land     transport,     298-99, 300, 301, 318
IU-204 (instrument unit), 254                                                   Lange, Oswald H., 136, 210, 211, 275
IU-205, 254                                                                     Langley Research Center (LaRC), 44, 61-63
IU-503, 254                                                                     Launch Complex 34, 70, 338, 343 ill.
                                                                                Launch Complex 37, 332, 334-35, 341
                                                                                Launch Complex 39, 4, 6 ill., 1 1 ill., 223, 347,
                                                                                  356 ill., 365 ill., 385 ill.; pad A, 383; pad
J-2 engine, 5,         58-59,       144,      151      ill.,    187     ill.,
                                                                                  B, 383
  240; failure,        360-63;    hydrogen tech-
                                     liquid                                     Launch Operations Center (LOG), 70
  nology, 127, 141, 143, 146-47, 359; problem                                   Launch Operations Directorate (LOD), 70
  phases, 144-45, 149-53, 372-73; S-II stage,                                   Launch vehicle, 3-4, 17-21, 25-29, 33-41,
  177, 210, 212, 216, 240, 348, 357; S-IVB stage,
                                                                                  5153,        56, 74. See also names of individual
  160, 164, 171,  177-78, 180-82, 186, 256;                                       vehicles.
  Saturn IB, 87, 143, 338-40, 343-45, Saturn
                                                                                Launch window, 293, 367
  V, 143, 368, 371; testing program, 142-43,
                                                                                Leonov, Aleksey A., 21, 388
  147-49, 216. See               also   Fuel injector, Pogo
                                                                                LEV-3  (inertial guidance system), 242-43
  effect
                                                                                Lewis Propulsion Laboratory, 44
JATO     project (Jet- Assisted Take-Off), 10                                   Lewis Research Center (LeRC), 44, 79, 84                  ill.,
                                                                                                                                      505
STAGES TO SATURN
Lovell, James A., Jr., 367, 375                                      Mathews, Charles W., 373                    ill.
Low, George M., 63, 226, 365-66, 373                   ill.          Mattingly,         Thomas      K., II,      375
LOX. S^     Liquid oxygen.                                           Maus, Hans H., 38              ill.,   65, 193
LR- 115 engine, 137                                                  Mechling Barge Lines, Inc., 303, 304
LR- 119 engine, 137, 160                                             Medaris.John B., 15, 31, 34
LSD (Navy Landing          Ship, Dock), 305, 319              ill.
                                                                     Mercury, Project, 19, 21, 61, 161, 294, 355
Lubricant, 147                                                       Meteoroids, 329, 330, 331, 334
Lucas, William R., Jr., 185, 396                                     Michoud Assembly    Facility (MAF), 68, 71-73,
Lunar excursion module (LEM), 5, 68, 83, 193                           75     84 ill., 208 ill., 301, 383, 385, 390;
                                                                               ill.,
Lunar module (LM), 161, 163, 236, 341, 343,                            Boeing, used by, 166, 192, 194, 195, 196,
  344, 345, 368-69, 372                                                201-03, 206; Chrysler, used by, 81-82
Lunar orbit rendezvous (LOR), 59-61, 63, 64                          Military rocketry,             9-16, 25, 31-32, 35, 39,
  ill., 65-68, 83, 84, 161, 162, 349, 367, 400                         40,41,53, 137
Lunar roving vehicle, 376, 377 ill.                                  Minuteman (ICBM                 missile), 349,       351
                                                                     Missile,     9-17, 21, 25, 54, 161. See              also   names of
                                                                       individual missiles.
506
                                                                                                                                  INDEX
Noise, 80, 357                                                           Polaris (missile), 16
North American Aviation, Inc. (North American                            Polyurethane insulation, 175
  Rockwell Corp. from Sept. 1967), 73, 146,                              Posiedon (barge), 305, 306              ill.,   307
  283, 371; contracts, 209-11,                          management       Powell,     James 247
                                                                                             T.,
  problems,               225     32;     production       facilities,   Powell, Luther E., 253
  166, 195, 212; production innovations,                        213-     Pratt   &   Whitney Aircraft Co., 134, 135-38,
  15; production problems, 215, 217, 222,                                  139   ill.,   145, 152, 160, 189
  230-33, 352                                                            Pregnant   Guppy (cargo              aircraft),    310      13, 315,
Nova (launch              vehicle), 37, 39,           50-53, 57,   58,     316 ill., 317-18
  59, 60, 63, 65, 66, 67                                                 Prentice, R. W., 310
Nozzles,          92-93, 121-22                                          President's Scientific  Advisory                       Committee
                                                                           (PSAC), 53, 67, 68, 113, 225
                                                                         Priem, Richard J., 114
                                                                                                                                       507
STAGES TO SATURN
         and Quality Office (GEM box), 274
Reliability                                                            Saturn B, 28               ill.,    43
Reorganization:Douglas Aircraft, 278-80;                                 B-1,47, 49
   NASA, 266-67, 269-71, 291; North                                    Saturn C, 28 ill., 43
   American, 230-32                                                       C-l, 48, 49,             51-53,           58, 59,         60      ill.,    137, 160,
Research and Development Operations (R&DO,                                      161, 209, See also Saturn                          I.
  MSFC), 269, 270, 274, 286, 289, 290                                     C-1B, 59-60, 143, 160, 161. See                                       also   Saturn
Research Institute, University of Alabama, 395                                 IB.
  ill.                                                                   C-2, 28          ill.,   48, 49,        51-53,            57, 58, 209,               210
Research Steering Committee on Manned Space                              C-3, 28          ill.,   48, 49, 58,63,                   210
  Flight (Goett Committee), 41                                           C-4, 28          ill.,   58, 157
Resident Managers Office (RMO), 277-78, 283                              C-5,      58-59, 60                ill.,    65, 67, 160, 161, 162,
Rigi-mesh, 138, 145                                                            192. See also Saturn V.
RL-10 engine,        87, 127, 139     ill,     144,   326      ill.,   Saturn        I,    3,      23,     28       ill.,     30    ill.,       61    ill.,   70,
  334, 336; Centaur, used in, 134, 188; J-2,                             83-85, 139                ill.,   161      ill.,   183,        321-29, 331-
  contributions to, 144, 147, 153; S-IV stage,                                               74-79, 189, 191, 324-
                                                                         36, 338, 381; design,
  used    in,   137-38, 140, 188-89, 325; See                 also       27, 345; engines, 95,97-98, 101, 137, 157,
  Cluster concept.                                                       256, 336; guidance system, 243-45, 249,
Rocketdyne Div., North American Aviation,                                329, 349; liquid hydrogen fuel, 87, 89, 91,
  Inc. (North American Rockwell
                                Corp. from                               325; 400; production, 196, 265, 299; 399;
  Sept. 1967), 15, 26, 76, 105         ill.,    126   ill.,   151        testing,79-81, 323, 337. See also Air trans-
      199-200, 280, 344, 361-62, 398; con-
  ill.,
                                                                         port,     Land           transport, Pegasus project,                           Water
  tracts, 29, 97, 104-05, 106, 141, 143, 148;                            transport.
  production facilities, 98, 142-43; production                        Saturn IB, 3, 20 ill., 23, 28 ill., 61 ill., 77,
  innovations, 101, 118, 120-21; production                              84 ill., 85, 126-27, 155, 161 ill., 169 ill.,
  problems, 101-04, 111-16; testing, 107,                                179     ill.,    209, 278, 291, 306                       ill.,    316 ill., 321,
  111, 115, 123-24, 126, 142, 147, 152-53                                342     ill.,    345, 377, 385               ill.,   389       ill.; and ASTP
Rockets, early,     714                                                  program, 388-89; design, 38, 157, 162, 189,
Rosen, Milton W., 36, 39, 63, 65, 192, 193, 195                          191,     337-38; engines,                          87, 94, 97, 98, 103,
RP-1 (kerosene-based propellant), 5, 89, 164,                            143, 256, 338, 339; guidance system, 244,
  177, 192, 232; F-l, used in, 105, 107-08,                              245, 247, 249, 254, 329, 339, 344; liquid
  119-20, 127, 200; H-l, used in, 99, 102,                               hydrogen fuel, 89, 91, 400; production, 71,
  127; tanks, effect on, 192-93, 198                                     83,185-86, 196, 266; and Skylab program,
Rudolph, Arthur, 223, 273 ill., 293, 297, 351,                           382-83; testing, 38, 148, 338. See also Air
  364, 399; and AS-501, 351-54, 357; and S-II                                                                                      Land
                                                                         transport, All-up concept,                                              transport,
  program, 226, 231; management policies,                                Water transport.
  270-71, 275, 283-84, 288, 290-92                                     Saturn IB Program Office (MSFC), 270
Ruud, Ralph H., 219, 231                                               Saturn V, ii ill., 3-4, 7, 20 ill., 23, 28 ill., 61
                                                                         ill., 70, 75 ill., 85, 126-27, 161 ill., 197 ill.,
Sacramento Test           Facility   (SACTO, Douglas                     271, 297, 321, 354-55, 365 ill., 367-71, 378,
Aircraft Co.), 184-87,         280                                       381; design, 157, 177, 189, 278, 288, 372,
Safety, 141, 185, 227, 229, 231                                          400; engines, 87, 89, 101, 123, 125, 143, 148,
Salyut space station, 381, 387                                           256, 339, 354, 357, 376-77; guidance sys-
Sanchini, Dominick, 110                                                  tem, 155, 241, 243-45, 247-49, 329,                                            357-
Santa Susanna Field Laboratory, 142                                      59; liquidhydrogen fuel, 89, 91, 162, 400;
SA-T (test booster stage), 79-80                                         production, 71, 185-86; and Skylab pro-
Satellites,     17, 47,   161, 330; communications,                      gram, 379, 382; testing, 73, 188, 338, 345. See
  35, 38, 134, 394; weather, 25, 35, 135,                     394        alsoAir transport, All-up concept, Manned
Saturn (launch vehicle), 21, 23, 56, 90                        ill.,
                                                                         lunar landing, Noise, Pogo effect, Quality
  92, 99, 183, 396; in civilian programs, 39-41,                         control,          Schedule delays,                        ST-124,             Water
  57; in military programs, 38-40, 57;                                   transport, Welding.
  nomenclature, 28, 36, 37, 60, 106, 161                               Saturn V Program Office (MSFC),                            270-71, 273,
Saturn A:                                                                286     ill.,    290-92. See                also     Government-con-
  A- 1,47, 49                                                            tractor relations,                 Program Control Center,
  A-2, 47, 49                                                            Quality control.
508
                                                                                                                                                   INDEX
Saturn 500-F (interim                     facilities         test vehicle),
                                                                                          liquid      hydrogen            fuel, 43, 89, 209, 21 1; test-
  351-52                                                                                  ing, 73, 74,             223-24
Saturn-Apollo space vehicle (See                               also   Apollo           S-IV, 48, 49,77, 81, 137, 139                           ill.,   161      ill.,
  Saturn IB and V):                                                                       169     ill.,    182, 184,            189-90, 316            ill.,   319
  SA-1 (Saturn                I),   98,   304-05, 323-24, 326,                            ill.,   326     ill.,    382; destruction of, 185, 186;
    327, 328                                                                              flight  performance, 183-84, 328; liquid
  SA-2, 324, 325, 336                                                                    hydrogen fuel, 89, 163-64, 325
  SA-3, 324, 325                                                                       S-IVB, 5, 83, 89, 143, 155, 157, 161 ill., 169
  SA-4, 324, 326 ill., 328                                                               ill., 179 ill., 183, 186, 187 ill., 279 ill.,
  SA-5, 185, 244, 312, 323, 324, 326                               ill.,      327,       306 ill., 316 ill., 319 ill., 374; design, 162-64,
     328                                                                                  190, 212, 222, flight performance, 144,
  SA-6, 104, 327, 328, 329, 338                                                           147, 338-40; 343-44; 358-59; 361-62; 367-
  SA-7, 101, 104, 327, 329, 331                                                           69; 371, 375; liquid                    hydrogen        fuel, 164,
  SA-8, 327, 331, 338, 334                                                               174; testing, 148-49, 184, 188
  SA-9, 244,327, 331,332                                                               S-V, 48, 58, 137, 159, 265, 324, 325
  SA-10, 326, 327, 335                                                               Saturn Systems office (SSO, MSFC), 265-66,
  SA-201 (Saturn IB), 97                                                               270
  SA-202, 97                                                                         Saturn Vehicle               Team        (Silverstein committee),
  SA-203, 97                                                                           45,47-51, 140
  SA-204, 97                                                                         Schedule delay, 52-53, 68, 153, 160, 209,
  SA-205, 97                                                                           223-32, 349, 352-54, 364-65, 376
  SA-206, 97                                                                         Scheer, Julian W., 353
  SA-209, 389                                                                        Schirra, Walter M., 343, 344
  SA-2 11, 389                                                                       Schmidt, Dalton M., 238
  SA-5 14 (Saturn V), 389                                                            Schneider, William C., 347, 357
  SA-5 15, 389                                                                       Schomburg, August, 42
Saturn    Apollo Systems Integration Office                                          Schriever, Bernard A., 34, 228
  (MSFC), 266                                                                        Schweickart, Russell L., 368
Saturn Booster Branch (Michoud Assembly                                              Schwenk, Francis C., 47
  Facility), 194                                                                     Scott, David R., 368
Saturn program, 39, 42, 47, 50-52, 59, 240,                                          Seal Beach Production Facilities, 69, 212, 215,
  272 ill., 262-63, 294, 400; contributions,                                           221 ill.
  379,397-99; cryogenics, advanced by, 134,                                          Seamans, Robert                C., Jr., 55, 63, 67, 68,                   113,
  136-37, 143, 161-62, 398. See also F-l                                               160,312, 351
  engine,    Government-contractor relations,                                        Shea, Joseph          F.,     65, 66,      226
  H-l engine, Management, Reorganization,                                            Shepard, Alan B.,                  19,   20 ill.
  Schedule delay.                                                                    Sidey, Hugh, 55
Saturn stages:                                                                       Siebel,   Mathias            P.,   202, 262        ill.
  S-I, 58, 77, 81, 82 ill., 89, 185, 189, 244, 325-                                  Silverstein, Abe, 41, 44, 45, 46 il., 62, 132, 133,
    27; Chrysler product, 83, 331, 333;                                MSFC             134, 136, 137
    product, 81, 334                                                                 Silverstein committee. See Saturn Vehicle Team.
  S-IB, 77, 83, 89, 98, 102-03, 126, 148, 189                                        Skylab, 291,317, 379,                    381-85
  S-IC, 5, 6 ill., 75 ill., 89, 106, 111 ill., 127,                                  Skylab 4,    385      ill.
  155, 189, 190, 197                  ill.,   205    ill.,   208   ill.,      212,   Skylab program, 126, 127,                      383-84
  300    ill.,   306
                344, 352; flight performance,
                       ill.,                                                         Slayton,     Donald           K.,   389
  212, 344, 357; proportions, 191-92, 196,                                           Slidell   Computer             Facility, 68, 72,          390
  201, 206, 222, 354, 398; RP-1 fuel, 164, 192,                                      Sloop, John L., 132, 133, 134
  200, 232; testing, 69, 71-72, 73, 74, 196, 207,                                    Smith, Robert G., 287
  209                                                                                Smith, Ted, 167, 189
  S-II, 5,       6    ill.,    58, 69,        127,     143,      155,         162,   Smith, Whitney G., 201
     189, 190,         191-92, 220-21                  ill.,   303    ill.,   306    Smithsonian Institution, 332
     ill.,   319     ill.,    353, 398, 399; destruction of,                         Smolensky, Stanley M., 296
     224, 229-30;                   flight     performance, 212,                     Sneed, Bill H., 267, 291
     233, 357-58, 360-61, 367-68, 370-71;                                            Solar   cells,   332, 384
                                                                                                                                                          509
STAGES TO SATURN
Solar Div. International Harvester Co., 102,                                     See also Cluster concept, Insulation, Propellant
  254                                                                            utilization system.
Sparkman, John              J.,     390                                          programs, 21, 34; adapted to Saturn pro-
Speer, Fridtjof A.,                323                                           gram, 91, 95, 127, 141, 164-65, 177, 189-
Spent stage laboratory. See Orbital Workshop.                                    90
Spider beam, 78, 82 ill.                                                       Thor     (launch vehicle), 19, 21, 25
Sputnik   1,    18,26,381,386                                                  Thor- Able (launch     vehicle), 36, 101
Stafford, Thomas P., 368, 369, 389                                             Titan    (ICBM       missile), 17, 21, 34, 35, 37, 43,                           44
Stever, H. Guyford, 33, 34                                                     Titan (launch vehicle), 17, 43, 44, 161, 361,
Stewart, Donald L., 317                                                          388
Stewart,   Homer J.,               51                                          Titan C, 39
Stoner,    George H.,               194, 195                                   Titan I, 36, 91
Storms, Harrison A., 225, 227, 229, 230, 231                                   Titan    II,   20   ill.,    61      ill.,   243, 349
Stress corrosion, 101                                                          Titov,   Gherman             S.,     20
Studhalter,      W.    R.,         150                                         Transport. See Air transport, Land transport,
Stuhlinger, Ernst, 38                   ill.,   74,   335                        Water transport.
Super Guppy (cargo                  aircraft),        314-15, 316      ill.,   Trott.Jack, 201
  317-18                                                                       Tsiolkovsky, Konstantin E.,                           8,    129-30
Super-Jupiter (launch vehicle),                          25-27                 Tugboat, 303, 304, 307, 308
Surveyor mission, 137                                                          Turbopump, 93, 94 ill., 1 16-17,                                1   18, 119,    146
Sutton,    George          P., 45                                              Tyson, Overton S., 188
Sweat, Sidney         J.,    253
Swigert,   John       L., Jr.,          375
Symington, Stuart, 390
                                                                               Unexcelled Chemical Corp., 317
Systems Engineering Office                            (GEM   box), 274
                                                                               United Aircraft Corp., 134
                                                                               Urlaub, Matthew W., 194, 207, 209, 263
                                                                               U.S.S. Hornet (Apollo 11
                                                                                                        recovery ship), 372
Tank, 29, 30           ill.,       81,    82     ill.,   122,   155,   169
 ill.,   180, 187       354 design, 76-78,
                           ill.,    195,
 146-47, 164-65, 177, 199, 211-12, 213,                                        V-2                                                        16
                                                                                     (rocket), 9,            12,       14,    15,              ill.,     91,   195,
 387-88; problem phases, 185, 218-19, 223,                                       242, 244, 350, 386, 400
 231, 282, 324; production techniques, 166-
                                                                               Vanguard (launch                    vehicle), 16            ill.,    18, 19, 34,
 68, 170-71, 206, 213-14, 216; pressuriza-
                                                                                 36, 91, 141, 236
 tionof, 144, 177-78, 180, 198, 211-17.
                                                                               Vanguard I      (satellite),            16    ill.,   19
                                                                                                                   INDEX
  evaluation, 334, 336, 337; Pregnant                     Guppy,    Wiesman, Walter    F.,   393
  support           for,        31011;
                                   delay       schedule             Wiesner, Jerome B., 53, 67, 68       ill.
  handling, 157-58, 223-24, 227-29, 231,                            Williams, Frank L., 264, 350
  364, 366                                                          Wilson, Earl,  188-89
von Braun team,                 14,   38    ill.,   56, 259, 261,   Wilson,   Norm, 218
  391;        ABMA         research, 18, 23,      27-28, 31,
  33;    conservatism,            15,      333-34, 349; con-
  tractor relations, 82, 266; inertial guidance
  development, 242, 244; NASA, transfer to,                         XLR-15    engine. See    RL-10 engine.
  21,40-42, 44, 69                                                  Xerox, 287
von Karman, Theodore H., 130
VoshkodI, 21
Voshkod II, 22
Vostok launch vehicle, 387                                          Yarchin, Sam, 224, 226, 230, 231
Vostok (satellite), 387                                             York, Herbert F., 38, 39
Vostok   I,    19                                                   Young, John W., 368
Vostok   II,   20                                                   Young, Robert, 269, 289, 350
                                                                                                                      511
                       The Author
     Roger E. Bilstein is Professor of History at the University of Houston/
Clear Lake City. He was born in Hyannis, Nebraska (1937), and received
the B.A. degree from Doane College, Crete, Nebraska (1959), and the
M.A. (1960) and Ph.D. (1965) degrees from the Ohio State University,
where he specialized in recent U.S. history. As a student at Doane, he was
selected for the Washington Semester Program, sponsored by American
University, in Washington, D.C.; at Ohio State, he was named Mershon
Fellow in National Security Policy Studies. Before moving to Houston, he
taught at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater and the University of
Illinois-Urbana. At UH/CLC, he offers courses in the history of tech-
nology, and in the history of aviation and space exploration.
     Dr. Bilstein was editor-in-chief and contributor to Fundamentals of
Aviation and Space Technology (1974); his articles have appeared in Tech-
nology and Culture, Aerospace Historian, Ohio History, Journal of the British
Interplanetary Society, and elsewhere, including original essays in The
Wright Brothers: Heirs of Prometheus (1978), and Apollo: Ten Years Since
Tranquillity (1979), both books published by the National Air and Space
Museum. Dr. Bilstein was named Faculty Fellow in 1974 and 1975 in
research programs sponsored by NASA and the American Society for
Engineering Education. He was awarded the National Space Club's God-
dard Essay Award in 1978, and received the Manuscript Award of the
American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics in 1979. During
1977-1978, Dr. Bilstein was designated as Visiting Scholar in Aerospace
History at the National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution.
                                 The NASA History Series
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                                           ISBN 0-16-048909-1
                                                                                         90000
                                       9      80160 489099
                             Stages to Saturn
One    of the   NASA   History Series, Stages to Saturn     is   one of the finest
official histories ever
                      produced. It is essential reading for anyone
seeking to understand the development of space flight in America,
and the course of modern technology.
About the cover: "Go Apollo 11," watercolor by John Meigs, NASA
art program, March 5, 1970, NASA photo number 70-HC-206.
1996