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I wasn't born until 8 years after the moon landing, but I'm still in
awe of the technical accomplishment considering the time and technology. I've always wanted to look over "some" (of the many thousands of) mechanical drawings for Apollo. Is there any archive that would have these? I'm sure some still exist, although I assume a lot of them might be in a fprgptten box in a Lockheed warehouse somewhere. Anyone know where I might be able to get my hands on some copies? Thanks in advance! Dave |
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dave.harper schrieb:
I wasn't born until 8 years after the moon landing, but I'm still in awe of the technical accomplishment considering the time and technology. I've always wanted to look over "some" (of the many thousands of) mechanical drawings for Apollo. Is there any archive that would have these? I'm sure some still exist, although I assume a lot of them might be in a fprgptten box in a Lockheed warehouse somewhere. This would have to be a forgotten warehouse, not just a box in some. |
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Some documents have been archived in research libraries. One,
including research materials used for the official NASA Saturn histories, is at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. "http://www.uah.edu/library/about/department/collections.htm#saturn" You can go see this stuff, even spend hours doing research on it, but you have to be escorted at all times, etc. - Ed Kyle |
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On 15 Feb 2005 19:01:09 -0800, "dave.harper"
wrote: I wasn't born until 8 years after the moon landing, but I'm still in awe of the technical accomplishment considering the time and technology. I've always wanted to look over "some" (of the many thousands of) mechanical drawings for Apollo. Is there any archive that would have these? I'm sure some still exist, although I assume a lot of them might be in a fprgptten box in a Lockheed warehouse somewhere. Anyone know where I might be able to get my hands on some copies? "Uh, they were all destroyed after Apollo was cancelled, so that the Saturns would never be built again. But since we never went to the Moon anyway, it doesn't matter. Especially if our EBE Overloards say we never went to the Moon. Anyone seen my foil hat?" Ima Retard Moon Hoax Moron |
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Wow, thanks for the info. The contact there said she had a drawing
hanging up on the wall in the library. I've even been in there before, and never knew that was there! Thanks again! Dave Ed Kyle wrote: Some documents have been archived in research libraries. One, including research materials used for the official NASA Saturn histories, is at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. "http://www.uah.edu/library/about/department/collections.htm#saturn" You can go see this stuff, even spend hours doing research on it, but you have to be escorted at all times, etc. - Ed Kyle |
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Ed Kyle wrote:
Some documents have been archived in research libraries. One, including research materials used for the official NASA Saturn histories, is at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. "http://www.uah.edu/library/about/department/collections.htm#saturn" You can go see this stuff, even spend hours doing research on it, but you have to be escorted at all times, etc. Not exactly (unless things have changed in the last year or so). I visitted Huntsville on a business trip 13 months ago, and visited the UAH library to research Saturn. What I wound up doing was persuadign the special collectiosn librarian to jsut start packing the collections onto a cart in chronological order, starting at the beginning, and wheeling it out to me in the regular study area. I got up to, IIRC, 1968 or so before my time ran out. About burned out my scanner and the local photocopier, but I got away with a ****load of stuff, all without any real headache. |
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Did they have many mechanical drawings available? Not just overviews,
cutaways, or figures... but real production drawings with material call-outs, notes, part numbers, etc? Thanks, Dave |
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In article .com,
"dave.harper" wrote: Did they have many mechanical drawings available? Not just overviews, cutaways, or figures... but real production drawings with material call-outs, notes, part numbers, etc? Thanks, Dave I don't know if UAH does but I'm damn certain the MSFC technical library does, or did when I was at Boeing in the early 90's, 'cause I had to research some material specs and kept running across references to other Apollo-era drawings in their library. -- Herb Schaltegger, B.S., J.D., GPG Key ID: BBF6FC1C "The loss of the American system of checks and balances is more of a security danger than any terrorist risk." -- Bruce Schneier http://dischordia.blogspot.com http://www.angryherb.net |
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Scott Lowther wrote:
Ed Kyle wrote: Some documents have been archived in research libraries. One, including research materials used for the official NASA Saturn histories, is at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. "http://www.uah.edu/library/about/department/collections.htm#saturn" You can go see this stuff, even spend hours doing research on it, but you have to be escorted at all times, etc. Not exactly (unless things have changed in the last year or so). I visitted Huntsville on a business trip 13 months ago, and visited the UAH library to research Saturn. What I wound up doing was persuadign the special collectiosn librarian to jsut start packing the collections onto a cart in chronological order, starting at the beginning, and wheeling it out to me in the regular study area. I hope they can continue such accessibility, but it could cause them trouble. I'm aware of similar non-space-related collections at university libraries that have been serially pilfered over a period of time - even when people had to sign in to access the collections. I would love to see this stuff digitized and made available via. Internet. - Ed Kyle |
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dave.harper wrote:
Did they have many mechanical drawings available? Not just overviews, cutaways, or figures... but real production drawings with material call-outs, notes, part numbers, etc? Not that I saw. I did get some good inboard profiels of the various Saturn vehicles and stages, but the collection was more for reports than for drawings. The production drawings are archived on microfilm elsewhere. |
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