May 292015
 

From a 1977 Rockwell brochure touting the forthcoming benefits to be expected from the era of space industrialization that the Shuttle was soon to usher in:

rockwell 77 space industrialization

Note that some of the illustrations here were constantly re-tasked. For example, the image in upper right with the cop and the bad guy: here is shows the advantages of the Lunetta, lighting up scary urban areas at night, allowing The Man to spot and chase down criminals. But in other publications, the same small painting was used to show other advantages of space industrialization, nothing to do with Lunetta. Not shown in *this* illustration is the police officers right hand. Elsewhere, the image is published with him holding his hand sort of in front of his face, as if he was wearing a Dick Tracey-esque two-way video/radio watch… because that’s what he was wearing (same sort of thing shown in the center-left image on the right-hand page). Space technology would, it was claimed, allow police officers to carry small, easily portable communications devices of effectively unlimited range, unlike the bulky and short-ranged walkie-talkies they had at the time.

Admittedly, it was a crazy, far-out notion of the future.

 Posted by at 11:29 pm
May 262015
 

A photo (because I couldn’t be bothered to scan it) of a page from a 1967 edition of “TRW Space Data,” recently arrived in my mailbox via eBay. Shown here are current (1967) and projected capabilities and costs of American launch vehicles. The Saturn V is noticeably cheaper on a dollars-per-pound basis than anything else, with the Titan IIIC and the Saturn Ib coming in behind it. For the future, hypothetical fully reusable vehicles were expected to greatly reduce those costs further, with a recoverable booster expected to run somewhere about $50/lb by 1970. The graph leads me to believe that the data was dated even at this point; Reference 3 mentioned in the graph was from 1961. Further, the Aerospace Plane was an ongoing project in ’61, but was long kaput by ’67.

$50 would be about $354 in todays money; the $540 for a pound of Saturn V payload would be $3825 today.

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 Posted by at 1:39 pm
May 192015
 

Photos of some of the aerospace history I’ve been able to purchase lately thanks to the APR Patreon. If you’d like to help out and get in on this action, please check out the APR Patreon page.

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And then there’s this. While I haven’t managed to get hold of the actual item, I have gotten full-color scans of this, in chunks. I am now piecing it together into one gigantic whole.

triebflugel

 Posted by at 10:09 pm
May 152015
 

I’ve made a number of science fictional CAD models for Fantastic Plastic. Wonderfest, an annual hobby convention in Louisville, Kentucky, is coming up at the end of the month, and Fantastic Plastic is going to set up there. A while back I thought it might be interesting to take some of the CAD models I’ve created for current and forthcoming Fantastic Plastic model kits, specifically the Helicarrier, the Prometheus and the Messiah, and create 2D layout drawings… and then make cyanotype blueprints. Further, the blueprints would be at the same scale as the kits.

The end results? A moderately sized Helicarrier blueprint, two big Prometheus sheets (one showing the craft in flight, the other showing it in landed configuration), and one enormous Messiah blueprint, a full six feet long.

I don’t know if there is a market for such things. The Prometheus and the Messiah in particular are just gigantic. Were I to really try to commercialize them, I’d probably scale them down to at least 2/3 and more likely 1/2 the current size. Still, creating them was not a minor effort… so what the heck. I’m going to make them available for a limited time. Yes, they’re pricey. But they’re also *huge.* And a pain to make. And there won’t be very many of them on the entire planet (right now, two copies each of the Helicarrier and the Messiah; a grand total of one of the Prometheus prints).

These will be available for a two-week period, starting now. If some dark miracle occurs and I sell a hundred of them within that span, then, great! But however many, at the end of the two weeks, that’s it. All done, no more. I will total them up, and hand notate  each one as numbered limited edition (“1 of 5,” or whatever, based on the order that orders come in) plus I’ll initial each one. Because why not.

Feel free to order as many of each as you want. Don’t forget postage… and don’t forget that with this one-time postage you can order as many *other* cyanotype prints as you like.

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Prometheus prints:

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Helicarrier:

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 Posted by at 10:49 pm
May 152015
 

Saw this on eBay:

German WWII electro-mechanical analog computer for the V2 rocket – A4 missile

The starting bid price is a bit rich for my blood…  $7500. But if the photos and the scan from the Christies catalog are accurate, it does seem to be vintage V-2 hardware. Not quite sure what it did or where it did it; since there are dials that a human was apparently meant to set, it would seem to be part of the aiming system (which was little more than “go that far then flop out of the sky,” with azimuth controlled by rotating the launch pad and, IIRC, some radio guidance to get it pointed in the right direction. It *might* have gone on the missile itself, or it *might* have been part of the launch infrastructure. Shrug. This unit seems to be missing some bits, such as the rather important dials.

A bunch of photos at the auction site.

V2computer1 (21) V2computer1 (10) V2computer1 (4) V2computer1 (3) V2computer1 (2) V2computer1 (1)

 Posted by at 6:53 pm
May 062015
 

Looks like it was a successful test. It also looks like one *hell* of a ride. The test occurs about 16 minutes into the video:

The finned cylinder aft of the capsule turns out to not only be a very effective aerodynamic stabilizer, it turns out to be *vital.* As soon as the capsule separates from the stabilizer… wow. I’m sure there are adrenaline junkies who’d pay good money for this ride.

 Posted by at 7:15 am
May 052015
 

A blog reader passed along this view of a piece of early LEM art, hoping to see a higher resolution version. Can anyone help?

LEM

Bonus points if you recognize where the blog reader saw this…

 Posted by at 11:15 pm