NASA Johnson
Space Center Oral History Project
Edited Oral History Transcript
Francis
E. "Frank" Hughes
Interviewed by Rebecca Wright
Houston, Texas – 29 March 2013
Wright: Today
is August 29, 2013. This oral history interview with Frank Hughes
is being conducted in Houston, Texas, for the NASA Johnson Space Center
Oral History Project. Interviewer is Rebecca Wright, assisted by Rebecca
Hackler.
We thank you for taking time this morning to sit down and talk with
us. We know you spent many years working with NASA, and we’d
like for you to start by sharing with us how you first became employed
by NASA, and then where you were on those first assignments.
Hughes: Okay,
sounds good. Thank you for coming over, I think this could be fun.
How I came to NASA is kind of interesting. I went to a college called
St. Mary’s College, in [Moraga] California, to get a degree
in Physics. I went there because I was going to be an astronomer;
that was my thing. My vision was to work at Mount Palomar [Observatory],
the biggest optical telescope at the time. The first two years progressed
pretty well. The school that I was in (St. Mary’s) turned 100
years old in 1963. That was while I was there; I was there from ’61
to ’65. It had started in 1863.
Somehow, somebody had a lot of sway within the government, because
the celebrations for this [anniversary] in the spring of ’63,
Lyndon [B.] Johnson came to address the crowd at the centennial celebration.
It was great; glad I got the chance to see the vice president at that
time, and he talked about Apollo. It was just shortly after [President
John F.] Kennedy had delivered his famous speech about going to the
Moon. The budgets were formed up suddenly, and things were happening.
I was there watching very carefully, along with everybody else, as
NASA did the Mercury flights, in ’61 and ’62. I knew about
Gemini, but I still wasn’t involved. Suddenly when Johnson stood
up on the stage—and it was a beautiful day, it was done outside—and
he gave the speech, it just converted me. The astronomy thing just
went up in a puff of smoke, and I was up for going to work on Apollo.
I finished the degree in ’65, and along the way I applied to
go to work for NASA. I applied to [NASA] Ames Research Center [Moffett
Field, California]; that was the area of the country I was living
in then, around the San Francisco Bay area. They sent a letter back
that said, “No, you can’t. You’re just getting a
Bachelor’s. To work for us, you need a Master’s.”
That was then, but what it amounted to is that they were a research
center, not an operations center. I know that now. So, I went off
to the University of Idaho to get a Master’s in solid-state
physics. I don’t know what the hell that (solid state physics)
was all about, but I woke up in a bad dream one night and said, “I’m
going to do that.” I was interested in crystals, lasers and
things like that.
While I was there, the first semester, I was miserable. I wanted to
go to work, I didn’t want to do any more school. I need a break.
Of course, I’d gone from mild weather in San Francisco back
to—I grew up in Montana—so here I was in Idaho. One particularly
terrible day in January—and it was also one of those days where
your finals came after the holidays. You took all your books home,
looked at them, and felt guilty, but didn’t do anything through
the holidays. Then went back and tried to take the finals.
I was going to the physics laboratory, but in order to get there—the
snow was blowing horizontal, it was about 15 degrees—and I went
through the main library. Doing that could take two blocks on my way,
out of the weather. I could go inside for a little bit. There was
a NASA recruiting booth sitting there, and it was 4:30 in the afternoon,
so they were packing up. I went and stopped them and started talking
to them.
A fellow named Art [Arthur J.] Thiberville was there. Art was really
a great person, stayed friends with him all the time I was here once
I was hired. That was it. I talked to them, and they tell me what
they want to do, and I certainly liked that, and they liked what I
had to say. I said, “But I just got here. I don’t have
my Master’s.”
They said, “You don’t need a Master’s. You want
to work for Johnson Space Center, a Bachelor’s is pretty good.”
In fact, I used to joke about that. You only had to breathe about
10 or 15 times a minute and you’re in. “We’re going
to do this Apollo [Program] and we need people.” They handed
me half an inch [thick stack] of paper. Literally, it was so many
pieces of paper. I skipped the rest of that night, went home and spent
the entire time filling out, with my little portable typewriter, all
this information required. It literally was like security questions.
“How many times have you been out of the country?” I was
21 at this time.
So, I’d be calling back to home to find out. “Well, we’d
been to Canada.”
“When?”
“I don’t know when!”
I made up a bunch of dates, I literally did. They said, “It’s
about four times (to Canada).” Okay, I made up dates. We just
sent it in, I assumed nobody will know.
That was it. About—I did it that night—and about 10 days
later, this phone call came, and it’s Art. He says, “We’d
like to hire you. Come down here to JSC, and work with us.”
I said, “Okay, that’s good.”
He said, “But this is how it works. I’ve got to send a
letter to you, so you’ll get that. That’s the official
offer; you sign it and send it back.”
I said, “Don’t send it here, send it to my home address.
I’m out of here.” Literally, I put down the phone, I went
upstairs and I called—I had told my landlady I was gone—I
called my dad, who is a machinist in the mines in Butte, Montana.
I said, “I’m going to leave school.” He knew I was
really miserable at Christmas, but he thought the kind of thing that
parents do. I said, “No, I’m taking a job with NASA, and
I need to get out of here so I can be ready to do whatever I need
to do.”
He said, “I just got home.” His shift was like mid-week.
He said, “Let me get something to eat, and I’ll head out.”
(This is what parents do for kids.)
He’s going to drive six hours through the middle of winter—because
this January—in Montana and Idaho, and did. I said, “Okay,
just meet me in Coeur d’Alene [Idaho], because I’m going
to get on a bus here in an hour, and I’ll be there, so you’ll
save some trip time.” I did, he did, we grabbed my trunk, threw
it in the car, and then I drove the rest of the time. He went to sleep,
because we got back into town about 7 o’clock. He got up, took
a shower, and went to work.
Anyway, that’s the deal. I was ready to go, almost immediately.
Then everything slowed down. Security was all heavy-duty at that time,
during the Cold War. I started teaching school, substitute teaching.
I did that until they finally called, and I was to report on May 2nd,
down here at JSC. Then I buy a car—I didn’t have a car.
I was penniless, a grad [graduate] student. I got a car, and then
three weeks before I was supposed to report, Art called me and said,
“It’s about that job.” I thought, “Oh, crap,
they read the resume.”
They said, “No, no, no, everything’s fine.” He says,
“But we’d like to see if it’s okay if we send you
to Florida instead of Houston. Still working for us here, but we need
a position filled down there real quick.”
I said, “Yes, hell yes.” Things fly from there (Florida),
it couldn’t be better.
They said, “Okay, you’re going to work for a different
branch at JSC.” Oh by the way, back at the interview, they said,
“It’s too bad you came so late that day at the school,
but we’ve made assignments in all of our jobs that we had except
one, and it’s in flight simulation.”
I said, “I’d take it. What is it?” I had a pretty
good idea, but still, “I want you to tell me, what you’re
talking about.” So I had jumped from the simulation branch in
Houston, run by Stan [Stanley] Faber, and I jumped over and switched
over to a guy named Riley [D.] McCafferty, who worked down there.
On the second of May, which was a Monday, I came down. I got to Cocoa
Beach [Florida] the night before, and reported in the next day. That
started it up.
It’s kind of interesting, because I got there the same day that
the first box of the Apollo simulator was arriving in this big empty
building. It was a brand-new building, they just finished building
it. That was my home for the next five years (Kennedy Space Center,
Building M7-409).
Wright: Tell
us what all was going on. You just mentioned that, but ’66 was
the height of Gemini.
Hughes: It
was absolutely true. In fact, it was interesting because Gemini VIII
occurred after I’d been hired, but before I reported, so it
was a big deal going on. When I got there, Gemini was full tilt, and
it was so interesting because the MCC [Mission Control Center] was
there for Gemini—for all of Mercury—and then the first
few Gemini, until the MCC [in Houston] came on line. On Gemini I and
II, it was controlled down there. [Gemini] III, it was parallel controlled.
The MCC in Houston came online, and they watched the one at the Cape
[Canaveral, Florida] do its job. Then on Gemini IV, they swapped,
so MCC Houston became prime on that. There were simulators in Houston
for Gemini and another one at the Cape. In Mercury, the simulators
had been in St. Louis, and one at the Cape. There was no Houston [Center]
at that time.
When I got there that first day, there was nothing to do. There was
a big empty building. There were four other guys that had been hired
before me—and we’ll talk about those later—they
were really good people, but they all had military background, or
something like that. They were coming in from different places, and
I was the first one, truly civilian, that hadn’t been through
any of the military.
We all walked up and looked at this box, what you call the CMS, the
Command Module Simulator. It was being built in Binghamton, New York
by Link [a division of Singer Corporation], and they came down. There
was going to be one in Houston and two of those in Florida. Later,
there was one Lunar Module Simulator [LMS] in Houston and two in Florida,
although ultimately as they slowed down, they never built the third
LMS simulator, so there was only one in each place.
That day, after a couple hours, we walked around and talked. This
one guy was my boss, his name is John Mitchell. He walked me around
and introduced everybody—he was a great guy. Then he said, “Okay,
we’re going to have you guys start studying the Apollo systems.
Here’s the book.” They just had one book for all these
people, and we’re all in one room, one office room. It was just
four or five desks.
They said, “Okay, I’ll take the guidance system, you take
the—” We just broke the book up into chapters and said,
“Read it, and then you can come back and tell us about it.”
Every day, you’d come in and get the same or another section
of this one book, one copy. There was only one small Xerox machine
at that time. There was just nothing, no processes. This is in a different
building from the one at the Cape. This is on MILA, the Merritt Island
Launch Area in the KSC [Kennedy Space Center] industrial complex.
The Gemini simulator and the control center were over on the Cape.
I went to lunch, went across the street to this place, found out where
the cafeterias are and all that sort of thing in the MSO [Manned Space
Operations] building out at KSC. Then Larry Thompson, another guy
who’s there, another new guy, he said, “I got to go across
to the Cape to the GMS [Gemini Mission Simulator]—.” He
was there long enough, he had trained on Gemini some, but he had been
moved over to Apollo. He’s somebody with a modicum of experience,
and now he’s going to go over to this other building.
It was kind of exciting. They said, “Do you want to go along
and see the Gemini simulator?” Well, hell yes, there’s
nothing else to do. Literally nothing assigned, except read this damn
book.
We jumped into his car and drove over, and it was all wondrous. Here’s
MCC—it’s not being used now. By then, it’s just
dark. It was the hot spot of everything going on, and a year later
it’s not being used at all. Larry went to do his thing, but
they turned me over to somebody else, and they took me in and showed
me the GMS, they called it; Gemini Mission Simulator. As they went
through it, it was really great. They said, “Want to get in?”
Yes, of course, throw me in the briar patch. They put me in it. It
was interesting. You climbed in, so I was in the commander’s
seat of a Gemini, and then they would close the door. Then they would
put the visual over it, so you could actually look out the window.
It was very, very simple; all you could do is see an Agena spacecraft,
if you had done the right maneuvers and rendezvoused with it. The
visual was just a little TV, and you’d see this Agena sitting
out there.
I get in and start farting around with it, and I was just having a
good time. They launched me, and I was in orbit. They said, “Now,
if you turn on this computer—.” They had little Gemini
computer that was only a 4k machine, 4,000 words of memory, and you
could do these computations. The instructor is very literal; you just
tell me how to do this rendezvous, because we’re all excited
about how it was done.
(By the way, we’re doing a rendezvous to the International Space
Station now in four revs [revolutions], after launch [M=4]. We did
it in one orbit. It was M equals one [M=1]. You would launch, and
you would rendezvous, poof, you’re right there. We got so conservative
on the Shuttle. I kept saying, “Why are we doing this? You’re
wasting days and days of fuel.” Anyway, that’s a whole
different story.)
I was in there buried in this simulator and Larry comes over the headset—now
I’m hearing him on the headset. He says, “Frank, let’s
go. I want to go back. Are you done?”
I was going to say, “Okay,” but somebody pipes up and
says, “Gus is still here and he’s going back over in about
an hour.”
I said—I don’t know who the hell Gus is, but “If
it’s okay, I’ll get a ride.”
Somebody (another voice) says, “Oh yes, he can get a ride.”
I get through; they take me through all these maneuvers. I get out
of the simulator, and meet Gus [Virgil I.] Grissom. First day out,
that’s my first real dyed-in-the-wool astronaut there. He is
cool, Gus is just Gus. He was such a great guy always. He immediately
says, “Oh, you’re the new guy, huh?” Because they’re
all assembling, new people are just flown in every week. “There’s
the new guy,” or something like that all the time.
“Yes, I’m me,” and that’s it.
He says, “Where you from?”
“Montana.”
“Oh hell, I go hunting in Montana all the time.” Those
kinds of coincidences happen a lot, things start connecting up. He
says, “Okay, are you ready to go?”
I said, “Now I am.” He walks out, and he’s got a
new blue Corvette. One of the Jim Rathmann’s [owner of a local
Corvette dealership] things, there’s a whole story about that.
He says, “You ready?” I’m am trying to strap in,
because there was hardly any seatbelts in cars at that time.
I said, “Where’s the [seatbelt]?” (I had one in
my car, but I had to install it though.)
He said, “No seatbelts.” He puts it in gear and roars
off. The geography down there is there’s a long freeway, and
it goes up and down the length of the Cape. Then off of it are all
these two-lane roads that would go to each of the pads along the way.
Of course, this was Mercury Control Center, so it was the control
for three different pads that fired Atlas rockets. You would come
off this freeway, turn down half a mile, and then make a turn into
the smaller area, which is where the Control Center was. That was
gravel; this is not big-city. We’re still out in the Florida
scrub country.
He puts it into gear, and he just floors it, and we go racing up this
half-mile gravel road, and he’s going about 85 miles an hour.
When he turns onto the two-lane road, without any slowdown or stop,
now he’s got it up to about 120, going toward the freeway. He
looks at me with a big grin and said, “Are you having a good
time?” Just like one of those things where your hair’s
going back like this [streaming back in the wind].
“Oh yes.”
He was going to check out the new guy to see how he’d do. Then
he turned onto that freeway going north, to get back to the Merritt
Island side. He was about 140 miles an hour, going north. All these
guys, they were just bulletproof, literally. They just played all
the time. They would get a new car every six months, as soon as the
ashtrays were full or whatever then that was it, they would turn them
in. Then Rathmann would sell them saying, “Gus Grissom used
to drive this car.” And it was only about $500 a year or something
like that, a leased arrangement.
Wright: Yes.
Good deal.
Hughes: They
hardly paid anything. It was an awesome deal. I used to drive Corvettes
back and forth from the Cape to Houston. I came down a lot, and if
they wanted to get rid of one, it was time to turn it in and it was
in Houston, then they would say, “Here’s my gas card.
Will you drive it back?”
“Oh yes.” Stop by Tallahassee, and Gainesville, and all
the women’s schools along the way. I’m 22, and then get
back to work down there.
Or they’d have the other way. “Will you take my car to
Houston? When are you going?”
“I’m leaving Thursday.”
“Okay, here’s the gas card.”
“Okay.” I said, “But I was going to stop over in
Nashville.”
“That’s okay. Just use the gas card.”
Wright: Good
deal.
Hughes: It
was a good deal. Fell into that briar patch and it was awesome.
Wright: As
you were reading those chapters of the book, getting up on the Apollo
simulators, how did that all transpire? Were you part of what set
up down there for that training?
Hughes: Yes,
when I came in, the first CMS 1 was being built here in Houston at
the same time as CMS 2. It was just like CMS 1 was about three months
ahead as the pieces were coming together. You have to imagine, the
simulator was constructed. There was a “crew station”
inside of it. It was built to replicate the Command Module. You had
a place where three people sit. There’s no service module, that’s
all virtual, because you just did it in software. CMS had this extensive
visual system that wrapped around it, and I can show you pictures
of it sometime. What it amounts to is that you would be in this situation
and you’d look out the forward windows if you were doing rendezvous,
or if you’re in orbit you could look down and you could see
the Earth going by.
It was an amazing neat visual system. It was done by a company that
contracted from Link called Farrand Optical [Company]. They were in
the Bronx, New York. They don’t exist anymore, and I stayed
in touch with many, many of the people over the years. They were optics
experts. They did a lot of work, like refueling simulators for the
Air Force, over the years.
They did the simulation for this CMS simulator. The first thing that
came was a piece of the visual system. The structure [for the visual]
had to be put up, then the Command Module piece came, and it just
rolled in underneath all this structure. Then they had to do this
optical alignment. There were 10 of us [instructors] there that were
for this first delivery—there were 8 of us, I guess, it was.
A couple of leaders—the CMS 2, it was called. CMS 1 was Houston,
2 and then 3 were down there, Command Module Simulator 2.
This guy came with it, and they were going to assemble this simulator.
They were coming down from New York, coming to Florida. They were
all excited about being there. Some were going to just come down for
the assembly; some were coming down to live because they were going
to support this simulator over time. There’s a lot of really,
really good people that came along. When it started, it was just an
assemblage of boxes of gear
I’ve got to stop for a minute. My degree was in Physics, remember,
that’s what I did. What I began to realize, that everybody was
else was an engineer, except one guy. We got to be very good friends,
the two of us [Pleddie Baker].
Those engineers knew so much more about their subject area, if they
were aerospace guys, or if they’re electrical engineering guys,
or if they’re mechanical engineering guys. An analogy is like
the icicles on the side of a house. They were like one of those icicles.
They would go all the way down, they knew so much deep into the subject.
They had studied it all so much more than I, but they didn’t
know anything about anything else. The electrical guys didn’t
know any mechanical; the electrical or mechanical guys didn’t
know any orbital mechanics, only the aero guys.
In physics, I had studied all those subjects. My education was a broad
brush across all of these disciplines. Physics is a study of how things
work. All things, so I knew optics, I knew orbital mechanics, I knew
electronics, I knew mechanical engineering at my level. I could speak
to these guys building this simulator. Everybody else could come out,
and if it was one of their subjects they’d get interested in
it, but if it’s some other system, they just didn’t seem
to warm up to it.
Pretty soon, I knew these simulator experts all of the time. Literally,
they started calling me out when they had a question. I became the
interface to the NASA cadre there. “They need 400 cycle, 160
volt AC power supply,” because they need to do this test. Then
their gear crumped, or it didn’t get delivered, or they never
thought of bringing it, or whatever the hell happened.
Pretty soon, I was just going back and forth, like I had done in school.
I was always a lab assistant; we just did stuff like that. Suddenly
I’m doing it with them, but inherently I’m learning more
about how this simulator works. I didn’t design it; I didn’t
have anything to do with that, because I wasn’t there yet, but
I sure as hell got to know how it worked. What is it supposed to do?
Not everything that it did every time; it didn’t deliver, sometimes,
what they said, but it delivered a lot. Over time period, it just
started to be better and better. It was a good simulator.
At first, we couldn’t get it going. Gus, one time—he was
going to be flying the first flight—he came out there, and he
called it a train wreck because of all of this visual gear hanging
over it. He hung a lemon on it one day; he was just so upset with
how badly it behaved. Of course, there were people working 24 hours
a day trying to make it better. A lot of it was due to flight software,
and we haven’t got into that yet. The way it worked in this
case, there was no need to simulate computers in the other simulator
up to this time.
What happened is that the people who built this simulator had decided
to have a computer to pretend to be the guidance computer on board.
The computers—they were just slow, relative to everything we
do today, it was very, very slow. The [simulator] computers acted
like the spacecraft were there, and there were three of them working
together. They were called DDP 224s, and they had all kinds of software
modules that we developed for this simulator, uniquely. They didn’t
have these computer buses—you plug it in the wall and so much
data runs through that pipe now, but then it didn’t.
The problem was, whatever they had, it was too slow. Then these actually—these
machines, three of them—had common memory. They had developed
a software method where two machines could write into the same memory
block. That meant if you wanted to give something to this machine,
it writes pretty fast, in a relative sense. It would write to the
memory, the other one would read it out of the memory. That was so
much faster, so this common memory, they call it. It’s shared
memory, so there was computer one, two, three, if you can imagine.
Then there was a fourth machine for each of these CMS that was called
ISAGC. Interpretively Simulated Apollo Guidance Computer, and it was
another one of those same DDP 224s, but it’s been modified.
They physically took its guts apart, and changed it so it had the
same instructions that the Apollo computer could do. There’s
a guy around here named Jim Rainey. You ought to talk to him sometime,
just about the ISAGC. It’s mentioned a lot in that Digital Apollo
[Human and Machine in Spaceflight, David A. Mindell], but Rainey was
the king of that ISAGC around here. He didn’t know a damn thing
about flying spacecraft or anything like that, but he could make computers
work. He is a great guy, still, a wonderful human being, and so bright.
The architecture is starting to come together; I’m beginning
to see what’s going on. It was interesting, because the Apollo
Guidance Computer, AGC—the software came from MIT [Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, Cambridge], at that time. Literally, they
could build the software, write a tape, send it to us, and now we
can put the real software—just like it was going to work in
the real vehicle, where the real box is. This is very much different
than this simulator computer that we’re running.
That’s it, the interpreter, and that’s what they call
it. It’s like you took the software for your iPod and put it
in an Android machine and it ran. You had to have a package around
it to make it feel comfortable in there. That’s what this interpreter
did; the computer changed so that it wasn’t the same instructions.
It tells it add, multiply, divide, things like that, whatever you
want to do, but it had instructions in the Apollo computer that this
ISAGC didn’t have, and vice versa. They had to make sure the
instruction set matched.
That happened through that summer of ’66, they were putting
it together. CMS 2 came up and started running, power on it, probably
about end of June, the pieces came together. Not the visual, but the
systems simulation piece of it. It was a big event. There were eight
balls—FDI, flight director indicators, using an eight ball in
an airplane—just to power up and see it jump all of a sudden,
because here it is sitting in a box all of the time. Put in the item
and suddenly power’s on, and so the CMS is alive. It was just
like the whole device, a piece at a time, came alive. All those devices
you see in the movies, like Apollo 13, you can see the instrumentation
move. They did a great job faking it there, but to see it for real
was awesome.
I hadn’t yet been to the real spacecraft, I’ve only seen
drawings. Now suddenly, I became totally familiar with the acreage
around there. Every switch, they said throw the so-and-so switch,
you just reach up and you knew where it was, because it’s like
your car after awhile. You spent so much time, because you’re
inside the simulator, sitting. In the simulator, you laid on your
back. The guy in the navigation station stood up, so you could do
the navigation. That meant you were like when you landed, or when
you launched, so you’re laying on your back. Am I anywhere that
you want to be?
Wright: Yes,
it’s great. Talk about the work processes though, because everything
was moving so fast. You’re at ’66, you’re trying
to make it to the end of the decade. Apollo’s not up, Gus Grissom’s
not happy because he feels things should be [better].
Hughes: Yes,
all the stuff that came together. Gus was unhappy—there was
a couple things. The simulations weren’t working good, because
the interpreter [ISAGC] wasn’t quite right yet. It was coming
together. The simulator systems weren’t quite good, but they
were coming together. The crew would go across the street to the MSO,
where the vehicle was there, spacecraft 12, 012, that’s it’s
designation. There was a whole vehicle. There were two designs, Block
I and Block II spacecraft, and there were two spacecraft, 012 and
014 were supposed to be first two flights. Then, they moved to a smarter,
better set of spacecraft that would be the Apollo, the ones that would
leave Earth orbit.
He was assigned to fly 012, and they’d go over, and it didn’t
work very good either. They would say, “We’re frustrated
in all directions.” Everything was having difficulties. There
was a lot of problem with communications all the time, in the spacecraft.
The simulator worked pretty good. He’s was always saying, “What
the hell, they could get the comm [communications] working better
over across the street than it is over here.” On the other hand,
when he turned on a computer over there, it ran because it was the
computer, where ours was still trying to fake this thing into thinking
that it’s the computer. They were going back and forth. I say
that the pace was a big deal [part of their frustrations].
When we were in about July, the simulator was pretty good. When I
was first there, in that first month, Gemini 9 occurred. I had nothing
to do with 9, except I got to know these guys, and I was on the console
on the Gemini simulator while they were inside. This is Tom [Thomas
P.] Stafford and Gene [Eugene A.] Cernan, and it was really cool to
watch it going on. That simulator was working pretty good, in a relative
sense. It was a very simple simulator, so it didn’t have to
do much. It did well at what it was doing, because it had matured.
That’s the one where they lost the Agena on the way uphill,
and then they scrubbed that day. Then they put it back together, and
then they had this ATDA [Augmented Target Docking Adapter]—they
were going to dock to this ATDA anyway. Then it came up and the cover
wouldn’t come off, and that’s the angry alligator flight,
where they fly and they do it. Then they were going to rendezvous
and dock with the ATDA, and [Tom Stafford] was going to hold it all
together and Gene would go outside, and that’s when we began
to unravel all of the problems with EVA [extravehicular activity].
These guys were not physically ready for this; they were not in shape
in a relative sense. They didn’t have to be. Nobody thought
about this. It was going to be easy, because you’re going into
space. [They thought] there were enough handholds, there were enough
places to put your feet. Between 9, 10, 11, 12, all of those things,
lots of handholds outside, tethers [were added].
Gene got back in; he was going to fly a backpack [an early version
of the Astronaut Maneuvering Unit, AMU] around. It’s a good
thing he never got it loose, because he was so winded by the time
he got back there, and he was overtaxing the environmental system
of the suit. When you’re in space, you’ve got plus 250
[degrees Fahrenheit] on the Sun side of your body and minus 250 [degrees]
on the other. The attitude that we chose to put him back into that
equipment module, by the time he got back there—he was slow
moving, so it was dark. It was on the dark side of the Earth, and
although there are a couple of lights, he couldn’t see what’s
going on.
By that time, the suit starts getting cold, which means he started
getting vapor on the face plate, so he couldn’t see. It was
almost like he’s blind. Now he’s way out of the cabin,
a long way to get back. Fortunately, Tom said, “Just settle
down. Breathe, settle down. Blow off the timeline and come on back.
Just work your way back in, we’ll get back inside.” Then
they could hardly get him back inside, because he was just winded,
just tired.
Then Gemini 10 came, that was with John [W.] Young and Mike [Michael]
Collins. They did everything they had to do, they did a great one.
They had put a couple of handholds on the Agena. They went out and
grabbed this package that they were supposed to retrieve; they did
everything, except they lost a camera. But they did everything that
they were supposed to do. Everybody starts saying, “Oh, we’re
getting pretty good at this.” But John and Mike were in good
shape and they practiced continuously.
Then Gemini 11 comes along, and Dick [Richard F.] Gordon goes out—Pete
[Charles Conrad] is in the cockpit—and he damn near kills himself
out there. He was supposed to do a lot of transition up on the Agena
vehicle and retrieve a package there too. Same kind of [problems occurred].
When he went forward, he couldn’t hold on. He was trying to
ride this Agena like a horse, and it was just terrible, terrible time.
He was exhausted. Of course, he smoked till the day of liftoff. Now,
everybody’s back is against the wall again, saying, “This
EVA is really tough.” The mockup used for the training at this
time is in the same building where we are building the Apollo simulator.
I’m in the middle of all this chaos going on. I’m not
typically an EVA guy, but it’s all going around you, so you
make your inputs. This is not a simulator problem; this is a physical
EVA problem with mock-ups. The empty parts of the building, there’s
lots of room, so they had mock-ups there, in Florida, so these guys
could practice right up to the day of launch. It’s where other
simulators are going to be, but they just rolled in these mock-ups,
bringing them down from Houston.
Then Buzz [Aldrin] came along, and did his EVA, and it worked great.
He had seen everybody do it wrong, and had time, with a lot of people
to see, “Okay, you need more handholds and tethers.” That’s
the first time we had the foot restraint. When he got to some work
place, you could put your feet into this support foothold device.
Then you would spread your heels out, and that would click into a
lock that would hold you that way. That anchored you till you wanted
to move somewhere else.
That’s what you do when you do an EVA—even to this day—when
you ride on the RMS [Remote Manipulator System] on Shuttle. You’d
get into this foothold, and so your big heavy boots just slide in.
If you put an outward pressure, then you had on the outside of each
foot a small steel plate that would fit into a lock. Now you just
stayed there, and to get out of it, you just had to move your feet
back together and you were free to pull out. That anchor made it all
good and EVA is much easier.
By that time though, they had given up on flying the AMU device. Buzz
went back in the equipment module and he was playing with this—they
called it a busy box. It was where you could turn levers, throw switches,
or tighten bolts. The idea was so that you could see that you were
counteracting your weight. You could turn a wrench, because now he’s
anchored down pretty good, so it acts like a wrench, a regular one,
and it doesn’t twist you the wrong direction. He went out and
played that whole busy box device.
All these events were going on, and at the same time, that took us
up through the end of ’66. At that same time, we had gotten
the simulator going, and it got better, and better, and better. Along
the way, my astronomy knowledge kicked in, because on Apollo you had
to do cislunar navigation. You had to actually navigate to the Moon
and back if you lost voice comm. The crews had to know the stars;
there were 51 navigation stars that they had to know. That by itself
was a problem. We did some tests on Gemini, and on the day side, it
was hard to find any stars. Just because even though you’re
150 miles up, there’s still a sheen across the sky. There’s
still enough air molecules that the bright, bright Sun makes it hard
to find anything but the brightest of stars.
On the dark side, it was so good, that the people couldn’t find
the stars because they could see too many. You depend on these bright
stars, and then there’s a few other stars, when you look at
the night sky, maybe you’ll see 2,000 stars. It’s just
amazing, if you get into the shadow of the Earth, you look up, and
you cannot see the constellations, because there’s so damn many
stars in-between all those bright ones that are almost as bright.
You see more than 10,000 stars. That was something that I got involved
with big time. We took crews up to University of North Carolina [at
Chapel Hill]. There was a planetarium up there, Morehead Planetarium
[and Science Center], so we took them up there and taught them the
stars in that environment.
Then we would take them somewhere out in the boondocks in Florida,
and say, “This is better than the planetarium, because here
it is now. Can you still find Canopus, and Altair, and Polaris, and
every one of the 51 stars that you had to know?” You had to
develop these gouges like if you take the two stars at the end of
the Big Dipper, and if you follow it, it points to Polaris. There
were all these things that we came up with. We didn’t invent
that one, but that’s one I teach a lot of people. If you go
out in the summertime, and if you find the Dipper, and if you look
at the Dipper and you see the handle, the handle makes an arc. You’d
say, “Follow the arc to Arcturus”, which is one of our
navigation stars in Boötes constellation. Then you speed on to
Spica, which is in Virgo, so that’s another. All these little
gouges like that are simple, but mentally, they could see. We had
a checklist; we had this image. Here’s the star, and here’s
these little gouges with an arc going from the Dipper handle to star
number A and star number B, just so they could find them. That worked,
that was pretty well done.
Going back on the simulator, that was the best star simulator we had
ever had. They had a two and a half foot diameter ball, a black sphere,
and they had mounted steel balls on it. They had actually half drilled
so you could take a steel ball and set it, and glue it into the ball.
They did about 1,900 stars. It’s used what is called a specular
reflection. If you look at this mouse, it’s not round, but this
round object, you can see how you’re seeing the reflection here.
If you have one that’s very, very solid that’s white,
then you’ll only see one point. The Sun is shining on it, you
have one point. Looking at a distance, it looks like a star. It doesn’t
show like a ball anymore; it’s called a specular reflection.
They were just incredible, gorgeous stars. They even colored it a
little bit; some of the stars are kind of like orangey, so they put
on little gold-covered ball on there, and you had some image of color
as well. It was just something else, so much better than anything
we’ve done, even till today. The digital simulations, if it’s
a real faint star it’s one pixel, and if it’s a little
bit brighter, it’s two pixels. Whoa! Two pixels, so it’s
a little line there, if you put three of them, or four, and so on.
It’s never the same, and you’re getting more brightness
behind more pixels, but that’s not the way the world works.
We survived, and trained all these guys over the years, but those
first ones were the best. In fact, I want to get a star ball and put
it over in Space Center Houston sometime, just to let people see what
it makes. You could turn on a light and look at that, so you could
see what the night sky would look like up there.
Wright: Yes,
that would be neat.
Hughes: Yes.
The Smithsonian [Institution, Washington, DC] still has some star
balls. There was four big ones and one small one in each of the CMSs,
and two for the Lunar Module window. When you looked out the window,
you saw the stars. Then they had a telescope for navigation also,
so most of those star balls are lost. Probably in somebody’s
house.
Wright: Yes,
somebody’s back attic somewhere.
Hughes: Exactly.
Like the pieces that are missing on the Saturn V, we can take a tour
around there, I can show you all of the pieces that are just gone.
Wright: Gone
over there.
Hughes: Yes,
somebody recycled them actually, I think.
Wright: Yes,
I think that happened a lot. Let’s talk about January 1967.
Hughes: All
of this simulation activity, I was getting pretty good at this. Luckily
I was a pretty quick study, but on top of that, I was single. Everybody
else married during that time, or was married when they arrived. That
meant at the end of the day, they had to go be married, and do whatever
that meant. At the end of the day, everybody put the pieces back together
in the book. I’m the only one that said, “Okay,”
and I took it home. I just sat there and read the damn book at the
kitchen table. First of all, it’s like with a new job, you come
into town, you have enough money to pay the rent. Then your first
check, you pay the next month’s rent. It takes time before you
start getting ahead, so the first two or three months, there was nothing
else I was going to do.
I read the damn book, inside and out, and then of course I had questions.
I’d go find the person, or I had to call them up in Houston.
I’d say, “Who knows about this?”
They’d say, “Nobody.” It was so funny.
“There must be somebody, somebody wrote this. Who wrote this?”
They’d help me find out if it was somebody at North American,
out in Los Angeles. The nice thing about it is I never had, up to
this moment, the idea of long distance. Pick up a phone, dial 9, and
just dial across the country. God, it was great. I not only would
call them and ask them how it worked, I’d say, “Why does
it say this?”
They’d say, “Oh, I meant to change that.” It was
great, so I’d exchange data with them. Then they just said,
“What’s your name?”
“I’m down here at KSC.” I said, “If you’re
ever down, come on down here.” You start building connections,
so it was great.
Somewhere in August and September, we finally put the crew in the
simulator for the first time. This is the downfall of the lemon thing.
Larry Thompson that I told you about was the chief instructor for
the simulator, and he gets in, and there are three or four of us instructors
sitting around with our headsets on just being eager to listen in
to hear the master doing his thing. It was Jim [James A.] McDivitt,
Rusty [Russell L.] Schweickart, and I think Dave [David R.] Scott,
and accidentally, the Apollo 9 crew, but it wasn’t intended
to come together like that, they were just three people sent in to
check out the simulator. Hell, Gus, maybe Deke [Donald K. Slayton],
might’ve already had some idea. There they are, and they get
in the simulator, and they got it running, and we launched. On the
way uphill there was some question, and they said, “Why is it
doing this?”
Larry said, “I don’t know. We’ll take a note of
it, and we’ll get back to you and see what’s going on.”
Then they get into orbit, and there’s something wrong with the
guidance system. “Should this be like that?” They’d
have questions.
He’d say, “Wait a minute, I’ll take a note, and
we’ll get back to you afterward.”
The third time, I said, “Larry, I think it’s because this.
If they do this or throw this switch, it’ll be all right.”
He said, “Are you sure?”
I said, “Yes.”
He said, “Why don’t you try turning this switch on,”
and it worked.
They said, “Okay,” and then they just went on. Two or
three more times like that, and each time I happened to know because
I’d memorized the damn book. I learned how it’s supposed
to work.
Each time Larry said, “I didn’t know that.”
“Just have them try it.” He did; a confidence building
up kind of thing.
Then they asked something else, and it was more involved. By this
time he goes, “Do you know?”
I said, “Yes, I think it’s this.”
“Well, just tell them.”
Of course I said, “I think try this, da-da-da-da.”
They did, and then McDivitt said, “Who’s this?”
He knows Larry; they’ve worked together for a couple of years.
Larry introduced me, and from then on, I began gradually to be the
go-to guy. If it was simulators, then go to Frank. There were a lot
of other good people, I just happened to be there early on, and it
came together. It was that same thing.
Then they’d start to say, “Go to MIT next week, because
there’s a new software load coming, and we’re going to
do something.” This was this guy named Riley McCafferty [Branch
Chief]; he had no clue what the hell this thing did. He knew Gemini
but he didn’t know anything about Apollo, except whatever we
told him. He said, “Go to MIT and get smarter. Go for a week.”
So, I did, and it was funny. Now it was getting into November. I went
up there, and it snowed like hell. Have you ever been in Boston in
snow? I had to be in Cambridge, that’s where I’m staying
because MIT’s Instrumentational Laboratory was part of the school
at that time. Later it became independent and became separate.
I went to this Greek restaurant that I found; somebody at the hotel,
at the Marriot sent me down the road, and said, “Go to this
place, it’s really good food.” I do and the food is great.
Now it’s snowing again, it’s really snowing. I’ve
got this rent-a-car, and I’m in the middle of Cambridge, lost.
There’s a cop going by, walking the beat.
I said, “I need to get back to the Marriot.”
He says, “Oh, okay. You go down this way, you turn left into—no.”
Then he says, “Now you go here, and you turn immediately right
here, and then you go to your right—no.” Then he says,
“I don’t think you can get there from here.”
Wright: Oh
goodness.
Hughes: I
always loved that. I wanted somebody to tell me that. “I just
don’t think you can get there from here.”
“That’s okay, I’ll find it.” I got to the
car, and I went to the river. I know the hotel was on the Charles
River. Turn left, and there it was. I treasured that memory, those
two things that happened that night. There was that conversation with
the police officer, and my first time I had baklava. It was all good.
I started going to Boston a lot, and then in the middle of January,
they had a simulator out in Downey [California] called ME—it’s
a Mission Evaluator simulator. They had real computers in it, real
flight computers. They weren’t trying to fake anything; it was
the real deal. There’s a simulation of the system, which was
pretty good too. Not as good as ours was supposed to be, but damn
good at the time. I wound up going out and spending the week of 15
January there, with the Apollo 1 crew, and it was a really good time.
The simulator worked well, they got a lot done that week, and they
got a lot of confidence that they knew what the hell was going on.
The mission was coming together.
They were three weeks away from launch, and our simulator was still
not doing as good as it should. There were still so many problems.
If you align a platform, that is, you had to look up at stars and
actually tell the platform where it was, so you could then rotate
yourself around and know what was going on. It didn’t work;
I mean the real one didn’t work, the real spacecraft. They would
just find ways to work around that, and we did that. In the ME, we
were getting it all done. I learned a whole lot of things, and it
was like being with your family. We were just close, going out after
work. It was interesting, some nights one or the other one would be
gone somewhere with family, or friends, or whatever out there. We’d
go to dinner, and then everybody would split off, because they had
things to do and study, or cat around. I was just bombarded with information.
Then we flew back home. I left Friday night, got back to Melbourne
[Florida]. We landed—Orlando or Melbourne were the two places—we
used to routinely fly into Melbourne; nobody does that anymore. Then
I went in on second shift Sunday night and all week with the idea
I was working with the visual guys. They said, “This is how
it’s got to do. This is how it’s got to be,” and
with the AGC guys, the [Apollo] guidance computer guys. “I saw
it do this, this sucker’s got to do it, because I just saw one
do it.” It was a really profitable week. I didn’t see
the crew, because they were on day shift and I didn’t overlap
coming in. I’d come in at 3 [p.m.] and work to 12 midnight or
plus.
They were in the building, our simulator building, on Thursday, because
they ran a sim [simulation] with Houston. Then the next day, the backup
crew was in the simulator, and that one, I did see Wally [Wallace
M. Schirra]. They were just through with the sim, and they were leaving.
I said, “We had a great week in Downey, and I got some of this
new information, and you’ve got to see some of this next week.”
He says, “Cool.” They got in their cars and left, and
then get in the T-38s and go home.
I was the only NASA guy there in the evening this week. You’d
always have somebody who was in charge, that’s like a building
manager, that’s what we called it. Contractors would come and
say, “We need to do this or that,” and they’d just
bless them and say go for it. They knew what they were doing. It was
always easy to work them that way, if you know what to do, go do it.
About 5:30, or something like that, somebody says, “Something
wrong with the crew? Have you heard anything?”
I said, “No.”
He says, “Well, somebody called me from across the Cape.”
I says, “I don’t know. They were in yesterday.”
They were in the spacecraft, so I try to walk in and call, and the
phone was ringing. From then on, it was all hell broke loose. The
crew was injured; at first, that was what we knew, that they had an
accident. Then it just got worse, and worse, and worse. The crew was
dead. By 6:30, my boss came back. People don’t know what to
do, they came back in, and we were sitting there for a while.
Then it was amazing how fast it went. They knew the crew was dead,
they were gone. I’d never had anybody in my life who died, and
now you have three in the same day. That was bad by itself. Then Deke
called, and he talked to McCafferty, my branch chief. He said, “We
need to get somebody to go out and check the switches in the spacecraft.
They’re not sure that the crew might’ve thrown a switch
or something that caused it. Can you get one of your guys to head
out?”
He said, “Frank’s here.”
Deke, who I knew well by then said, “Perfect. You two guys come
over.” We jump in the car and we drive over to the 34. They
wanted me to slide in on a board and write down all the positions
of the switches before they took the bodies out. I’m handling
this, driving over, thinking about how this is going to go on.
We got there and stopped at the pad, and Deke was there. He said,
“No. We don’t have to do that.” He said, “Some
of the switches are melted; they’re going to have to take them
apart to find out what happened.” Of course, he was saying,
“They didn’t cause this.” There’s no way that
you could do it. At least I did not have to slide in with people that
you know, and work with, and love and whatever else. Then they went
back, and they said, “Okay, but since you’re here all
night—,” looking at me.
I said, “Oh yes.”
He said, “Okay. Go over to the MSO, and you’re going to
put everybody up in the crew quarters. People are coming in from all
over the country, give them one of the rooms in the crew quarters,
and set it up.” I was like Howard Johnson for the rest of the
night. All these people were showing up, big name scientists and everybody.
Frank Borman came running back out of Houston. He jumped in a T-38
and ran down.
The whole idea is that they were starting the investigation group.
So, everybody was coming in, and they’d say, “Have you
still got room available?”
I’d say, “I got room, send them out here,” so that
they’d be here, they’d be able to go close to the spacecraft.
Compared to the investigations from the other accidents that we had
later, it was so professional. So, I worked until about 10 the next
morning, and then I went home. I was the quartermaster to make sure
there was enough food; I got extra cooks in to cook up [food], send
them off and get food so everybody could get breakfast. All this just
to keep it going, which is great, because I didn’t have to think
too much about the rest of it. It was a hell of a day.
Wright: Considering
what, less than two years before you were in Idaho.
Hughes: Oh
yes, freezing my ass, trying to stay out of the snow.
Wright: Now
you were in the midst of an accident investigation.
Hughes: Yes,
in fact, one year it was literally [one year]. It was January, because
I came in in May and January is when I’d—it’s one
year, almost exactly to the date. Yes, it’s a date and two weeks.
Wright: Time
only in calendar days though.
Hughes: Oh
yes.
Wright: You
had had many, many nights of [work]. We’d like to hear the rest
of this episode of the following days, and how things started moving
forward.
Hughes: Yes,
it was interesting, because immediately these really good people—and
again, I just met people. It put me in a position where I met all
kinds of other astronauts. Like Borman, I just met him there. Of course,
we worked closely on Apollo 8, later. He knew what I could do, and
I could get anything. After work sometimes I’d just go over
and look at the spacecraft. It’s the best thing about working
in Florida instead of Houston. At Houston, it’s just a white-collar
job. Get down to Florida, and it’s a dangerous, highly industrial
business. Everything will either burn you, freeze you, poison you,
or crush you. Those guys down there at KSC are in the real space business.
We up here [at JSC] are like spectators, that’s what it really
amounts to. They think they’re in the catbird seat, but really
they have no clue. I always say nobody should be able to work in the
Control Center unless you go down and not just see a launch, but you
see the ballet that goes on before it’s ready. With all those
guys, and the escape suits, and all the dangerous fumes around, and
all that they have to do. That’s the real world. Sometimes we’d
be very frustrated, and we’d step outside. You’d just
think, “Goddamn simulator, I want to blow it up.” You’d
walk outside, and they’d be moving a piece of hardware. Real
hardware, going out to the pad. You could say, “This is the
real world.” Kind of get reanimated and go back into the building
and work hard again. All of us, we talked about that a lot down there.
The guys here were so good, the people that did all the jobs, and
I’m talking about not just everybody in Mission Control, but
that simulator team. We just lucked out to be in this other place,
where the crews would come through there, and they got to know them,
and do everything, and they put their fingerprints on.
You come down here, and then it’s almost like life and death.
This is real now. It’s not like you’re just farting around
in the simulator, but now I need to know how this works, because if
it doesn’t work right, I’m not coming back. It was a different
level of animation, involvement, and it’s not just me, it’s
everybody that worked there. We felt we were blessed to be at that
end, and it doesn’t exist now. The same thing happens here,
now, and you have the generic simulator training, then flight specific.
That’s what you did; you did generic training here in Houston.
This is how the electrical system works, this is how the environmental
system works. Down there you got more of a vision of the whole mission,
what has to get done.
There were three parts after the [January] 27th, because you had to
bury the crew. Everybody got ready to do this investigation about
what happened. For a long time there were people going up and down
the pad, working to get the spacecraft safed. It was already loaded
to go, so it had hypergolics in it. People had to unload that, the
professionals that would do that. Then they had to lift it off there,
lower it down, put it on a truck, and take it over in the building
across the street, in the Mission Operations building.
When you get all that going, then you had to stop, go to Arlington
[National Cemetery, Virginia]. I didn’t go, but you had to go
up there and go through [the funerals]. Everything stopped for a day
or two; everybody in the world was watching what was happening up
in Washington, and at West Point [Cemetery, United States Military
Academy, New York], by the way. Two [Grissom and Roger B. Chaffee]
were buried in Washington, and Ed [Edward H. White] is at West Point.
Then the hard slogging, of going back to work, because then all we
could do is keep one eye on this investigation, but we had to make
the simulator work. Now the date is no longer three weeks away; it’s
never, if we don’t figure out what’s going on here.
During that time, really good people came down from Binghamton [New
York]. It started a whole different set of things. A lot of changes
to the spacecraft started coming through. On the bottom on the inside
of the real spacecraft—and also in the simulator—they
had wire runs. Literally, wires were tacked down. You’d have
a screw and a clamp and it would hold a bundle of wires running around.
They were not armored or anything, so in the simulator you were walking
on them. Now these were fake wires, but you could see how they could
break. The real wires had Teflon insulation. Now Teflon—it wasn’t
new—but it was new to being used as an insulation. It’s
a great insulation, but it’s brittle. So if you put it in a
place where you stepped on it, you could crack the insulation.
Everybody gradually began to believe that the reason for the fire
is that some of this insulation on some wire was broken, one way or
another. Up underneath Gus’s [seat] on that left-hand side,
which is where the environmental controls system was. Then when the
test was going on, there was a short, and the short was near someplace
where they used an aluminum tube carrying poisonous fluid, ethylene
glycol, like antifreeze in your car.
It’s the [liquid] that kills kittens if you get a puddle in
the street. It’s also flammable, so why we were using the damn
thing? We had a pure oxygen environment, and we had this flammable
liquid used for cooling the spacecraft.
[Ethylene Glycol is a very efficient fluid for moving heat in a system.
We used it for pumping the heat out of the Command Module out to radiators
that were mounted on the Service Module. The tubes that carried the
fluid were made of aluminum. The fire inside the Command Module was
caused by a short circuit somewhere under Gus on the left side of
the spacecraft, melted one of the tubes and turned the glycol loose
in the spacecraft. (This was our best guess at the time of the accident
and I never heard anyone give a better explanation.) Since it occurred
in the module with 100 percent oxygen, the combustion of the glycol
was explosive, very fast.]
Everybody is now thinking, “What the hell were we thinking about?”
We flew the whole flight still with ethylene glycol, because we couldn’t
change. AiResearch [Environmental Control Systems], the company that
did that design, that was a done deal, it was completed. These designs
were built into it.
At least we got rid of the pure oxygen on the pad, for as long as
you could during some phases of the flight. When we started out, we
did oxygen-nitrogen, and then you purged it out as you went up during
launch. Part of it is [when] you launched, you went 15 pounds [atmospheric]
pressure, and then as you gained altitude, it dropped down [depressurized]
to 5 pounds. That spacecraft only operated at 5 pounds pressure; that
lets you be a very weaker structural shell. It was great, we never
heard about anybody having the bends in spacesuits, because when you
went in the spacesuits, they were the same pressure. That’s
why it was done.
We’re still stuck with these 5 pound spacesuits today. That
means you have to go from 15 pounds [inside the ISS or Shuttle] down
to 5. Now you’re actually having nitrogen bubbles appear in
your blood stream. You can be a damage entity when you get through
that. We’ve spent all this time with pre-breathing [to get rid
of the nitrogen in your blood], and it took some doing. If you could
even get an 8 pound spacesuit, you wouldn’t have to go through
much of that. [No good designs have occurred because of mobility problems,
the suit is too stiff.] Sometimes they would lower the Shuttle pressure
down some, and help them with their pre-breathe interval. Everybody
breathed a little bit less. It’s like if I took you to Denver’s
[Colorado] altitude or something like that and then that makes it
easier for them to get into their 5 pound suits with less danger [of
getting the bends].
All those thoughts were running around. Simulator changes started
coming in—changes to the systems, and we had to just make sure
it all works. Suddenly they sweep all this bottom of the spacecraft
clean, and put cable trays in the bottom of the simulator, which just
matched up what they were doing inside the spacecraft. Now spacecraft
12 is the one that burned up. Spacecraft 14 is the next Block I; they
just nixed that off. We were going straight to Block II, which is
S/C 101, the first one, so that was the spacecraft that had all this
new configuration. It had a hatch that you could open quickly in an
emergency. It was right in line coming; it’s like the changes
we did sometimes on the Shuttle, too. There was a better joint in
the solid motors, and it was coming three flights later after [Space
Shuttle] Challenger [STS-51L accident], instead of somebody saying,
“Stop, fix it now. Put that one in.”
The only reason this really difficult hatch was on the Command Module
was because of the hatch that blew on Gus Grissom’s Gemini flight.
Then it killed him, because they couldn’t get the damn thing
opened. They were all going to burn pretty badly when that fire started,
but there was no way to open the hatch. It was like three minutes
to open that hatch. Where after the new Block II hatch came along,
it took about 10 seconds, because the middle guy would reach up and
push a button and activate this pump handle three times, and that
hatch would pop loose. By then, they could’ve kicked it loose
and the middle guy would’ve got out for sure. There would have
been accumulating damage on the other side. Roger was hardly burned
at all; the fire was over on the left or Gus’s side.
Wright: That’s
a tough time through that investigation, I’m sure.
Hughes: Yes,
it was. It was tough times, and they roasted us all the time. “Did
you tell them?”
“Yes, they designed it. They’re part of the design process,
so yes.”
It was not near as much as the Challenger; we got a lot more from
this simulator on that one. “Did someone tell Christa [McAuliffe]
that this was a dangerous business?”
I said, “Yes, I think.” Really I’d get kind of pissy
with the guy. I said, “Listen; she’s a smart lady. If
we could take the elevators all the way up to the top of the launch
tower, and walk across, and get in, and strap into this spacecraft.
And then know that everybody else has to get three miles away. If
she didn’t figure out that this is a dangerous business by now,
there was nothing that I was going to tell her was going to make any
difference.” Buy yes, we did tell her.
That whole summer of ’67 was making the spacecraft right. Chasing
our tail in terms of they changed it one way, and then they’d
change it another way. But it got better. Along the way, the simulator
itself kept getting better. The simulations settled down; the flight
software got a lot better. It’s like one of those things where
you call a halt with a lot of crazy work and then other things were
happening that were really heartening to us. Like the first Saturn
V; Apollo 4, and then Apollo 6. Apollo 5, the LM [Lunar Module] they
lost in South America. We got smarter at a lot of things like that.
It flew off in that last burn; they intentionally burned it to depletion.
Someday somebody will find that sucker in the jungles of Peru or something
like that. It’s like the Skylab over at Australia. It was going
to go somewhere safe and then, they said, “It isn’t doing
that. It’s going somewhere else.”
Wright: Were
you going back and forth from Houston to Florida still during that
summer?
Hughes: Yes,
I was here. One thing that happened—I never thought about this
for a long time—I became a guidance navigation guy, if you were
saying what my specialty was. They created a group called the ISAGC
[Apollo guidance computer] Control Group or something like that. I
don’t [remember] the name, it hardly matters. A guy named Clair
[D.] Nelson was an instructor down here in Florida, and we co-chaired
this group so that now we knew whenever MIT put out new software,
we had a role in making sure that software was moved quickly into
both simulators, so the crew sees this new software. It meant that
there was feedback when we found something wrong with the flight software,
even though we’re not officially verifying software. We put
a crew in there with the software, it’s like the million monkeys
joke*. They’re not going to do everything that you thought they
were going to do, and they’ll do new things. That allows you
to find out what does not work correctly.
*[Million Joke: If you put a million monkeys with million typewriters,
over time, one would write something Shakespeare wrote.]
Then if something breaks, or it doesn’t run, it’s wonderful,
because we feed it back. We say we saw this happen. It was like that.
Clair was just a great engineer; he was really smart. Between the
two of us, we would wind up getting the crew the best training we
could in that regard. Everything followed along. If this AGC needed
something, it got done, and that ricocheted down. This system had
to get better down here, because the flight computer needed a better
set of data, or cleaner data. You had gyros and IMU simulations, inertial
measurement units. It got better; it made the simulator better because
the demands of the flight computer were so rigorous. They had to be.
Through ‘67, it was really good. If I wasn’t in Downey
or Houston, I would be in Cambridge working with the MIT guys. I remember
we got up there and it started getting serious; it’s at the
end of the year. It was November or December of ’67, I guess
it was. MIT had put a set of navigation gear on the roof; it had a
little observatory cover on the roof, and so you could actually look
up at the stars and use it. They had a real system, so you saw the
telescope, and the sextant, and everything. We’d go up there
with the crew, and it was wonderful. Of course, it only took them
about 37 minutes until each crew figured out that the nurses’
quarters for Massachusetts General Hospital was right across the river.
This 60 powered telescope works really good.
Wright: Oh
gosh. Keep focused, right?
Hughes: It
was heavenly bodies.
Wright: A
new kind of star. Oh, how funny.
Hughes: Everybody
learned how to use this equipment really, really well. So, we get
into ’68, more of this. It was just really a downtime, but the
two Saturn rockets launches helped so much just to reanimate everybody
and get going. Even though the Saturns had a couple of problems with
pogo [oscillation] and early engine shutdowns. But we got through
with that. Those guys were really working on those. There was 15 Saturn
V rockets built along with another called F1. Today, we’ve got
two left. The Saturn here [at JSC] is a real one, that’s number
514, and the one at [NASA] Marshall [Space Flight Center] is number
515. The one at KSC is a mockup. KSC doesn’t want you to know
about that. It was made to train the crane operators to lift it, and
it was called F1. It was a full simulator, except it didn’t
have real engines on it. It didn’t have real this and that.
If you ever look down there again [at KSC]—and you don’t
have to tell the KSC guys this, because they don’t want to hear
it—if you can look into our engines here, you’ll look
and see the injector. You’ll actually see all the little holes
that were used to spray the fuel and oxygen in. It was an important
process to mix the kerosene and oxygen together in the engine. At
KSC, they have one real engine on there, and then the next is not.
If you look back up where the injector is, it’s just a blank
wall. In other words, it’s just a mockup of the engine.
In’66, ’67, we used to play in the VAB [Vehicle Assembly
Building, previously Vertical Assembly Building]. We would go in there
and we’d run races. We’d [use] a stopwatch. There’s
16 different stairways that go all the way to the roof. We’d
take one that was away from the KSC security, and we’d start
somebody, and they’d start running up the stairs. We’d
go over and get in the elevator, go up two different elevators and
get out on the roof, and wait for him. After you wait for awhile,
pretty soon you’d see a little hand going back and forth, back
and forth on the banister, getting up there. I did it once, and I
damn near died. This one guy, it was four minutes and 20 seconds,
or something like that. These guys were in shape; they’re young.
Wright: That’s
amazing.
Hughes: Yes,
it is. Just straight up, just going straight up. Obviously, they’d
slow down. They’d start going pretty fast, but you can imagine,
that’s 450 feet. They had to go 450 feet to the roof. We did
a lot of that. We’d get in F1 when it was there, and I knew
some guys, and they said, “Yes, come over.” So, we climbed
up inside the engines; in and around the thrust structure of this
whole thing. It was a real one, so I looked at it. It was just an
amazing thing to me. The bottom of the kerosene tank comes down, it’s
curved. Then they had I-beams, literally, that were cut so that they
were welded onto the bottom of the tank. That’s what supported
all this weight. It is like they put this whole building together
and it will fly. I looked at one I-beam, and it says, “American
Bridge [Company],” which is the I-beam part of, at that time,
U.S. Steel. In other words, they just took these big I-beams and shaved
them off, and built them into this huge rocket. Boeing [Company] doing
that one, at Michoud [Assembly Facility, New Orleans, Louisiana].
It was just amazing, the size of it, just amazing. Then to think that
this sucker’s going to go somewhere.
Wright: When
you said you knew something inside and out, I guess you really did.
Hughes: Yes,
we did, we did. We just went around and we had our daytime job, and
then we were so tied together, we’d go over and do something
else. I was kind of an outdoorsman in Montana, do whatever. Go to
Florida, it was a strange business. I remember two things very early
when I was there. You know what a heron is? A great blue heron?
I lived in Titusville for a year, and then I moved to Cocoa Beach.
I was driving down to one of those back-ass roads in Merritt Island,
and there’s a heron, and he grabbed a snake. I just had to stop
the car. Fortunately there was nothing around. This happens all the
time probably, but he grabbed the snake behind the neck, so it couldn’t
bit him. The snake is doing its dance, there. The bird got ready,
and got ready, and got ready, and then he flipped the snake up into
the air. Just flipped up in the air, and kept its mouth open. The
snake just slid down, just completely. I couldn’t even drive,
that is the damnedest thing I’ve ever seen. How do you eat a
poisonous snake if you’re a bird like that? He probably crushed
it, broke its neck by this point, with the bite. Then flipped it,
and this damn snake stretched out, like almost straight, and it just
“foom,” disappeared.
Wright: Not
in Montana anymore, are you?
Hughes: That’s
right, you’re not in Montana anymore. Then the other thing that
happened, is I met a guy sitting at a bar, and he was an Indian. He’d
just come back from Nam [Vietnam] during that time, and he was kind
of screwed up. He was [from] the tribe down there in the south part
of the state, a Seminole. We became friends, so he took me out, and
I got comfortable in the swamp. I mean, we would go out in airboats,
and canoes. We would see alligators, so many things that went on out
there in those swamps. In fact, because of this, I wanted to count
how many alligators were in KSC.
I went to KSC, and they said, “We don’t know how many.”
I got the park’s approval to check. Then I went down to the
Audubon Society in Melbourne, and I recruited a bunch of little old
ladies who would bring their canoes. They were so excited because
they got to come inside KSC. It had been closed off for years. [I
had] my canoe, and a couple other friends, and then we had about four
or five of these things canoes. We would give each pair of ladies
a canal to go down. Three nights, different times, we’d have
a square mile set aside. We had canoes come in at different angles,
and they would go through their area.
This is after dark, and so you go through it with a canoe and a real
bright floodlight, and you would point it ahead. If there’s
an alligator there, they would look at you. It’s like a deer;
they’ll freeze. They’ll just look at the light. You could
just count the lights and divide by two, and that’s the number
of alligators. I kept thinking, “These people are going to get
lost.” But no, the only one that had a close call was me. I
had a buddy and we were going along, and I was paddling, and he was
counting. Got to this point during the night, and he says, “That’s
it, turn around, I’ll do it now [paddle].”
I said, “You okay?”
He says, “Yes.”
I said, “Okay,” and we just flipped around and he was
paddling. We’re going along and here’s this big gator
coming up.
He says, “Okay, this is a big one.” He can tell, because
they’re hanging down in the water, still.
What’s beautiful about this is the water’s still, the
stars are here, but then you have stars underneath. It’s almost
like you’re in space. Black vegetation on both sides, stars,
and stars, and if you’re cruising along, it’s noiseless.
Here’s this big [alligator] coming up, and they’re sitting
the way they do, draped down in the water with the nose and the eyes
up, and everything else is down. I said, “Okay, just take him
to the left, so we can see how really long it is.” Whatever
happened, little puff of wind or something, just the operator error
in the back here, and we nailed him right behind the head. That sucker
came out of the water, literally out of the water, and slammed his
whole tail down the side. I was sitting down so I’d keep the
center of gravity low. He was sitting up more in the seat.
He took that entire boat out of the water and moved it about three
feet sideways. I had a bruise, my whole right thigh, because the canoe
is dented in. It’s a good thing it was a metal one and not a
fiberglass one. He was gone. I had a brand-new Nikonos underwater
camera, sitting behind me. I saw this splash—“sploosh!”—and
then—“kschetch!” My $300—then—camera
was sailing through the air during that dead space until it landed
somewhere out there. Since I didn’t even know exactly where
I was, there was no chance to ever go back to find it, because you’re
this many minutes into the thing. My transition to knowing Florida,
and know what to do, and go out and everything, was just amazing.
Wright: It’s
interesting that you were able to put that excursion together with
all the confidentiality, or the security of the whole Cold War race.
Hughes: Oh
yes, they loved it. It’s that same old stuff. They were all
kind of interested too, so we did three different one-mile squares,
different, one a week apart. It was so great, but we got incredible
results. It was like 45,000. You counted how many you see in this
mile and we just multiplied it by so many square miles of KSC. It
was like 40,000 alligators or something like that. That was then,
and I think that there’s only so much that they can eat, so
they’ve probably stayed pretty close. You see them around everywhere
at KSC. Maybe if you just see some around here, go down to Brazos
Bend State Park. They’re just everywhere.
Wright: Yes,
very large.
Hughes: Yes,
very large. Don’t bring your dog.
Wright: No
kidding. Or small children without leashes.
Hughes: Yes,
exactly.
Wright: This
might be a good place for us to stop, and then—because it’ll
be easy to pick up where we left off when we come back.
Hughes: Sure.
Wright: Thank
you so much for this morning.
[End
of interview]
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