NASA Headquarters NACA
Oral History Project
Edited Oral History Transcript
Solomon
Weiss
Interviewed by Rebecca Wright
Cleveland,
Ohio –
6 June 2014
Wright: Today is June 6, 2014. This oral history session is being
conducted with Solomon Weiss at his home in Cleveland, Ohio as part
of the NACA [National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics] Oral History
Project, sponsored by the NASA Headquarters History Office. Interviewer
is Rebecca Wright, assisted by Sandra Johnson. Thank you for letting
us in your home. We’d like for you to start today by telling
us how you became involved.
Weiss:
I studied aeronautical engineering at Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn—that’s
New York [University Polytechnic School of Engineering]—and
the head of the department gave them my name. They were beginning
to hire people, so they contacted me in a place up in the Catskills
[Catskill Mountains, New York], where my folks had a place and I was
helping them run it for the summer. Vic [Victor] Gordon—he became
budget officer, but he was personnel. He hired me on the phone. The
reason I took the job, they offered me $300 more than anybody else.
Wright:
That’s a good reason. This is in 1948?
Weiss:
Yes. The reason for that was that they were interested in my piloting
experience. They put me in flight tests. First, they had me geared
to run the new 8 by 6 [Foot] Tunnel because I ran the wind tunnel
at the school as part of a job. They thought I’d fit right in,
but by that time we were into supersonic flow, and it was entirely
different. Rather than waste, you might say, my experience, they put
me in flight research, and I spent several years there. That’s
where I was involved in the program to crash airplanes, to determine
why they burn, how they burn, what you can do about eliminating the
ignition sources of the airplane.
Wright:
Can you share with us how that project was first started, and then
how you determined the results that came from it?
Weiss:
I don’t know how it started, really. When I came on board it
was already in place. A fellow by the name of Pinkel—Irv [Irving]
Pinkel—was the head of that program. He was really the main
man. He okayed everything we did. That’s about all I can tell
you. I got involved first in establishing a bibliography of various
fuels being used in aircraft, and various ignition sources that we
could readily recognize. For example, hot parts of an engine, things
of that nature. We built an airport at Ravenna, Ohio. It’s an
ammunition dump. We took part of it over and built a runway about
1,700 feet long. We put a rail down the center of that runway, and
we attached the slipper to the airplane to guide the airplane into
a barrier.
One of my jobs was to create different kinds of barriers than an airplane
might experience when it crashed. I worked with a fellow who was a
civil engineer, and as we talked he would draw the thing up. Now he’s
gone. He was a Russian, although he had a Jewish name. His name was
[Edmund G.] Rosenberg. I don’t know if you knew him, but he
was Russian. I think he was part of the elite, so when the [Russian]
Revolution [1917] came he had to get out of there. That’s how
I met him.
I was one of the people that reduced the data and drew various conclusions
and spoke to the people that wrote the report, and also invented a
system to eliminate ignition sources from the engine and from electrostatic
charges. For example, one airplane we crashed, the landing gear came
off. It tumbled in dirt, it built up a charge, and when it hit the
ground it discharged a big plume of electricity. It allowed the fuel
that was spilling to catch fire.
That’s what I mean by electrical sources, but most of it was
due to the exhaust system of engines. This guy, Scottie [Scott H.]
Simpkinson, invented a vapor detector. He invented the vapor detector
that would tell us where in the engine was there fuel vapor that could
catch fire, where there was a combustible mixture. He also invented
sort of a thermocouple bridge that could trace where the flames started.
That way we determined where the ignition sources were. There must
have been about three or four of us that went to the crash site the
day after the crash, and we plotted where pieces of the airplane were,
where the fuel spilled. That was my first job as an experimenter,
to determine are there any things like fireproof paints—is there
some way you can control the fuel so that it doesn’t become
like a fog, which makes it easy to ignite?
There was a guy by the name of John [P.] Campbell, he was one of the
fellows in that group. The fellow who was leading it was a guy by
the name of Dugald [O.] Black. A fellow by the name of [G.] Merritt
Preston was the Branch Chief, and he ran the program. I’ll never
forget this one time I almost blew up an engine. I was in charge of
the jet phase of this thing, and I couldn’t get a jet engine.
I had difficulty. I finally got one, but in testing it I almost blew
it up. I was in my office about eight or nine o’clock at night,
trying to figure out why. My boss came by, Preston, and he said, “I
understand you’re upset because you almost blew up an engine.”
I said, “Yes.”
He said, “I understand you’re also upset because you didn’t
get your money on your promotion.” He said I would get it as
soon as money becomes available.
I said, “Yes, what happened to that?”
He said, “I just had a meeting with the big shots. You’re
number one in the field. If any money comes in, you’re the first
one to get it.”
I said, “Oh, baloney.”
He said, “Sol, we’re doing the best we can.”
I said, “Well the best you’re doing isn’t good enough.”
That’s another place where smart-aleck Weiss got involved. But
he [Preston] was a great guy.
The guy who was my immediate boss was a guy by the name of Gerard
[J.] Pesman. He was a professor at the University of Montana [Missoula].
One of my jobs was to determine, in a crash fire, do the passengers
burn to death or do they become asphyxiated because of various fumes
that come off? So I had to rig up a system of sampling the air in
the cabin and the pilot’s compartment, which I did do.
There’s only one thing—I went through aeronautical engineering,
and the only electrical course I took was a 12-volt course in DC [direct
current] electricity. Because that’s all they taught you. That’s
all an airplane had, a 12-volt battery. I’m trying to design
a timer to open and close valves to capture various atmospheres, and
I was having trouble. I used books that had inventions and what have
you, and I spent a lot of time in the library. I think I spent about
three weeks trying to design something, and the design was so complicated.
I really didn’t understand it, but I had different planes of
onion-skin [lightweight translucent] paper that would lay on top of
the other. One day, this guy Pesman comes to me, “How you making
out, Sol?”
I said, “Everything’s been tested. I got all sorts of
cylinders to capture gas, and we can take so many samples,”
and what have you. I rigged up within the laboratory to analyze the
gas, to see what’s in it. I said, “The only problem I
have is I’m trying to design a timer to open and close valves.”
He looks at it, and I’m trying to explain how this thing works,
and he knows I don’t know what I’m talking about.
He was a great guy. I hadn’t been there very long, and he said,
“We have an instrument research group that could probably help
you.” He arranged for a meeting between me and one of the research
guys, and the guy says, “I think I can help you, Sol.”
I came back to my office, went back to work on what I was doing, and
about two days later he calls me, he says, “I think I have what
you need.” I got to his office, and he built me two timers within
those two days. He had microswitches. I don’t know about microswitches.
I didn’t know anything, but I learned an awful lot from him
and he helped me an awful lot.
That turned out pretty good, really. There is a film about the crash
fire [program]. In fact, I think I have a copy of a VHS [Video Home
System] tape. If you want it, I’d look for it.
Wright:
Maybe we’ll see when we get through. We can do that.
Weiss:
You can probably get one at the lab [laboratory]. Irv Pinkel, Merritt
Preston, Dugald Black—they were recognized for the system that
they built up to inert the engine and avoid ignition sources for reciprocating
engines.
Getting in a jet engine was kind of interesting to me. I attended
a meeting of a NASA committee on aircraft operating problems. In fact
I was a member of that committee, and I gave a talk about oxygen,
I recall. One of the airline operators—I think it was United
[Airlines]—said to Irv Pinkel, who was the head of the program,
“What are you guys doing about jets? We’re going into
jets and you guys are still working with reciprocating engines.”
Irv Pinkel says, “No, we’re working with jets. Sol Weiss
is the project manager.” All of a sudden, I became a project
manager, and I didn’t know anything. I never even saw a jet
engine.
A big problem I had—I couldn’t get an engine. I tried
to get the Air Force to give me one, but they wanted $400,000. I didn’t
have a dime. Normally when I start a program I get all the mechanics
involved and we talk about the program, we talk about what we’re
going to do, what we think the data might mean, and what will we do
if the data shows such-and-such? If they make suggestions and I couldn’t
put holes in it, we would do it. We would do the experiment.
They were involved. I went to them and I said, “Hey, we got
to cancel that program because I don’t have an engine, we need
an engine to start with.”
They said, “When do you want the engine?”
I said, “I’d like to have it yesterday.”
They said, “We’ll have it for you in three days.”
“Where the hell are you going to get an engine?” They
went out to [Building] South 40 [Rocket Engine Test Facility] and
got a bunch of old jet engines, and they put one together for me,
from various engines.
It’s kind of interesting because GE [General Electric Company]
had an engine out there that had an experimental compressor, and I
used that compressor in my engine. When they came around to take inventory,
they saw that compressor there and they said, “How did you get
it? It was written off a couple of years ago.”
I said, “Hey, that engine has 15 different parts to it.”
These guys put an engine together. They had run jet engines so they
rigged it up. All I had to do was press a button, and it started the
engine going. They were good.
The mechanics here, they make you or break you. They were really good
to me. I have nothing but good things to say about them. They were
terrific. The best part of it was that they felt so close to the program
that they would stay—we couldn’t pay anyone overtime,
and we couldn’t even give them comp [compensatory] time anymore.
We told them, “Look, we’re not going to run tomorrow.
Take the day off, but don’t get killed.” We would keep
two sets of books. They were that good. They were really terrific.
They would donate their time.
As I say, they really made you. So much so—this guy Pinkel became
our division chief. We worked in a place called the B Building. It
was a metal building out near the runway. What happened is George
[W.] Lewis [Jr.]—the guy whose father’s name is on the
lab [Lewis Research Center]—he went to Pinkel. He said, “Hey,
this guy Sol got all the mechanics tied up, and I can’t get
a mechanic.”
Pinkel called me and he said, “What’s this I understand,
you bribed the guys by buying them coffee?”
I said, “Look, when a guy is busy and I’m not doing anything,
if he needs a part I’ll go get it, rather than take him off
the job.” The cafeteria was across the street from the equipment
building, so I would pick up coffee and bring it back. If they went
for something, they would bring me coffee.
Pinkel said, “Get the hell out of here.”
After that, I got the foreman of the mechanics—the guy’s
name was [Beverly G.] Gulick—I said, “Put somebody on
George’s stuff. Don’t give me all the guys. If you can’t
give me more guys tell me so, because we have to share all these guys.”
It worked out after that, but that was kind of interesting.
The thing that really made me feel great is that we were like one
big family. Like the fellow who built me those timers. I’m the
guy who got credit for it—it’s in a report, I got credit
for it—and he didn’t care. I said, “Don’t
you want your name on the report?”
He said, “No, you’ll probably do the same thing for somebody
else,” which was true. We all took turns helping other people.
That was the crash fire program. Where do I go from there?
The second thing we took was flying an airplane on liquid hydrogen.
We had a [Glenn L. Martin Company] B-57 [Canberra], which was built
in Maryland. They were in Baltimore. They built the airplane, and
we had one. It’s one of these airplanes that can land vertically.
We flew that airplane on liquid hydrogen, which meant we had to change
the fuel system to operate on liquid hydrogen.
We had to invent various kinds of throttles, which was done by a fellow
by the name of [Harold] Gold. In fact, we used to call this the “Gold
valve.” He invented pressure transducence to measure pressure,
and also invented this throttle. The throttle was based upon the flow
of jet fuel. We would fuel the airplane with a wingtip tank, which
was my responsibility, to use conventional insulation. Liquid hydrogen
is at -423 degrees [Fahrenheit]. We would put insulation around a
tank, ordinary insulation, and between the tank and the insulation,
there’s a little space where we would solidify air. It would
be like ice between the two. So we came up with something to avoid
that because you lose a lot of hydrogen when you do that. In fact,
it helped the boom shock because they did something similar—they
were a lot more sophisticated than we were. That was part of it.
The hydrogen part was run by a fellow by the name of Paul [M.] Ordin.
His wife is here. That’s why we’re here. My wife and his
wife were buddy-buddies, and he was a great boss. He was a charming
person. He would come and say, “How can I help you?”
I said, “Paul, what the hell do you know about this stuff?”
He really was very knowledgeable. He was a chemical engineer. I knew
nothing about chemical engineering, but I was put on this program
to handle the flight aspect of this. The flight aspect—we can’t
fly for at least a year on this thing. At any rate, we did a good
job. We designed the system to use liquid hydrogen. Some years later,
when there was a fuel shortage, [NASA] Langley [Research Center, Hampton,
Virginia] tried to build a liquid hydrogen airplane. It’s difficult
to design because hydrogen’s very light, but it takes up a lot
of volume. You might need 12 times the tankage to do the same thing
you do with jet—in fact, you do need 12 times the tankage. That
was a problem. I had to design a wingtip tank that could hold about
20 minutes of flight at about 30,000 feet.
We did that for the Air Force. What happened, from what we know—the
Air Force went on bid to have an outsider do this. The lowest bid
they got was a four-year course at something like $4 million or $5
million a year. The fellow who was the liaison officer between NASA
and the Air Force was running that project for the Air Force, so he
came to us and asked us to do it. We did it in just less than one
year. We flew the airplane. We designed things that were useful, but
we also realized you don’t want to fly with liquid hydrogen.
It’s not easy.
That started programs here using hydrogen as a fuel for automobile
engines. That started there. As I say, Paul Ordin ran that program.
First it was run by Abe [Abraham] Silverstein. He was the [Center]
Director. I don’t know if you knew Abe, but he was like the
chairman of this meeting we had. “Okay, what have you done?”
A guy by the name of Loren Acker, he’s the guy that chose the
material for the liquid hydrogen tank. It had to be a special nickel
material, so it’s almost custom-made. He got up and he gave
a whole talk on why we chose that material, and Abe said, “Don’t
use that, use this.” That’s the way he was. If you didn’t
know your onion, you couldn’t argue with him because he really
was a very bright guy.
I got in the liquid hydrogen business, and I set up some guy with
an experimental set-up where we can look at hydrogen in zero-g [gravity].
I think I built the first zero-g experiment. We got something like
3/4 of a second of zero-g. Then we flew an airplane, and that gave
us zero-g by the way we maneuvered the airplane. I think out of the
airplane we got about a second or two. Kept increasing it. I got out
of that business because I think by this time, Silverstein went to
[NASA Headquarters] Washington [DC], and I was involved with liquid
metals.
The liquid metal that I was involved with was potassium. By saying
“involved,” I had to come up with an electrical system
that we could use on the Moon. We used a closed-circuit potassium
system, where we used the reactor to boil the potassium to 100 percent
vapor, then we used the vapor to drive a turbine, which drove a generator
or an alternator. I got involved in that. He gave me a section called
the dynamic power section, something like that, so I had a section
then. From there, Bruce [T.] Lundin called me in and said he wanted
me to organize a nuclear technology group. That’s when I had
an argument with him.
You might think I’m really a sassy old something-or-other, but
Bruce Lundin was our Director then. We split into two sections, development
and research. A guy by the name of Dr. [John C.] Evvard was head of
research. Bruce Lundin was head of development. I worked in development,
did contract work. We got in a contractor. When Lundin called me and
asked me to organize this, I said, “I’m one of the few
people at the lab that never took a course in nucleonics. I don’t
know the first thing about nucleonic. Why are you choosing me?”
He flattered the hell out of me. He said, “I know you can get
the job done,” so I got flattered and I said, “Okay, I’ll
do it.” He said, “You’ll have a complete staff that’s
competent in nucleonics.” So I started hiring nuclear engineers.
I was working right under him until we get organized, and every time
I tried to hire someone he would reject them.
I say, “Bruce, you told me I would have a staff that’s
competent—I don’t know the first thing about these things.”
He said, “You know why I can’t hire anyone.”
I said, “Why?”
He said, “I don’t have any slots.”
I said, “You knew this when you asked me to take over, and you
told me I’ll have a complete crew.” He disappointed the
hell out of me.
I don’t think he wanted us to be successful because if we weren’t
successful, the research guy couldn’t be. They had to go through
us to get all their work done. We’re the only ones that could
go out on contract. I was working with a bunch of guys in research,
so I said, “I’m going to really play it hard with this
guy Lundin.” I didn’t like that idea, roping me into this
thing.
You know how they got me? Do you know Jack [John H.] Enders? He was
a pilot here, and I think he got something wrong with his eyesight,
so he became a person in Washington. I worked as his consultant. Every
time he wanted to go somewhere he would take me along, so I knew what
he was doing. When he retired, they got me drunk at Langley. I had
to take this job—all these guys from the industry were saying,
“Sol, we need you there,” because they thought they could
get everything out of me. As it was, I got into that game, and we
did do a lot of good work with this liquid metal.
Thompson Ramo Wooldridge, TRW [Inc.], they worked with sodium. One
of our boys had a contract with them to develop an electrical system
using sodium. We went to potassium because potassium doesn’t
pick up the radiation as much as sodium. I think that’s why
we did it. I was in that job for quite a while.
What happened here, since I didn’t have any nuclear engineers,
I went to one of the divisions we had called nuclear systems. It was
run by Roy [Leroy V.] Humble. He was division chief. I went to him
and I said, “Roy, I’m working with your people. If I don’t
get the job done, you don’t get the job done. Can you lend me
some guys part-time?”
He had a lot of nuclear engineers. He said, “How many do you
want?”
I said, “It would be nice to have about 20 guys part-time.”
He said, “I’ll give you 40,” and he gave me 40 guys
part-time.
It was really good, and I told these guys I had a big travel budget.
I said, “Look, I’ve been a contract position now for a
year or two. I want you to go see the contractor at least once a month,
regardless of what you think he’s doing.” I’m going
through a bunch of papers one day, and one of these guys in Humble’s
group had never seen a contractor. It’s been in effect for about
three or four months. I got him and I asked him, “How come you
haven’t seen a contractor?”
He said, “Look, Sol, you get the weekly reports.”
“Yes, I read them.”
“And I’m on the phone every day with my counterpart.”
I said, “I still think you ought to go see them,” so he
went out to California. These guys didn’t do a thing that they
said they did in their progress reports. They have to go to the California
government to get a license to work in a nuclear field. They didn’t
even do that, but they said they did. So I told Procurement, “Don’t
pay them.” And I said, “How do I blacklist them?”
He said, “Sol, it’ll take five years for you to blacklist
them.”
When I appointed a technical committee to review the proposals, I
said, “If you pick this guy as one of the winners, I won’t
sign off on it.” If they knew that when I was in business, they
could put me in jail. That’s the way I ran it for a while.
Eventually, some other outfit, a good outfit, took them over. They
came to us and said, “Hey, you owe us money. We’ve been
writing you reports and doing something, and we’ve never gotten
paid.”
This is a new outfit, and they’re good, so I told Procurement,
“Give them $1,000,” and they were happy with that. It
was a low contract, something like $50,000 to $100,000. Today you
can’t get a contract for less than $1 million, but when we were
in the business I don’t think you ever had anything over $100,000.
We did some good work here. That takes care of the liquid potassium.
The next thing, I know I’ve told you, I went to Headquarters.
I took over the Aircraft Safety Program, and I had something like
$7 million to $8 million to spend at about nine different Centers.
I was supposed to spend six months there as a volunteer, you might
say. As it was, I told them, “I’ll take the job if you
advertise it, get somebody on board, and I’ll spend a month
with him to tell him what I’m doing, and he can do whatever
he wants.” He said, “Okay.” We’re almost in
the ninth month, and they hadn’t advertised the job.
I went to my boss—it’s kind of interesting because my
son met my boss. They were in the same musical instrument club in
Colorado. He was a great guy. I thought I did a pretty good job in
Washington. I took care of all the things, and I could see what Jack
was going through. When you make out those RTOPs, Research and Technology
Operating Plans, everyone exaggerates what they need. I had $100,000
and I wanted to start Langley on it. I told the guy involved, “I
got $100,000. You’re asking for $300,000. I’ll give you
the $100,000, and I may be able to get the other couple of hundred
thousand for you.”
He said, “If I don’t get it, I don’t start the program.”
I said, “Okay, you made things easy for me—I’ll
split the $100,000 amongst the other people.”
He says, “Wait, hold it.” He finally came around. He did
the job for about $75,000. I worked for Jack Enders, who was the head
of this group, and I was always honest with him. That’s why
I always got what I wanted. I was really very lucky.
Wright:
Did Jack work for the government still?
Weiss:
He worked for NASA. I worked at Headquarters. He was one of our pilots
here. A lot of guys here—for example, Neil [A.] Armstrong was
one of our pilots here. In fact, Irv Pinkel hired him and I worked
with him. I almost had to bawl him out one time.
I was trying to determine if you crash open a tank in the wing, where
does the fuel go? It becomes a spray. As a spray it can move very
rapidly, and if it goes to a jet engine, which is always hot, it’ll
catch fire and spread around the airplane. We designed some system
to avoid that. My first inkling was to go to our chemist and find
out, could I put a dye in the fuel? He told me the amount of dye you’ll
need will screw up the engine. I figured I’ll do something else,
so I went into nucleonics. I got the AEC [Atomic Energy Commission]
to provide me with an isotope that had a three-day half-life, so we
could get it prepared and use it in the engine. It got kind of difficult
to handle, and the AEC was on our back all the time. They were really
very, very concerned about us handling stuff like that.
After about nine months, I wrote up a report of what I did in Washington,
and then I quit. I came back and [John F.] McCarthy made a little
coffee klatch for me. He was the new Director, and I didn’t
like him for a couple of things. First of all, I met him at MIT [Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, Cambridge]. He was head of nucleonics there.
I was working with the aircraft guys at MIT, and I met him and I didn’t
like his attitude towards a lot of things.
He had a coffee klatch for me, so some of the guys I was able to help.
When you’re in Washington, you know who has the purse strings.
We needed to renovate an icing tunnel. Our Altitude Wind Tunnel was
going to be a new icing tunnel. It was going to be the biggest one
in the world, and they needed $38 million to get started. I managed
to get them $38 million, but we found out later you need more than
$38 million, so they never revived that tunnel.
Wright:
Can you share with us how you were able to get that funding?
Weiss:
I think I spoke to the guy who’s head of that subject, and I
talked him into it. I had some guys from Lewis come down and give
a talk about icing because we were heavily into that. When I got there,
everybody worked on icing for a while—even I worked on it, but
I did the mathematics. Because I was fresh out of school, I could
still do the math. One time when Preston came to me—I’m
working at my desk, trying to reduce the data, and he asked me, “What
are you doing?”
I said, “I’m reducing my data so I can come to some conclusion.”
He said, “Sol, you’re too valuable for that.”
I said, “What are you talking about?”
He said, “We have girls who are mathematicians. They’ll
do it for you.” He showed me how to prepare everything for them,
so they did all my calculation. I couldn’t do any computation
at all after a while. I forgot all my math.
That took care of Washington. I came back, I had this coffee klatch,
and after everyone left the Director, McCarthy, said, “Now that
you’re back, Sol, don’t make waves.” The waves I
was making was I was not enthused about space, and I would gear my
money to aviation because I thought a lot of work ought to be done
there. And I was being supported by people in Washington. One day
Jack called me, said, “When are you going to get started on
that program we talked about?”
I said, “Jack, I’m ready to go. All I have to do is see
the check. I have to see the money.”
He said, “I sent it down two months ago.”
“You did?” So I start checking. I find the Director used
it on some space program. That’s when I gave him hell. I got
away with it, but after that session I figured I’m not going
to gain anything here, so I retired. When I retired I said, “Just
let me use my secretary part-time because I got to write this report
for Washington. And also, just get me a direct line to Washington.
That’s all I want.”
He says, “We’ll rehire you as a rehired annuitant.”
“I don’t want to be rehired,” and we’re arguing.
Finally I said, “Okay, I’ll be rehired,” so they
rehired me. When I wrote the report, I knew George Mandel, who was
head of publication. He worked in my group for a while. He helped
me an awful lot, getting everything done. We got the report out to
about 3,000 people in less than a month, which is unusual. When that
happened, I went to Personnel. I said, “I quit.”
They say, “You can’t quit, you signed on for a year.”
I said, “If you guys want to pay me, you can pay me, but I’m
not coming in.” That was the way that ended.
I retired then, and I did consulting work. That’s why I wrote
that thing [gesturing]. I don’t have a professional license.
I do have—in something called System Safety in California, I’m
grandfathered in there. It’s not really sufficient to go to
court with, so in order to be eligible for court, I had to write this
thing for the judge. We never went to court, as a matter of fact,
but there’s a lot of garbage in there.
Wright:
It’s probably very useful information for us.
Weiss:
Maybe you’ll find something. It does give sort of a run-down
of all the things I was involved in. I’ll be happy to entertain
any other questions.
Wright:
Did you ever have an opportunity to fly the planes, or ride on some
of the experiments that you were on?
Weiss:
Yes. We flew out of [NASA] Ames [Research Center, Moffett Field, California].
They had a big airplane, and a lot of engineers had an experiment
on that airplane. Each one is allocated, like, one hour. I was there—I
forget now the reason. There was a professor, I think from Palo Alto
[California], on this trip that I was on, and he was counting whales—they
go down to Mexico—so we helped him count. He must have gotten
about four times more than there were. Everyone gave him a different
number.
Also on that flight, there was some guy trying to test out some way
of determining where clear air turbulence existed, because we hit
a lot of clear air turbulence and we were not equipped to do that.
There were people from all the Centers using that airplane. As I say,
each one was allocated an hour. We’d go to Ames and we’d
spend a whole day there. I’m trying to think of other things
I may have done. That zero-g thing.
Wright:
Yes, that’s interesting. What time period was that? I guess
I could look here.
Weiss:
Yes, it might be in there. There’s a guy here who was a genius,
a guy by the name of [Irving] Brazinsky. He was getting his Ph.D.
[Doctor of Philosophy] in chemical engineering. He took over the apparatus
that I put together, so he put my name on his report. The reason I
found out about it—I was invited to an editorial meeting. I
said, “Take my name off, because I didn’t make any contribution.”
He said, “Yes, you did. You gave me the apparatus.”
“Forget about it,” I said, “you’ll be giving
it to other people, too.” The next thing I know, I get 10 copies,
which an author gets. I call him, I say, “How come my name’s
still on this thing?”
He says, “Abe told me to leave it on.” Can’t argue
with Abe. He was a damn good Director. He was a very bright guy and
a very sensible guy. He ran the Apollo Program. We contributed to
the Apollo Program to some extent. We did little things I can’t
even recall that helped the Apollo Program.
Wright:
You mentioned the work that you did with the liquid hydrogen possibly
helped with the upper stage.
Weiss:
I think it helped the liquid hydrogen stage. Also, I think we helped
to prove the trajectory. It may not have been me, but somebody within
our lab, because you had to get permission from the president to put
anything on that had nuclear stuff on it. The president had to okay
it.
Wright:
Could you talk about the work that you did that impacted industry?
Some of the relationships that you had, or what they were looking
for?
Weiss:
For example, that work on the inerting system or fire prevention system
for a reciprocating engine, that went to Walter Kidde [& Company,
Inc.]. They were building hardware to encompass that. We all got credit
for it. At that time they didn’t give you any awards or anything.
We got mentioned in the Congressional Record [official record of the
U.S. Congress]. By “we,” I mean all the people that were
on that thing. We had a guy, John Campbell—did you talk to [Erwin
V.] Zaretsky? He’s been there for a long time. In fact, they
had to make a new memorial pin for him.
Johnson:
Erv Zaretsky, we talked to him.
Wright:
Yes, we did.
Weiss:
He’s been there a long time. He’s from Chicago [Illinois].
When he came to Cleveland, we used to have him over for dinner because
he was a bachelor at the time.
Wright:
You’ve stayed in Cleveland all these years—you didn’t
ever want to move?
Weiss:
I’ll tell you why. When we got here, we were absolutely broke.
We didn’t have a dime between the two of us. We had people help
us, we never even knew them. We met such wonderful people here. We
stayed here because the kids are not here, and if you go where the
kids are they get transferred, so we decided to stay in Cleveland.
It so happens that my son [Robert Weiss] got a job at the University
of Akron [Ohio]. He’s head of the Polymer Engineering Department.
MRS.
Weiss: There were a couple of times, though, he wanted to leave. He’d
tell me he wanted to go back to New York, and asked me if I wanted
to go back. I didn’t want to go back.
Weiss:
Yes, I was very fortunate. I wish I’d gone to California. Ames
wanted me to come down there, but I don’t know, there really
was no future. I was doing work that I really loved.
Wright:
You really stayed a lot in the aviation side, didn’t you?
Weiss:
Yes, I was the only one carrying the program really, except the guys
in Washington. They were helping me out quite a bit. They would look
to me for the next job. We did a lot of things. For example, when
you come in for a landing, all of a sudden there’s an air burst
that pushes you down and you might crack up.
Speaking of cracking up, I cracked up three airplanes through World
War II, and the last airplane blew up at 24,000 feet. I was very lucky.
I lost seven guys in that crew.
Wright:
I read you were a commander of a [Boeing] B-17 [Flying Fortress]?
Weiss:
No, a [Consolidated] B-24 [Liberator]. I got time in a [B-]17, but
they found they made a mistake on my orders. I had been sent to Sebring,
Florida [Hendricks Army Airfield] to fly a 17. I got two hours in
a 17, which means I soloed, and then they determined there’s
60 of us got the wrong orders, so they shipped us up to Smyrna, Tennessee
[Sewart Air Force Base] to fly B-24s. I picked up a crew in Salt Lake
City [Hill Air Force Base], and we went to Boise, Idaho [Gowen Field].
That’s where we got married.
Wright:
Wasn’t the B-24 a more difficult plane to fly?
Weiss:
It was a little more difficult, but not really. It was faster than
a 17. It couldn’t fly as high, but you wanted to fly high so
that the flak [anti-aircraft artillery] won’t reach you. By
the time I was in it, the flak could go higher than I could. That’s
about all I can recall.
Wright:
Let me ask Sandra if she’s got some questions to ask.
Johnson:
I was just kind of curious, in those early years, you were young and
raising a family during that time. The social activities that they
provided at Lewis—did you do a lot of that?
Weiss:
Yes, we had a group called NicNACA. I was the entertainment committee
in that thing. You had no choice in this—you got a memo from
Abe Silverstein saying, “You’re it,” and that was
it.
Johnson:
You don’t know why you were picked, you just got picked?
Weiss:
He probably had a list of people that weren’t doing anything
in their spare time, so he picked them. The NicNACA committee, they
were really very useful. They would plan other things too, like some
sort of celebrations.
When we first flew the [Martin] B-57 [Canberra], hell, we were scared
stiff. To make it easy to fly, we got one of these trolley switches—the
guy goes from one knob to another on the trolley—and hooked
it up so that the pilot just has to go from one notch to another.
All the circuitry gets involved that’s supposed to be involved.
That’s another thing that Scottie Simpkinson rigged up.
We took off, and unfortunately it was a slushy day in the wintertime.
It was in December. When the ship came back, we only had very little
jet fuel left. We’re supposed to switch from hydrogen back to
jet, and make the landing. The nose wheel didn’t come out, so
the pilot made a run past the tower. The tower said, “No nose
wheel.” He couldn’t do anything else, so he’s going
to come in. I was scared stiff because I got that wingtip tank that
had hydrogen in it. But on the opposite wingtip, I had another tank
filled with helium to purge the hydrogen out of it. I was pretty sure
that there are no ignition sources there, but you never can be sure.
We were scared stiff.
As the guy came on this final approach, the nose wheel kept coming
down, and it finally locked and he was able to land. We were in our
control room, and every one of us, I think, were about ready to cry.
Because we worked with the pilots, and Flight Research and Flight
Operations were really one branch. We worked together. We were scared
stiff that somebody may get hurt and might blow up. As it turned out,
the nose wheel came down and locked, so we were very lucky. I remember
Paul Ordin breathing a sigh of relief because he was responsible for
the whole thing.
Wright:
Do you believe more research could have come out of that program if
the Air Force hadn’t canceled it when it did?
Weiss:
I think they were happy with what they got. I think we sort of discouraged
them. They wanted it for the [Lockheed] U-2 [Dragon Lady] because
hydrogen has three times the heating value of jet fuel, so that means
you can fly three times higher or go three times farther. As I mentioned
before, you have to redesign the airplane because it can’t carry
all that fuel. You have to carry the same poundage.
We were very lucky. For example, we were always concerned that we
might reach critical temperature before we get out to the runway,
and boy, did we luck out. The taxiway was so broken up that it shook
up the tank and mixed the tank up. The cold fuel went right back into
the liquid, so the pressure went down. We were lucky. But we had cleared
everything. We were a little concerned because one of our pilots went
off a taxiway into the mud, and we held up the airport for about an
hour while we pulled it out.
They asked us not to do any experiments at the airport. We’d
go to a place in Detroit. We’d fly for maybe a half an hour,
do our experiments there. There was a naval base, and we’d do
our experiments there and then come back. I don’t know if you
know Cliff Crabb, he was one of our pilots.
Wright:
I’ve heard the name.
Weiss:
He was a screwball. He would do anything. I’ll tell you about
Neil Armstrong—but I’m with Cliff, we’re coming
back from Michigan, the wind is going like crazy, and we’re
drifting. The airplane almost had to do this to land [demonstrates],
and kick out immediately. I’m sitting in the co-pilot’s
seat.
Wright:
Are you in the B-57?
Weiss:
No, this was a Convair [aircraft]. We carried passengers. Cliff was
flying, and he straightened out, and I went, “Phew!”
He said, “Why, were you frightened?”
I said, “You’re damn right I was frightened—don’t
you ever do that to me again. We should have gone back and stayed
overnight.”
He says, “You were frightened? How do you think I felt?”
He was a crazy guy. We went to Jack Enders’ retirement party.
He has three of his own airplanes, so we used one of his airplanes.
We took off and he said, “Okay, Sol, you got it.”
I said, “What heading you want me to fly?”
He said, “Just keep going the way you’re going. When we
get close, I’ll tell you what to fly.” When we got close
to Washington he said, “Okay, now pick up heading such-and-such.”
Now when I was flying, there weren’t the instruments that they
have today. There was an instrument in his airplane—you hit
a button, and a point moves to where the station is, tells you how
far away you are, and how long it’s going to take you to get
there. When I was flying, you had to use a loop antenna and it was
a big thing to find out where you are. That had changed quite a bit,
so we did that with his airplane.
Wright:
Did you fly much after the war?
Weiss:
Occasionally I’d fly a NASA airplane. I don’t know if
you knew [Warren J.] North, he was an instructor in a [North American
Aviation] T-6 [Texan]?
Wright:
Warren North? Yes, I did meet him.
Weiss:
I think he was head of instruction. He used to be one of our pilots,
and he flew a T-6 as an instructor. There were a couple of times when
he said, “Okay, you got it,” and he let me do aerobatics,
which I couldn’t do with a B-24.
I took her [Mrs. Weiss] up one time in an airplane in Elmira, New
York. It’s primarily a sailplane airport. I got an airplane
that I could do aerobatics in, so I took her up. I hadn’t done
aerobatics in a year, so I made a lot of mistakes. I keep flying up
and redoing it, so I run the hell out of her. When we got down on
the ground I figured she would say, “Don’t ever take me
up again.” She said, “When are you going to teach me to
fly?”
Johnson:
It was fun, I imagine. You were going to talk about Neil Armstrong?
Weiss:
Yes, Neil Armstrong. We had a program that I told you about, determining
where the fuel is. At first we were going to use a dye. The chemist
told me, “You’re going to have to use too much; the engine
won’t run,” so I gave that up and used nucleonics. That
was a little too risky, so I went back to another chemist. He said,
“We’ll use a tablespoon of dye,” and I could color
1,100 gallons of water that way. We did that.
Neil was taxiing down the runway. I put spoilers on the wings so he
couldn’t fly, and I told him, “Don’t try to take
off.” We’re going down the runway, and we’re lifting
up a little bit. There’s a microswitch on each gear, so when
it reaches a certain level it allows you to retract the gear. We got
to that point, so he says, “Hey, we’re going to fly.”
I said, “Neil, don’t you dare try to take off with this
thing!”
We built up a special valve to simulate a quick-acting valve, so we
immediately lost 1,100 gallons of water. It just took a couple of
seconds to do that. It was dyed, and we’d go around and see
where the dye is, and get some idea of where the fuel would go. After
we did a post-mortem on a crashed airplane, we would walk around.
It would be nice to use a Geiger counter [instrument to measure ionizing
radiation] because you can get the concentration and the place where
the fuel is located. With seeing this thing splash, you had to find
it. We had viewing ports all around this crash site.
I don’t know if you’ve ever seen it. I think you ought
to take a look at the film.
Wright:
We will have to.
Johnson:
When you were doing the zero-g, you mentioned you went from the facility
to flying that on the plane. Did you fly on the plane too, or just
the experiment?
Weiss:
No, we gave that program over to another group—I’m trying
to remember who it was. It was a group that took over zero-g. We had
a fuel tower that was about 100 feet. They dropped a package down
there, and you’d get zero-g on the way down and the way up,
if you hit something and you push it up. I think we got about a second
out of that, but it still wasn’t enough, so they got an airplane
that they could do various maneuvers. They went over a hump and then
went down, and they got zero-g for maybe 10 seconds. They got a lot
of stuff that way. We got off that program because we were unsuccessful.
I went to [NASA Marshall Space Flight Center in] Huntsville [Alabama].
They needed a drop tower to check out their instrumentation, so they
built something about 40 feet high. I said, “I have the money.
We could build something 100 feet if you come in with me.” All
they did was talk German to me. They didn’t want to get involved
because the 40-foot structure was good enough there. They checked
out their electronics on that. It’s zero-g, but they couldn’t
get very much out of it. Maybe you got a half a second.
Wright:
There were drop towers at Lewis, did you have them there?
Weiss:
At Lewis we had some old fuel towers, and they used that. They were
100-feet deep, so they started to use that to get a little more zero-g,
and then later on they did use airplanes. It’s kind of funny,
being at zero-g. Everything in your body seems to go in every direction.
They did a good job on that.
This fellow that wrote that report got my name on it—I could
kill him because what did happen was the thing I was afraid of. This
guy still knew his math—he’s getting his Ph.D., he’s
a brilliant guy—and a guy from Lockheed [Aircraft Corp.] called
me. He said he could get equation one, he could go to equation two,
but he can’t go any further than that. “Can you help me?”
I said, “I’ll try.” I happened to have Brazinsky’s
chicken-scratching, so I went through all his notes. I couldn’t
figure out how he got it.
I worked at home every night. I worked at the lab every weekend till
I finally did solve it. Boy, I felt good when I solved it. But I was
afraid that I would never get the solution to it. I kept telling him,
“When you write a report, we ought to put it in an appendix
so people know how you do it.” But they don’t listen to
me.
Wright:
When you said that you really didn’t want to start being more
involved in the space program, was it you personally, or you didn’t
want the Center to move that way?
Weiss:
Me, personally. I had my budget and I could devote it any way I liked.
It had to be approved by the Director.
Wright:
Did you have a lot of strong feelings about the Center moving into
more of the space business, or did you feel like the Center should
stay more toward aeronautics?
Weiss:
I think we should have stayed in aeronautics. It’s because I’ve
been in aeronautics since I was 12 years old. I used to cycle down
to a commercial field and I’d clean up oil spills and clean
out airplanes just to get a free ride—until my mother found
out. She said, “You’ve got to kill yourself now?”
I’m already in the [Army Air Corps] Reserves, waiting for a
class to open up.
Wright:
What’s the first plane ride you took? What was the plane?
Weiss:
It was a Piper [J-3] Cub on skis, in Utica, New York. I took one lesson,
but I couldn’t afford it. It was something like $10 an hour.
Wright:
Is that the first one you took a ride on, or is that the first one
you flew?
Weiss:
No, the first one that I actually piloted. The instructor told me
I could take the stick.
Wright:
What’s the first one you flew on, the first ride you took?
Weiss:
I think the Primary Trainer, a PT-17. It was a [Boeing-] Stearman
[Model 75 Kaydet]. That had about a 220 horsepower engine, and after
that we went into Basic, that’s a [Vultee] BT-13 [Valiant].
That was a dog. You know what happened in that airplane? I was going
solo. I felt that if I can get out of a spin, I can do anything. I
climbed up as high as I could, which may have been about 12,000 or
13,000 feet, and I threw it into a spin. It took me at least three
turns to get out. With the primary trainer, all you had to do is take
your feet off the controls and it comes out by itself.
I say, “There’s something wrong,” so I did it about
two or three times. I said, “I better go down and get my instructor
to take me up and show me what I’m doing wrong.” When
I went down, you turned the log over—you make out a solo log—and
it says, “Do not spin this airplane until authorized by instructor.”
The next time somebody spun the airplane was one of my upperclassmen.
We had the hazing system. One of my upperclassmen spun in from 5,000
feet, and they found the engine about 3 feet into the ground. I never
spun the airplane after that.
Wright:
That’s a good lesson.
Weiss:
I pulled a B-24 out of a spin, lucky—which is kind of interesting.
Somebody found me, some guy from Michigan. Apparently my group has
an organization, so I went to our first convention, which was in Florida.
We happened to be in Florida, so we went.
I did a lot of things that you shouldn’t do, but when you were
able to do it, you didn’t do it. Especially with that BT-13.
It was a hard airplane to control. In fact, we lost one instructor
one time. He’s sitting in the back, lighting up a cigar. He
didn’t have his safety belt on, and the guy said, “Do
a slow roll.” The guy did a slow roll and he fell out, but he
had a chute [parachute] on.
That’s what happened with me, really [during World War II].
I got blown out of an airplane, and fortunately I had the chute behind
my seat. It’s the kind you snap on. It got shot up, so when
I came down, I came down pretty fast. I hurt my legs, as a matter
of fact. I came down pretty fast. I figured, look, I’m Jewish,
I’m going to take out as many [enemy soldiers] as I can before
they get me. I reached for my .45 [caliber ammunition revolver]—which
I couldn’t hit the side of a barn with a .45. I go for my .45,
which I kept in my shoulder holster, and I didn’t have it fortunately.
If I had it I probably would have tried to shoot my way out, and I
wouldn’t be here today.
Wright:
It’s an amazing time. I’m glad you survived them all.
Weiss:
It’s kind of crazy. When I got into this group, they told me
about things that had happened to people in the group. For example,
one guy gave his crew the order to bail out. He bailed out, and he’s
left-handed. He’s looking for the D-ring, to pull the D-ring
[to activate the parachute]. He went to his jacket, his flight suit,
his underwear, and part of his skin before he realized he’s
got to use the other hand. They don’t teach you how to use the
parachute. They give you a sheet of paper, they call it Pilot’s
Information, and you have to sign a sheet that you read it. It tells
you how to use the parachute.
In my case, I started to oscillate back and forth. I was facing the
wind, which is no good, because then everything goes over your head
and it’ll drag you. You’re supposed to turn around 180
degrees. They tell you how to do it—you grab the risers like
this [demonstrates], and you unhook it, and it turns you 180 degrees.
I started to do that, and I just started oscillating, said, “The
hell with that, I’ll wait till I get on the ground.”
Wright:
You certainly were able to impact aircraft safety later in your career,
weren’t you?
Weiss:
I don’t know if you know Ken [Kenneth E.] Hodge. I worked for
him in Washington. Jack Enders works for him. He was head of aircraft
safety. I took that over for about nine months, and I used up all
my money and left. I had a lot of money. As an NACA guy, never had
more than $10,000. I built the most expensive experimental set-up
you can find, it cost about $10,000. The reason for that was it was
made of special nickel-plated steel, so it was rust-inhibited. We
had to build something special. That cost a lot, it cost about $10,000
for that. They’re still laughing at me about spending all that
money. That was a lot of money, then.
Wright:
It was. Did you ever work up at the [NASA] Plum Brook [Reactor Facility,
Sandusky, Ohio]?
Weiss:
No, I did not. When Plum Brook closed down, I inherited a couple of
the guys in my crew. I’m a funny character. I was told that
I have to reduce a couple of guys in [pay] grade, most were guys who
were coming back from Plum Brook. When they went to Plum Brook, they
were reduced in grade, and now I’m supposed to reduce them again?
I said I won’t do it, so I stalled them for at least six months,
until they said they met their quota, so I didn’t have to do
it. One of the guys was a branch chief at Plum Brook, and I broke
him down into a section head when he came back to Cleveland. How could
I make him any lower than that? I didn’t do it, really. Personnel
sent him a letter. I didn’t like that.
Wright:
What was the most challenging aspect of your job while you were at
the Center?
Weiss:
I would say living through liquid hydrogen. Liquid hydrogen, all you
have to do is look in the wrong direction and it’ll ignite.
It ignites over a big range of temperatures. I think that was our
best contribution in the jet field. We gave them a graph showing them
how long hot air resided on various hot components, so you knew how
long you want to cool it, to bring it down in temperature. In fact,
they had a cut-away engine somewhere that has all the systems on it,
but the only one I know that really got involved was Walter Kidde.
They make fire extinguishers. They were involved from the beginning
because I think they contracted out to the Air Force. Is there anything
else I can say?
Johnson:
I was just thinking about the B program again—do you recall
working with the photographers on that? I know they were writing some
of those things, too.
Weiss:
Yes. We bought them all the equipment. They had movie equipment. We
bought Hollywood type of equipment and we had stations all around
the crash area with armor plate on it because sometimes a prop would
come off and fly 100 feet. We did protect the photographer. The guy
who was most vulnerable was the guy who’s lined up with the
airplane, right at the end of the airplane. He was about 200, 300
feet away from the crash itself.
Johnson:
That was on the crash fire program?
Weiss:
That was in the crash fire program.
Johnson:
What about the hydrogen program? Did you work with the photographers
there?
Weiss:
Yes, to an extent. We built timing marks on the airplane so that we
could check timing frequently. We put a block every second, or something
like that. The thing that was really, for me, a big responsibility
because I was a new engineer—I was asked to find out whether
the passengers were killed because of toxic gases, or were they burned
to death? What I did first of all was I went to the medical library
here to determine why do people die? I found the British had a lot
of crashes, and the majority of them broke an aorta. You break the
aorta, you’ve got a second or two to live, so we had to be careful
to protect the aorta.
Johnson:
Thank you so much for sharing everything.
Weiss:
I’d be happy to share anything I could.
[End
of interview]