NASA Johnson
Space Center Oral History Project
Edited Oral History Transcript
Warren
J. North
Interviewed
by Summer Chick Bergen
Houston, Texas – 30 September 1998
Bergen:
This is an interview with Warren North on September 30, 1998, at the
offices of the Signal Corporation in Houston, Texas. The interviewer
is Summer Chick Bergen, assisted by Carol Butler and Paul Rollins.
We're so glad you could be here with us. Let's start with your experience
in the Air Force, or what was the Army at that time, during World
War II. Did you enlist in the Army or were you drafted?
North:
I started college back in 1940, at the University of Illinois, and
enlisted in the ROTC [Reserve Officer Training Corps] Engineer Corps
at that time. I was in the Mechanical Engineering Department. After
three years in the ROTC, they decided that since the war was on, we
needed to be pulled out before we were commissioned, so we were [given
the rank of] three-stripe sergeants and sent to the engineer officers'
training school, which involved three months at Fort Leonard Wood,
Missouri, for basic training, and then on to OCS [Officer Candidate
School] at Fort Belvoir.
We were at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, building [pontoon] bridges
in the swamps. We went by the orderly room one day and … found
a notice on the bulletin board that said "Anyone who would like
to transfer into another branch can at this point." This …
was an edict from Washington. "You can transfer into the [Army]
Air Force [or Field Artillery] if you like, but you can't transfer
so-called downward into the infantry." It was their pecking order,
apparently, in how you can transfer based on your technical background.
So a good percentage of us from ROTC at University of Illinois transferred
into the [Army] Air Force, pilot training.
I got my commission in [November] 1944, in Victoria, Texas, as a fighter
pilot. At that time the war in Europe had just completed, and the
pilots from Europe were being transferred into the Pacific, so they
didn't need us right at that point to go into fighter operations.
… They said, "We'll pick 10 percent of you to be instructors,
and the rest can be divided among [towing gunnery] targets,"
and things like this.
… I wound up at Randolph Field, going through [AT-6] instructor
school, then spent six months in Waco, Texas, training basic pilots
who at that time were transitioning … from the Stearman into
the AT-6, which was the advanced trainer when I went through training.
So we trained the first group of cadets in AT-6 coming out of the
Stearman, which was quite a jump for them. A lot of ground loops and
a lot of [broken] axles, but they made it in fairly good shape.
…Then after six months of [instructing], they said, "Well,
we don't need any fighter pilots overseas, but we need bomber pilots,
so we'll pick some of you for bomber pilots." …I got [assigned]
to B-17 training and then B-29 training, which I did, and wound up
picking up a [full] crew in Lincoln, Nebraska, [for] the B-29, and
then took that crew up to Mountain Home, Idaho, for phasing, for about
two weeks before [going] to the Pacific.
It was during that two-week period that … the atomic bomb [was
dropped], and we were all told that we could cease and desist and
separate from the Air Force, which I did, and went back to college.
This time I went … to Purdue [University], rather than Illinois,
because [Purdue] had an Aeronautical Engineering Department which
I wanted to specialize in. … I lost six months by transferring
from mechanical [engineering] to aero[nautical engineering], but then
got a degree in 1947 in aeroengineering from Purdue.
I interviewed with several companies [including] McDonnell [and] NACA
[National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics] at that time—and
went [with NACA] because it appeared a lot of research was being done
that was very parallel to what I'd been trained in, in the propulsion
option of jet aeronautical engineering. So I went [to] the Lewis [Research]
Laboratory, which was the [NACA] Propulsion Center at that time, and
still is, worked under Abe Silverstein for several years. That was
in 1947, I … [worked] for about a year in the altitude wind-tunnel
testing the jet engines, including the engine that's currently in
the T-38 at Ellington Field. That tells you how old that engine is.
[Laughter]
After a year there, one of the pilots from flight research, Howard
Lilly, had transferred to Edwards, which left a vacancy in flight,
so I transferred over there and began flying with NACA as a research
engineering test pilot, and flew everything that they had, all the
World War II fighters and bombers. We had the F-51, the F-61, the
F-82, which was a twin Mustang, the B-24, B-25, B-29. [Some] of that
research was flying engines in icing conditions beyond the Cleveland
area, up and down the Great Lakes. [Most of my research flying was]
in the F-82. We were dropping ramjet [powered missiles] … over
Wallops Island in the Atlantic Ocean, and on the way down [Bob Gilruth's
engineers including Howard Kyle] would get telemetry data back on
the propulsion characteristics of the ramjet. At that time I was working
in conjunction with John [H.] Disher, who [later went to] headquarters
[at] the same time [as] I.
… I got a master's degree [by attending night school at Case
Institute of Technology] under Dr. [T. Keith] Glennan, who subsequently
became the first administrator of NASA. Then I [received] a fellowship
to Princeton for flight test engineering that the [Air Force and]
Navy had primarily sponsored. [I attended under a fellowship AIAA
(American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics)] was sponsoring.
Got [another] master's degree there in flight test [engineering] and
was going to [NACA] Edwards as a research pilot when I interviewed
with the head of the Langley flight group at Langley, Mel [Melvin
N.] Gough, who suggested that [Edwards] wasn't the place to go, because
[Edwards] had undercut him, [and was becoming the primary NACA flight
research center]. Being the Langley chief [pilot], he felt that [Langley]
was the place to do flight research.
So I got diverted back to Lewis, where they made me [Assistant] Head
of the Aerodynamics Branch on stability and control, and under Silverstein
we designed a hydrogen-powered [second stage], which was to be launched
on top of the Sergeant solid rocket first stage. We had that pretty
well along in terms of dynamic stability and propulsion [when] Abe
got a call to go to Washington to [put together a] space program because
we could see Sputnik coming. Couldn't see that particular event, but
we could see the space era coming, because we knew that the ICBMs
[Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles] from [post-] World War II were
now being [considered to launch orbiting payloads].
[Silverstein commuted] a group of us [to] headquarters, starting in
mid-[1958], including George [M.] Low, John Disher, John [L.] Sloop,
Newell Sanders, and myself. We worked there … for a period of
six or eight months during the [Dwight D.] Eisenhower administration,
in which we proposed several things to the administration in terms
of what man could do next, what we should do next. Of course, the
first [decision required] was what organization should take over the
space business. Should it be NACA? Should it be the Army, under [Wernher]
Von Braun? Should it be the Navy? So, a lot of discussion at the top
levels [of government], but [NACA was] prepared to take over if that's
the way the chips fell. And that's the way they fell. … Eisenhower
decided it should be [a] civilian space program, and therefore the
civilian agency, NACA, should be transformed into NASA and given the
prime responsibility.
At that point, George Low was made the director of manned space, under
[Abe] Silverstein, and I was [chief] of manned satellites …
at that time, before we had a Mercury Program. [We were assigned]
our background specialties under Abe's guidance, and mine being piloted
flight, became manned satellites. I [was] selected, under Charlie
[Charles J.] Donlan, to [interview and recommend] selection of the
Mercury 7…
Fortunately, Eisenhower helped us by saying, "Let's make this
simpler and more logical." … He had a little prodding from
us to [select] people who had already been qualified in high-performance
jet aircraft, in particular who had gone through the military test
pilot schools at Edwards, Navy [Patuxent], and Great Britain. …
At that point, [his] decision [and the program's objective] was …
secret… [We asked for] volunteers for a program "which
would be interesting [to pilots]" and we got more than we needed.
Over 110 we felt were fully qualified and we ranked [them] in terms
of their experience qualifications, [then] divided them into three
groups.
We sent the first group … [to] a physical exam at Lovelace Clinic
in New Mexico. [It was] decided … I should go with them just
to make sure that everything was done appropriately, so I went through
the Lovelace Clinic [testing] with them. I came back [to Washington]
and I did not go through the Wright Field test, which was more psychological
than physical. … I thought that was not required, and I guess
I wasn't alone in that respect.
[We interviewed and ranked] this first group of thirty [two] who had
gone through [testing in five successive] weeks, [then] screened those
down to seven. [They were] the Mercury 7. At that point, the Manned
Space Program had been officially kicked off by Eisenhower, and so
had the beginnings of the Johnson Space Center, [composed] of Bob
[Robert R.] Gilruth's group at Langley, [who] had been visiting headquarters,
[meeting] with Silverstein's [staff and Congress] the previous six
or eight months.
… I was transferred into Gilruth's group. "As headquarters
representative, you should go [to] Houston with … the Mercury
astronauts," so I [moved to Texas] in 1962 with no [NASA] facilities
except several spots around the Houston area here. My first office
was on [the Gulf Freeway], and Gilruth was in the Farnsworth Chambers
Building on Telephone Road, [where I] spent part of [my] time …
before the Center was built. About a year and a half later, we moved
into the Center. Building 4 was [my] home for the next ten …
years.
At that point, … Walt [Walter C.] Williams had joined the group,
because Charlie Donlan, who was Gilruth's deputy at Langley [Space
Task Group], decided not to come [to Texas], and go back to Langley
where he had started. [Gilruth] brought Walt Williams [in] as [his]
deputy, so I reported directly through Williams, … in Flight
Crew Operations Division, as division chief.
[I was] involved, when I was down here, in the second selection program
[primarily] Gemini astronauts, the next nine, and then following that,
[in helping select] the third group [which] involved [some] of the
Apollo astronauts… [I continued to be involved with Astronaut
selection until 1967]. At that point my time was wholly tied up with
the crew integration into the vehicles, … the training simulators,
[and flight planning]. That's the way it started.
Bergen:
Tell us about the simulators that you used and how important they
were in training for the missions.
North:
We saw quite an evolution, of course, in that time period, because
in the aircraft industry, as you know, you had your option of using
simulators [or] airplanes to train with. In the space business, you
lost the [actual] flight vehicle [as a training device]. You had to
train all the way on the simulator. So I think the space business
probably did more to advance the art of simulation than anything else
in the simulation world. We went from the old analog computer Mercury
procedures trainer to the high-fidelity motion base we have today
in Shuttle, the evolution of [digital] computer technology into [flight
simulators].
Probably the most advanced thing we developed was the out-the-window
view, the high-fidelity aspect … not only allowed the crew to
see the Earth and the stars, but allowed them to navigate, so it had
to be a precise out-the-window-type simulation. Half the money in
the Apollo simulator was involved in getting the out-the-window optics
perfect enough for training. So that was certainly a big step forward.
We have a lot to thank in the company of Singer Link, who [developed
most of the simulators and] worked with us [in Houston] in those days.
I spent many trips up to Binghamton [New York] to work with them,
[including] people like Ray Long … and Lloyd Kelly, who was
a pilot, working directly … with my division on the design of
the simulator. They're still in the business. [They are now part of]
Raytheon. I believe they merged … a couple of years ago.
The other aspect of the simulation business that became very important
was the lunar landing part, which involved the Lunar Landing Test
Vehicle… [We] had to simulate operation in one-sixth gravity,
and that [simulator which] was flown here at Ellington Field, was
initiated by the Dryden Flight Research Center, actually. They were
helping us in parallel all along the way [developing operational]
techniques for manned space flight. Two gentlemen out there, Gene
[J.] Matranga and Dick [Richard E.] Day, [designed the] Lunar Landing
Research Vehicle, they called it, which was the predecessor of the
training vehicle. It had a jet engine in the center and peroxide jets
around the perimeter. The jet engine was gimbaled so it stayed in
a vertical position at all times, and was programmed to [thrust at]
five-sixths of the weight of the vehicle even as the fuel was depleted,
so it kept a one-sixth gravity dynamic environment for the hydrogen
peroxide [rockets which would] tilt the vehicle [causing it to translate
in any direction].
That vehicle evolved into the—we built three of the lunar landing
trainers after that for crew training, with the great help of Bell
Aerospace out of Buffalo, New York. As Neil Armstrong and [those who
followed] said, they felt it was … that [simulator] experience
that [prepared] them [to] land safely on the moon. They felt they
had been there before.
Bergen:
Where were you when Neil Armstrong landed on the Moon?
North:
In the control center here.
Bergen:
What do you remember about that event?
North:
It was a great relief to know they were down safely with a very scarce
amount of fuel. Of course, immediately then the thought switched over
to a safe return to lunar orbit. As we all appreciated during the
design phase, you [could] design in redundancy of nearly every component
of the spacecraft, electronically, propulsion-wise, except for one
thing, and that was the ascent stage of the lunar module. That was
a single engine. It had to work. So fortunately, a day later when
he took off, it worked perfectly.
Bergen:
One thing we didn't talk much about was Gemini. What are some memories
you have from that program, and what kind of involvement did you have
in it?
North:
That was an interesting program that turned out to be an extremely
helpful and useful program operationally for us. As you know, in fact,
when [Gemini] was … initiated, we had not chosen the lunar orbit
rendezvous; we had chosen Earth rendezvous. … We were going
to do Earth rendezvous before going to the moon. So the rendezvous
[concept] had been chosen, but not the particular [type] that we wound
up with. …That's one reason [the] Gemini Program was instigated,
because … the rendezvous with the Agena target vehicle would
be very similar to Earth orbit rendezvous, which [was] eventually
[changed to] lunar orbit rendezvous. … [Gemini] gave a lot of
practice in rendezvous, docking, separation from docking. As Neil
Armstrong found out the hard way [in Gemini VIII], it isn't always
[predictable].
The other thing that we discovered was extravehicular activity in
space could be far more physically tiring than we had suspected on
the ground. In fact, on [Eugene A.] Cernan's mission, flying with
Tom [Thomas P.] Stafford, he was working in the adapter of the Gemini
spacecraft, doing mechanical work, and fighting the [forces from pressurized]
gloves [coupled with faceplate fogging caused by the cold of dark
space, it] became so tiring that he became nearly exhausted doing
work that had seemed quite straightforward on the ground, although
we had trained [some] in the water tank, not to the extent we should
have. … We found that we needed to do a lot more training on
the ground, in the water, to get realistic physical exertion-type
motion, particularly on the hands. Gloves were redesigned at that
point to make them easier to use [with] the 5 psi [pounds per square
inch] pressure space suit. Those were the two primary things [which]
evolved [from Gemini].
Bergen:
Did you work directly with the astronauts very much? How did your
position in Flight Crew connect with what actually happened on the
missions?
North:
My division had about 300 people divided primarily into [three groups]:
one was the Simulation …, one was the Crew Integration, [the
third was Flight Planning]. So much of the time was spent working
with the astronauts and the contractors, to make sure that the vehicle
was designed from the standpoint of manual [operation]. In the case
of system failures, we could switch to a backup system, and …
once you were in the backup system, you could [learn to] fly the vehicle
safely. So we spent a lot of time on the simulations involving those
techniques, not only in Gemini, but later in Apollo, with Marshall
Space Flight Center. I traveled a lot with the astronauts in the T-38
[flying] to the various [development] facilities…
Training that we did on Apollo in the mission simulation for Apollo
13 certainly paid off, because using that [systems training familiarity],
we were able to quickly investigate the various fixes for the Apollo
13 [problems] in terms of what the crew could do, what the lifetime
of the propellants might be, and the battery power [without fuel cells].
Simulators worked hand in hand with the operation in space. Although
not intended [for the particular Apollo 13 problems], it certainly
helped in the malfunction [workaround procedures].
Bergen:
Do you feel your experience as a pilot, flying the different vehicles
that you flew, helped you in your position at NASA?
North:
Other people [apparently] felt so, and I think that's helped [resolve]
some of the [problems] we [faced]. We had a lot of extraneous input
from the beginning as to what a pilot could and couldn't do in space.
There were people in the aeromedical community and psychologists who
felt that the crew could not operate at zero gravity. … We [believed]
from aircraft experience that zero gravity [in space] was a simple
extension of a zero G pushover maneuver in high-speed aircraft. Even
an extrapolation of diving off of a high diving board, you're at zero
gravity for a couple of seconds. Seemed like a logical extension to
[a pilot], but that concept was hard to sell in the beginning.
[Some] would say that zero gravity would make the gentlemen go berserk.
In fact, during the Mercury design, we were told by one [person] we
had to design an automatic system which would take over if the pilot
went berserk. [Laughter] So we had to fight that sort of [input] in
the beginning, but that soon became passe, as soon as first flight.
Bergen:
Speaking of Mercury, what kind of impact did Yuri Gagarin's flight
[1961] have on you and the people you worked with?
North:
We felt that we probably shouldn't have flown the chimp first. If
we hadn't, we'd have been first. As you know, we flew [the chimp]
before Gagarin, and then Gagarin flew before [Alan B.] Shepard [Jr.].
If … Shepard [had flown] in place of [the chimp], we would have
been there first. I think retrospect shows that we didn't learn anything
from the monkey flight that helped us.
Bergen:
What did you think were the greatest challenges of the Mercury Program?
North:
It was a very interesting period, because everybody knew that we and
the Russians both had boosters that could launch ICBMs, and the logical
extension from that was to put manned and unmanned satellites in space.
So we felt that [man-rating the military boosters was] most important…
Of course, even before that time period, people had thought about
space because of the implications of these vehicles, and the German
group, the Peenemunde group under von Braun, eventually wound up at
the Marshall Space Flight Center under—at that time it was the
Army Ballistic Missile Agency, under General [John B.] Medaris. The
von Braun group was a very [dedicated] group, a good group. We enjoyed
working with them. The astronauts and he got along very well, and
that [mutual respect with] the astronauts was extremely [helpful for
all].
We made good friends with [many] at McDonnell, on the Mercury Program:
Jim [James S.] McDonnell [Jr.], the president himself, John [F.] Yardley,
Walter [F.] Burke, [and] Chuck Jacobson, who later came down to Houston,
headed up the McDonnell group here, which was [also an excellent]
support group for the Apollo Program. So we [had] good relationships
with the prime contractor not only in the Mercury Program, but that
continued throughout the Gemini Program, which [then] continued with
[subsequent programs]. [We also] had the influx of people like Jim
[James A.] Chamberlin from Canada and his strong technical group [of]
AVRO [ARROW designers], the airplane that was canceled just before
the Mercury Program flew. …They were a logical group to help
us, and we sure thank them. It was more of a partnership with the
contractor that made the program work, I think, more than a manager-employee
relationship. It was a partnership, [with] good people in industry
and the government.
Bergen:
Did you have concerns about putting men in a Mercury capsule on top
of the Atlas, with so many problems they had in the development of
that rocket?
North:
You've been reading the literature. [Laughter] Certainly. We worked
very closely with General Dynamics on the Atlas, and with Von Braun
on the Redstone, to make sure that the escape system, which had been
designed primarily by NASA, could fly on these two vehicles and separate,
pull the spacecraft off in the event of emergency. That was a strong
[requirement], and my initial effort was to make sure the escape system
could be manually … monitored and activated, [when necessary]
by the crew.
Of course, in Gemini we went … the aircraft [escape] route,
[using] ejection seats rather than the escape tower, so [the crew]
could eject [as in a high-speed aircraft]. That way we could eliminate
the escape tower…
Bergen:
How did you feel about using the ejection seats as opposed to the
escape tower? There were some people who didn't like the idea of ejection
seats.
North:
That group was not the pilots. The pilots grew up with ejection seats,
and many of them [are alive today because of] ejection seats. In fact,
Neil Armstrong [was] training [at Ellington] here in the lunar landing
training vehicle, [when he] had to eject [because] the aerodynamic
forces of this training vehicle upset the stability … [provided]
with the [peroxide] jet [control] system. … He lost control
of the vehicle and had to eject…
… Ejection seats had certainly been perfected. The Gemini seat
[was followed by the Mach 3 shuttle ejection seat]. We went out in
the early [shuttle] days to see Kelly Johnson at Lockheed Burbank.
He was in charge of the SR-71 airplane [design], which … had
many of the flight characteristics in terms of mach number and dynamic
pressure that we'd be facing in [shuttle]. … The ejection seats,
as you know, continued throughout Gemini and into Shuttle, the first
four flights, and many of our wishes would have been that we could
have kept the ejection seats in the Shuttle.
In fact, we fought to do that. That would have restricted the size
of the crew, because [one] couldn't put six or seven ejection seats
in there of the same type that Kelly Johnson had built for the SR-71,
but we could leave the two pilot seats in [then added] four [abreast]
behind the pilots, that were of a much lighter variety. The Yankee
escape system, which flew on the A-1 airplane, for instance. It's
a tractor rocket that pulls the pilot out in a prone position, where
the seat [pan] collapses and the pilot is pulled out [head] first.
That would have involved putting in pyrotechnic escape hatches in
four places … behind the flight crew in the [overhead] payload
deck …, which would have involved redesigning the orbiter to
some degree, [including] the wiring overhead.
John [W.] Young and I made several trips to try to make that system
[workable] by getting Langley to help us. Langley engineers in the
Structures Division looked at how you would put shaped charges in
the overhead of the Shuttle. It could have been done. It would have
[involved] a time delay, … been a little [more] expensive, [and
added some] weight… At that time [some] people [interfacing
with Congress] were saying that all you needed was four flights and
you had an operational airplane… "Let's just use [seats]
for four flights … If the [shuttle] works fine, we can take
them out and fly it [safely] like a DC-9." Well, that, of course,
wasn't quite true.
… We made some mistakes along the way… We've got a vehicle
today which has a moderate [bailout] escape capability, but not nearly
what some of the crew would like.
Bergen:
You mentioned Gus Grissom. In '67, the Apollo 1 fire, or Apollo 204,
as it's often referred to, occurred. What kind of impact did that
have on your division, since you'd worked so closely with the astronauts
and the spacecraft?
North:
… We knew Rockwell was going to have to redesign the spacecraft.
The first thing, and the longest pole in that redesign, was making
the escape hatch … outward-opening … rather than inward-opening…
Of course, the reason it was inward-opening was that … it's
lighter weight. It's much lighter weight to put an inward-opening
hatch that seals by pressure when you pressurize the inside of the
airplane or inside of the spacecraft. It's certainly the lightest
way to go.
But we had never fully looked at, in retrospect, the anomalies that
could happen, that would require a quick opening of that hatch on
Apollo. [No one] had … foreseen the Apollo 204 fire, but we
had foreseen the need to get out in a hurry, … in [an] emergency.
Every [jet] fighter airplane that's ever been built, you can get out
in a hurry …, either by [explosively] blowing it out or ejecting
through it.
I remember at one time [it was] suggested to the Apollo Program Office,
before the fire, that the hatch should be outward-opening, and I'll
not go into that in any more detail, but we were told that [would
make it too heavy].
Bergen:
Were you involved in any way in the investigation after the fire?
North:
Everyone was [indirectly], yes. I wasn't part of the team that was
headed up by [J. Irving Pinkel who I worked with the Lewis Center].
[Frank] Borman … was on that team. … The main focus of
their operation was to [establish] the origins of the fire, not how
you could fix the spacecraft afterwards… So it was more on the
electrical-oxygen[-materials] relationship [to fires] that the accident
investigation focused on.
The rest of us looked at what we were going to do to change the spacecraft.
Of course, the outward-opening hatch quickly became a must for the
next Apollo spacecraft, and that took a year and a half, as you know,
before [it could be] redesigned and [tested]…
Bergen:
Did you feel confident in the spacecraft by the time Apollo 7 launched?
North:
…Yes.
Bergen:
Were you involved in the decision to send Apollo 8 to the moon?
North:
Indirectly. I knew that the lunar module wasn't going to be …
ready … for the Earth orbit mission that was planned…
The command module [had] been tested with man in it. It could simulate
easily the translunar mission. The reliability of the engines had
been … proved. It was time to bite the bullet.
Bergen:
Did you feel confident that the astronauts would be prepared for that
mission before they left?
North:
…Yes.
Bergen:
What are your memories of Apollo 8?
North:
That was an easy flight, from the crew's standpoint. They didn't go
into lunar orbit, as you know. They went into Earth orbit and then
injected in an escape trajectory—injected, not ejected—into
the translunar orbit. It was really a challenge for the … guidance
system to be able to target those in-flight maneuvers, which [it]
did in extremely good fashion with the help of MIT [Massachusetts
Institute of Technology] and the people in John Mayer's division in
the Center. Everything worked as planned from [the] trajectory standpoint
and a reentry standpoint.
Bergen:
What additional aspects of training did your division have to incorporate
when you did the lunar missions, when they were actually on the lunar
surface?
North:
We became involved … with the geologists, of course. I saw it
necessary to go out to Hawaii at one time with Dave Scott's crew,
to make sure that they could find the right [lunar] rocks in the Kilauea
crater. It was a very interesting aspect of our training program.
The astronauts enjoyed the geology, I'm sure. The experiments I did
not get involved in in great detail. We were more concerned about
getting there safely and doing the work safely on the surface, getting
back in the spacecraft … and doing all the failure-type training
that we could here in terms of the spacecraft, other than the experiments
that they were conducting… We felt [the lunar surface activity
was] well-managed … by the scientific community. It worked quite
well. [Harold I. Johnson, in my division, had designed and built a
translating overhead suspension harness which gave the Astronauts
excellent simulation of walking and running under one-sixth gravity.]
Bergen:
How did you feel about the selection of the Earth scientist astronauts?
North:
We felt it was the thing to do. They were all good men. I had good
relationships with them. I flew [in aircraft] with … them, [the
first group] became pilots, as you probably know. Joe [Joseph P.]
Kerwin, Ed [Edward G.] Gibson, that group…
Bergen:
How did you feel when President [John F.] Kennedy announced that we
were going to go to the moon and back before the end of the decade?
North:
We had some inkling of it because my bosses had made those overtures
to President Eisenhower, who was somewhat lukewarm. But when Kennedy
was elected, as you know, … Abe Silverstein [and Hugh Dryden]
had made approaches to the White House [Space] Committee under Lyndon
[B.] Johnson [and convinced him] that the Apollo Program was the thing
to do, man landing on the moon. We knew that the seeds had been sown;
we weren't quite sure when they'd germinate. It was gratifying that
Kennedy did it soon after Shepard's flight. It invigorated everybody
to work harder. For the next [five or six] years, I don't think anybody
took any annual leave and no sick leave unless we were really sick.
I didn't. When I retired, I had 2,000 hours of sick leave I hadn't
used. [Laughter] Lost [most of my] annual leave.
Bergen:
You mentioned your boss, Abe Silverstein, several times. Tell us about
him and your working relationship with him.
North:
Extremely sharp, capable engineer and manager [and good at projecting
technology into the future]. He had a bachelor's degree in mechanical
engineering, as I recall, from Rose Poly Tech in Terra Haute, Indiana,
which people don't normally think of as an outstanding engineering
school, but it certainly [developed on in Abe]. He became father of
propulsion, as far as I was concerned—advanced propulsion. He
[recently received] the Guggenheim Award, as you probably know. It
was awarded to him about a year ago, which is a very prestigious award
for all of the work he's done primarily in propulsion, but also in
the [overall] space program. He had not only hardware knowledge, but
he could look into the future and see what [could] be done ten years
from now. We took the lead from him.
Bergen:
Do you have any other special memories, or anything that we didn't
talk about, from Mercury through Apollo, that I didn't ask you questions
about or you haven't mentioned yet, that you'd like to share.
North:
I think probably most of our work, of course, hopefully was done when
they lifted off, … the [spacecraft] familiarization and crew
integration… My division then had little to do [if everything
went well]. They had written the flight plan and had laid out everything,
how it should work [and conducted the training]. So when we had the
problems, that training paid off.
On Apollo 13, I recall that … Tom [Thomas K.] Mattingly, who
had originally been scheduled on that flight, [then] was exposed to
chicken pox [or measles] and was grounded, … was available [to
trouble-shoot because he had studied the systems] … thoroughly.
He knew the systems. He knew the procedures. He came over to the mission
simulator and we worked three days, seemed like night and day, to
look at all of the fixes that were being proposed, the impact it had
on the mission and was it practical. It [was] an extremely useful
tool. Without that simulator, we would have had a rough time pulling
it off as it was pulled off. That crew might still be in orbit somewhere.
Bergen:
True. How did you feel when Apollo 17 launched and you knew the Apollo
Program was ending?
North:
[Chuckles] At that point I was heavily involved in the Shuttle Program,
and I felt that we were over the hump in Apollo after Apollo 13 and
14. We, of course, [continued to work Apollo] heavily, but we had
shifted part of our division's effort into Shuttle and we were hoping
the Shuttle would materialize as quickly as we thought. We could foresee
the Skylab missions coming. … We did not foresee the Apollo-Soyuz
at that point. That came … as an afterthought during Skylab.
The Center was really stretched, as you know, in those days. [At one
time,] we were [working] Mercury, Gemini, and … Apollo together,
and looking at Shuttle somewhat in the same time frame, although Mercury
was finished in 1962. … There was a lot of overlap, and I was
heavily involved in all phases of it. I was fortunate to be involved
in all phases.
Bergen:
In 1971, you were moved to the position of assistant director for
Space Shuttle Flight Operations Directorate. How did you get moved
into that position, and what were you responsible for?
North:
You asked before about Apollo 17. This [move] occurred before Apollo
17, as I recall. We were trying to shift gears and pick up the Shuttle…
I had [major] interest in how the experience from [lifting-body programs
and X-15], from [NASA and] the Air Force, should feed into the Shuttle
design, many different configurations being considered. At that point,
three excellent people that were working with me [in] Flight Crew
Operations, Dean [F.] Grimm, [J. W.] Bilodeau, and [Carroll H.] Woodling,
… were all made division chiefs.
My division was split up into those three divisions and I worked under
[Kenneth S.] Kleinknecht in the beginning, and worked with John [W.]
Young probably more than anybody in the crew integration phase of
Shuttle, what the crew could do, should do, in Shuttle. Visited many
of the contractors, … Langley, the Dryden [people], [and the]
Air Force… That was a busy time in the Shuttle formulation phase.
Bergen:
What were some of the issues that you were involved in?
North:
Started with the configuration, what could the crew do. It was a foregone
conclusion that the Shuttle was going to be more like an airplane
than a ballistic missile warhead. We knew it was going to have some
kind of wing; we didn't know how much. The L/D, lift-over-drag ratio
of the X-15 was something that we knew [pilots] could handle…
[Armstrong and Joe H. Engle had flown the X-15.]
It turned out that the Shuttle has the same lift-to-drag ratio as
the X-15, although an entirely different configuration. Therefore,
the same flight [angles-of-attack] would be required to be able to
safely fly … and land it unpowered, although in the beginning
the first configuration … did have air-breathing engines that
would extend out from the sides after deorbit and be used in case
a go-around was required on landing. But after looking at the X-15
experience and the landing [footprint], … you would have coming
down from orbit with the kind of lift-to-drag ratio that we had, felt
that you'd have to be awfully far off target before you couldn't land
at a prescribed point after deorbit with the lift-to-drag ratio of
the X-15. … So far it's worked very well. The only problems
we've had have been weather, of course, on landing. With two alternate
fields, you're covered. So that was the first phase.
The second phase was what degree of redundancy do you need in the
flight control system. As I recall, General Abramson came on board
in headquarters about that time, manned space flight chief. His experience
[with] the F-16 [development was valuable]. He was the F-16 program
manager in the Air Force.
That airplane had a fly-by wire system, no control cables directly
to the servos, so we [had] that experience, although it wasn't good
in the beginning, the F-16 had some accidents, as you may know, in
the early days because of problems with the fly-by wire system. …
[The pilot input] a signal which [was modified] before it went to
the [control surface] servos, so the position of the elevator wasn't
necessarily what the pilot was calling for. [It] was what the computer
[was programmed to] handle, and it led to some accidents in the F-16
because the software designers could not [foresee and] design [software
for the anomalous flight conditions] the airplane could [experience].
That's [also] happened in some of the civilian aircraft accidents,
… the autopilot has put the aircraft in the position where the
pilot couldn't recover. … I think some of the European Airbus
early accidents were due to [an] autopilot [which placed] the airplane
in the [attitudes] where the crew couldn't recover [with a fly-by-wire
control system]. So we were quite concerned that the fly-by wire system
had to be very carefully designed and checked out, and the software
had to be [compatible with] any condition that could arise. And with
that so-called guarantee, we went ahead with the fly-by wire system…
It's worked very well.
… The brakes on the airplane … have been upgraded since
the beginning. A … drag chute was an add-on afterwards to give
you more [landing] margin. But a big concern was [inflight] crew safety,
in my mind, and how do you get away from the vehicle in the case of
emergency, particularly during launch. We learned the hard way that
we weren't quite ready for that kind of an accident, and I hope we
move in the right direction. It takes more than four flights to become
operational in this high-risk business.
That's what I think is going to continue to be with us as higher propulsion
system performances like the … engines are putting out. The
ones we have on the Shuttle today [operate at] 3000 pounds per square
inch, which is a lot of pressure to harness. A lot of chances for
a leak [during launch]. It would be catastrophic. We've been extremely
lucky in the main engine category. … The solid rocket [has]
had [the] critical [inflight] problems so far.
Bergen:
Were you involved in developing simulations for the Shuttle?
North:
Yes. Used a lot of outside help in that regard. We used [Cornell's]
Calspan inflight training airplane, what they call the TIFS [Total
Inflight Simulator], which [their pilot Bob] Harper flew… [TIFS
was the forerunner of the Gulfstream II Shuttle Training Aircraft
used today.] We used a lot of experience from the simulators at Edwards,
from the lifting bodies, the X-15 simulations [are] very analogous
to our final phase of our flight. Bob Hoey at the [Edwards] Air Force
[Base] was a big help and was heavily involved with the lifting body
[and X-airplane] program simulations, as was Dick Day, who was my
assistant division chief… All that experience was extremely
valuable in [knowing] what the Shuttle … should be [designed
to emulate]. Moving base visuals were just an outgrowth of what [had
been] done before.
Bergen:
How did you feel about the first STS-1, the first Shuttle mission,
being manned as opposed to being unmanned?
North:
[Laughter] That was the way it was designed, and that's the way it
[flew]. It worked very well. There was during the design phase much
speculation as to how much of an autopilot we should design into the
airplane in terms of the automatic landing system. That debate flourished
for several years during the evolution of the Shuttle, and it was
finally decided that it had to be [a manned landing], because automatic
landing was too big a step to [qualify using today's procedures],
although the Russians did it later. [Theirs] was more of a [one-time]
stunt than a real thing, because that's the last and only flight they
ever had in [their] Shuttle.
Bergen:
What do you feel were some of the biggest challenges in your job in
the development of the Shuttle?
North:
I think I've reviewed most of those. I was just using the experience
in industry and the Air Force and Dryden to build on, the lifting
body program, X-15. I had known these people from NACA days, had been
out there many times for conferences, and we'd given papers together
on various aspects of aircraft flying. So I knew who to contact at
Dryden. We'd previously known each other. So we introduced the astronauts
to them. Of course, [some] of them that had gone through the Air Force
Test Pilot School had grown up with [those troops] also, so it was
a natural cooperation and partnership with Dryden [and the Air Force],
as far as I was concerned.
Bergen:
How did flight operations differ in Space Shuttle from Mercury through
Apollo?
North:
Certainly became more refined and more precise in all aspects, from
hardware to the simulations, to the operation, a logical evolution
in a ten-year period. Got a lot of experience to look back on now
as we take the next step, as to what can and can't be done. …
The [plans] that I've read about, that the Augustine Committee has
recommended seem pretty logical in terms of the next step.
Bergen:
The Challenger accident happened after you retired. Were you involved
in any way in that investigation?
North:
I was called back by Eagle Engineering, who had a contract to look
at implications of the accident in terms of design and what they could
do and should do next, and things crew safety-wise that we had talked
about before were reviewed there.
… The configuration we have today is … a compromise of
what we would like to see, but certainly a step in the right direction.
… The current configuration will allow a crew to get out under
a stabilized flight condition if they can't make the landing field,
but it will not enable them to get out during a serious malfunction
where the [vehicle] is tumbling. [It is believed] the crew was probably
alive in their Challenger crew cabin until it hit the water, so if
they'd had parachutes and a way to get out, they could have saved
themselves. … That exact accident will never happen again, but
something equally as catastrophic might. So we hope we've taken a
big enough step in crew safety.
Bergen:
How do you feel about the privatization of the Space Shuttle?
North:
I think we learned from the Manned Space Program that the private
industry [has] really got a heck of a lot of capability. In fact,
they have all of [the manufacturing capability and a lot of operational
smarts], as far as I'm concerned… They have to be heavily involved
in the design and operation. It's a logical step.
Bergen:
Where would you like to see the Space Program headed in the future?
North:
That's a good question, in view of the cost limitations we have. [Budgets]
seem to vary from week to week and from President to President. But
then I think that the [recommendations from] the Augustine Committee
…, from what I'm aware of, is that you need to focus the effort
on people whom you know have the background to carry it through. That
was, I think, what happened in Apollo, that people like Silverstein
and Gilruth and George Low had the background to know who to call
on, when to call on them, and how they could work with private industry.
So it was a great partnership effort between the people that could
do it.
I think we had trouble with headquarters from time to time, [depending
on the background of the people] there. The lead center concept certainly
worked out well, as far as I'm concerned, where you focus the responsibility
on the people who have the background. If you try to dilute that too
much, you can cause problems in [extraneous effort] communications
delays and expense.
Bergen:
Looking back over your entire career in the space industry, what do
you feel you're most proud of?
North:
That I was born when I was: [Laughter] I don't think there's any other
time in our history that one's lifetime could span as much progress
as we've seen in aviation, from World War II, where [aircraft development]
and [rocket performance were top priority], and the aftermath of World
War II, what it meant in terms of the Cold War competition with [aircraft
and rockets], and certainly the computer coming [of] age. The computer
has done a lot to enable small, compact [systems] to navigate to the
moon and back. It's an exciting time to live in.
Bergen:
How do you feel about us working with the Russians now, when in the
rest of your career we were in competition with them?
North:
… I think the astronauts did an extremely good job of bridging
a [communications] gap which [revealed a high level of expertise in
Russia]. The Russians are … good engineers and build airplanes
that are extremely good. They put all their money in airplanes and
defense, and that's [how] their [economic] problem [developed]. They
spent all their money that way and not on the things that would have
let them have a free-enterprise economy like ours. [Because of their
current economy] it's going to be difficult for us to work with them,
I'm sure, in the future.
My concern is—and I'm sure I'm not alone—with their decreased
funding, that [some of] the hardware we're depending on over there,
including the [launch vehicles], are going to be extremely old and
perhaps not as well maintained as [everyone] would like. From a crew
standpoint, depending on what [exposure] the crew [has to this hardware],
it could be hazardous. … We're subsidizing them heavily on many
parts of that program. [The joint program is] going to have to be
scaled back [because] their monies are not going to be forthcoming
as we had hoped.
Butler:
I have two questions for you. Looking back, when you first became
involved with both the Air Force and then NACA, could you have ever
imagined where it all would lead and what it would involve?
North:
No, I certainly couldn't, and I didn't. My good fortune was, I was
working with people like Silverstein, who could foresee things. Afterwards,
in reading history, I realize that the Russians and the Germans, as
well as Professor [Robert H.] Goddard, had thought about rocket flight
long before World War II. So it's good that we had that foresight
back that far and some of the groundwork had been plowed… We
just built on that.
I'm extremely thankful that we had the Germans under von Braun working
with us in the Space Program, the big boosters in particular. That
background was extremely valuable. The V-2 and V-1. The V-1 rocket,
incidentally, the Germans—their crew safety contact [at Marshall]
was a gentleman by the name of Jack [Joachim P.] Kuettner, who is
the only man who ever flew … the V-1 buzz bomb. He had some
wild stories to tell about that. That was the noisy pulsejet [which]
flew over London and scared everybody to death with its noise as well
as its warhead.
But von Braun's group was certainly a big help to [the NASA space
program]. It was a tough team to beat. I hope we can [continue to
work with them. Marshall also had many good American-born engineers
such as Lee James and Jim Odom.]
Butler:
You talked about Abe Silverstein. Are there any other individuals
who you worked with closely that you'd like to say anything about?
North:
I can give you a long list. I really can. I was in a position, working
with the astronauts, that we visited … the contractor facilities
and soon got to know [their people], most of the [prime] contractors,
fairly well.
To start with McDonnell, John Yardley, Walter Burke, Chuck Jacobson.
With Gemini booster was Buzz [Bastian] Hello, at that time he was
with Martin and later went with Rockwell. At Rockwell we [worked with]
Charlie [Charles H.] Feltz, Dale [D.] Myers, [aircraft] experienced,
good people to work with. In the Air Force we had General Abramson,
General Davis at Patrick [Air Force Base], who [was in charge of water
recovery] in the early [pre-shuttle] days… At Cornell Laboratory,
[was] Bob Harper [who developed the Cooper-Harper aircraft ratings
with George Cooper at Ames]. At Ames Research Center [was] Gordon
[H.] Hardy, one of their test pilots who worked with us on their simulation.
At Langley [was] Paul Holloway [and] [W.] Hewitt Phillips, who you've
probably read a lot about. Larry Bement in the Structures Division,
who worked with us a lot … looking at escape systems.
At Cape Kennedy, we had people like Sam [Samuel T.] Beddingfield,
and … [G.] Merritt Preston's [NACA] group, who I worked with
in Cleveland, [including] his crew chiefs … Frank [M.] Crichton,
the crew chief of the F-82, which I flew at Lewis, and Joe [Joseph]
Bobik, crew chief on the F-61, which I flew. It was like old home
week in some regards, that [we] were able to stick [together] through
the Space Program. All had aircraft backgrounds, which [was valuable
during space vehicle integration and operation].
Butler:
You are still out and about, involved in different programs. Would
you tell us some of what you're working on now? You gave us a brochure.
North:
[When I moved to Houston, I] had children who were starting school.
I discovered a [good] reading program at Alvin, Texas. I was living
in Friendswood at the time. It [was] the Spalding reading method of
using phonics to teach reading to elementary students, … although
it works with adults. The program was being taught in Alvin, not Friendswood,
so we carpooled our children into the Alvin school system. …
I talked George Low into having his children join us, so we carpooled
together. His two children and my two children, oldest children, went
to Alvin for about two years.
Mrs. Spalding [had developed the reading] program. I had met her along
the way [and] told her when I retired I'd like to help her, because
I knew the reading [proficiency] in this country and the reading capability
of [graduates] from high school and college was very low. …
Many high school and college graduates [are not] able to read well.
In fact, some [are] still illiterate, [having] been pushed through
school. [After retiring from NASA in 1985 I helped Mrs. Spalding organize
the Spalding Education Foundaton.]
The program we have is to train teachers [throughout this country,
Canada, and Australia] to teach this phonics-based method of reading
and comprehension, so when children graduate from high school and
college, high school primarily, they really know how to read [and
comprehend]. … That's been my involvement in the last ten years.
We know that we need good engineers and science people who [must]
be able to read [research, and technicians who must be able to comprehend
technical manuals]. It's been gratifying to know that our program
works, and we're seeing high test scores from the schools that have
incorporated it.
Butler:
That's wonderful, a very beneficial program.
North:
Keeps you busy.
Butler:
And that's a good thing. Thank you.
Rollins:
When you were a little boy, what did you want to be when you grew
up, or how close did you come?
North:
My life was, I guess, affected by [Charles] Lindbergh's flight. I
was five years old at the time when he flew [alone] across the Atlantic.
[That created an interest] in model aircraft-building. I wanted to
design aircraft engines. For [this] reason I bought an aircraft engine
book when I was in early high school, devoured it. Not unlike [these]
days, Lindbergh's flight [was] kind of like our [space program]. [They
both] started a lot of things rolling, a lot of [new and worthwhile]
interests among people.
Rollins:
Was he your greatest hero?
North:
At that time, surely was.
Rollins:
Do you have any other heroes?
North:
A lot of the people I worked with—Silverstein, [Gilruth], Low,
Sam [Samuel C.] Phillips, the contractors, are all heroes. The astronauts,
of course, but they've already been recognized.
Rollins:
It's those people who are behind the scenes that most of the American
people don't know anything about. If it hadn't been for you folks,
man wouldn't have walked on the moon. So we appreciate all you've
done for us, and coming here today, too.
North:
Thank you for inviting me.
Bergen:
Thank you very much.
[End
of Interview]
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