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Transporting Saturn S-IVB Third Stage
Transporting Saturn S-IVB Third Stage
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Transporting Saturn S-IVB Third Stage
In 1961 NASA contracted Boeing to build the 138-foot, 300,000-pound S-1C boosters that were the first stage of the 363-foot Apollo/Saturn V launch vehicles that would blast Apollo capsules to the moon. The first-stage booster, designed by Boeing in Huntsville, Ala., and assembled in New Orleans, La., had 7.5 million pounds of thrust and was a quantum leap beyond other rockets of the time. Its task was to hurl a 120-ton payload into orbit around the Earth. North American Rockwell built the S-II second stage, the command and service modules, and the F-1 and J-2 rocket engines, and the McDonnell Douglas Corp. built the S-IVB third stage. As time went on, Boeing was given more responsibility for the Saturn V program and, by 1964, was in charge of assembling all three stages of the rocket and providing mission support. Boeing also provided the technical staff at Cape Kennedy, responsible for checkout support during final assembly.
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Unique identifier
BI21712
Boeing ID
18760
Type
Image
Size
5998px × 4798px 82MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1960s
adults
Apollo Program
blue
blue skies
boats
bodies of water
cargo handling
clear skies
day
exteriors
gray
ground shots
historic production status
launch vehicles
photos
propulsion systems
rocket engines
rockets
smoke
space
text
three people
watercraft
white
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