Can’t confirm! My father was a rocket scientist, and worked for Rocketdyne, Rockwell International, and NASA. He was part of the team that sent the rocket to the Moon, he helped design the material that allows the shuttlecraft to return into our orbit without burning up. (he basically got an award for it. Of course, no money because the government owns the technology.)
My father was nothing short of a genius. I still have all of these notebooks that I found in his closet after he died seven years ago. The notebooks contain schematics and documentation for rocket engines on jobs that he worked on, especially divert engines. I will never get rid of these notebooks. 👏👏👏
I even have some little mini divert engine casings that they used in testing. I also have the end of a rocket engine, that I took to a highend metal recycling location in Los Angeles. The business was an entire block long. The guy brought out his little gun to point at the poece, and he couldn’t figure out what it was. He said it all his years, he never had a piece of metal brought him that he couldn’t figure out what it was.
As he scratched his head, I put it back in my trunk and told him to have a great day. I explain to him that my dad was a rocket scientist, and this must be something pretty special. I still have it today.
Can’t confirm! My father was a rocket scientist, and worked for Rocketdyne, Rockwell International, and NASA. He was part of the team that sent the rocket to the Moon, he helped design the material that allows the shuttlecraft to return into our orbit without burning up. (he basically got an award for it. Of course, no money because the government owns the technology.)
My father was nothing short of a genius. I still have all of these notebooks that I found in his closet after he died seven years ago. The notebooks contain schematics and documentation for rocket engines on jobs that he worked on, especially divert engines. I will never get rid of these notebooks. 👏👏👏
Wow that's so cool, frog <3
I even have some little mini divert engine casings that they used in testing. I also have the end of a rocket engine, that I took to a highend metal recycling location in Los Angeles. The business was an entire block long. The guy brought out his little gun to point at the poece, and he couldn’t figure out what it was. He said it all his years, he never had a piece of metal brought him that he couldn’t figure out what it was.
As he scratched his head, I put it back in my trunk and told him to have a great day. I explain to him that my dad was a rocket scientist, and this must be something pretty special. I still have it today.