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A member of the 345th Equipment Maintenance Squadron inspects the combustion frame of an A-10 Thunderbolt II aircraft engine

The FJ33 Engine Inlet from Williams International being tested in the Icing Research Tunnel

QUIET FAN QF-5A FAN AT QUIET FAN FACILITY - AIR INJECTION SYSTEM ON HAMILTON STANDARD

Steamboat COLUMBUS, Submerged south-southeast of Point Lookout, Scotland, St. Mary's County, MD

Three-inch A.A. cartridge cases. A three point inch antiaircraft cartridge case is the product of many operations that change it from a flat disc to a finished tubular case. The man performing the second draw puts many cases through this press every day

Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Launch Complex 39, Altitude Chambers, First Street, between Avenue D and Avenue E, Cape Canaveral, Brevard County, FL

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- Media and spectators get a close-up view of the Liberty Bell 7 Project Mercury capsule after its recovery from the Atlantic Ocean floor where it lay for 38 years. Launched July 21, 1961, the capsule made a successful 16-minute suborbital flight, with astronaut Virgil "Gus" Grissom aboard, and splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean. A prematurely jettisoned hatch caused the capsule to flood and a Marine rescue helicopter was unable to lift it. It quickly sank to a three-mile depth. Grissom was rescued but his spacecraft remained lost on the ocean floor, until now. Curt Newport, an underwater salvage expert, located the capsule through modern technology, and after one abortive attempt, successfully raised it and brought it to Port Canaveral. The recovery of Liberty Bell 7 fulfilled a 14-year dream for the expedition leader. The expedition was sponsored by the Discovery Channel. The capsule is being moved to the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center in Hutchinson, Kansas, where it will be restored for eventual public display. Newport has also been involved in salvage operations of the Space Shuttle Challenger and TWA Flight 800 that crashed off the coast of Long Island, N.Y KSC-99pp1032

Jönköpings Mek. Werkstad, interiör. Vattenverk är stora JMW-kunder. Bilden visar en pump med 800 mm genomlopp om 90 000 l/m för ett kommunalt vattenverk utanför Stockholm uner tillverkning.

DAMAGED HYDROGEN H2 MANIFOLDS ON TF-30 ENGINE

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CONTROL PANEL AND FAN BLADE ON ENGINE IN THE PROPULSION SYSTEMS LABORATORY PSL TANK 1

description

Summary

The original finding aid described this as:

Capture Date: 2/4/1976

Photographer: DONALD HUEBLER

Keywords: Larsen Scan

Location Building No: 64

Location Room: PSL-1

Photographs Relating to Agency Activities, Facilities and Personnel

Nothing Found.

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Tags

control panel fan blade fan blade engine propulsion systems laboratory psl tank propulsion systems laboratory psl tank nasa rocket test rocket development rocket engines national aeronautics and space administration high resolution ultra high resolution psl 1 photographs location room photographer donald huebler nasa photographs design space program 1970 s us national archives
date_range

Date

1976
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Source

The U.S. National Archives
link

Link

https://catalog.archives.gov/
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Copyright info

No known copyright restrictions

label_outline Explore Fan Blade, Propulsion Systems Laboratory Psl Tank, Psl 1 Photographs

Topics

control panel fan blade fan blade engine propulsion systems laboratory psl tank propulsion systems laboratory psl tank nasa rocket test rocket development rocket engines national aeronautics and space administration high resolution ultra high resolution psl 1 photographs location room photographer donald huebler nasa photographs design space program 1970 s us national archives