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DESTINATION MOON: A History of the
Lunar Orbiter Program
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- CHAPTER III: BEGINNING THE LUNAR
ORBITER PROGRAM
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- The Boeing Lunar Orbiter
Proposal
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- [65] The Source
Evaluation Board turned to the proposal of the Boeing Company of
Seattle, Washington. Boeing presented an orbiter concept which
used three-axis stabilization with a spacecraft weighing only 360
kilograms. The design employed much space-tested, off -the-shelf
hardware. For example, Boeing would have a photographic system
fabricated by Eastman Kodak, the contractor for the Agena photo
system already in use by the U.S. Air Force. Film processing on
board the orbiter would be handled by the Kodak Bimat process
which had been perfected in 1961. The Boeing orbiter would use the
same Canopus sensor for acquiring the star Canopus as an attitude
reference as the Mariner C spacecraft had used. The
100-pound-thrust Marquardt rocket engine which was being developed
for the Apollo Program would be used for deboosting the spacecraft
into lunar orbit. Four large solar panels would generate power for
the spacecraft, and these would be backed up [66] by nickel cadmium
batteries which would supply power at the times when the orbiter
would be out of sight of the Sun. The whole system would generate
266 watts of electrical output to power the spacecraft's
components.17
Boeing's proposed photographic system pleased
the Source Evaluation Board because it offered greater flexibility
than those submitted by the other four bidders. It would be a
scaled-down version of the Eastman Kodak system used by USAF, and,
unlike the others, it featured a camera with two lenses which could
take pictures simultaneously -- one using a high-resolution, the
other a medium-resolution mode. On a single mission the Boeing
orbiter could photograph a greater area of the lunar surface and also
obtain more detailed photographic data than any other proposed
system. Moreover, if loss of the use of one lens occurred.. the whole
photographic mission would not be ruined.
The photographic system would be capable of
providing pictures of areas up to 8,000 square kilometers in the
high-resolution mode-four times the size of area called for in the
NASA Request for Proposals. Moreover., the photographic payload would
use the very suitable, highly perfected Kodak [67] Bimat process to
develop and fix the film on board the spacecraft. It is, therefore,
important to the understanding of the Boeing lunar orbiter concept to
survey briefly the photographic system and the Bimat process in order
to recognize the greater degree of flexibility which these two
integrated subsystems offered NASA.

