-
DESTINATION MOON: A History of the
Lunar Orbiter Program
-
-
- CHAPTER V: IMPLEMENTING THE
PROGRAM
-
- NASA Cost-Reduction
Efforts
-
-
-
- [107] Faced with the
necessity to increase the rate of finding during the development
and testing phases of the Lunar Orbiter Program, both the Langley
Lunar Orbiter Project Office and the Headquarters Program Office
initiated policies to reduce unnecessary costs wherever
possible.
-
- Learning from the Boeing-subcontractor
negotiating experiences, NASA Headquarters and Langley continued
to pursue the policy of keeping contract changes to an absolute
minimum. The funding experiences of the second half of 1964 had
made the managers of the Lunar Orbiter Program very cost
conscious. The frequent meetings to discuss funding problems had
improved communications between Langley and NASA Headquarters
while they had also fostered a keen awareness by Boeing and NASA
management of the implications and pitfalls in the Lunar Orbiter
contract.
-
- Besides the strictest limitations on
changes, Lunar Orbiter could be spared undue expenses in another
specific area: the planned need for redundant spacecraft to back
up each flight spacecraft in the event of a failure before the
launch. Originally the plans had called for the backup spacecraft,
but after extensive consideration the Project Office at Langley
concluded that direct substitution of one spacecraft for another
between two launch [108] windows, should
the first spacecraft fail, was highly unlikely since the failure
would probably necessitate an investigation of the other
spacecraft.20
-
- In addition to this, storage problems at
Cape Kennedy and the necessity of maintaining the back-up
spacecraft in mission-ready condition during preparation of the
flight spacecraft presented no real guarantee of mission success
but added extra costs to the program. Indeed the whole philosophy
of spacecraft substitution seemed questionable, especially in a
situation where every dollar counted. Scherer pointed out to
Nelson in a memorandum that the earlier Pioneer and Surveyor
programs had originally made provisions for back-up spacecraft but
had later eliminated them. The Lunar Orbiter Program, by doing the
same, could save a substantial sum of money.21
-
- Elimination of the need for back-up
spacecraft was not the only way savings could be made. The
spacecraft delivery schedule proved to be another item for cost
reduction. The spacecraft were scheduled to arrive at the Cape
Kennedy facilities more rapidly than they could be launched. They
would require storage space there, and this was very limited. As
planned, spacecraft #8, the [109] last flight
spacecraft, would arrive a full six months before its launch date;
this would require that a "baby-sitter" keep it company for that
length of time, clogging vital test and storage facilities.
Scherer maintained that if changes were made in the delivery dates
of the fifth through the eighth spacecraft, the storage vans and
test teams could be reduced and money diverted for use
elsewhere.22
-
- One other item which Scherer explained to
Nelson was the possibility of reducing costs by economizing on
redundant recording equipment which the Lunar Orbiter Program
would employ at each site of the Deep Space Network to record
incoming data from the spacecraft. Comparing data-acquisition
requirements of the Mariner Program with those of Lunar Orbiter,
Scherer pointed out that Mariner had only two recording
apparatuses per site, one of which served ad a back-up. The Lunar
Orbiter Program planned to have three or more, which seemed to be
wasteful redundancy. He suggested to Nelson that he review the
program's needs for so much recording equipment and, wherever
possible, reduce or eliminate unnecessary extra
equipment.23
-
- [110] If funding
difficulties for FY 1965 placed a major constraint on initial
program operations, they also enhanced the performance of each
task force engaged in the program, and the process of overcoming
them educated Langley and Headquarters management as well as
Boeing officials about the increasing complexity of the whole
undertaking. It was clear by the beginning of 1965 that Boeing had
originally underestimated the costs of the major subcontractors.
The delays in signing both Eastman Kodak and RCA had made
themselves felt in the area of development and procurement.
Indeed, throughout the program the photographic subsystem would
remain the pacing item, arriving late and at the Cape Kennedy
facilities rather than at Boeing. Fortunately for Lunar Orbiter,
NASA and Boeing personnel successfully circumvented the problems
caused by the tardiness in signing the subcontractors to final
contracts.24
-
-
-

