
When I learned that my Apollo Guidance Computer was removed from the Lunar Module on display in the Smithsonian, I was wondering what greater purpose it could have served? Amazingly, this very unit was used in the NASA F-8 jet to demonstrate digital fly-by-wire (DFBW) controls for the first time in 1972, a project sponsored by Neil Armstrong (cool video summary)..
NASA’s conclusion: “The DFBW research program is considered one of the most significant and most successful NASA aeronautical programs since the inception of the agency.”
After demonstrating this breakthrough in aircraft control, the new approach carried over to the space shuttle and after a decade, all subsequent military and civilian jets, starting with the Airbus A320 and Boeing 777. It was a major advance in safety, reliability, fuel efficiency, maneuverability and smoothness of flight.
So, my LM guidance computer, designed for landing on the moon, taught us how better to fly on Earth. Why the crossover? From the NASA book Computers Take Flight: “The Lunar Module could not depend on aerodynamic assistance in any form. It was the first piloted vehicle designed to operate throughout its entire flight envelope in an airless environment. As such, it was necessary to provide the craft with all the components later needed for fly-by-wire aircraft.”
The blue arrow points to the Apollo 15 Command Module DSKY, repurposed after its flight to the moon and back. The pink arrow points to my LM AGC, but it’s actually the entire assemblage visible there in the upper avionics bay. It’s like R2D2 in the back seat. 🙂
From the NASA book: “The F-8 has a good-sized avionics bay behind the cockpit and above the gun bays. Removing the guns and ammunition allowed the auxiliary avionics, the DSKY, and the backup flight system to rest in the gun bays, leaving the original avionics bay for the computer and the inertial platform with the gyros—and the coolant system. ”
The magnetic core rope memories still contain the flight program. An artifact in the Future Ventures’ 🚀 Space Collection.
More on the Inertial Measurement Unit Ball:
The IMU was gimbaled on three axes. The innermost part, the stable member (SM), was a 6-inch beryllium cube, with three gyroscopes (IRIG) and three accelerometers (PIPA) mounted in it. Feedback loops used signals from the gyroscopes by way of the resolvers to control motors at each axis. This servo system kept the stable member fixed with respect to inertial space. Signals from the accelerometers were then integrated to keep track of the spacecraft’s velocity and position.
Update: new archival document research sheds light on the components inside the IMU ball, repurposed from various Apollo flights. Specifically, all three PIPAs inside it were the same ones that flew Apollo 12 to the moon and back! For the IRIGs, this IMU has:
7A-27 — Just flew on the F-8 DFBW
7A-69 — flew on Apollo 9 as part of IMU 14
7A-85 — flew on Apollo 7 as part of IMU 8

My pallet is still in the F-8 flight configuration, with the AGC + IMU gyro ball + program memory + some interface modules for the DFBW application. I was wondering about the extensive cooling system routing through a tray below each Lunar Module computing subsystem and running to the coolant plumbing box in the back right corner. From p.59 of the NASA book:




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