








Image credit: Convair
Image source: SDASM Archives




Image credit: NASA GRC
Image source: National Archives

Image credit: NASA GRC
Image source: National Archives

Image credit: NASA GRC
Image source: National Archives

This artist’s concept illustrates the Module Nova concept – Solid C-3 Basis. From 1960 to 1962, the Marshall Space Flight Center considered the Nova launch vehicle as a means to achieve a marned lunar landing with a direct flight to the Moon. Various configurations of the vehicle were examined. The latest configuration was a five-stage vehicle using eight F-1 engines in the first stage. Although the program was canceled after NASA planners selected the lunar/orbital rendezvous mode, the proposed F-1 engine would eventually be used in the Apollo Program to propel the first stage of the Saturn V launch vehicle.

This artist’s concept illustrates the Module Nova concept – Solid C-3 Basis. From 1960 to 1962, the Marshall Space Flight Center considered the Nova launch vehicle as a means to achieve a marned lunar landing with a direct flight to the Moon. Various configurations of the vehicle were examined. The latest configuration was a five-stage vehicle using eight F-1 engines in the first stage. Although the program was canceled after NASA planners selected the lunar/orbital rendezvous mode, the proposed F-1 engine would eventually be used in the Apollo Program to propel the first stage of the Saturn V launch vehicle.
Image credit: NASA MSFC
Image source: NASA Images

Image credit: Convair
Image source: SDASM Archives


FIGURE 1 Lockheed’s first supersonic transport (SST) design of 1956-58.
FIGURE 2 SST concept of the late-1950s.
Code One, Volume 24, Number 2, 2009
Image credit: Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Company
Image source: The Portal to Texas History

Code One, Volume 24, Number 2, 2009
Image credit: Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Company
Image source: The Portal to Texas History

Code One, Volume 24, Number 2, 2009
Image credit: Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Company
Image source: The Portal to Texas History

A Lockheed concept for the advanced tactical fighter (ATF) aircraft.
Lockheed Horizons, Number 17, February 1985
Image credit: Lockheed Martin
Image source: The Portal to Texas History

Lockheed Horizons, Number 18, June 1985
Image credit: Lockheed Martin
Image source: The Portal to Texas History

Artist’s concept of the pre-Shuttle Lockheed-sponsored Star Clipper stage-and-one-half lifting body configuration ascending from a desert launching base – circa 1968.
Lockheed Horizons, Number 13, 1983
Image credit: Lockheed Martin
Image source: The Portal to Texas History