The Partnership: A History of the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project
Designing the Interface
During the spring months of 1972, the
personnel of the MSC Engineering and Development Directorate pursued
the design of an international docking system. Working concurrently
with the North American Rockwell team and the Soviet Group 3 members,
the Houston engineers were attempting to ensure the speedy
development of hardware. Starting a contractor to work on a project
before design was firm was not unusual. In the Apollo program MSC had
followed the same approach in the design and development of the
command and service modules, the lunar module, and their various
subsystems. The iterative process of design helped to ensure the
timely delivery of hardware and the maintenance of tight
schedules.
The 27 March-3 April visit of the Soviet
Working Group 3 members to Houston was essential to the NASA plan of
having North American Rockwell start the detailed engineering of an
Advanced Missions docking system. The four-man delegation led by
Syromyatnikov quickly got down to the task...
[181]
Excerpt from Transcript of Telecon
Between Manned Spacecraft Center, Houston, Texas, U.S., and
Intercosmos, Moscow, U.S.S.R. from Approximately 9:30 to
10:45 CST
- American Translator:
- Good evening!
- Soviet Party:
- Hello!
- American Translator:
- This is the Manned Spacecraft
Center speaking. May we speak to Professor
Bushuyev?
- Soviet Party:
- Hello!
- American Translator:
- Hello, can you hear me?
- Soviet Translator:
- I hear you well.
- American Translator:
- Good! This is the MSC NASA USA,
may we speak to Professor Bushuyev?
- Soviet Party:
- Prof. Bushuyev to the telephone?
I will ask him.
- American Translator:
- Oh! That is you.
- Soviet Party:
- Yes.
- American Translator:
- Mr. Caldwell Johnson will now
speak to you.
- Mr. C. Johnson:
- Sdravstvuite! [Hello!] (In
English) Greetings from the MSC, Houston, Texas, to our
Soviet colleagues in Moscow.
- Soviet Party:
- Hello!
- American Translator:
- Mr. Caldwell Johnson will now
speak to you in English, and after, if you like, I will
translate it to you in Russian. Will that be convenient
for you?
- Soviet Party:
- Hello!
- American Translator:
- Hello!
- Professor Bushuyev:
- This is Professor Bushuyev
speaking. I would like to propose the following. Do you
hear me well?
- American Translator:
- Yes, can you speak a little
louder?
- Professor Bushuyev:
- I would like to make the
following proposal.
- American Translator:
- Please.
- Professor Bushuyev:
- We have worked on the questions
initiated by Dr. Lunney in the letter of 27 Jan. and
propose to (or offer to) lay out the answer to these
questions with the aid of our translator.
- American Translator:
- Good.
- Professor Bushuyev:
- If Dr. Lunney agrees, I will
transfer the phone to Dr. Lunney's friend, a co-worker in
our delegation Mr. Artemov.
- American Translator:
- It will be . . .
- Professor Bushuyev:
- What?
- American Translator:
- Who? Artemov?
- Professor Bushuyev:
- Mr. (tape garbled) of our
delegation who participated in the meeting which took
place in Moscow at the end of Nov.
- American Translator:
- Good! One second.
- Professor Bushuyev:
- I will transfer the telephone to
Mr. (tape garbled).
- American Translator:
- Excuse us please. May we break
in?
- Professor Bushuyev:
- Yes.
- American Translator:
- Mr. Caldwell Johnson will now
speak, whom you know; he had been in Moscow. He would
like to say something first. All right?
- Professor Bushuyev:
- All right. (Some Soviet speech,
but unintelligible.)
- Mr. Johnson:
- Prof. Bushuyev . . .
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[182] ....of joining in
defining the dimensions and specifications of the docking system.
This information was spelled out in the minutes of their meeting and
in four sheets of engineering drawings.* Bill Creasy and several of his colleagues worked with
Yevgeniy Gennadiyevich Bobrov at the drafting table to lay out these
first Soviet-American engineering drawings. Larry Ratcliff drew the
capture ring and guides on drafting paper, and Robert McElya supplied
the details of the structural interface ring, while Bobrov prepared a
similar drawing for the structural latches. T. O. Ross then took
these drawings and conducted a dimensional analysis to be sure that
all items were compatible.
On 3 April, the two sides completed their
drawings and wrote their minutes. These drawings were a blending of
the way in which the Americans and the Soviets usually presented data
on paper. Creasy said, "Their drawing procedure is different from
ours and sometimes we joke and say that . . . [these Group 3
drawings] must violate the drawing conventions of at least the U.S.
and Russia and probably several other countries." But each side could
understand and work from the information as recorded, and that was
the important point. Looking back on this effort, Creasy commented
that, despite five subsequent updatings of the April drawings, the
basic work only required some minor refinements and adding the
tolerance dimensions.42
Agreement on technical specifications for the
docking system cleared the way for NASA to begin discussions with
Rockwell about building the docking module and the docking system and
modifying the CSM. As MSC engineers worked with the potential
contractor in drafting a statement of work for Apollo/Salyut test
mission hardware, the procurement staff in Houston drew up their
contracting plans.
At Headquarters, the agency's senior staff was
looking into various political aspects of conducting a joint mission,
and two issues were paramount in these discussions. First,
congressional authorization and appropriations would have to be
obtained before NASA could begin to modify or build the necessary
hardware. Second, a bilateral agreement between the United States and
the Soviet Union would have to precede the request for funds. George
Low was given the task of determining how to resolve this
issue.
* Following the
formalization of ASTP in June 1972, these drawings became part of
Interacting Equipment Document 50 004, "Apollo Soyuz Physical
Interface Requirements."
42. Interview,
Creasy-Ezell, 7 July 1975; and "Minutes of Meeting on Assuring
Compatibility of Docking Systems and Tunnels," 3 Apr. 1972.
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