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Invention & Technology MagazineSummer 1999    Volume 15, Issue 1
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Cover Story


THE N-1 MOON ROCKET, THE WORLD’S MOST POWERFUL, LIFTED FROM ITS launch pad in Kazakhstan with the thrust of 30 engines. A cacophonous roar rolled across the steppes, a roar that carried hope. It was July 1969; at Cape Kennedy, half a world away, NASA was preparing to launch Apollo 11, which would carry the astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin to man’s first lunar landing. The N-1 was unmanned, but if its flight proved successful, the Soviets might be in a position to match the Americans’ achievement.

All engines were firing normally as the immense launch vehicle rose several hundred feet. Then a stray piece of metal, a bolt that a technician had failed to notice, entered the liquid-oxygen turbopump of engine number eight, causing it to explode. The blast broke cables in the electrical circuitry, damaged adjacent engines, and started a fire. An onboard fault-detection system shut down all propulsion. The N-1 moon rocket, fully fueled and weighing as much as a destroyer, fell back onto the launch complex and exploded in an enormous fireball.

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Feature Stories 
 
“I LIKE TO BUILD THINGS”
Walter Chrysler, a former railroad mechanic, built the most impressive car of the 1920s. By the early 1930s his company was outselling Ford.
by Stephen Fox
DOING WHAT COMES ARTIFICIALLY
Thanks to artificial insemination, some 60 percent of calves born on American dairy farms are offspring of parents that haven’t met socially.
by Miles R. McCarry
THE INFERNAL MACHINE
During the Civil War, when thousands of men could be killed in a day with rifles, both sides condemned the use of land mines as ungentlemanly.
by Mike Wright
THE ROCK DRILL AND CIVILIZATION
Every advance in civilization can be traced to advances in mining and metallurgy—and, going a step further, to advances in rock drilling.
by Larry C. Hoffman
 
 
 
Departments 
 
THEY’RE STILL THERE
In Buffalo, New York, a majestic array of 60-foot-tall steam engines stand as monumental and archaic as the pyramids of Egypt.
by Frederick Alien
NOTES FROM THE FIELD
Structural engineers preserve the early-1900s exterior of a San Francisco building while renovating the interior for the 21st century.
by Frederic D. Schwarz
POSTFIX
Apple’s Lisa computer was a marvel in its day. But that day was brief.
by Tim Hall
 
 
 
 
 

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