For release February 22,
2006
‘POOR COMMUNICATIONS’ MAJOR CULPRIT IN CHALLENGER
STORY, UTSI SPEAKER SAYS
A “classic case” of failed communications was the single
biggest mistake leading to the blow up of the Challenger space shuttle
on Jan. 28, 1986, according to one who tried to prevent that fateful
launch.
“It is not safe to fly based on what you don’t know,” Allen J. McDonald,
who was director of the project on the day of the tragedy, stressed in a
recent seminar at The University of Tennessee Space Institute.
People like to hear what they want to hear, the retired Thiokol
executive added, noting also that about a dozen fellow engineers kept
silent during the Presidential Commission and U.S. Congress
investigations into the failed mission.
“They agreed with my position, but none of them stood up; they were
afraid they might be wrong.” Had they joined him in protesting the
launch on the cold January day, he thinks the Challenger would never
have been launched.
McDonald stood fast in opposing the launch because of concern that
unusually cold weather (for Florida) threatened reliability of O-ring
seals on the shuttle but was overruled by NASA officials. While no one
expected it, the seals failed, leading to the mixture of liquid hydrogen
and oxygen and the explosion.
He also cited numerous examples of “Murphy’s Law” about things going
wrong that plagued the mission.
UTSI Professor Gary A. Flandro introduced his long-time friend, who is a
“Distinguished Lecturer” for the American Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics (AIAA).
It was McDonald who revealed before the Presidential Commission that he
had advised NASA to halt the launch. While this role eventually cast him
in the light of a “hero,” the speaker said any good feelings about that
were not as lasting as the regret of knowing “what might have been.” He
acknowledged that his subsequent successful efforts to ensure that the
O-ring problem would never occur again was satisfying.
While his testimony resulted in a demotion, he held various engineering
and management positions during the 42 years before retiring in August
2001 as vice president and technical director for advanced technology
programs for ATK Thiokol Propulsion.
Speaking directly to UTSI’s graduate students, McDonald advised: “You
need to be professional. Use all the information in the room and make
sure everybody participates – ask questions. There are no dumb
questions.”
He noted that technicians assessing ice on the shuttle found
temperatures as low as nine degrees on the morning of the launch and
recorded these on charts but never shared this information.
The speaker noted that until the Challenger’s tragic fate, the U.S. had
not lost any astronauts on a mission into space and pointed out that
this was a most unusual mission because of the cross-section represented
by its crew, including the first woman and first civilian to fly on the
shuttle and that the public didn’t realize the danger.
NASA was apparently under pressure from the Reagan administration to
proceed and the decision to go ahead with the launch was not an
engineering management decision, McDonald emphasized.
McDonald pointed out that the loss of the Challenger was particularly
significant at that time because “the shuttle was our key vehicle, and
the Cold War was still going on in 1986, and we had lost every major
launch vehicle we had within a year.”
Allen J. McDonald, center, shares a laugh with Prof.
Gary A. Flandro, left, and Dr. John E. Caruthers before presenting a
seminar at UTSI on the Space Shuttle Challenger tragedy and his efforts
to halt that launch.
-- UTSI Photo
Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
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