Monday, April 1, 2013

Our Visit to Edwards Air Force Base: Part 3

NASA Freebies

After touring the runway area, the tour bus stopped outside NASA’s Dryden Flight Research Center.  Our group was led inside to a briefing room, where we were shown a fifteen-minute video summarizing some of the facility’s past and present projects.  These covered various types of manned and unmanned aircraft, spacecraft, and systems that could be utilized in either type of craft, or on the ground.  (I particularly liked the flying drone powered by solar panels and tiny wind-driven propellers).  We were also given calendars showcasing spectacular photography from space, and copies of their newsletters.  One of the latter told of Nichelle Nichols’ recent visit to the Dryden, where she told the employees how her portrayal of Lieutenant Uhura on “Star Trek” had inspired Martin Luther King Jr.  Although I had read the account of her meeting with him in her autobiography Beyond Uhura: Star Trek and Other Memories, it was nice to be reminded that she still promotes interest in space exploration through her role in the 1960s TV show.

We still had an hour before Don, our tour guide, had told us the bus would return, so we headed over to the cafeteria, where we had our choice of purchasing burgers, sandwiches, pizza, and numerous other hot and cold foods, as well as ice cream for dessert.  We shared the Chicken Tenders and French Fries basket, mostly for sentimental reasons, as we do this every time we visit Kennedy Space Center in Florida.  Then we went outside to admire more airplanes on display, including another large and sleek Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird (we had seen one outside the museum), and an HL-10, one of the heavy lifting bodies NASA tested when it began investigating the space-plane concept, which eventually led to the development of the space shuttle.  Interestingly, the same rocket engine that helped Chuck Yeager’s Bell X-1 break the sound barrier powered the HL-10. 

When the bus arrived, all of us hopped on board, and Don concluded our tour of the base by showing us how the active-duty military personnel (and their families) who worked there lived.  We rode through the housing communities for enlisted personnel, and then the larger, upper-scale homes of the senior officers.  (All the houses had been rebuilt in recent years, and as the number of base personnel had fallen from its high point, this left more real estate for other purposes).  There were lots set aside for people to store their RVs, and others where families could offer their car, or any other unwanted items, for sale.  The bus also took us past their grocery store, fast-food restaurants like Burger King and Starbucks, several small strip malls, and their schools.  Like the base itself, all the streets were named after military officers who had made notable contributions to Edwards AFB.  Don pointed out that the junior high school was located at the intersection of two aptly named streets: Love and Payne.  Make of that what you will.

Before the bus dropped us off outside the base, Don, our large, well-rounded tour guide, related one final anecdote.  He said he was often asked if Chuck Yeager still visited the base, and he said that, yes, he did, but not so frequently as in the past.  For a long time, he served as a base consultant, and would stop by the base regularly, where he was still allowed to test airplanes.  Amazingly, although he’s now eighty-nine years old, Yeager still makes the occasional flight in a military jet.  At one point, Don was waiting in line in the cafeteria when who should get in line behind him but the great man himself.  Don knew that Chuck Yeager always got asked the same questions, such as “What was it like to break the sound barrier in the Bell X-1?”  He scoured his brain for a question that wouldn’t sound completely stupid, might intrigue Yeager, and perhaps even promote a long and interesting discussion.  Ultimately, the best he could come up with was, “So, are you buying lunch?”

Chuck Yeager looked at Don’s large frame and ample belly.  “Not the way you eat,” he said.

Of all the people on the bus, I think Don laughed the loudest.

Many thanks to the people who helped schedule our tour, who checked us in, our guide Don, our bus driver, all the helpful staff in museum, at Dryden, those who made our lunch in the cafeteria, and everyone else who made our day special.  Many thanks also to Edwards Air Force Base for offering these interesting tours.  Now, if only you would have let us bring our cameras with us…

Dragon Dave

Related Dragon Cache entries
Understanding Kimi Raikkonen: Part 6 (includes a summary of Chuck Yeager’s record-breaking flight)

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