The Flickr Apolloiv Image Generatr

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This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.

This site is a busybee project and is supported by the generosity of viewers like you.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (ca. Sep. 1967, World Book Ency. Sci. Svc. photo) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (ca. Sep. 1967, World Book Ency. Sci. Svc. photo)

A clever photograph taken August 26, 1967, during rollout of the Apollo 4/SA-501 launch vehicle.

Note the repainted & noticeably whiter “t-shaped” area extending upward/outward from the ‘vertical’ black roll pattern stripe between the “USA” lettering of the S-IC (first) stage.

Excellent reading regarding the aforementioned, along with a lot of other wonderful content at Wes Oleszewski’s delightful website:

gwsbooks.blogspot.com/2015/04/saturn-vs-vanishing-stripes...
Credit: Wes Oleszewski/”Growing Up With Spaceflight” website

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (67-H-1537) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (67-H-1537)

“MID-PACIFIC RECOVERY AREA—The Apollo 4 spacecraft, its heat shield blackened by temperatures exceeding 4,000 F., is lowered to its cradle after recovery by the carrier USS Bennington. The unmanned spacecraft launched from Cape Kennedy, Fla., last Thursday ended an eight and one half hour flight with a Pacific Ocean splash down approximately 275 miles northeast of Midway Island.”

A surprisingly good caption/description.

a04 (AS-501)_v_c_o_AKP (S-67-50531) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_c_o_AKP (S-67-50531)

“APOLLO 4 ON PAD AT DAWN – Early morning view of Pad A, Launch Complex 39, Kennedy Space Center, showing the Apollo 4 (Spacecraft 017/Saturn 501) unmanned, earth-orbital space mission ready for launch. The huge 363-ft. tall Apollo/Saturn V space vehicle was launched at 7:00:01 a.m. (EST), November 9, 1967.”

When I acquired this photograph, at first glance I thought it was a fake it looked so good. It’s the real deal though, yay! Although the scan looks great, it really doesn’t do it justice. Seriously, no hype, it’s stunning.

About the moon though…see one of the below linked photos.

a04 (AS-501)_v_c_v_AKP (S-67-50531) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_c_v_AKP (S-67-50531)

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (67-H-1004, 67-HC-322) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (67-H-1004, 67-HC-322)

“The Apollo/Saturn 501 spacecraft mated to the Service Module and Spacecraft Lunar Module Adapter is being mated to the Saturn V booster at the Vehicle Assembly Building in preparation for the first (unmanned) flight of the Apollo/Saturn V.”

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (105-KSC-67P-569) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (105-KSC-67P-569)

“NASA’s Apollo 4 space vehicle successfully completed at Count Down Demonstration Test today, at KSC’s Launch Complex 39 Pad A Merritt Island, Florida.”

Interesting & somewhat applicable today:

www.nasa.gov/feature/lessons-learned-from-apollo-4-countd...

Per "Countdown to a Moon Launch: Preparing Apollo for Its Historic Journey", written by Jonathan H. Ward, the Apollo 4 CDDT was referred to as "The Test from Hell."

Also:

www.drewexmachina.com/2017/11/11/apollo-4-the-first-fligh...
Credit: Andrew LePage/"Drew Ex Machina" website

www.nasa.gov/feature/55-years-ago-apollo-4-the-first-flig...

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (S-68-18503) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (S-68-18503)

“APOLLO 4 RECOVERY---The Apollo Spacecraft 017 Command Module is lowered onto a dolly on the deck of the USS Bennington, prime recovery ship for the Apollo 4 (Spacecraft 017/Saturn 501) unmanned, earth-orbital space mission. The Command Module splashed down at 3:37 p.m. (EST), November 9, 1967, 934 nautical miles northwest of Honolulu, Hawaii. Note charred heat shield caused by extreme heat of reentry.”

A really good description/caption...somewhere, pigs are flying.

Despite the erroneous (to a degree) reference to CM-009 as being a “large” hatch window CM, it was also a “small” hatch window CM – at the same time – addressed and as can be seen at the following wonderful site:

heroicrelics.org/info/apollo-4/apollo-4-hatch.html
Credit: Mike Jetzer/HEROIC RELICS website

And check out the Master-at-Arms...with the baton in his hand, either ready to club the alien that may have snuck onboard, or, being Navy, to make sure no one lifts something from the cockpit.
Just kidding shipmates, just kidding. 😉👍

a04_v_bw_o_n (ca. 1967, unnumbered World Book Sci Svc photo) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04_v_bw_o_n (ca. 1967, unnumbered World Book Sci Svc photo)

“During Apollo 4, the Service Module main engine was used to accelerate the unmanned spacecraft so that its reentry velocity would be comparable to that at the end of a manned lunar mission.”

The above, I assume, is per the caption/accompanying press slug associated with the linked photo below.

Although unnumbered, the work is clearly by Russ Arasmith. As such, it was likely used in press releases & therefore, handled accordingly. Despite this, it has retained its high gloss.

a (poss S-IC-T or 3)_v_bw_o_n (ca. 1965-67, unnumbered prob. NASA photo) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a (poss S-IC-T or 3)_v_bw_o_n (ca. 1965-67, unnumbered prob. NASA photo)

In lieu of comparative photographs (other than the one following), along with well-founded skepticism and doubt associated with NASA photographic record keeping & identification, I’ll foolishly go out on a limb and call this S-IC-3…being hoisted into position or removed(?) from the S-IC Test Stand/Building 4670, Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), possibly in October 1966.

In support of my above, I submit the following weak evidence:

history.nasa.gov/MHR-5/part-7.htm

Specifically, the following passage:

“After successful completion of post-manufacturing checkout at the Michoud Booster Checkout Facility, the S-IC-3 stage left Michoud on September 23 and arrived at MSFC on October 1. Unloading operations began on October 3, and on that same date workmen erected the stage in the test stand. ³²⁵

325. MSFC Press Release No. 66-223, Sept. 29, 1966.”

Even more specifically, this image – it being the ‘smoking rocket’:

history.nasa.gov/MHR-5/Images/fig317.jpg

HOWEVER, odds are far greater that it’s S-IC-T, due to the fact that it was static fired multiple times in the test stand. Per Mike Jetzer’s superlative “HEROIC RELICS” website:

“A total of 18 tests were performed with the S-IC-T stage at MSFC. The first three flight stages were also static-fired in the stand, with S-IC-1 undergoing two tests and S-IC-2 and S-IC-3 each being fired once. S-IC-4 and subsequent were tested at the MTF.”

At:

heroicrelics.org/msfc/test-stand-s-ic/index.html

ALTHOUGH, what little photographic evidence I’ve found of the purported S-IC-T at the MSFC S-IC test stand, of both supposed emplacement & removal, none have evidence of thrust chambers installed.

FINALLY, the outward appearance of the S-IC probably offers a clue as to its identification, Unfortunately though, I can’t keep up with the different paint schemes of the Saturn V’s, which seemed to have been changed, at different locations, during different times of the manufacturing/testing process, and where/when/if the U.S. flag decals were applied, along with what font “USA” decal was applied. So I suppose my final determination should actually be: who the f**k knows.

a04 (AS-501)_v_c_o_AKP (107-KSC-67PC-391, 107-KSC-67-9207 eq) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_c_o_AKP (107-KSC-67PC-391, 107-KSC-67-9207 eq)

“SATURN APOLLO 501 IN HIGH BAY 1, WITH WORK PLATFORMS RETRACTED. VAB HIGH BAY 1.
5-24-67”

Note access arm No. 8 “Service Module (inflight)” directly behind the CSM. Access arm No. 9 “Command Module (preflight)” is to the far right. Speaking of the CSM, note also the lack of RCS thrusters on the SM. Kind of clue as to vehicle identification.

And, unless something else surfaces, maybe on the verso of a “S-67-XXXXX” version of this photo - if such exists - the following lame, I’m sure contemporary pablum is apparently what’s meant to pass as the official description/caption:

“This photograph depicts the Saturn V vehicle (SA-501) for the Apollo 4 mission in the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC). After the completion of the assembly operation, the work platform was retracted and the vehicle was readied to rollout from the VAB to the launch pad. The Apollo 4 mission was the first launch of the Saturn V launch vehicle. Objectives of the unmanned Apollo 4 test flight were to obtain flight information on launch vehicle and spacecraft structural integrity and compatibility, flight loads, stage separation, and subsystems operation including testing of restart of the S-IVB stage, and to evaluate the Apollo command module heat shield. The Apollo 4 was launched on November 9, 1967 from KSC.”

Surprisingly, the above, with a bullshit, probably arbitrarily assigned “NASA ID” of 6754387 is actually available at:

images.nasa.gov/details-6754387

Unfortunately, as with many others, the description has been propagated everywhere. While I’ve read MUCH worse, it’s merely a copy/paste from some Apollo 4 document, which doesn’t address the context of the photograph…that is, what’s actually going on…the REASON the photograph was taken.

With that, the recognition/correct identification of the content of this photograph, along with the date, hence its pertinence to the problematic history of the SA-501 vehicle, has been…take your pick: lost, overlooked, unrecognized, omitted…something unacceptable.
For starters, the NASA photo ninjas, especially at the time of the photo’s processing, i.e., 1967, should’ve recognized that the CSM atop the vehicle was NOT the flight CSM (CSM-017). It ALSO should’ve been easily/readily identified as M-11, the Flight Verification Vehicle (FVV), it having been photographed a bazillion times during 1966 as part of SA-500F photo documentation.
As if that weren’t enough, within the multiple regurgitations of the trials & tribulations of making Apollo 4 happen, there’s not a mention of M-11, other than within the following, which although incomplete, with its own errors, at least references it…ONCE:

“The third stage (S-IVB) was the first major component of Apollo 4 to be delivered at KSC. It arrived from Sacramento aboard the Guppy aircraft on 14 August 1966 and went immediately into a low bay of the assembly building for inspection and checkout. The following week the spacer and instrument unit arrived. On 12 September, as Peter Conrad and Richard Gordon prepared to blast off in Gemini 11, the barge Poseidon sailed into the Banana River with the first stage. Boeing gave it a lengthy checkout in the transfer aisle of the high bay before erecting the booster on 27 October. During the following week, technicians stacked the remaining launch vehicle stages, using the spool for the absent S-II. There were a few problems - the checkout of the swing arms took an extra two days and a cooling unit for the instrument unit sprang a leak - but the launch team, still counting on the mid-November delivery date for the S-II, hoped to roll the complete vehicle out to pad A by 13 January 1967.

By late November the Apollo Program Office had moved the S-II's arrival back to January, and the launch back to April. Since spacecraft 017 would not arrive for another three weeks, KSC erected the facilities verification model of Apollo on 28 November.

[The first linked black & white photograph by Cliff Steenhoff below, depicts such.]

This allowed North American to check out some of its spacecraft support equipment. The first week in December the memory core in a digital events evaluator failed after intermittent troubles; cracked solder joints were blamed. A hurried repair put the computer back on line.

The command-service module arrived at KSC on Christmas Eve and was mated to the launch vehicle on 12 January 1967. That tardy prima donna, the S-II stage, finally appeared on 21 January. Tank inspection, insulation, and engine work were in progress by the 23rd. Test crews found damaged connectors on three recirculation pumps and set about investigating the extent of the rework that would be necessary. While inspecting the liquid hydrogen tank on the second stage, the North American team found 22 cracked gussets. These triangular metal braces, used to support the horizontal ribs of the stage framework, had to be replaced. Plans to move the second stage into a low bay checkout cell on the 29th were temporarily set aside because of a late shipment of the aft interstage (the cylindrical aluminum structure that formed the structural interface between the first and second stages). The interstage arrived on 31 January, and by the end of the next day the stage was in a low bay cell with work platforms around it.

Despite the delay with the S-II stage, KSC officials expected to meet the new launch date in May. The fire on 27 January placed all schedules in question. Although Apollo 4 was an unmanned mission, NASA officials wanted to give command-module 017 a close examination. On 14 February, a week before the S-II could be inserted into a fully assembled vehicle, the spacecraft was removed from the stack and taken to the operations and checkout building. When inspection disclosed a number of wiring errors, KSC's Operations Office cancelled the restacking of the spacecraft. By 1 March electrical engineers had discovered so many wiring discrepancies that the test team stopped their repair work, pending a thorough investigation of all spacecraft wiring. Within two weeks the North American and NASA quality control teams recorded 1,407 discrepancies. While North American repaired about half of these on the spot, modifications, repair work, and validations continued into June. During the break technicians performed pressure tests on service module systems at pad 16. It would be mid-June, with the wiring modifications for the command module finally completed, before North American could remate the spacecraft and take it back to the assembly building.

As the extent of the wiring problems was not immediately recognized, the launch vehicle team forged ahead to recoup the time lost on the S-II stage. In mid-February Boeing's airframe handling and ordnance group removed the instrument unit and spacer from the 501 stack and on the 23rd erected the S-II. The operation involved incredibly close tolerances. To qualify crane handlers, Stanley Smith, Bendix senior engineer of the crane and hoist group, stated, "We give them a technical examination and then check their reflexes and response to commands in training sessions." During a mating, an operator and an electrician boarded the crane and another man helped guide movements from the floor by communicating with the operator via a walkie-talkie. Smith set a high goal for his team: "We strive to train our men to the point where they could conceivably lower the crane hook on top of an egg without breaking the shell."

After a stage was properly aligned on the Saturn stack, a crew of one engineer, two quality control inspectors, one chief mechanic, and eight assistants took eight hours to complete the mating. Three 30-centimeter pins on the second stage fitted into brackets located 120 degrees apart on the periphery of the first stage. Then the mechanics inserted 216 one-centimeter, high-strength fasteners into matching holes around the perimeter where the two stages joined. The team torqued the fasteners in a staggered sequence to secure the bolts evenly and ensure a uniform distribution of stress. The mating of the second and third stages was conducted in much the same manner. The 501 was now set up except for the missing CSM.

[This is where something about the FVV (M-11) being reincorporated into the stack should’ve been referenced.]

The lengthy delays with the flight hardware aided the Site Activation Board in its efforts to get LC-39 ready for its first launch. The board's first flow [see chapter 15-1] included firing room 1, mobile launcher 1, high bay 1, and the other facilities required for the support of Apollo 4 - 1,280 activities altogether. During the first quarter of 1967, PERT charts showed less than 1% of these activities behind schedule. The decision in mid-April to modify the LOX system on launcher 1 and pad A put five weeks of negative slack into the site activation schedule. The modifications were made necessary by excessive pressure in the LOX system. KSC engineers added an automatic bleed system, relief valve supports, and a block valve that prevented purging through the drain line. As continued vehicle problems further delayed the rollout, the five weeks of negative slack disappeared.

On 24 May the S-II stage was in trouble again. NASA announced it would be dismantled for inspection, consequent on the discovery of hairline cracks in the propellant tank weld seams on another S-II at the factory in California.

[The photograph is dated 5-24-67. If correct, then the image was taken as part of documenting preparations for destacking M-11 & the S-IVB in order to remove the S-II stage.]

Additionally, thanks to the remarkable “CAPCOM ESPACE” website:

“For Apollo 4, the M11 was placed on launcher 501 on November 28, 1966 and removed at the end of 1966 following delays in stage S2. It will be put back in place on April 6, 1967 and removed on May 26.”]

Above, along with much more good stuff, at:

www.capcomespace.net/dossiers/espace_US/apollo/vaisseaux/...

So, somewhere out there, there’s some documentation from which the above was gleaned. I probably don’t have it & certainly didn’t find it online.]

The additional checks were not expected to delay the flight of 501 "more than a week or so." By mid-June the inspection, which included extensive x-ray and dye penetrant tests, was completed and the stage returned to the stack. On 20 June, the command-service module was mechanically mated to the Saturn V, and 501 was - at last - a fully assembled space vehicle. A revised schedule on 21 July set rollout for mid-August. On 26 August 1967, the big rocket emerged from the high bay slightly more than a year after its first components had arrived at KSC, and a good six months after its originally scheduled launch date. It had been a year of delay and frustration, and the end was not yet.”

The above, other than the inserted (bracketed) astute comments, observations & additional useful links, at/from:

www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/SP-4204/ch19-3.html

Inexcusable, incompetent, confounding at least, considering the importance/significance of this vehicle. But then again, for an organization that seems to have “officially/formally” misidentified the Command Module on display at Expo ’67 – to this day – the oversight, ignorance & tacit mis/non-identification of a lowly FVV is both literally & figuratively a no-brainer. The buffoonery continues. At least this shit is so far back in the rearview mirror that no one remembers, those that did are probably dead, and no one now cares, or will in the future. No harm, no foul, all good. 👍

a04 (AS-501)_v_c_o_AKP (unnumbered, launch photo) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_c_o_AKP (unnumbered, launch photo)

Exceedingly rare, almost non-existent view/vantage point of the spectacular & historic liftoff of Apollo 4 (AS-501), 9 November 1967.

Consider for a moment, the first launch of a full-up Saturn V stack, unmanned, 1967…unparalleled.

SL…who…what???

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (67-H-1254) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (67-H-1254)

"Apollo-4 Configuration"

"Sta" refers to station numbers...which appear to be a standardized bottom-to-top linear reference system, in inches, of the launch vehicle’s ‘planes’ of attachment(?), separation(?) and (thanks to Mike Jetzer)…gimbal.
I think I've also seen station numbers associated with/to levels/points on either the Mobile Service Structure (MSS) or Launcher Umbilical Tower (LUT). Maybe even both? If so, reasonable to assume they correspond with those of the vehicle??? Then again, it may just be a concocted memory on my part.

Fortunately, and commensurate with the superb site it is, the following excerpt, along with additional graphics, sheds light on the ‘mystery’:

“The station numbers are at right. Marshall Space Flight Center station numbers are in inches and are defined such that station 100 is the gimbal plane of the engines. This scheme seems to have started with the Jupiter missile (the first ABMA missile with an engine with gimbal capability; the Jupiter's S-3D engine was 100 inches tall from the exit plane to the gimbal plane) and continued on up to the Saturn V. This leads to the somewhat unusual need, in the case of the much-larger F-1 engine, for negative station numbers.”

At:

heroicrelics.org/info/saturn-v/saturn-v-general.html

heroicrelics.org/info/saturn-v/saturn-v-general/saturn-v-...
Both above credit: Mike Jetzer/heroicrelics.org

If correct, which I have no reason to doubt, how bizarre…to continue the “tradition”. There surely must’ve been some interesting history & background for its 'continuation'. So, station numbers seem to be attributed to MSFC. I don't get it.
Also, although I've found "field splice" in various NASA documents, it still doesn't help me understand or visualize it. So, I guess it's "duh" on my part.

SLS my Artem-ass. 😜

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (67-H-1538) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (67-H-1538)

“The first flight test of the Apollo/Saturn V space vehicle is being prepared for launching from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s John F. Kennedy Space Center, Fla., Complex 39A. The mission is designated Apollo 4. The Apollo/Saturn V is the most powerful space vehicle developed in the United States space program. It is 363 feet tall and its first-stage engines produce 7,500,00 pounds of thrust at liftoff. Weight fully fueled is 6,220,025 pounds. The Saturn V launch vehicle will place 278,699 pounds in a 101-nautical-mile (117-statute mile) Earth orbit. The command module will reenter the atmosphere, land, and be recovered in the Pacific Ocean about 622 miles northwest of Hawaii. Objectives of the Earth-orbital unmanned mission are to obtain flight information on launch vehicle and spacecraft structural integrity and compatibility, flight loads, stage separation, subsystem operation, emergency detection subsystem operation and to evaluate the Apollo command module (CM) heat shield under conditions encountered on return from a Moon mission.”

A rarely seen perspective, of any Saturn V, depicting either rollout/rollback of the Mobile Service Structure (MSS). Either activity meriting the gentleman documenting it with his tripod-mounted 16mm?/35mm? motion picture camera. He may be a contractor, although I can’t identify the lettering or logo on the back of his jacket. Looks to be a capital 'R", and the third letter possibly a lowercase 'c', which would suggest Rocketdyne; however, that would've been all caps, and that's not the Rocketdyne logo on the left. Finally, the fact he’s wearing a jacket/windbreaker may support it being MSS rollback.

All of that, during the first “all-up” test of the entire rocket that was to safely launch humans, with the goal of landing – also safely – on the moon. And then, returning the crew – safely – back to the earth.

THIS PHOTOGRAPH & MACHINES IS/ARE FROM LATE 1967.

I SAY AGAIN, 1967.

Where were you in 1967?
‘WERE’ you in 1967?
I’m guessing most of you ‘were NOT’.

www.nasa.gov/feature/55-years-ago-apollo-4-the-first-flig...

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_v_n (S-67-50531) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_v_n (S-67-50531)

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (S-67-50531) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (S-67-50531)

“APOLLO 4 ON PAD AT DAWN----Early morning view of Pad A, Launch Complex 39, Kennedy Space Center, showing Apollo 4 (Spacecraft 017/Saturn 501) unmanned, earth-orbital space mission ready for launch. The huge 363-ft. tall Apollo/Saturn V space vehicle was launched at 7:00:01 a.m. (EST), November 9, 1967.”

By any standard, an absolutely stunning image.

About that moon though, specifically, it's placement...

Compare with the below linked photograph...

Did the clouds really move that little while the earth rotated that much? Even if so, shouldn't there be a larger delta between the relative azimuth of the moon in both images? Our orbed maiden appears to have only seemingly translated horizontally.
I'm pretty certain both photographs were taken from the exact same position.
Something ain't right here.

You know, the more I read about the never ending SLS woes and now raptor engine issues & costs, this remarkable creation should’ve never been abandoned.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (NAR-Rocketdyne photo no. VEH690) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (NAR-Rocketdyne photo no. VEH690)

Dramatic view of the launch of Apollo 4, the first full-up test of the awesome Saturn V, 7:00:01 a.m. (EST), 9 November 1967, Launch Complex 39A, Kennedy Space Center.

Rarely seen. Most photographs of Apollo 4 and Apollo 6, the two unmanned test flights of the Saturn V, are moments after launch or of the vehicles at altitude, pitching over & heading down range.

a11_v_c_o_AKP (ca. 1969 montage, DAC print no. 27870) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a11_v_c_o_AKP (ca. 1969 montage, DAC print no. 27870)

An Apollo 11 montage…sort of…with an Apollo 4 launch photo, Apollo 10 photo of the earth - and to complete the presentation - a reversed image of Aldrin at the SEQ bay…yep.
If this photograph was indeed originally conceived & printed by Douglas Aircraft Co., not of NASA-origination/compilation, they can almost be forgiven, almost.
I guess it’s the effort that counted and 66.7% (a solid “D”), was good enough for contractor/gov’t work.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (poss. NAA infographic, S87MS15699) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (poss. NAA infographic, S87MS15699)

"APOLLO 4 MISSION: SECOND SPS FIRING"

nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/nmc/spacecraft/display.action?id=1967...

www.drewexmachina.com/2017/11/11/apollo-4-the-first-fligh...
Credit: DrewExMachina website/Andrew LePage

There's a 10-second discrepancy in the duration of the second SPS firing between the above sites. In this rare instance, I favor the NSSDC data.

a04_v_c_o_AKP (unnumbered) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04_v_c_o_AKP (unnumbered)

"Apollo 4 (Spacecraft 017/Apollo-Saturn 501) launches from Pad A, Launch Complex 39, Kennedy Space Center, Florida. Liftoff of the 363-ft tall Saturn V launch vehicle occurred at 7:00:01 a.m. (EST), 9 November 1967. Successful objectives of the unmanned earth-orbital mission included:
1. Flight information on launch vehicle and spacecraft structural integrity and compatibility, flight loads, stage separation, subsystem operation, emergency detection subsystem operation.
2. Evaluation of the Command Module heat shield under conditions encountered on re-entry from a lunar mission."

Above is an 'official' NASA caption taken from another Apollo 4 liftoff photo. An uncommon photo of this historic ‘no-fail’ launch that unfortunately has not been handled appropriately.

Interesting:

upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e6/Saturn_V_laun...
Credit: Wikimedia

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (NAA publicity photo, DBA 102067, A-117) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

a04 (AS-501)_v_bw_o_n (NAA publicity photo, DBA 102067, A-117)

“SPACECRAFT TUMBLE--Apollo 4 spacecraft command module receives final tumbling test in world’s largest clean room at North American Aviation’s Space Division, Downey, Calif., as part of last-minute inspection procedure of structure before shipment to Kennedy Space Center, Fla. Apollo 4 will be launched late this fall to gather additional spacecraft data on high heat rate entry of command module while simulating lunar reentry velocities of almost 25,000 miles per hour and 4,500 degree temperatures.”

1967 - preparations prior to testing a capsule intended for manned flight, of the ability to withstand the higher reentry heating expected, due the greater velocity inherent to returning from the moon.
The moon - 1967.
I’ll admit, I’m barely paying any attention to the latest ‘commitment” to send Americans beyond earth orbit, so the following may be irrelevant, wrong, not applicable, etc.
Does current ablative, heat dissipation... or whatever it is technology, preclude similar high temperature reentry testing, or does/will Orion or whatever it’s going to be, eventually, have the capability/fuel to decelerate on approach? Or is that not yet even a consideration...until the fundamental ability to just get someone into orbit & back, alive, is demonstrated?
Sobering.
Mind-blowing.
Depressing - 1967.