Page Title: Thoughts From Homer Hickam at Skyridge: NASA Man: The illustrated Don't Blow Yourself Up

  • This webpage makes use of the TITLE meta tag - this is good for search engine optimization.

Page Description:

  • This webpage DOES NOT make use of the DESCRIPTION meta tag - this is NOT GOOD for search engine optimization.

Page Keywords:

  • This webpage DOES NOT make use of the KEYWORDS meta tag - whilst search engines nowadays do not put too much emphasis on this meta tag including them in your website does no harm.

Page Text: This is the blog of author Homer Hickam. Skyridge is his home in St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands rebuilt after the hurricanes of 2017 Friday, December 31, 2021 NASA Man: The illustrated Don't Blow Yourself Up After requests from readers for more illustrations in my new memoir Don't Blow Yourself Up , I am writing a series of blogs with photos and maps.  This one covers Part 4 of the memoir titled NASA MAN which includes my career with NASA from 1981 to 1998. I was hired by NASA while I was still in Germany working for the Army in Grafenwoehr, the big training base in Bavaria that is used to train combat units. My job was to manage the work needed to keep the base operational. NASA wanted me to come and help the Spacelab Program Office keep track its many work orders and inventory by computerizing the system. Spacelab rested in the cargo bay with a connecting tunnel. This I did until the Challenger disaster. I was in Japan negotiating with their space agency for a Spacelab mission when Challenger and her crew were lost. I returned and worked on the solid rocket motor redesign for awhile, then asked to transfer to the Mission Operations Lab and became a payload crew training manager. I also worked in NASA's Neutral Buoyancy Simulator as a diver helping astronauts to work underwater on various space missions. Water provided buoyancy and simulated microgravity. Homer Hickam in orange wet suit working with astronaut in Neutral Buoyancy Simulator During this time, I volunteered to design and manage the construction of a small neutral buoyancy tank at Space Camp in Huntsville. We called it the Underwater Astronaut Trainer (UAT). I also designed a suit that students could wear underwater just like real astronauts. With my company Deep Space, we trained Space Camp/Academy students in the evening. Linda Terry and student in the UAT suit around 1989. I am top left. Linda is LT in the memoir. We were married a decade later. In the UAT suit I also went up to New York and trained David Letterman to scuba dive and work in the UAT helmet for a show that unfortunately never happened In 1989, I was assigned to Japan to help train the first Japanese astronauts. This began many adventures there and I met many wonderful Japanese trainers, engineers, and astronauts Takao Doi, Momoru Mohri, Homer Hickam, Stan Koszelak, Chiaki Mukai Spacelab-Japan Training Team. I'm 3rd from left 2nd row. After Spacelab-Japan flew in 1992, I worked on the Hubble Space Telescope repair mission in the Neutral Buoyancy Simulator. To prepare for the astronauts to train, some of us engineers went underwater in the Extravehicular Mobility Unit (EMU) suit to work out the procedures. It was the first use of Nitrox, a mixed gas that some feared would cause the "suited subject" to catch on fire. To make sure it was OK, we volunteered to go into the suit. Homer Hickam in the EMU suit working the HST repair procedures After SL-J and HST, I wrote a Tech Study on how the USA could go back to the Moon. NASA had no interest in going and engineers were restricted from helping me but I did it, anyway, by disguising it as a study of the South Pole Station. This study is still on the books and available to the managers and engineers as we finally go back to Luna (let's hope that remains true). My clever little moon anchor as described in my 1993 (!) study for NASA My study can be seen here:  https://homerhickamblog.blogspot.com/2019/03/1993-study-of-moon-laboratory-by-homer.html I also got to meet a very special person and give her a tour of the Spacelab module in our Payload Crew Training Complex. Hello Olivia! Olivia Newton-John and Homer Hickam Afterwards, I was assigned to the International Space Station as the payload training manager. I was one of a team of NASA managers and engineers sent to negotiate with the Russians to figure out how we were going to build the station and train the cosmonauts and astronauts. I had an interesting time in Moscow and the environs and made many friends With a replica of Sputnik 1 and shaking hands with a cosmonaut In 1998, I retired from NASA. I had 30 years of federal service and it was time to let younger folks take over. I also had a new writing career! Posted by

  • This webpage has 714 words which is between the recommended minimum of 250 words and the recommended maximum of 2500 words - GOOD WORK.

Header tags:

  • It appears that you are using header tags - this is a GOOD thing!

Spelling errors:

  • This webpage has 2 words which may be misspelt.

Possibly mis-spelt word: Hickam

Suggestion: Hick am
Suggestion: Hick-am
Suggestion: Hickman

Possibly mis-spelt word: Skyridge

Suggestion: Sky ridge
Suggestion: Sky-ridge
Suggestion: Bridges

Broken links:

  • This webpage has no broken links that we can detect - GOOD WORK.

Broken image links:

  • This webpage has no broken image links that we can detect - GOOD WORK.

CSS over tables for layout?:

  • It appears that this page uses DIVs for layout this is a GOOD thing!

Last modified date:

  • It appears that this page was updated on the Saturday, April 16, 2022 which is within the last thirty days - this is a GOOD thing!

Images that are being re-sized:

  • This webpage has no images that are being re-sized by the browser - GOOD WORK.

Images that are being re-sized:

  • This webpage has no images that are missing their width and height - GOOD WORK.

Mobile friendly:

  • After testing this webpage it appears to be mobile friendly - this is a GOOD thing!

Links with no anchor text:

  • This webpage has no links that are missing anchor text - GOOD WORK.

W3C Validation:

Print friendly?:

  • It appears that the webpage does NOT use CSS stylesheets to provide print functionality - this is a BAD thing.

GZIP Compression enabled?:

  • It appears that the serrver does NOT have GZIP Compression enabled - this is a NOT a good thing!