North American Aviation built the Apollo Command and Service Modules. NAA merged with Rockwell-Standard to become Rockwell International. RI sold,its NAA division to Boeing in 1996. Grumman Aircraft, now part of Northrop Grumman, built the Apollo Lunar Modules.
@@markholm7050 Sorry, yes NAA and Rockwell built the Command module, while Grumman built the Lander. Point is, this technology has been around since the 1960s, so why is Boeing trying to reinvent the wheel?
Thank you for this video. I hope Boeing can make Starliner work. At the same time, I hope SpaceX can make Starship work on schedule. Not sure why we don't hear much from Blue Origin, they're also an important player.
if its this hard to even get men to the iss, how have they done the moonlanding so quick? how comes that 70s tech is superior to our tech nowadays? can anybody explain?
They don't get anymore money but yah they got the 4.2 billion then they spend another billion or more themselves already over the contract ...not sure if they have to pay money back off they never complete a flight
How the hell are they using flammable tape in 2023? But how the hell was the 1st starliner allowed to fly w/the same tape?
Thanks for the update sir!
Thanks for the update
Maybe NASA should have hired Northrop Grumman. After all, they're the ones who built the very successful Apollo craft.
North American Aviation built the Apollo Command and Service Modules. NAA merged with Rockwell-Standard to become Rockwell International. RI sold,its NAA division to Boeing in 1996. Grumman Aircraft, now part of Northrop Grumman, built the Apollo Lunar Modules.
@@markholm7050 Sorry, yes NAA and Rockwell built the Command module, while Grumman built the Lander. Point is, this technology has been around since the 1960s, so why is Boeing trying to reinvent the wheel?
Typical Boeing, the company has become a joke
Good bless you 😢
Thank you for this video. I hope Boeing can make Starliner work. At the same time, I hope SpaceX can make Starship work on schedule. Not sure why we don't hear much from Blue Origin, they're also an important player.
The component engineers are going bye bye.
if its this hard to even get men to the iss, how have they done the moonlanding so quick? how comes that 70s tech is superior to our tech nowadays? can anybody explain?
Boeing still gets the money, right?
Theyre making a loss - it was a fixed payment contract - anything above that boeing pays
They don't get anymore money but yah they got the 4.2 billion then they spend another billion or more themselves already over the contract ...not sure if they have to pay money back off they never complete a flight
Hi
boeing boeing boeing
Sor make me the moderator of this channel plzz
Like crack nice very nice vídeo brother 😊😊
I love isro i want to work in isro
Boeing diversity and inclusion in practice.
ISRO 🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳
Jai Bharat