Looking Back
10 YEARS AGO —
JUNE 4, 1998
X-ray telescope
counts down to
liftoff:
Technicians
have finished assembling the
world’s most powerful X-ray telescope,
NASA’s Advanced X-ray Astrophysics
Facility.
AXAF is
slated for launch
aboard Space
Shuttle mission
STS-93 in December. The telescope
has 10 the resolution and 50 to
100 the sensitivity of any previous
X-ray telescope. Scientists will
be able to study sources of X-rays,
such as colliding galaxies and black
holes with the instrument.
30 YEARS AGO
JUNE 8, 1978
Laser rangefinder readied for
battle tank: A technician at Hughes
Aircraft Co. adjusts the boresight of
a laser rangefinder
for the Army’s
new XM1 main
battle tank. The
new “mini”
rangefinder, designed
to provide
inst ant aneous
range information
to the tank’s
fire-control computer,
is smaller
and more efficient
than its predecessors. Hughes
will manufacture the first 110 laser
rangefinders for delivery to
Chrysler Corp., builder of the tank.
Hughes is also manufacturing an
infrared night-vision and fire-detection
subsystems for the XM1.
50 YEARS AGO
JUNE 12, 1958
Fast inspection of high-speed
cams solves a major problem in
computer production at IBM. Inspection
of a
12 3-in.-diameter
printing
cam involves
precise
measurement
of 4,320 points
a round t he
cam diameter.
Tolerances
run to 0.0001 in. Formerly a 12-hr
job, inspection takes 12 min on the
new cam analyzer. Three electronic
gage heads reference the revolving
cam to the master. Dimension
differences are picked up by gages
and recorded by supporting equipment.
IBM designed mechanical
portions of the new machine. Gaging
components were supplied by
Airborne Instruments Laboratory,
Mineola, N.Y.