Where Are The Remaining Saturn V Components?
Here’s a list of where the stages and major components of the remaining Saturn V’s leftover after Projects Apollo and Skylab are located:

Apollo was originally intended to have twenty missions, but was ended after seventeen by the Nixon Administration.
Note: the provenance of the chart it unknown, but has been verified for accuracy.
LC-39B Pad Damage Assessment From Apollo 10
On May 18, 1969, at 11:49AM ET, Apollo 10 launched from LC-39B at Cape Kennedy. It was the second mission to the moon (Apollo 8 being the first), the fifth launch of a Saturn V, and the first Saturn V launched from Pad LC-39B — the same pad that now supports SLS / Artemis.

It was quite a busy day for everyone at Kennedy Space Center, and my Dad, Armand Boyer, on duty that day as the “Pad Chief” was one of them. He was responsible for fire and safety activities at the launch pad, but his job for the day didn’t end with the rocket launching. The aftermath of the rocket leaving the pad was incredible in its own right.
Artemis-1 On Her First Night of Wet Dress Rehearsal, April 1, 2022
The sun sets on Artemis1 and the first night of its Wet Dress Rehearsal begins.
All was quiet at that moment, and it was incredible to watch SLS start to glow brighter and brighter as the darkness fell behind her.

All was quiet at that moment, and it was incredible to watch SLS start to glow brighter and brighter as the darkness fell behind her.
(click to enlarge full size. Photo ©2022 Charles Boyer)
The day was a stormy one, starting with a tornado warning around 830-9am in Cocoa Beach, which is not far at all from Kennedy Space Center and Pad LC-39B. I was not terribly worried, however, because tornadoes almost always track northeast and that meant it would be offshore before it go to the launch pad. Fortunately, the warning was much ado about not very much and there was no damage to speak of at the beaches.
In between storms (it rained again that afternoon and that night as well) SpaceX launched a Falcon 9 carrying Transporter 4 at 12:24:17 local time, and later, after an afternoon of steely-grey skies and more rain, the clouds parted a little bit to put some color in the gloaming as the sun set.

(click to enlarge full size. Photo ©2022 Charles Boyer)
Artemis herself seemed to grow brighter and brighter as the sky turned to black. Much brighter and taller than the Cape Canaveral Lighthouse, the rocket shone like a beacon into the night. It’s clearly visible from all over the Titusville-Cocoa area, especially on bridges or on roads that give a view up the rivers.
Saturn V’s were the same, brightly lit and easy to see from nearly everywhere around town. It was not only a working spacecraft, but also a symbol that never failed to catch the eye. And given that a lot of NASA workers and their associated contractors contributing to the project live here, Artemis is now what the brightly lit Apollo vehicles were: a reminder of what the mission was.

(Best viewed enlarged…there are lots of cool little details to look at.)
(click to enlarge full size. Photo ©2022 Charles Boyer)
Like Father, Like Son: Two Steely-Eyed Rocket Men Who Took Us To The Moon
Here’s a story in the Huntsville (Alabama) Times from 1958 talking about my grandfather and my uncle and their jobs with the space program. V.L. Pinson, my grandfather, was a senior engineer and manager with the Army Ballistic Missile Agency, which was later merged into NASA in 1960.
George Pinson, my uncle, joined Boeing shortly after this article was written, and during his time there, he was an engineer, director and senior manager. When he retired, he had over 300 patents, some of which can be found here. One of the main projects he worked on was the Saturn V S-IC first stage, as well as military rocketry systems.
They were both very intelligent men, and literal rocket scientists who taught me a great deal — not the least of which was how to learn and how to go about solving problems.

Inside NASA’s Transporter-Crawler
Ever wondered what the inside of NASA’s Transporter Crawler looks like?
In 2014, I was part of a NASA Social event, and as part of the “insider” tour we got to go inside and look around in the Crawler that was used for Apollo and the Space Shuttle, and is now used for Artemis.












An Apollo Story: Rubbing Shoulders With Wally Schirra
My father Armand worked at Cape Kennedy (now Kennedy Space Center) during the Apollo program. He was the Pad Fire Chief whose fire and safety responsibility was launch pad operations — and that included astronaut safety except for when they were in the rocket itself. Once they were strapped in, the Launch Escape System (a rocket on top of the rocket) was the primary safety system, but anywhere else, that was Dad’s team.

Apollo 7 lifts off from Cape Kennedy on October 11, 1968.
When it came time to launch Apollo 7, everyone at Kennedy Space Center was tense — it was the first human-crewed flight of Apollo, and it was the first time men humans would be going to space after the AS-204 (Apollo 1) tragedy that had claimed three astronauts in the first design of the Apollo capsule. America had started falling behind schedule in its schedule to get to the moon before 1970, and on this flight, everything had to go right…or perhaps the program would be canceled.
If there’s one thing about NASA, is that’s they pay attention to the smallest details. That’s because major incidents always start small…and mushroom from there. On this particular mission, due to the previous tragedy in the capsule, extra attention was given to FOD — foreign object debris — that might be loose in the capsule. The fear was another fire, and no one was taking any chances. None.
With that, word came down from on high in the NASA hierarchy: once they were in their flight suits, no one was to touch the astronauts, under penalty of instant dismissal from their position. The mission managers made it clear that they meant business and that meant anyone.
Part of Dad’s job was to ride up in the elevator on the rocket gantry to the White Room — the place where crew would help each astronaut into the capsule. This elevator was essentially a hardened industrial elevator, big enough to move a lot of people and gear, but not so big one could stand on the other side of a room. There wasn’t room enough for that.

Wally Schirra waiting to go to the launch pad to start the Apollo 7 mission on October 11, 1968.
The mission command was Walter “Wally” Schirra, a crack former Navy test pilot and an inveterate smart-ass. He and my father knew each other well from launches and rehearsals for the Apollo 7 launch. They’d spent a lot of time testing emergency evacuation systems, refining them afterwards in meetings, and probably hoisting a couple of drinks after work back in Cocoa Beach. That meant Wally had also experienced by Dad’s wicked sense of humor, and anyone that ever knew him said the same thing: he was a masterful raconteur who loved to laugh and loved to tell a joke even more. He and Schirra were two peas in a pod.
So the astronauts get out of their van, walk up to the elevator on the launch pad and they start riding up towards their seats, and Dad was with them in their procession.
Dad told me that they ended up in the back, side by side, riding up to the top when Schirra starts laughing, gives my Dad “a shit-eating grin” and then “started rubbing shoulder all over me, laughing.”
What did you think about that?
“I was scared shitless that one of the Germans would turn around and I’d have to come home and explain to your mother why I’d gotten fired.”
But you didn’t, right?
“Nope, the Germans turned around, looked at Schirra and said in their perfect* English ‘stop it Schirra. Armand has kids at home.'”
Did you worry about getting any FOD on Wally?
“No, we were in jumpers and they were the cleanest clothes I ever wore. Wally knew it too.”
Dad told me that the rest of the way was silent, and when they got to the top, and then he looked at my Schirra and said, “give me a hug goodbye, Wally!”
Yup, the world watching and two smart-asses are cutting up behind the scenes. That was my Dad.
- most of zee Germans had accents.
Was Going To The Moon Worth It?
We often view going to the moon as a political stunt. The thing is, it was actually a profitable investment made by the US Government.

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