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Re: [OM] IMG: A Distinguished Retiree

Subject: Re: [OM] IMG: A Distinguished Retiree
From: Jim Nichols <jhnichols@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 1 Feb 2017 08:52:26 -0600
Hi Chris,

Thanks for looking. AEDC was the brainchild of Gen. Hap Arnold as WWII ended and the allies got a good look at the advances that the Germans had made in aircraft, engines and rockets. Vast quantities of machinery from the German test facilities were packed up and shipped to the US and new facilities were designed from the ground up. German scientists were hurried out of the reach of the Russians and moved westward. Many made their way through England, others were provided passage directly, but all were part of Operation Paperclip which got them into the US.

I first encountered these scientists when I was assigned to the Wind Tunnel Branch at Wright Field in Dayton, Ohio, in 1951. They were living, with their families, in an enclave near the field, and were assigned to various labs where their talents best fitted the needs of the research being conducted.

I was assigned to the 20-ft Massie Memorial Wind Tunnel, a subsonic facility that was the largest such facility that the Air Force owned. There was also a 10-ft transonic tunnel, and a vertical spin tunnel. The management structure of this facility was military, but the technical expertise was provided by Civil Service professionals and selected German scientists. Dr. Bernard Goethert was the senior advisor to the Colonel in charge, and Dr. Hans Doetsch was my supervisor.

The Air Force selected the former Camp Forrest area at Tullahoma, TN as the site on which to build a new group of facilities, using the captured engine test facilities as a starting point, and with the foresight of Dr. Theodore von Karman, new subsonic, transonic, supersonic, and hypersonic facilities. Rocket test cells and a large space chamber were also built.

About the time my USAF tour ended, in 1953, Dr. Goerthert moved to AEDC to take charge of the new transonic and supersonic facilities. He interviewed me and hired me, and that's how my history at AEDC began.

Jim Nichols
Tullahoma, TN USA

On 2/1/2017 6:15 AM, ChrisB wrote:
It’s great to have your history, Jim.  I do love to feel a connection with the 
past.

I had to look up AEDC but I see that it is to do with simulation facilities.  I’m in the process 
of bidding for a  little money (£5.5m) to upgrade our disorientation trainers – 6 DoF 
simulators with visuals.  The visual displays in our current simulators are OK for the moment, but they 
will not persuade young pilots in a few years time and I’m angling for displays that are almost as 
good as Hollywood-standard CGI with which to provide realistic situations with visual illusions to train 
our pilots to stay safe.

But it’s going to be an uphill struggle in the current pecuniary climate . . .

Chris

On 31 Jan 17, at 23:12, Jim Nichols <jhnichols@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

In June 1964, we welcomed a new Cooperative Engineering Student to our office 
at AEDC.  I was 34 at the time.  Today, I attended his retirement, at the top 
of his game, as a high level member of the Civil Service Senior Executive 
Service.  It was with pleasure I shook his hand and wished him well in his next 
endeavor.

At one time, one of my sons worked for him, and he passed on compliments today 
for my son's accomplishments.

He is on the right in this photo, wearing his newly-awarded medal.

http://www.gallery.leica-users.org/v/OldNick/Distinguished+Retiree.jpg.html 
<http://www.gallery.leica-users.org/v/OldNick/Distinguished+Retiree.jpg.html>

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