saturnv

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  • Lego

    Your next Lego masterpiece is a $120 NASA Saturn V rocket

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    04.28.2017

    Lego has been inspired by NASA lately. Last month, the toymaker paid homage to women who made great contributions to the space agency, and now it's revealing an Apollo Saturn V set that also looks incredible. As seen in the picture above, this rocket stands at a little more than three feet tall and can be positioned horizontally or vertically. The idea for the piece was born out of the company's Lego Ideas program, which lets people from all over the world submit concepts they'd like to see get made. Made up of nearly 2,000 Lego pieces, the NASA Apollo Saturn V is expected to hit stores in June for $120 -- which is a small price to pay to make your Moon-landing fantasies come true.

  • Jeff Bezos expedition finds proof that recovered F-1 engine belongs to Apollo 11

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    07.19.2013

    Jeff Bezos' expeditionary team already believes that it's recovering Apollo 11 engines from the ocean, but it now has firm evidence that it's on the right track. The group has just found a serial number (pictured above) linking a salvaged thrust chamber to the fifth F-1 engine on Apollo 11's Saturn V rocket. While there's more identification work to go, the discovery shows that Bezos' conservation project is paying off. The timing is also rather convenient -- it gives us a fitting tribute to the NASA explorers that reached the Moon 44 years ago.

  • Jeff Bezos highlights finds from F-1 engine underwater 'sculpture garden'

    by 
    Brian Heater
    Brian Heater
    03.20.2013

    You'd think running a company like Amazon would keep a guy busy. But like many of his fellow billionaires, Jeff Bezos still has big dreams. Space dreams. As of late, the exec's been spending time onboard the Seabed Worker (much of which has apparently involved working on his computer from the cabin), alongside a crew tasked with recovering F-1 engines from the Apollo program, which are now a part of an "incredible sculpture garden...that tells the story of a fiery and violent end." Seems Bezos has been exercising his poesy muscles in the cabin, as well. The team has apparently recovered enough F1-parts to construct two engines, which will go on display to help "inspire something amazing." More striking images from the expedition can be seen in the source link below.