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The average age of NASA engineers on Apollo 11 was 28

4 pointsby mknapper1almost 6 years ago

1 comment

bediger4000almost 6 years ago
Even if that&#x27;s true, it doesn&#x27;t tell the entire story.<p>For example, in 1960, the USA was at the end of a 15-year period of building new jets, missiles and rockets. Every guy coming out of college with an engineering degree (and the GI BIll meant there were a lot) had a place in a growing industry. Everybody who wanted to got a lot of hands-on experience. The defence industry was taking shape, it was not a mature (some say &#x27;ossified&#x27;) industry and market.<p>There were many companies involved. We hear some of the names today, Boeing, Lockheed, Northrup. But the aerospace&#x2F;defence industry in 1960 had probably 3 or 4 times as many companies in it. There were a ton of what we would call &quot;senior engineers&quot; today who had a number of projects behind them.<p>There might have been a distribution where the average engineer was 28, but that means little in comparison to today. We have far fewer companies, which means far fewer senior engineers, and those engineers don&#x27;t have the range of experience, or the hands-on experience that a senior engineer had in 1960.