Saturday, 3 June 2017
Handbook Of Model Rocketry
Another quest that proved a slightly more challenging than anticipated was my aspiration to find those editions of G. Harry Stine's Handbook Of Model Rocketry that my enthusiastically completist mind perceived as still dreadfully missing.
I first purchased the Handbook in its fourth edition in 1976 or 1977, and the latest, seventh edition is still readily available at the time I am writing this. We were utterly excited - rightly so! - about the Handbook when we first received it, and I thus also purchased any subsequent editions throughout the years. But obtaining the earlier and therefore historically rather fascinating editions was near impossible from Switzerland before the advent of the internet. And, as I found out, it can at times be somewhat difficult even today.
While I eventually found a copy of the second edition in decent condition, it was due to the extremely generous efforts by American collector Steve Kristal that I was able to complete the long-coveted line-up of books by adding the first and third editions. Needless to say, I am deeply grateful for such kindness.
For somebody who has been fascinated by model rocketry for most of my life, this means a lot. G. Harry Stine's Handbooks are not mere collector's items to me; it is still quite fascinating to read them, and the information therein has aged quite well. These books are like a time machine to an era when model rocketry lived through a golden age.
The photo above thus shows all the editions in chronological order. Top row, from left: Handbook Of Model Rocketry, original edition, Follett Publishing Company, Chicago, 1965; second edition, Follett Publishing Company, Chicago, 1967; third edition, Follett Publishing Company, Chicago, 1970; my original copy of the fourth edition as purchased when I was a teenager, Follett Publishing Company, Chicago, 1976.
Bottom row, from left: fifth edition, Prentice Hall Press, New York, 1987; sixth edition, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, 1994; seventh edition (with Bill Stine), John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New Jersey, 2004.
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One of the two guys in the photo on the sixth edition - the one in the hat - is a friend of mine and belongs to my club in Massachusetts. His name is Ron, and he has some interesting connections.
ReplyDeleteHe recently invited me to a motor certification session with the NAR S&T Committee at MIT in Cambridge. It was a fascinating experience in which we did some static tests using a stand built by Vern Estes himself.
Imagine my surprise when he showed me the cover of the Handbook with his photo on it!
Being featured on the cover of the Handbook Of Model Rocketry is like being awarded a knighthood!
DeleteGee I don’t feel knighted !
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