How do you think the Mars Rover will have an impact on the world?
I believe in general, as people and all the interesting technical developments over the years, we've become a little numb to the excitement. But, the Mars 2020 has been releasing a lot of excellent footage of high-definition video. The public became really involved with the Mars 2020 exploration and the Mars Ingenuity drone test flight that's coming up will pave new ways for more exploration. Not only on Mars, but our customer is also looking at developing a drone for the Dragonfly Expedition that is planning to explore Titan, the moon orbiting Saturn.
But as I look back throughout history, space exploration has been the key motivator for all kinds of technical developments. When we had the first Apollo 8 photo taken of Earth from a distance, Earth Day and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency were created. In 1980, computers and cell phones started coming out. This is all within a short time period, and all driven by motivation from the excitement that space exploration has brought into our lives. To think about it, that's just driving even more development and technology. Who knows what's next?
Were you nervous during the “seven minutes of terror”, when the MIMU was doing its job?
Yeah, during most of those landings we were nervous. We actually had a team in a viewing party outside of work to watch the landing as it was televised, as we do for most of the landings. It’s all captured on video for the first time and you can see our MIMUs on the Sky Crane as it delivers the rover and flys off and comes what we’ll just call ‘Mars junk’.
But, being involved and seeing all of that first-hand, it was extremely exciting and nerve-wracking. At the end you get that sigh of relief and mission success. I then got phone calls from my customer counterparts, congratulating us on our product doing what it's supposed to do.
How is that relationship with the customer? Do they have a high confidence in us of our history?
Yeah, absolutely. The MIMU has a huge history and heritage behind it and with all of our mission successes, we've been 100% successful. The product started out in 1997, we were on early Mars missions. At that time, we thought that we might have 100 units and we're already up close to 800 total MIMU units, dating back to 1997.
That heritage is what's bringing our customers back. They know that the MIMU is reliable and that it will perform as expected, and they keep using it in their designs.
Is there anything else that you wanted to add?
As with anything that we do here at Honeywell, it's never just one person that does the work. It was definitely a team effort, especially with the redesign our customer needed during the landing phase. Through it all, every function and department worked really well together to make sure that we deliver quality products to our customers, and the customers definitely recognize that over and over again. It keeps them coming back to us.