Allan McDonald, an engineer who dared speak the truth against the odds, recently passed away at 83. 

On Saturday March 6, 2021, an 83-year-old man living in Ogden, Utah, died from the effects of a fall. His name was Allan J McDonald, and you may never have heard of him, but he did something remarkable.

Allan McDonald received a degree in chemical engineering in 1959 from Montana State University, then went to work for Morton-Thiokol, which manufactured the rockets for the Minuteman intercontinental ballistic missile and later, the solid rocket boosters (SRBs) used by NASA in its space shuttle.

After 26 years with the company, McDonald was on site at Cape Canaveral, Florida, to oversee the solid rocket boosters that would power the shuttle Challenger on its 10th flight, which was also the 25th space shuttle flight. 

Kennedy Space Center/Wikimedia

On January 27, 1986, the night before the scheduled launch, the temperature was expected to drop to 30°F (-1°C), and could drop to as low as 18°F (-8°C). McDonald was concerned about the SRB's O-rings.

What's an O-ring?

These were rubber gaskets that separated parts of the solid rocket boosters. Both McDonald and another Morton-Thiokol engineer, Roger Boisjoly, feared that the cold temperatures could cause the O-rings to stiffen and crack. This could allow volatile rocket fuel to escape, and could in turn cause the shuttle to explode.

Solid rocket boosters at the sides of the space shuttle Source: NASA/Wikimedia Commons

Two years previously, during a launch of the shuttle Discovery, Thiokol engineers had observed hot gasses escaping through one of the primary O-rings, but the secondary O-ring had held, and the Thiokol engineers concluded that the risk was acceptable.

Then, during an April 1985 flight by Challenger, hot gasses had eroded both the primary and the secondary O-ring, and Thiokol began a redesign of their solid rocket boosters. Instead of waiting for the redesign, Lawrence Mulloy, the manager of solid rocket boosters for NASA, waived launch constraints for the boosters for six consecutive shuttle flights.

In July 1985, Thiokol engineer Boisjoly had written a memo to the company's management describing evidence of O-ring stiffening that happened during a previous shuttle launch when the temperature was a relatively balmy 53°F (12°C).

Why this Challenger mission was special

The Challenger mission on January 28, 1986, was special because it was the first space shuttle mission to carry a civilian into orbit. That civilian was New Hampshire school teacher Christa McAuliffe, who was the first participant of the Teacher in Space project, designed to inspire students, honour teachers, and spur interest in STEM.

Challenger crew Source: NASA/Wikimedia Commons

On the day of the launch, schools across the US and other countries set up televisions inside classrooms so that students could watch the lift-off. Other crew members onboard the Challenger were commander Francis Scobee, pilot Michael Smith, mission specialists Ellison Onizuka, Judith Resnik, and Ronald McNair, and payload specialist Gregory Jarvis.

On the night of January 27, NASA officials conducted a pre-launch conference call with Thiokol engineers, including Roger Boisjoly, back in Utah. Their signoff was required before the shuttle could launch, but citing the low temperatures, the Thiokol engineers refused to sign off on the launch.

NASA officials challenged the Thiokol engineers to prove that the O-rings would fail. In the documentary, Challenger: The Final Flight, Allan McDonald said, "Normally we were always challenged to prove it was safe to launch, now all of a sudden we got the impression they were asking us to prove it would fail, and we couldn’t do that."

NASA urged the engineers to take a half-hour break to discuss the issue of the O-rings. When they returned to the conference call, suddenly the Thiokol engineers gave their approval for the launch. When Thiokol faxed a letter stating their approval for the launch, McDonald in Florida, refused to sign it.

Challenger launching Source: NASA/Wikimedia Commons

The morning of January 28, 1986, dawned clear and cold. When Challenger thundered into the sky at 11:38 a.m, the temperature was 28.9°F (−1.7°C). The coldest launch before this had been at 54°F (12°C). A mere 73 seconds after liftoff, Challenger exploded, with pieces veering off in various directions. All seven people on board were killed.

President Reagan creates a panel

President Ronald Reagan immediately convened a panel to investigate the explosion. It was headed by the former secretary of state William P Rogers, and it featured some famous names, including former astronauts Neil Armstrong and Sally Ride, and the Nobel-winning physicist Richard Feynman.

While the commission sought answers from NASA and the top management of suppliers, Feynman preferred to talk to engineers and technicians, and he soon became suspicious of the O-rings.

At one televised hearing, Feynman placed a miniature version of an O-ring into a glass of ice water to demonstrate how brittle it became. Feynman said, "for a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled".

At a closed-door meeting, Ride confronted the person at NASA who was responsible for the booster rockets, Mulloy, stating that some commission members had heard that the Thiokol engineers disagreed with the launch decision.

Sitting in the back of the meeting room, McDonald rose, and with tears in his eyes, he addressed the panel, describing how Thiokol's executives had pressured the group of engineers to agree to the launch. The Thiokol executives had themselves been pressured by NASA officials who didn't want to delay the launch.

Smoke escaping from the SRB at launch Source: NASA/Wikimedia Commons

Video taken of the launch showed an O-ring on the right-hand solid rocket booster failing, and allowing pressurised, burning gas to reach the outside of the booster where it undermined an attachment. Aerodynamic forces then broke the orbiter apart.

In its final report, the Rogers Commission found fault with the design of the solid rocket boosters, and with NASA's decision to launch. The elective director of the commission, Alton Keel, told an interviewer, "Allan McDonald was a hero in our eyes."

Thiokol 'rewards' McDonald and Boisjoly

In response to their honest and courageous stances, Thiokol 'rewarded' its two engineers by demoting McDonald and placing Boisjoly on an indeterminate leave of absence.

When US House of Representatives member from Massachusetts Edward Markey learned of Thiokol's treatment of the two men, he informed Thiokol that he would block any future government contracts unless they reinstated the men.

Boisjoly chose not to return; however, McDonald was placed in charge of redesigning the solid rocket boosters. McDonald's design was used on subsequent space shuttle missions, once the shuttle resumed flying in 1988, it continued to be used until its retirement in 2011.

In 2001, McDonald retired from Thiokol, and in 2009, he along with James Hansen, published the book, Truth, Lies, and O-Rings: Inside the Space Shuttle Challenger Disaster.

Challenger Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery Source: Jtesla16/Wikimedia Commons

Today, the Challenger disaster is taught as a case study in classes on engineering safety and workplace ethics. In public speeches after his retirement, McDonald often cited this aphorism: "Regret for things we did is tempered by time. Regret for things we did not do is inconsolable."

Hopefully, Allan McDonald is consoled at last. 

Allan McDonald

This article was first written by  and first appeared in Interesting Engineering.