, prior to packing and mounting on the
Apollo Lunar Module ladder About three months prior to the July 1969 Apollo 11 mission,
Robert Gilruth, director of the MSC and a member of the Committee on Symbolic Activities, still needed to select someone to design the flag assembly. He asked
Jack Kinzler, head of technical services at MSC, also known as "Mr. Fix It", to take on the task. Inspired by the memory of his mother hanging curtains during his childhood, Kinzler came up with the idea of inserting a horizontal pole through a hemmed pocket in the top of the flag to support it. This would make it appear to fly on the airless Moon as it would float in the wind on Earth. He worked out the details over several days, assisted by Deputy Division Chief Dave McCraw. Kinzler also suggested, designed, and oversaw the creation of the
commemorative plaques affixed to the Apollo Lunar Modules. and is cited as such by NASA, there is some uncertainty about the manufacturer; according to a NASA contractor report published in the 1990s, labels and bindings were removed from the flags to make them easier to attach to the aluminium staff, thus removing any identifying information about the company that produced the flags. The assembly had to be designed with the astronauts' physical limitations in mind. Because of their thick spacesuits, the astronauts had limited range of motion and manual dexterity. The flag assembly was designed to work within those limitations. The flag assembly was stored immediately behind the left side of the LM ladder. Due to the heat of the exhaust from the descent engine, temperatures were calculated to be for most of the landing, however they would increase to during the final 13 seconds at touchdown. To insulate the flag from these extreme conditions, it had to be packed inside a dual-walled protective shroud consisting of a stainless steel outer case separated from an aluminum layer by Thermoflex insulation, with several layers of
Kapton thermal insulation foil between the inner case and the flag. The insulation limited the temperature to which the flag was subjected to . The shroud was estimated to cost several hundred dollars. The flags deployed on the last three landing flights were carried in the
Modular Equipment Stowage Assembly (MESA, an equipment drawer which opened from the side of the Lunar Module) rather than on the ladder. This eliminated the need for the thermal protection shroud. The complete package needed to be as light as possible so as not to cut into the lunar payload and weighed . The flag which had hung in the Mission Operations Control Room (MOCR) in the
Mission Control Center through the prior Apollo landings was flown to the Moon on the final mission,
Apollo 17. This flag measured 20% wider and taller than the others requiring a long horizontal pole. ==Flags deployed==