The Apollo Boilerplate Command Module (BP-26) at the Kennedy Space Center shortly after its arrival, for the Apollo SA-8 (AS-104) mission.
Date: April 10, 1965
source
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The Apollo Boilerplate Command Module (BP-26) at the Kennedy Space Center shortly after its arrival, for the Apollo SA-8 (AS-104) mission.
Date: April 10, 1965
source

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SA-8 Saturn I Block II (AS-104) at LC-37B during a count down demonstration test (CDDT).
Date: May 1965
NASA ID: 107-KSC-65C-3140
The Apollo Boilerplate (BP-26) "being mated to the SA-8 Saturn I Block II (AS-104) launch vehicle on Launch Complex 37B (LC-37B).
The radial configuration of the forward restraint straps of the Pegasus B/Pegasus 2 micrometeoroid detection satellite can be seen inside the cavity of the Command Module. I think the squarish structure to be two of the stowed/folded solar panels of the satellite."
Date: April-May 1965
Mike Acs's Collection: link
“This drawing, prepared by the NASA-Marshall Space Flight Center, shows meteoroid detection panels being deployed (1) on a Saturn-launched satellite, in the folded position aboard the launch vehicle (2), unfolding (3). Unfolded the panels (4) have a wingspan of about 100 feet. The presence of tiny particles in space will be recorded as they collide with the wing skin sensor.”
The three Pegasus satellites launched on SA-8 (AS-103), SA-9 (AS-104) and SA-10 (AS-105).
Date: 1963
Mike Acs's Collection: 63-Meteoroid Satellite-2

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Pegasus satellite housed inside the adapted service module of the Saturn I Block II (SA-8 through SA-10). Metroid Technology Satellite Mission
Date: 1963
NASA Doc: link, link
"This image depicts a high angle view of technicians working on the instrument unit (IU) component assembly for the SA-8 mission in Marshall Space Flight Center's building 4705. A thin, circular structure, only 1-meter high and 7.6 meters in diameter, the IU was sandwiched between the S-IV and Apollo spacecraft. Packed inside were the computers, gyroscopes, and assorted black boxes necessary to keep the launch vehicle properly functioning and on its course."
Date: 1964
NASA ID: MSFC-6412716
Launch of AS-104 (SA-8)
Night launch of the AS-104 Saturn I Block II (BP-16/SA-8) from LC-37B.
Time exposure of the launch of Saturn SA-8, carrying Pegasus-2 spacecraft. Prominent features of the Merritt Island Launch Area - the Vehicle Assembly Building and three Launcher Umbilical Towers - are seen in the background
Diagram showing the major components of the Saturn I SA-8 rocket.
This mission's primary objective was to demonstrate the launch vehicle's iterative guidance mode and to evaluate system accuracy.
It also carried the Pegasus 2 satellite into orbit. Its purpose was to study the frequency of micrometeoroid impacts and long duration effect of space on spacecraft.
Video of the launch and Pegasus 2's unfurling.
Date: May 25, 1965
NASA ID: S65-42937, 65-H-824, 65-H-861, MSFC-9801797
source, source
Posted on Flickr by Drew Granston: link
Saturn I/IB Quarterly Film Report Number Twenty-Four - June 1965: link