Bad Brain
Well-known member
...not that the gold foil covered landing gear was convincing to begin withLeaving the gold foil covered landing gear look as though it was just assembled? Not very convincing.
...not that the gold foil covered landing gear was convincing to begin withLeaving the gold foil covered landing gear look as though it was just assembled? Not very convincing.
Leaving the gold foil covered landing gear look as though it was just assembled?
All the consoles on the floor of mission control were powered by a single mainframe computer that has the average computing power of a 2005 era laptop. The space ship itself had a computer roughly equivalent to a modern digital watch. About 72 kilobytes which is enough to store one of the smaller images you'd see posted at rig talk.
It's not believable. Dust would be everywhere on that craft had they used a 10,000 ft lbs reverse thruster to bring it down, especially considering the weight of an astronaut, in moon gravity, left pretty hefty footprints in the lunar surface.yes exactly.
It's not believable. Dust would be everywhere on that craft had they used a 10,000 ft lbs reverse thruster to bring it down, especially considering the weight of an astronaut, in moon gravity, left pretty hefty footprints in the lunar surface.
Right, down to about 3,000lbs supposedly, which considering the depth a moon boot made in the lunar dust tells me something is going to come flying back all over the landing craft. Especially considering the lightweight lunar rover kicked up dust everywhere per the driver. Dust would fly everywhere and take a very long time to settle, so the perfectly pristine just-put-the-second-coat-of-wax on look the module has is fantastical.It didn’t use 10,000lbs to land, they used it to slow down. The thrusters were also shut off before touchdown.
The moon gravity is also part of why the dust flew far away from the lander
Dust would not fly everywhere, it would fly away from the thrust, which it did.Right, down to about 3,000lbs supposedly, which considering the depth a moon boot made in the lunar dust tells me something is going to come flying back all over the landing craft. Especially considering the lightweight lunar rover kicked up dust everywhere per the driver. Dust would fly everywhere and take a very long time to settle, so the perfectly pristine just-put-the-second-coat-of-wax on look the module has is fantastical.
Yes it magically landed without getting so much as a speck of dust on it. Science fiction!Dust would not fly everywhere, it would fly away from the thrust, which it did.
And you are right it would take longer to settle, which adds to the distance AWAY from the lander that it landed
It's all fantastical.the perfectly pristine just-put-the-second-coat-of-wax on look the module has is fantastical
not really man. You said everything correctly yourself, you just think the dust went straight up, which it did not. Other Apollo missions had harder landings and damn near buried the pads. You just chose to ignore thatYes it magically landed without getting so much as a speck of dust on it. Science fiction!
I don't think the dust went straight up. I just think there would have been dust all over the lander. Dust goes everywhere when you blast it with force. I'm sure there is a mathetmatical equation for it but none of those equations would have your lunar lander come out dust free.not really man. You said everything correctly yourself, you just think the dust went straight up, which it did not. Other Apollo missions had harder landings and damn near buried the pads. You just chose to ignore that
I don't think the dust went straight up. I just think there would have been dust all over the lander. Dust goes everywhere when you blast it with force. I'm sure there is a mathetmatical equation for it but none of those equations would have your lunar lander come out dust free.
So they damn near buried the pads on some other landings, that has nothing to do with what we are discussing which is the conflicting claims vs photo evidence.
"A reel of film mistakenly released by NASA shows the Apollo astronauts faking a shot of the earth, making it appear they were half way to the moon when, in reality, they were only a couple of hundred miles up, in earth orbit."It's all fantastical.
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