tonycondon
Gastons CRO (Chief Dinner Reservation Officer)
Does this one show the US Flag?
Does this one show the US Flag?
Just amazing they we created such a beast 50 years ago with such primitive computers.
My amazement is that something as complex and primitive as a Saturn/Apollo was able to get 9 crews to the moon and back, with 6 of those crews conducting successful landings.
Or, if the LEM doesn’t ignite, they’re stuck on the moon for good.
Sent out an APB; got a number of our "pilots & pizza" gang going as a group on Wed eve.
Looking forward to it.
In my town, the 4:30pm show today is your last chance to see it in IMAX.Go.See.This.Movie.
Fantastic!
Yes - they were very good. If you have Amazon Prime the series is available on prime.Speaking of Armstrong, just finished “First Flights” series. Pretty good actually. Never have heard of it until a couple weeks ago. A lot of old footage I had never seen before.
Yes - they were very good. If you have Amazon Prime the series is available on prime.
Yea - There is a ton of aviation content on Prime. Between that and YouTube - that is a major reason I got rid of cable.
As a side note, anybody interested in the 1202 and 1201 alarms they experienced when landing on the moon should Google that (apollo 1202) - there are some good writeups and a couple good YouTube videos that explain it. The more in-depth explanations go into detail on the memory structure of the computer, and how it ran tasks. Very interesting stuff.
The man on the ground who had supervised some of the AGC work, recognized the problem, and avoided an abort, Jack Garman, passed away recently in September 2016.
I found a pretty cool picture, all the Saturn V launches.
It's interesting that the first manned flight on top of the Saturn V was to the moon (Apollo 8). The earlier Saturn V launches were unmanned.
My wife and I saw the movie last night. It was outstanding. It led me to think about could we do the same thing nowadays in the current risk averse culture we live in. Would we have the fortitude to go forward in the same period of time they did in the ‘60’s?
This is my thought also. I don’t see any way we can go to Mars within my lifetime. First of all, there’s no strategic driver (like the Cold War) to go. NASA to me these days is just another aimless government program.Not only no, but hell no. We have zero risk tolerance today. That puts an upper limit on our achievements.
This is my thought also. I don’t see any way we can go to Mars within my lifetime. First of all, there’s no strategic driver (like the Cold War) to go. NASA to me these days is just another aimless government program.
My wife and I saw the movie last night. It was outstanding. It led me to think about could we do the same thing nowadays in the current risk averse culture we live in. Would we have the fortitude to go forward in the same period of time they did in the ‘60’s?
I didn't get the memo.We have zero risk tolerance today. That puts an upper limit on our achievements.
They never talk about whomever was responsible for the checklist having Buzz turn the tracking radar on, though.
Does this one show the US Flag?
I just watched for Firstman tonight and there was a flag on the moon
Sounds like a PoA flyin
So I congratulate you, I watched the movie and knew about the flag controversy and was attentively watching the sequence and did not see the flag, must have gone by real fast.I just watched for Firstman tonight and there was a flag on the moon
(real spin rate was close to 1 rev/min)
they overfly terrain that reminds you of Grand Canyon, yet the actual footage of the landing sequence is available, so it boggles my mind why they went for this cheesy version.
They should have just used the same studio set they used in 1969 ...yet the actual footage of the landing sequence is available, so it boggles my mind why they went for this cheesy version. Once they land the scenery is done quite well.
was attentively watching the sequence and did not see the flag, must have gone by real fast.
Yes, you are right, it was 296 deg/s, my mistake but what we see in the movie is multiple revolutions per sec.The rotation rate was 360 degrees per *second*, not *minute*.