Imagine being stranded on the moon. Like if he landed too fast and it tipped over
@eventcone3 сағат бұрын
Oh yes. Just one of many risks that those guys pitted their courage, coolness under pressure, professionalism and training against.
@neilaldenarmstrong980620 сағат бұрын
I was 12 years old when Apollo 11 landed on the moon. It gave me goosebumps and brought tears to my eyes. I was in complete awe having witnessed this moment in history. I'm 67 now and watching video like this or just listening to the audio still brings tears to my eyes. I feel privileged to have experienced it and being.o!d enough (and nerdy enough) to understand what was going on. I'll never forget it.
@Joe_PomonaКүн бұрын
Remember watching this at the cinema for the 50 year anniversary... They played it at normal speed, in real time. The tension in the theatre was tangible, even though everyone knew how it ended, it still got everyone on edge. Fantastic moment. Tranquility base, the eagle had landed!
@kurtisengle6256Күн бұрын
Saw it on the schools 19" tv. It's still awesome.
@SelwynRewesКүн бұрын
FYI none of these pictures were transmitted live back to earth...they were recorded on film and only viewed when developed on return to earth.
@jordishima3 күн бұрын
To this day, I do not fully trust people who believe that this did not happen
@AFoulOdor3 күн бұрын
The more I learn about this the more amazed I become. Notably the computer system blows my mind away. What it does with the 1201 and 1202 codes demonstrates amazing forethought, specifically toward maximizing the use of limited resources to achieve critical objectives in the mission time line, which is in line with the whole Apollo program. I have also been confused before about the angles observed through the view port during the approach. I now know that the LEM was oriented parallel to the surface as it made its initial approach. The windows were facing down so the astronauts could observe the surface, and then the LEM was rotated so that the sensors could detect the surface. Then the LEM was oriented perpendicular to the surface for the final descent.
@eventcone3 күн бұрын
Computer technology may have advanced rapidly in the last 50 years, but human ingenuity not one jot.
@rockethead72 күн бұрын
Just FYI, Apollo 11 was the only landing that they had the windows facing down for the initial part of the descent burn.
@TheCuttyBrown5 күн бұрын
Yeah da fukk right😂😂😂
@WesBell-l4s7 күн бұрын
Yea. Who's this Roger,guy?
@codis90918 күн бұрын
no delay at all
@SelwynRewes7 күн бұрын
so sorry for your partner....
@briscoedarling32378 күн бұрын
“They came in peace for all mankind.”
@SelwynRewesКүн бұрын
if they had crashed it would have been ' they came in pieces for all mankind'..
@bernardoperez738515 күн бұрын
4:54- It is written descend, instead descend. Thanks a Lot !
@johnphilips658517 күн бұрын
We choose to go to the moon and do the other things not because they are easy, but because they are hard. John Kennedy
@alex-internetlubber18 күн бұрын
I can't understand how any Capcom did the lunar landings (especially Duke here with the first one) given all the voices yattering in their ears, having to listen to the astronauts on the other channel...
@maxfan159115 күн бұрын
Lots of practice. Plus, they were already pretty extraordinary people, given they were good enough to be selected as astronauts in the first place.
@mwalker354722 күн бұрын
I was 11 years old when this occurred, and it still excites me to this day. These men were true heroes.
@HinesRiley22 күн бұрын
Beautiful compile! Fun to watch! That "Roge" tho... Should be simplified to "K." Loved the last minute convo abt "Keep the chatter down in the room...." Sorta like Teams and X, lol.
@stampoutup-talking143625 күн бұрын
Wow
@soberekАй бұрын
I have no more nails on my fingers now.
@esccamilesАй бұрын
First time I've seen all that, damn, that was intense, I can start breathing again.
@XtarizАй бұрын
It's pretty insane we did this almost 60 years ago and never done anything like this again
@eventconeАй бұрын
....yet.
@maxfan159115 күн бұрын
Well, they did it five more times in the following three and a half years... :-)
@aaabbb-ff1spАй бұрын
Apollo Flight Script
@maxfan159115 күн бұрын
I suppose the 22 kilograms of moon rocks they brought back for scientists to study were scripts as well?
@supertom8552Ай бұрын
Astronomical accomplishment ! With vacuum tube technology , over 200,000 miles in a complete vacuum, coasting on inertia , after being thrown into the vacuum of space by rocket 🚀 ship, then coasting on central fugal force , moons gravity, then rejoining the orbiter thrusting off of nothing, and coasting again in the vacuum of space back to earth with near PINPOINT precision , MIRACULOUS 🎊 🎉
@SelwynRewesАй бұрын
and repeated 9 times... Astronauts who walked on the moon Date Location Apollo 11 Neil Armstrong, Edwin Aldrin, 7/16/1969 Sea of Tranquillity Apollo 12 Charles Conrad, Alan Bean, 11/13/1969 Oceans of Storms (Surveyor 3) Apollo 14 Alan Shepard, Edgar Mitchell, 1/31/1971 Littrow Crater Apollo 15 David Scott, James Irwin, 7/30/1971 Censorinus Crater Apollo 16 John Young, Charles Duke, 4/16/1972 Descartes Highlands Apollo 17 Gene Cernan, Harrison Schmitt. 12/7/1972 Marius Hill Astronauts who orbited the moon Apollo 8 Frank Borman, Bill Anders, Jim Lovell Apollo 10 Tom Stafford, Apollo 11 Michael Collins Apollo 12 Dick Gordon, Apollo 13 Jack Swigert, Fred Haise, (Jim Lovell) 4/11/1970 Apollo 14 Stuart Roosa Apollo 15 Al Worden Apollo 16 Thomas Mattingley Apollo 17 Ron Evans
@maxfan159115 күн бұрын
"central fugal force" LOL! "then rejoining the orbiter thrusting off of nothing" Oh, the old rockets-can't-work-in-a-vacuum-because-there's-nothing-to-push-off line. Yeah, learn how Newton's laws of motion work, please.
@eventcone13 күн бұрын
Your only 341 years behind the times (the age of Newtonian physics).
@80sbeginnerАй бұрын
29.8.2024 hi Apollo11ApolloFlightJournal! Van Halen - Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love (my cover version 🫡) *_I shared the news, baby_* 👨💻 *_All about your disease_* 👨🚀 *_Yeah you may have all you want, baby_* 💵 *_But I got somethin', few read_* 😜 *_Oh yeah_* 🥳 *_Ain't talkin' 'bout gov_* 🤵🤵♀🤵♂ *_My gov is rotten to the core_* 🤵🤵♀🤵♂🟰💩 *_Hate talkin' 'bout gov_* 🤬 *_Just like I told you before, yeah before_* 👆 *_You know you're semi-good lookin'_* 🐵 *_Stand on the feet again_* 👨🚀🟰🤡 *_Oh yeah you stink_* 🤢 *_you're really crookin', baby_* 👨🚀🟰🤥 *_You better find yourself a bend_* 🌐🟰💩 *_"My friend"_* 🤜👨🚀 *_Ain't talkin' 'bout gov_* 🙅♂ *_My gov is rotten to the core_* 🤵🤵♀🤵♂🟰💩 *_Hate talkin' 'bout gov_* 😡 *_Just like I told you before, before, before, before, before_* 🔁 *_Ain't talkin' 'bout gov_* 😐 *_Babe, it is rotten to the core_* 🤵🤵♀🤵♂🟰💩 *_Hate talkin' 'bout gov_* 😠 *_Just like I told you before, before_* ☝ *_Lie "been to the edge"_* 🌕 *_And 'there' Lie stood and looked down_* 📷🌍 *_You know Lie lost a lot of friends, share, baby_* 😂👉🌍👈🤣 *_I got no rhyme to bless a round_* 🌍🟰💩 *_Mmm, sore, if you want it, got to bleed_* 🩸 *_more hit, baby_* *_Yeah, got to, got to bleed, baby_* 👨🚀🔨 *_Mmm, you got to, got to bleed, baby_* 🤵🪓 *_Hey, got to, got to bleed, baby_* 🤥⛏ *_Ain't talkin' 'bout gov_* 🤐 *_My gov is rotten to the core_* 🤵🤵♀🤵♂🟰💩 *_Hate talkin' 'bout gov_* 😤 *_Just like I told you before, before, before_* 👆 *_Hate talkin' 'bout gov_* 😾 *_Don't wanna talk about gov_* 😶 *_Don't need to talk about gov_* 😣 *_Ain't gonna talk about gov_* 😖 *_No more, no more, aaaaargh_* 🤯 *_Hey, hey, hey!_* 🙋♂ *_Pray, pray, pray!_* 🙏 *_Hey, hey, hey!_* 👋 *_Pray, pray, pray!_* 🙏 *_Hey, hey, hey!_* 👍 *_Pray, pray, pray!_* 🙏 *_Hey, hey, hey!_* 🫡 *_Pray, pray, pray!_* 🙏 *_Hey, hey, hey!_* 🔚
@jamesb.9155Ай бұрын
You need removing.
@combcomclrlsrАй бұрын
Boulders in the landing zone? That's why you have a test pilot at the controls!
@OldSchoolGarage1969Ай бұрын
Once I was blind but now I see , Kubrick was a great film maker
@ApolloKid1961Ай бұрын
No self-respecting film director is going to make the same movie SIX times from the same set with black and white camera equipment and only different actors.
@eventconeАй бұрын
Yes, he was. But he was not known for making documentary films.
@jamesb.9155Ай бұрын
@@ApolloKid1961 fool
@wimkuijpers1342Ай бұрын
@@jamesb.9155 Do a search for vasectomy. You need it.
@JimmyianlRodriguez-e8iАй бұрын
Nice movei
@JimmyianlRodriguez-e8iАй бұрын
Very buetiful story..
@javiercuffaro4933Ай бұрын
Por qué no se levantó polvo durante la última etapa del aterrozaje?
@rockethead7Ай бұрын
Well, that's one way to demonstrate that you didn't watch the video before asking what's at the end of the video.
@TwentyEighthParallelАй бұрын
17:33
@jamesb.9155Ай бұрын
Why do you care. .
@maxfan159115 күн бұрын
Dust wouldn't be raised. There's no air on the Moon, so dust wouldn't billow like it does on Earth. Instead, it was blown away by the rocket exhaust, which hit the ground then spread out sideways in all directions.
@shmeautifulАй бұрын
Contact light.
@ie9432Ай бұрын
Это в 1969 году может и выглядело правдоподобно,сейчас же очевидно присутствие комбинированных съёмок..Но Кубрику,конечно,надо отдать должное..!
@TwentyEighthParallelАй бұрын
_But Kubrick, of course, must be given credit..!_ Yes, indeed. Kubrick was a perfectionist and insisted he film on location. NASA agreed.
@alex-internetlubberАй бұрын
What's amazing about 11 is it was (obviously) Safety First. We didn't understand a great deal, the program hadn't advanced to pinpoint landings on 12, or the rover on 15-17. And yet there's a moment where Armstrong goes off camera and just collects a ton of rocks, far more than expected. This with the shortest EVA in the program
@davep8221Ай бұрын
This a music video with video taken from *the* moon landing. Their name is _Public Service Broadcasting_ and the song is _Go!_ kzbin.info/www/bejne/eHmsoGmnrK-UqKs I grew up on the space coast in the 60s. We'd watch the count down, and the clearing of the tower, then run outside to see it come up over the horizon (take that flerfers!). Then staging, and some big booms.
@apollo11guyАй бұрын
Well done! I'm amazed at how much audio never made it into the official transcripts.
@Apollo11ApolloFlightJournal18 күн бұрын
The transcripts were only of the air/ground communications, presented on the left (and the left stereo channel). The chatter subtitled on the right (and the right stereo channel) was an internal intercom loop in mission control. The recordings of that loop only became available much later.
@Tsunami_Japan_2 ай бұрын
Impossible. How should they have sent the signals to the Earth?
@@rockethead7 How did they send the signals from the LEM to Earth?
@rockethead72 ай бұрын
It couldn't be done. There is no possible way to send signals. It's impossible, remember?
@Tsunami_Japan_2 ай бұрын
@@rockethead7 So it is fake. Right?
@waspanimations70372 ай бұрын
No way you - A person living in the 21st century - has never heard of radio waves
@abelgomez_XIV2 ай бұрын
Fake
@nasaAttackDog2 ай бұрын
Real
@jamesb.9155Ай бұрын
STOP TROLLING FOOL>
@maxfan159115 күн бұрын
Don't stop there. Now you provide supporting evidence. Oh go on, don't tell me you don't have any?
@abelgomez_XIV15 күн бұрын
@@maxfan1591 sh up nerd
@DavidR-f6z2 ай бұрын
Watched Apollo 13 last night with my girlfriend. She checked her phone at a slower point in the movie. "Do you realize you have more computing power in that phone than all of NASA during these flights?" She hadn't thought about it like that, but it's true.
@SelwynRewes2 ай бұрын
really ... and how would you know what computing power means...?
@DavidR-f6z2 ай бұрын
@@SelwynRewes I dunno. BS degree in Computer Science? Yeah, maybe that.
@bez7502 ай бұрын
What most people fail to realise is that although the computer used for the Apollo programme was primitive, It was built like a tank to sustain the vibrations of lift off. It ensured extreme glitches, for example the 12 02 alarm. It shut down and rebooted. There's no comparison to a modern I phone. This shoe box sized, primatative computer landed us on the moon🤙
@DavidR-f6z2 ай бұрын
@@bez750 I'm not talking about MIL-SPEC stuff, vibe, or any of the other physical attributes. I'm talking about the ability of the processor to actually compute. Storage is another factor. My iPhone has a 14.4 GHz CPU speed with 256 GB of storage. Storage on the Apollo Guidance Computer was measured in words of memory, and had about 2MHz of processing speed. They did an amazing job with what they had, but the truth is the iPhone, or Galaxy for that matter, would outpace even the Mission Control computers. FYI: The 1201 and 1202 alarms given indicated that the onboard computers had hit its maximum capacity to process calculations and transfer information. Not sure it rebooted, or that would have caused an abort.
@bez7502 ай бұрын
@@DavidR-f6z Fair enough👍 it's an old saying that even a 1980 Casio watch had more power. Not sure that's true but yes, an I phone certainly has. Yes, the 1201 and 1202 was executive overflow👍 I find it remarkable that the core rope memory software was literally sown in after ground test with punch cards 😱
@ruudkraan70722 ай бұрын
This landing is totaly fake. No landing on the moon. Very good fake movie.myour camera cannot against the heat there. Impossible..
@rockethead72 ай бұрын
Awww, you poor thing.
@nasaAttackDog2 ай бұрын
Learn how to type a coherent sentence.
@eventcone2 ай бұрын
What 'heat'? They were in a vacuum. There is heat in the lunar surface, but its temperature was moderate at the time that the landings were made.
@tuttt992 ай бұрын
This is amazing! Never gets old.
@hcic98602 ай бұрын
Seems a bit too in depth to be fake
@jurisfabium12292 ай бұрын
Great work with arranging all the overlooping chattering, made it easy remarkably easy to understand it all. Do keep going, I never get tired of space history revised on every possible way, detail and angles.
@RodCalidge2 ай бұрын
And today, the highest we can go is 250 miles up into LEO
@eventcone2 ай бұрын
In the absence of a suitably powerful launch vehicle, yes. The last such vehicle (the Saturn V used by the Apollo program) was retired following the massive reduction in funding voted for by the US Congress following the achievement of President Kennedy's goals, and the failure of the Soviet Union's own moon program.
@RodCalidgeАй бұрын
Uh-huh. Sure. 😅 @@eventcone
@willoughbykrenzteinburgАй бұрын
@@RodCalidge So you have no problem accepting that we can get into LEO? Got it.
@RodCalidge16 күн бұрын
@willoughbykrenzteinburg No. I Don’t. Because you haven't broken through an atmosphere yet. You're still protected by the earth's molten magnetic core. Once you actually hit space, it's a whole other ballgame.
@willoughbykrenzteinburg16 күн бұрын
@@RodCalidge This is the dumbest thing I've ever read.
@obvious-troll2 ай бұрын
FIDO during the landing was Flight Director during the Challenger disaster in 1986
@JaneEva2 ай бұрын
That crickety little thing went through space to the moon? LOL. Telecommunications and video were as clear as a bell from earth to the moon at a time when a call between countries was fraught with technical mishaps, static, etc. Lol. They "lost" the technology to get back to the moon? LOl. Eisav is a liar, first and foremost. Only fools believe this! LOOK AT THAT CRICKETY LITTLE THING AND USE YOUR COMMON SENSE! That thing couldn't stand up to a wind storm.
@rockethead7Ай бұрын
"Telecommunications and video were as clear as a bell" Oh, you're a pure genius alright. Did you not even make it to 1:50 in this video? How "clear as a bell" was that? They could barely even hear each other. And, as for video, yes, this video was clear, because it wasn't telecommunicating at all. This was 16mm film. Go watch the Apollo 11 TV transmissions and tell me how "clear as a bell" you think they are.
@rockethead7Ай бұрын
"They "lost" the technology to get back to the moon?" Well, "lost" is a bit dramatic. But, essentially, it's true. It's "lost" in a physical sense. They don't have it right now. Nobody ever claimed that they don't know how it was done. But, when they retired the Saturn V rocket, they ran out of command modules, they ended the program before all of the landers were built, they ripped down the launch facilities, and there are no more companies/contractors that build anything for Apollo, yes, it's "lost" in that sense. You didn't hinge your entire belief system on the word "lost," did you?
@rockethead7Ай бұрын
"LOOK AT THAT CRICKETY LITTLE THING AND USE YOUR COMMON SENSE! That thing couldn't stand up to a wind storm." Well, there's no wind in space to stand up to, so, I fail to see your point. But, ok, I'm all ears, what EXACTLY would you have done differently. Don't just say "crickety little thing" as if it's supposed to mean something. Name the exact components that you think they designed wrong, and how you would have designed it instead. Can you?
@Messier42-handleАй бұрын
im disgusted with your disrespect. how fucking dare you disrespect the spacecraft that kept them alive on the moon
@sanjayyashwantsohani48202 ай бұрын
Was there no or acceptable lag into the verbal communications and telemetry data receipt to display on the consoles of controllers team?
@eventcone2 ай бұрын
Yes there was. The lag was a known quantity of about 3 seconds, and was allowed for.
@rockethead72 ай бұрын
Almost undoubtedly, you are expecting lag when there is no reason to expect it. The voice and data are being recorded IN HOUSTON. Thus, there is no reason to expect a delay when you hear an astronaut speak and Houston answers. The delay is heard only when Houston speaks and an astronaut answers. There has never been a single instance in any of the original recordings that lacked the correct delay.
@thom31242 ай бұрын
55 years ago this day. I was sitting in front of the TV (Black and white in those days) watching this. What a thrill.
@dennissvitak54752 ай бұрын
Scott Manley is PERFECT to narrate this.
@Apollo11ApolloFlightJournal2 ай бұрын
Scott is great. Love his work. But, David Henderson did a fine job in this... and has a better Scottish accent! :-D
@TheRobot132 ай бұрын
55 years ago
@davros_adl81552 ай бұрын
55 years.
@Important-Translations2 ай бұрын
That is not the Moon
@erac58552 ай бұрын
🥱
@minkymott2 ай бұрын
We went to bed early so we could get up and watch this. I'll never forget the excitement. I was 9 years old. Remember it like it was yesterday. How in the world can people possibly believe this was all fake.
@SelwynRewes2 ай бұрын
sorry to say that no one saw any of these images live....these pictures were recorded on film cameras from within the lunar lander ...only viewed after the astronauts returned to earth.... but still incredible stuff...
@minkymott2 ай бұрын
@@SelwynRewes well, what I meant was, we got up early to watch the report. Grammatical error. :) Yes, it was still incredible. We breathed a sigh of relief with Walter.
@StevenJSkibaАй бұрын
Mind Control via the Tell-A-Vision.
@SelwynRewesАй бұрын
@@StevenJSkiba doesn't affect anyone with a vast emptiness between their ears...
@jamesgasser1182 ай бұрын
I was 12 and this program is why I became an Engineer. It led to a great life of understanding and prosperity. Thanks Apollo team.