I remember that my family was very upset about the lack of coverage of the later moon missions. I still don't understand what is wrong with people that they are so uninterested in learning. It hurts our society very much.
@crystalakabeavergamingsubs95498 күн бұрын
I remember watching this first hand in 3rd grade at school. 😊
@patrickmccarthy706810 күн бұрын
Brilliant engineering and the bravery of those men is outstanding!
@Ricky-o5i6t12 сағат бұрын
You really think we went to the moon in a tin can 😂😂😂
@KeystoneInvestigations12 күн бұрын
When I use to work at NASA, there was a saying.....To go places and do things that have never been done before, that’s what living is all about.
@RichardCook-on3gf11 күн бұрын
I was confident the crew would get back safely. Sad that Capt. Lovell did not walk on the moon after all of his training and experience. He was chosen to be Neil Armstrong's backup on Apollo 11, so if anything happened to Armstrong before the flight Lovell would have been first to walk on the moon.
@JMG7174 сағат бұрын
What’s really sad is that in the rotation, Lovell was slated to command 14. In which case, he actually would’ve walked at Fra Mauro instead of Al Shepard.
@MrBoomer-k6v13 күн бұрын
Space exploration the future of mankind
@KeystoneInvestigations12 күн бұрын
Would that be outer space or inner space?
@markmitchell45712 күн бұрын
Not unless we develop a faster than light drive or learn how to warp space. There is absolutely no friendly place in our solar system. So nothing we can live on in our neighborhood. I have no doubt that there are earth-type planets in some of the billions of galaxies, but those galaxies are very far. We're not going anyplace soon.
@austins.249512 күн бұрын
That is, if we survive the next four years… which isn’t looking likely.
@Shifty31912 күн бұрын
"Exploration is in our nature. We began as wanderers, and we are wanderers still. We have lingered long enough on the shores of the cosmic ocean. We are ready at last to set sail for the stars." - Carl Sagan
@leoa4c11 күн бұрын
Not if we don't assure our indefinite future, here first, which, at this rate of population growth, coupled with a declining ability to sustain said population, such future is not looking certain, by any means.
@internetpolification7 күн бұрын
Narrator…… it’s not “capshule”. Nor is it “mojule”
@myste19736 күн бұрын
Tell me you're an American without telling me. 😂 He isn't an American speaker. Therefore, he is saying it correctly. Your accent isn't everyone's accent. Even within the borders of your country. 🙄
@leoa4c11 күн бұрын
I think that one of the lessons learned in Apollo 13, which was not an established lesson in aerospace, by any means, was to guard against the unpredictable, even at high costs in performance or efficiency. I am sure that in countless projects before and since, a smart engineer has asked the team the sensible question of "Can anyone imagine a single reason why we need so much weight and complexity for this high level of redundancy?", to which a smarter engineer answered "To guard against that which we are unable to imagine". Another lesson, perhaps, was to standardize as much as possible. If 2 systems, in 2 different craft perform the exact same function, why design them to be different? They were designed differently because no one imagined that, one day, in one mission, one part from one craft may have to be used on another. Keep you designs open to the unpredictable, be it in civil engineering, software developing, aerospace hardware, an any other field or system where lives may be at risk.
@leoa4c11 күн бұрын
One area where these lessons were not employed, even for later Apollo missions was in the procedure to couple the lunar module to the service module, in space, while in transit to the moon. In order to simplify the launch escape system (LES), and optimize the efficiency of the Saturn V as a whole, the lunar module sat behind the service module prior to launch, meaning that if a similar problem to Apollo13's (where all oxygen tanks were damaged, including the added 3rd tank) happened before the two were connected, the astronauts would be left without engines. Redesigning the LES to carry and discard the LM as well as the CM would've been super expensive. However, it would've provided a lot more flexibility when and if a catastrophic failure of the SM happened at any time on the way to the moon, as the lunar module "lifeboat", and one with engines, would always be there.
@paulmichaelfreedman83349 күн бұрын
I am assuming you're talking about the CO2 scrubbers in the CM/SM and LEM? The reason the systems were incompatible is because they were designed and built by two different companies. Don't ask me why those companies never communicated with each other.
@ChadwickVonGriffindorIII11 күн бұрын
And all of that was mathematics
@paulmichaelfreedman83349 күн бұрын
With a slide rule!
@topsecretalienfiles11 күн бұрын
When I used to work at NASA, there was a saying... "To go to places and do things that have never been done before, that's what life is all about.
@bv637711 күн бұрын
Did you actually or did you just copy that other commenter
@paulmichaelfreedman83349 күн бұрын
@@bv6377 Bots
@darrenrexfrancis25382 күн бұрын
@@bv6377...😂
@jameswright252212 күн бұрын
Amazing how they got them back. Amazing that they shelved a program that got man to the moon yet it still hasn’t been done today. Just use the Apollo program and save billions.
@Shifty31912 күн бұрын
that would defeat the purpose of developing new technology that will enable spaceflight for the future. Apollo was only planned until Apollo 20, ultimately scrapped after 17 due to budget constraints. The space race was essentially over as soon as Neil stepped off the LEM. The Soviets struggled through the mid to late 60's due to bureaucracy within government, competition between Korolev and Chelomey, competition between government departments, and massive budget concerns as the Soviets were still rebuilding after the decimation the Nazis caused in Soviet cities. The US, while still suffering from competition between departments and military, was essentially united after JFK was assassinated. Project Apollo was planned pretty much as soon as Mercury was underway, then as Apollo was made clearer, Gemini went ahead. The space program of the 60's and 70's was never designed as long-term habitation of Space. It was literally a proxy to develop efficient and powerful ICBM's for the Military, and to beat the Soviets. Artemis is being designed for long-term use of the Moon and it's resources to develop further Space travel within the Solar System
@paulzuk146811 күн бұрын
It would probably not save any money at all. Look up how F-1 engines were made, and marvel at how much a PITA of a process it was.
@paulmichaelfreedman83349 күн бұрын
@@Shifty319 The main reason the Soviets lagged behind is because Korolev, the only man capable of pulling off getting the N1 to the moon, died unexpectly due to complications during surgery. I can't recall what the ailment was that needed urgent surgery, but I can imagine it was cardio vascular.
@Shifty3199 күн бұрын
@@paulmichaelfreedman8334 Korolev dying didn't help, no. But the in-fighting between Chelomey and Korolov, combined with the lack of funding due to the agricultural crisis turned what should have been an easy decision (between the UR700 and the N1) into a long drawn out process. when it was finally decided to go ahead with the N1, further budget cuts followed. Korolevs death obviously stalled their program, but there was 10 years of bureaucracy, paranoia, and in-fighting that handicapped the Soviet program, before Korolevs demise
@Shifty3199 күн бұрын
@@paulmichaelfreedman8334 there's an amazing podcast called "A History of the Space Race" by Albert Lai which explores every facet of both programs extensively.
@MrBoomer-k6v13 күн бұрын
Great video❤
@lorrieshigley362513 күн бұрын
Yes.. and they made a great movie about it!
@KeystoneInvestigations12 күн бұрын
Which is full of endless inaccuracies!
@Anna_Nimmitty12 күн бұрын
@@KeystoneInvestigations Uh, care to elaborate there a bit??
@magicfairy780512 күн бұрын
Still my favourite movie. Artistic license
@AKCobra112010 күн бұрын
There were some, but I'm actually impressed with how right the movie got it compared to most "based on a true story" films. @@KeystoneInvestigations
@christinawells202410 күн бұрын
Yup. The book is excellent and tells you everything. The movie is still good tho.
@EuClid-v5e5 күн бұрын
Euclides. 🙂👍👍👍💯💯💯💯💯🇺🇲🦅. Hello. You. 🙂👍💯
@garyslatter985410 күн бұрын
Nasa got so luck...
@paulmichaelfreedman83349 күн бұрын
not justluck, they got home thanks to the thousands of people who worked day and night to make it possible. Their spacecraft was seriously crippled and the astronauts would have died within hours had Houston not worked the problem they way they did.
@gregessex185112 күн бұрын
29:10 Back in the days when it was OK for a senior NASA official to be sucking on a cancer stick whilst delivering a press conference.
@kmatcyk11 күн бұрын
The fact they have to write true should tell you something
@DrewWalton10 күн бұрын
Yes, it tells you that you should stop believing in crazy conspiracy theories.
@markmitchell45712 күн бұрын
At the time Americans didn't want another very expensive box of rocks. If we had long term missions maybe the same 'ol same 'ol missions would have been better received.
@davidclarke35606 күн бұрын
Way too many ads
@richardmedina57155 күн бұрын
Welcome to KZbin.
@WissamIbrahim-b4k13 күн бұрын
Any room logo Sci In the video
@gfsfyfy42611 күн бұрын
@BobGeogeo12 күн бұрын
1:40:00 Lovel says "Fred, Jack and I... " Proper grammar, instead of the increasingly common "me and..."
@paulmichaelfreedman83349 күн бұрын
Not just I instead of me, but also putting himself last when the says all their names.
@luisheribertoperezfelician748913 күн бұрын
🎉
@salonsospain12 күн бұрын
14359
@andrestrishak829222 сағат бұрын
Unbelievable is right! Haha! We never went to the moon, just a Hollywood basement. Billions paid for fake cartoons.
@salonsospain12 күн бұрын
166
@WendySchelske12 күн бұрын
God is great
@willmpet10 күн бұрын
God is not great!
@enetlocal10 күн бұрын
😂
@gregdavidd13 күн бұрын
The movie was better. This video is not needed. Just watch the movie.
@KeystoneInvestigations12 күн бұрын
Which is full of endless inaccuracies!
@gregdavidd12 күн бұрын
@@KeystoneInvestigations Not according the people that actually lived it. They said it was very accurate.
@alanluscombe8a55312 күн бұрын
Nobody forcing you to watch it.
@gregdavidd12 күн бұрын
@@alanluscombe8a553 Nobody is forcing you to read my comments.
@BobGeogeo12 күн бұрын
Jim Lovell and Ron Howard acknowledge and are OK with short cuts and dramatizations in the Apollo 13 film. Straight documentaries have their place.
@NoremacOktik12 күн бұрын
All staged fools.
@brunodinis745412 күн бұрын
ok.
@alextownsend862411 күн бұрын
God damn I hope you guys weed yourselves out soon...
@bv637711 күн бұрын
@@alextownsend8624 unfortunately there will always be idiots like this
@ginskimpivot75310 күн бұрын
And 55 years later not one of you can present a crumb of hoax evidence.
@christinawells202410 күн бұрын
@alextownsend8624 🤣 wouldn’t it be nice? What’s more horrific is that these people have offspring, which just prolongs the ignorance.