What's inside of the Lunar Module?

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Jared Owen

Jared Owen

Күн бұрын

Come see inside the Lunar Module using 3D animation.
Watch my space videos playlist: • Space
⬇more links below⬇
The Apollo Lunar Module was the part of the Apollo Spacecraft that landed on the moon. The LM was split up into two parts - the ascent stage and descent stage. For the landing, both parts went to the surface of the moon. When it's time the leave only the ascent stage leaves the surface. The descent stage has fuel and oxidizer tanks in the center compartments. Equipment was also stored in the outer corners - these were called quadrants. They stored items such as the Lunar Roving Vehicle, scientific experiments, a camera, and water and oxygen tanks. The ascent stage was where the astronauts lived. It had the controls, two windows, more equipment, a docking hatch, and the engine to leave the lunar surface.
⌚Timestamps:
0:00 - Intro
0:19 - Designing the LM
1:08 - Getting to the Moon's Surface
1:49 - Apollo Missions
2:15 - Two Stages
2:30 - Descent Stage
4:59 - Ascent Stage
6:41 - What happened to each Lunar Module
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Book Sources:
Apollo 11: Owners' Workshop Manual by David Baker
amzn.to/2J0MZE2
Apollo 13: Owners' Workshop Manual by David Baker
amzn.to/2XllsGg
Moon Lander: How we developed the Apollo Lunar Module by Thomas J. Kelly
amzn.to/2Lv1qC8
Space!: The Universe as You've Never Seen It Before by DK Children
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Internet sources:
www.imdb.com/title/tt1203167/ -- Moon Machines
www.imdb.com/title/tt0120570/ -- From Earth to the Moon (mini-series)
• Video -- Lunar Rover unfolding
• Lunar Rover Vehicle De... -- Lunar Rover unfolding animation
• Video -- Thomas Kelly explains how the LM works
• Video -- "The Lunar Module story" (1989)
• Anatomy of the Lunar M... -- Atonomy of the Lunar Module
www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/LM04_Lun...
www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a14/a14-...
www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/ALSEP-19...
nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary...
Made with Blender 2.79b (cycles render)
Here is some of the gear that I use for animation:
Graphics Card: GTX 1080ti amzn.to/2t70HN0
CPU: i7-8700k amzn.to/2WEk9OE
Motherboard: Asus Prim Z370-A amzn.to/2t4EVth
Microphone: Samson Go Mic amzn.to/2GaSpvV
Mouse: Logitech G600 amzn.to/2UKhf9P
#b3d #nasa #lunarmodule

Пікірлер: 11 000
@JaredOwen
@JaredOwen 4 жыл бұрын
The Apollo Spacecraft is one of my favorite topics! Thanks everyone for watching and supporting my videos😎 Watch my 3 part series on the Apollo Spacecraft: kzbin.info/www/bejne/bpXTnKCLn69rrrc Learn more cool facts about the Lunar Module that I didn't include in this video: www.patreon.com/posts/finished-video-28251494
@CaptRageALot
@CaptRageALot 4 жыл бұрын
Jared Owen awesome video man
@ItsMrMikey
@ItsMrMikey 4 жыл бұрын
I love space too
@hexagonist23
@hexagonist23 4 жыл бұрын
Did you get permission from NASA to monetize their works?
@hartiniopel3755
@hartiniopel3755 4 жыл бұрын
As always..... Your animation is great.. Easy to understand. Thanks jared...
@evanescentenquirer2684
@evanescentenquirer2684 4 жыл бұрын
You should look at the bfr
@kaiserschmitt
@kaiserschmitt 4 жыл бұрын
Jared: *Talks about RCS* People who play Kerbal Space Program: You know i’m somewhat of a scientist myself
@exus1ai
@exus1ai 4 жыл бұрын
dont forget about SFS
@Sednas
@Sednas 4 жыл бұрын
@@exus1ai wow that game has branched out a lot
@exus1ai
@exus1ai 4 жыл бұрын
@@Sednas but still yeah
@piotruszrodo7101
@piotruszrodo7101 4 жыл бұрын
XDDDD
@Minecrafter6818
@Minecrafter6818 4 жыл бұрын
Lumineo dude same
@jamesgrinder2491
@jamesgrinder2491 3 жыл бұрын
At 11 years old I watched the first Moon landing in the presence of my Grandmother. She was born in 1899 and remembers when the horse and buggy was the most common form of transportation.
@yafuker6046
@yafuker6046 3 жыл бұрын
Same here- mine born in 1886, I was 13. she was 17 when Wright Bros. did their thing and died after the third shuttle flight.
@erikbakker1531
@erikbakker1531 3 жыл бұрын
@@yafuker6046 When you think about it, that's pretty amazing. To be 17 in 1903, having teenage dreams about life. Who could honestly imagine all those things? The first airplanes, electricity, electric lighting, electric trains, and also Titanic, WW1, radio stations, the Roaring Twenties, depression, WW2, television, commercial flight, colour television, space flight, satellite television,.....moonlandings(!), open heart surgery, personal computers. Not to mention theme parks, SUV's, frozen pizza's, and three coloured toothpaste.
@NamelessM.F.
@NamelessM.F. 2 жыл бұрын
@Xx Bylizzy xX so she was born in about 1904?
@neilarmstrongsson795
@neilarmstrongsson795 2 жыл бұрын
Except for what your grandmother saw, the horse and cart, was real, but what you saw....was faked.
@ravioliravioligivemethefor3131
@ravioliravioligivemethefor3131 2 жыл бұрын
@@neilarmstrongsson795 ??
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 Жыл бұрын
A pleasant surprise! A straightforward, no-nonsense presentation, not dumbed down, nor unnecessarily complicated. Good use of computer graphics. No whiteboards, no obtuse narration. Guess I'm going to find something else to complain about today. Well, the weather IS awfully cold…
@williamthepleaser1
@williamthepleaser1 Жыл бұрын
You know what cold is? The vacuum of space at -380C. You know what hot is? The thermosphere, which at about 100Km up reaches 2000+C. Guess what all satellites and the silly module were/are made of? Aluminum which has a melting point of 800C covered in mylar sheets that melt at 300C.
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 Жыл бұрын
@@williamthepleaser1 Quit being silly. I don't see any point you're trying to make. You don't seem to understand what temperatures mean in space, anyway. You think those involved in those missions haven't thought of all that stuff? Quit wasting our time. BTW there is NO SUCH THING as minus 380 C.
@williamremuso6193
@williamremuso6193 Жыл бұрын
Hi did a good job 👍
@DJ_POOP_IT_OUT_FEAT_LIL_WiiWii
@DJ_POOP_IT_OUT_FEAT_LIL_WiiWii Жыл бұрын
its an old one that has no sponsored ba
@257ian
@257ian 8 ай бұрын
I'm afraid, my friend, it's not the video but YOU who have been "Dumbed Down" if you believe Man flew to the Moon in a cardboard box held together with gaffer tape
@genericfakename8197
@genericfakename8197 5 ай бұрын
That tiny detail about how the lunar rover folded out explained so much! You have no idea how many hours I've spent looking at diagrams of that thing for two seconds of animation to make it look totally obvious.
@DeputyNordburg
@DeputyNordburg 5 ай бұрын
Pretty easy to find video of it being packed and then unpacked on the moon.
@andyburk4825
@andyburk4825 4 жыл бұрын
"It's ugly, but it gets you there..." - Volkswagen
@G-ra-ha-m
@G-ra-ha-m 4 жыл бұрын
The Volkswagen was invented by the same country who developed the A4/V2 rocket motor (head designer = Korolev). It's telling that the F-1 main engines in the SaturnV were of considerably inferior design to the V2 rocket motor. The Germans used a double walled chamber like all rockets do today while Rocketdyne were still brazing thousands of tiny tubes together. Nothing about the SaturnV was particular advanced which is why NASA scrapped it as soon as the Apollo series of novels were finished.
@colinantink9094
@colinantink9094 4 жыл бұрын
Dude. Made me snort milk outta my nose. Thanks for that XD
@owensharp4891
@owensharp4891 4 жыл бұрын
Graham NASA wouldn’t want to use a German engine. In the Cold War the United States would probably want to build their own engine to show the Soviets their capabilities.
@G-ra-ha-m
@G-ra-ha-m 4 жыл бұрын
@@owensharp4891 Yet NASA were quite happy putting Von Braun - a well known and not particularly nice nazi in charge. Also the F-1 showed no capabilities, it was a dreadful design last proposed in 1962 and never used again. Ever.
@owensharp4891
@owensharp4891 4 жыл бұрын
Von Braun was the best rocket scientist NASA had at the time. I’m not saying he was a good person, just saying he was the best at designing rockets at the time.
@StarshipLanding
@StarshipLanding 8 ай бұрын
If your here in 2023 getting hype about space pop a thumbs up
@thesealsharkproductions9780
@thesealsharkproductions9780 5 ай бұрын
👍
@spaced___x
@spaced___x 5 ай бұрын
👍👍👍
@christinabalfoort2126
@christinabalfoort2126 5 ай бұрын
👍
@alexlabs4858
@alexlabs4858 5 ай бұрын
I’m getting hyped about the moooooon
@guenthersteiner9252
@guenthersteiner9252 5 ай бұрын
I'm really exited for the new Artemis program and Musks plans with the starships. I think that Nasa, Space x and other international space agencies can achieve great Milestones like apollo and soyuz did during the space race
@udparent2730
@udparent2730 Жыл бұрын
Beautiful! And, thank you Jared! My dad helped design the LEM while working at Grumman in Farmingdale NY. He was always so proud of his work there and we were so proud of him too. Miss you daddy!
@narajuna
@narajuna 2 ай бұрын
Please pay attention....! The MIT quote is dated 1966. I very clearly pointed out that the name " LEM " was dropped NASA in 1967, although some sources say that the notice to change the name went out in June 1966...
@sblack48
@sblack48 Ай бұрын
You should be proud. It might have been the most challenging of all the many design challenges Apollo had to overcome. A manned spacecraft that would takeoff and land only in the vacuum of space, a pure SPACE craft, had never been built and has never been built since. It required a completely unique approach. And the minuscule weight budget they were given made it all the more difficult. But they pulled it off and it landed 6 times and saved the Apollo 13 crew. It was Grumman’s finest engineering achievement.
@narajuna
@narajuna Ай бұрын
....nah just takes 5 years and bingo first try!
@androidaxolotl8311
@androidaxolotl8311 Жыл бұрын
1:58 The Lunar Module actually played a very very very important role in Apollo 13. After the o2 tank explosion which crippled the command module Odyssey, the astronauts, with no other choice, shut it down and powered up the Lunar Module, Aquarius. They used the LEM oxygen supply to survive, and used its descent engine to get on a free-return trajectory. If this had happened on a mission such as Apollo 8, with no LEM, the crew would have for sure died.
@shutdahellup69420
@shutdahellup69420 Жыл бұрын
Dem sun.
@shndiganshndi1363
@shndiganshndi1363 Жыл бұрын
@Jared Owen Pin this comment it's a very interesting info tho
@thevlaka
@thevlaka Жыл бұрын
bahahaha thinking that this tin foil paper machet consturct did anything at all. hilarious
@androidaxolotl8311
@androidaxolotl8311 Жыл бұрын
@@thevlaka what?
@123davepreston
@123davepreston Жыл бұрын
The Lunar Module actually played a very very very important role in Nasa's FAKED moon landing. We never went bro.
@DGFX64
@DGFX64 4 жыл бұрын
Wow, I learned more about the moon landings in your 8 minute video that I did in the last 50 years. Great stuff. Thank you.
@KenJackson_US
@KenJackson_US 4 жыл бұрын
I watched them live.
@guywithahoodie7859
@guywithahoodie7859 3 жыл бұрын
What was it like?
@DGFX64
@DGFX64 3 жыл бұрын
Ken Jackson...lucky you Ken...that would be a most treasured memory.
@invent5540
@invent5540 3 жыл бұрын
@@guywithahoodie7859 I watched them live too. I was 10 years old. My father took me outside to look at the moon and said: "son think about it, two men touched the surface an hour ago, you'll remember this day, and this conversation and tell your grandchildren about this moment". In my mind I was thinking my 47 year old father was really old. I'm 61 now, and it seems like yesterday. He's left this world 10 years ago... God rest his soul. Life moves on moments are fleeting...
@watwat7097
@watwat7097 3 жыл бұрын
@@invent5540 thank you for sharing that with us, made me happy !
@olliehopnoodle4628
@olliehopnoodle4628 Жыл бұрын
I saw one of the LM's at the NASM in DC. We passed it the first time and I thought it was a high school mock up. When we returned to that area I was hanging out by it while my wife was off doing something. I was AMAZED to learn it was an actual unused LM. I couldn't believe the guys on the earlier missions actually trusted that to get them to and from the moon. Just amazing and so much respect for the team that made the moon landings possible.
@danielgonzalez5787
@danielgonzalez5787 10 ай бұрын
everyone involved was very well aware of just how dangerous the mission was. In preparing for a disaster president Nixon had a speech ready that thankfully was not needed. here's a video someone made using the speech kzbin.info/www/bejne/goivkpeAe65rhs0
@ranchdressing1037
@ranchdressing1037 10 ай бұрын
They didn't... I'm sorry.
@olliehopnoodle4628
@olliehopnoodle4628 10 ай бұрын
@@ranchdressing1037 Yes. They did.
@danielgonzalez5787
@danielgonzalez5787 10 ай бұрын
@@ranchdressing1037 hey we not only took on the gargantuan challenge of developing this massive rocket and successfully launched it, should we go on and land on the moon? naaaa /s
@ildefonsogiron4034
@ildefonsogiron4034 9 ай бұрын
I also saw one at the MIT museum. My wife thought it was an attraction park kind of thing, and a very fragile one.
@petermihelich7094
@petermihelich7094 Жыл бұрын
The fuels for the LM was a hyperbolic type, which when combined cause a superheated steam jet. The 'fuel' was aerozine a highly corrosive liquid. The oxidizer was nitrous oxide N2O4. When combined there was an explosive reaction. My dad was an electrical engineer at Grumman. He was involved with the LM project, when I was 10 years old he brought me into plant 5 to see the high bay white room with almost all of the LM 's in a row. LM 1 was already tested at this time on the apollo 5 unmanned mission to test the vehicle in space.
@joesantamaria5874
@joesantamaria5874 Жыл бұрын
Wow. Must have been quite a sight!
@fromnorway643
@fromnorway643 Жыл бұрын
The LM flew in space three times on Apollo 5, 9 and 10 before its first landing on the Moon.
@petermihelich7094
@petermihelich7094 Жыл бұрын
Correct, apollo5 (LM2), had no legs or life support systems, was used only to test decent, ascent, and reaction rockets. Also the test of inertial guidance. LM3 was tested in earth orbit by 2 astronauts. Tested all systems and maneuvering and docking with the Apollo9 capsule. It was not light enough to take the astronauts off the moon. LM4 was light enough to bring the astronauts off the moon but was used in lunar orbit to test the navigation equipment as well as inertial guidance in low gravity.
@glennsammon4465
@glennsammon4465 Жыл бұрын
my Dad work on it too. I ended up working there when we built the wings for the shuttle.
@petermihelich7094
@petermihelich7094 Жыл бұрын
By the time you were there, my dad was working at Calverton.
@RappinPicard
@RappinPicard 4 жыл бұрын
Apollo 10’s ascent stage is still out there orbiting the sun somewhere.
@unclefreddieDied
@unclefreddieDied 4 жыл бұрын
ascend this!
@user-lx3fm1tz2d
@user-lx3fm1tz2d 4 жыл бұрын
Wow. Didn't know that. Might build that into a later book if I get the chance.
@scottl5000
@scottl5000 4 жыл бұрын
yes and they think they may of found it not long ago.
@poopshoot7882
@poopshoot7882 4 жыл бұрын
Scott L yes your tight. It landed in my neighbor’s yard about 4 years ago
@stefanhenson4673
@stefanhenson4673 3 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/iJKTeHSeq9VlY8k
@flyingwing9839
@flyingwing9839 5 ай бұрын
Perfect! I am a docent at The Cradle of Aviation Museum and we have the Apollo 19 LEM. This video is an easy to understand presentation of our magnificent bird. Thanks Jared!
@MrDaiseymay
@MrDaiseymay 4 ай бұрын
TELLING YOU WHAT YOU WANTED TO HEAR EH? HOW NICE.
@Hobbes746
@Hobbes746 4 ай бұрын
@@MrDaiseymay don’t be an idiot.
@aemrt5745
@aemrt5745 4 ай бұрын
That's awesome! Seeing it IRL gives a real appreciation of the machines size. I need to visit Long Island someday!
@davidstepeck2644
@davidstepeck2644 4 ай бұрын
I’m heading your way! I’m in Connecticut and see you’re close on the map. 7:05 I’ve seen Jared’s videos multiple times; they’re so good it’s worth multiple re-watches.
@srinitaaigaura
@srinitaaigaura 2 жыл бұрын
The planning of the Apollo missions was so well thought about. And in those days where everything had to be done by hand with very little computing power and no fancy design tools. Those engineers were the greatest.
@edisonone
@edisonone 2 жыл бұрын
Slide rule…Slide rule… 8 digit transistor calculator by Sony was all the rage then… Damn Bob Lazar for bringing element 115 into Molder and Scully’s X-Files…
@edisonone
@edisonone 2 жыл бұрын
@@aemrt5745 HAL-9000... HAL-9000... Bill Gate's soon come out with Windows followed in a close second with Close Encounters of the 3rd kind all the while the Lone Ranger and his deputy Tonto was still Hi O'Silvering it out on America's living room in fuzzy black and white coming in from antennas mounted on a rooftop. Capitano Kirk soon come along to with colour TV that weight as much as the USS Starship Enterprise... I too was sold then...
@shots-shots-shotseverybody2707
@shots-shots-shotseverybody2707 Жыл бұрын
They never on planned that these phoney props would be found in 2022 which were the mission control instruments for their international fiction production kzbin.info/www/bejne/b4W0nGptipx9d7s
@shots-shots-shotseverybody2707
@shots-shots-shotseverybody2707 Жыл бұрын
@@edisonone kzbin.info/www/bejne/b4W0nGptipx9d7s
@shots-shots-shotseverybody2707
@shots-shots-shotseverybody2707 Жыл бұрын
@@edisonone kzbin.info/www/bejne/b4W0nGptipx9d7s
@alexanderpanaretos9364
@alexanderpanaretos9364 3 ай бұрын
One of the most - maybe the most - ingenious vehicles ever designed. Almost hard to believe that decades have passed since it carried people to the moon.
@mplsmark222
@mplsmark222 2 ай бұрын
I watched another documentary on the LEM. In a nutshell shell, it looks the way it does because they had to keep reworking it bit by bit to get the weight down, leaving just enough to have a functional machine. It didn’t need to look pretty or like something from Buck Rogers, it had to work. So many intelligent hard working people put their soul into the Apollo program, what a great achievement.
@kamakaziozzie3038
@kamakaziozzie3038 2 ай бұрын
@@mplsmark222your description is accurate. The LEM is a shell within a nutshell! Like those Russian dolls that have many layers
@sblack48
@sblack48 Ай бұрын
It really does look crude close up because the covers over the various tanks are all wrinkly because they are paper thin, basically there to keep dust put and nothing more (not part of the pressure vessel) and weight was their constant enemy.
@dharakis
@dharakis Ай бұрын
they lied and took an oath of secrecy . taking minds off the vietnam atrocities of stealing gold and oil van allen radiation belts keep space travel impossible .you tube 4409 did we go to the moon in a soup can .ΑΩ
@Beemer917
@Beemer917 3 жыл бұрын
My dad and uncle, Eric and Harry Petersen worked at the Space Sciences Laboratory in Berkeley as machinists. The made a bunch of those reflectors. All so Mariner Mars and Viking stuff.
@sarahpride5556
@sarahpride5556 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks! You showed the design well. As a kid in 1969 my friend “Hank” and I had plastic models of the Saturn rocket. As the Moon Mission progressed start to finish, from launch to recovery, we duplicated every step with our models... Rocket stages separated, CM pulled LM out, separated, LM landed, returned safely to Earth,...every action simulated as we watched our TV sets. I recently visited Huntsville AL., and saw the Enormous Saturn V rocket standing erect at the NASA museum at the Redstone Arsenal... OMG! I was so stunned. And proud.
@G-ra-ha-m
@G-ra-ha-m 4 жыл бұрын
The SaturnV never worked properly: There's a good reason why the design of the F-1 rocket motor was never used again.
@owensharp4891
@owensharp4891 4 жыл бұрын
I’m pretty sure if something can take you to the moon, it’s good
@G-ra-ha-m
@G-ra-ha-m 4 жыл бұрын
@@owensharp4891 True, so their immediate scrapping of the F-1 shows us again that it didn't take them to the moon. In the 1980s NASA finished the Shuttle SRB, a far far better engine, just three SRBs give 9m lbf, 20% more than claimed for the F-1 based Saturn V first stage.
@owensharp4891
@owensharp4891 4 жыл бұрын
Graham I understand that, but that is 20 years later! In the 60’s they had the V-1 and in the 80’s they engineered the solid rocket boosters.
@G-ra-ha-m
@G-ra-ha-m 4 жыл бұрын
@@owensharp4891 V-1? You mean the F-1, a 1962 design that NASA ditched as soon as possible. If it was good why did they ditch it? Look at the tubular design, it was always rubbish - they ditched it because it didn't work very well. The point about the SRBs is that in the 1980s NASA again had all the equipment they needed to visit the moon with ease. I.e. they lost nothing but their excuses for never 'returning'.
@tonydean6684
@tonydean6684 4 ай бұрын
A stunning American achievement! The engineering, the computing, the mathematics, the manufacturing, the communications, the electronics - outstanding.
@aemrt5745
@aemrt5745 4 ай бұрын
A key, unsung, aspect of Apollo's success was NASA's management. They had incredibly competent administrators, James Webb (the recent telescope namesake) is just one example.
@Life_42
@Life_42 Жыл бұрын
This is insanely detailed!!! I greatly appreciate your videos! Thank you so much for teaching millions of people!
@mako88sb
@mako88sb Жыл бұрын
Yes, excellent work. There’s also this video by Kevin Hughes that focuses on the docking probe. He has another that does an excellent job of detailing the issues with it during the docking attempts with Apollo 14. m.kzbin.info/www/bejne/apXVio2Zgr5soLc
@charleswest6372
@charleswest6372 Жыл бұрын
Apollo was bogus. Never went to the moon in that aluminum crockpot
@tezzymurphy8730
@tezzymurphy8730 Жыл бұрын
Teaching you how easy it is to fool the world with CGI and green screens. Never heard of the freedom of information act what it says about our planet? You're too easily led, is the trouble.
@michael.forkert
@michael.forkert 11 ай бұрын
Insane is what it is, and insanity what it represents.
@AndreGamingOfficial
@AndreGamingOfficial 4 жыл бұрын
3:00 Fun fact, that flag on Apollo 11 was bought at a sears for only 5 dollars
@mikeksp9177
@mikeksp9177 4 жыл бұрын
I know this one That's why they went white
@SnoopyDoofie
@SnoopyDoofie 4 жыл бұрын
Fun fact. It was made in China.
@PomegranateChocolate
@PomegranateChocolate 4 жыл бұрын
@@SnoopyDoofie China at that is actually Taiwan.
@joevignolor4u949
@joevignolor4u949 4 жыл бұрын
It was also an add on that wasn't originally supposed to go on the mission. That's why they had to mount it outside on the ladder as the LM had already been closed up and loaded into the Saturn V.
@dennis9707
@dennis9707 4 жыл бұрын
Andre hope your not lying because I'll believe that till I hear different now.
@GeorgeVreelandHill
@GeorgeVreelandHill 4 жыл бұрын
I watched on TV the first moon landing. Now I know more about how it happened. Thank you.
@scottl5000
@scottl5000 4 жыл бұрын
Rock and roll buddy! Me too, it was my birthday, turned 10, Olympia WA. Shaped my entire life. I even named my dog Apollo.
@stevewittwer7444
@stevewittwer7444 4 жыл бұрын
@@scottl5000 liar. Mr NASA fúckstick talking shit again using Another of his multitude of aliases
@stevewittwer7444
@stevewittwer7444 4 жыл бұрын
Liar. Mr NASA fúckstick talking shit again using Another of his multitude of aliases he uses to write his many troll posts on every fe video he can find and every other video exposing the lies and telling us the truth
@vivienbear8499
@vivienbear8499 4 жыл бұрын
Boomer report !!
@finnicknoth6409
@finnicknoth6409 4 жыл бұрын
@@stevewittwer7444 HOLY SHIT thats boomer as FUCK
@alanluscombe8a553
@alanluscombe8a553 2 жыл бұрын
Everything about the Apollo missions and how they were achieved is fascinating. I can only imagine what it would have been like, I mean imagine flying to the moon and landing on it and the feeling when you first touch down and then crawl out to walk on it. Mind blowing
@charleswest6372
@charleswest6372 Жыл бұрын
They achieved NOTHING! Artemis is first time an earth craft went to moon. Technology in 69 couldn't do it.
@alanluscombe8a553
@alanluscombe8a553 Жыл бұрын
@@charleswest6372 ok buddy. There literally hundreds of thousands of people who worked on it and explanations that make sense for how every bit of it worked. If you don’t want to believe that’s up to you but you got the idea it’s fake from something silly but you ignore every bit of proof there is because it’s what you choose to do. Whatever.
@sebassrosr
@sebassrosr Жыл бұрын
@@charleswest6372 🧠n't?
@tarrantwolf
@tarrantwolf Жыл бұрын
@@charleswest6372 not according to photographs from the Chinese, Japanese and Indian space agencies, and no, they aren't NASA.
@remy5333
@remy5333 Жыл бұрын
​@@tarrantwolf "but but but muh conspiracy it's all fake" It's incredible how moon-landing deniers are dense.
@markhammond265
@markhammond265 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Jared for helping the younger generation to understand this really happened. I grew up in Huntsville Alabama and was 13 when man first landed on the moon. Keep up your GREAT WORK.
@midnightrambler3653
@midnightrambler3653 4 жыл бұрын
Excellent video. A perfect example of designing something solely for the function it had to carry out.
@BaguetteGamingOfficial
@BaguetteGamingOfficial 4 жыл бұрын
WAR CHILDREN !
@LemonChecks
@LemonChecks 4 жыл бұрын
"minimalist" engineering. lol. but excellent point! MORE creation should take note.
@stefanhenson4673
@stefanhenson4673 3 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/iJKTeHSeq9VlY8k
@cocoweepah
@cocoweepah 3 жыл бұрын
The function of the ANIMATION ? Deception.
@midnightrambler3653
@midnightrambler3653 3 жыл бұрын
@@cocoweepah function of the animation. To show how the lunar module worked.
@Able_Are
@Able_Are 4 жыл бұрын
"I thought I knew a lot about the LM but you've taught me something new." - Me too. Fantasic.
@dougraney3127
@dougraney3127 Жыл бұрын
My father worked on the first LM. His engineering handiwork, as part of the design team, is still sitting on the moon. We watched the entire thing, from launch to splashdown. It was awesome!
@123davepreston
@123davepreston Жыл бұрын
Relax Doug, we never landed on the moon. NASA FAKED the whole thing
@RocketPal
@RocketPal Жыл бұрын
@@123davepreston Moon landing were real. Stop with the conspiracies. All of them are already debunked anyway.
@azuranokurobuchiumi
@azuranokurobuchiumi 11 ай бұрын
Amazing what did he do?
@tonynoaa3950
@tonynoaa3950 3 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/rn-2o5eKqbSZaqssi=2T_v0DIzz_lnw0Pj
@davidbaez3756
@davidbaez3756 9 күн бұрын
One of the greatest engineering marvels in history!
@mako88sb
@mako88sb 9 күн бұрын
Yes. Not sure if you’ve ever read Tom Kelly’s book? He did a fantastic job describing all the hurdles they had to overcome.
@johnnyfraley2270
@johnnyfraley2270 4 жыл бұрын
I watched the landing in my elementary school class. We just watched TV the whole time as history was being made. Great video! This is KZbin at its best!
@johnnyfraley2270
@johnnyfraley2270 4 жыл бұрын
@Terry Winter Do flat earthers like you really exist? We are not riding on the back of a giant turtle. You can buy a $50 telescope and see the equipment we left on the moon. Wait, maybe they painted that equipment on the end of the telescope.
@ismaellopez3963
@ismaellopez3963 4 жыл бұрын
@Bilal Khalid stfu ignorant muslim
@tma2001
@tma2001 4 жыл бұрын
@Terry Winter Sure, if the letters are a 2-3 feet tall and the plate is affixed to the roof! "but so far nothing, so why is that ?" literally 10 seconds later with Google: "Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera wiki entry LROC has flown several times over the historic Apollo lunar landing sites at 50 km (31 mi) altitude; with the camera's high resolution, the Lunar Roving Vehicles and Lunar Module descent stages and their respective shadows are clearly visible, along with other equipment previously left on the Moon. It is expected that this photography will boost public acknowledgement of the validity of the landings, and further discredit Apollo conspiracy theories." Typical lazy conspiratards expect everyone else to do the work for them.
@tma2001
@tma2001 4 жыл бұрын
@Terry Winter Well you obviously didn't understand your own link! It was pretty clear in my reply that at least I know what the Nyquist limit is (evidently it went over your head, literally :)
@tma2001
@tma2001 4 жыл бұрын
@Terry Winter I thought the anti-vaxxers like you stopped taking their meds :)
@stvdagger8074
@stvdagger8074 3 жыл бұрын
The ascent stages of the Apollo 9 LEM (Spider) and the whole Apollo 13 LEM (Aquarius) burned up in earth's atmosphere. The ascent stage of the Apollo 10 LEM (Snoopy) was jettisoned into a heliocentric orbit. In June 2019, an astronomer announced that they had located it. All of the other LEM ascent stages launched were deliberately crashed into the moon. The sound waves of their impacts were recorded by instruments left on the moon. This was done to get a better understanding of the geology of the moon.
@johntechwriter
@johntechwriter 3 жыл бұрын
Since the moon has no atmosphere, how can sound be carried? Guess I need to do sone homework.
@stvdagger8074
@stvdagger8074 3 жыл бұрын
@@johntechwriter The sound traveled through the moon. Rock does transmit sound.
@LoganJohnson-lm2bh
@LoganJohnson-lm2bh 10 ай бұрын
Jared I was a long haul truck driver for 45 years one afternoon at a diner at a truck stop i got into a conversation with an older trucker .It was an amazing story .He was the man with his truck that picked up the first lunar module and moved it to the assembly location for launching .
@danandtab7463
@danandtab7463 Жыл бұрын
This is great because I was always fascinated by the LM. I wonder if the engineers knew they were giving this thing a face, or if this just happened by itself. Because it definitely has a face.
@Fixxate
@Fixxate 4 жыл бұрын
In a few years, you'll be doing a video on Artemis.
@tanjirokamodo5072
@tanjirokamodo5072 3 жыл бұрын
4 years to be precise
@Bob-yt9fo
@Bob-yt9fo 3 жыл бұрын
Abhay Yadav yes
@danielcoetzee5793
@danielcoetzee5793 3 жыл бұрын
@@Bob-yt9fo The movie is already made....; shot in secret location (and studio) somewhere in a deserted desert...! Besides, NASA has their own computer graphics specialists.
@danielcoetzee5793
@danielcoetzee5793 3 жыл бұрын
"Artemis", the Greek Goddess of the hunt, wilderness, wild animals, the moon and chastity.....! Ever wondered why space craft, rockets and missions are given mythological names of Roman or Greek gods like Mercury, Apollo, Saturn, Artemis, Dragon etc. etc etc....? What does "Dragon" infer..the "Dragon from the Book of Revelations....???? Ever wondered why planets and celestial bodies are given names like Mercury, Venus, Mars, Saturn, Neptune, Jupiter and Pluto etc. Even the new discoveries like "Ceres" and the moons of planets like Ganymede, Titan, Europa, Oberon, Miranda etc. Even names of demons like Phobos and Deimos and the names of asteroids like Apophis....!? Why do they give names of mythological gods to things which God has created.....; even names of demons..!? Why do the glorify human endeavors and achievements with names of gods and demons...? What are we getting into when we get into "space travel" and believe in "moon landings"...? What are we worshipping when we glorify "space travel" ...? Why "Artemis"...; was it inspired by the movie (or book) "Artemis Fowl" at all...? What are the goals of scientist really with "space travel" and "studying the origins and composition of the universe...? What are they really looking for and what are they really trying to achieve...(Besides "dispelling the myth of God")?? What are they really up to at Cern with their "particle accelerator" (besides looking for the "god particle"..).???? Are they really trying to open a portal to another dimension,(maybe a spiritual one) and making contact with "creatures" from beyond..? What will happen if they succeed in their scientific endeavor....; will they unleash the "Dragon" from the underworld that we read of in the Book of Revelations...?
@Fixxate
@Fixxate 3 жыл бұрын
@@danielcoetzee5793 I don't know what the hell you're on about but I get the feeling it may be drug induced
@williamblair9597
@williamblair9597 8 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation with detailed graphics showing every compartment and its contents. The only thing I've ever known was the intentional goal to produce the Lem with as few moving parts as possible. What incredible engineering.
@aemrt5745
@aemrt5745 7 ай бұрын
It really was an incredible engineering design, especially considering the short timeframe.
@davidponseigo8811
@davidponseigo8811 4 ай бұрын
My father in law was serving on the USS Hornet when it picked up the crew of Apollo 11 & 12 and got to shake their hands both times.
@tracycapilot2002
@tracycapilot2002 21 күн бұрын
My hometown, Alameda California is where the USS Hornet is permanently berthed as a museum. It is well maintained and served by very knowledgeable docents and is well worth a visit!
@Robert-ff9wf
@Robert-ff9wf Жыл бұрын
When you see the lunar lander in person it is very large. It is much bigger than the impression you get watching it on a screen. As a matter of fact everything about Apollo is on a very large scale when you see it for yourself at NASA. The first stage engines are incredibly large and are the most powerful engine ever built! They never failed either and it just blows my mind how much fuel the fuel pumps could pump a second. The engines were throttleable and moved to change the angle of thrust to keep the rocket flying straight.
@marksprague1280
@marksprague1280 Жыл бұрын
IIRC, the lunar module weighed 30,000 pounds when began its descent to the lunar surface.
@rockethead7
@rockethead7 Жыл бұрын
Ugh, deleting my reply, because I confused 2nd stage with 1st stage. My bad.
@Robert-ff9wf
@Robert-ff9wf Жыл бұрын
@@aemrt5745 Wow!you get to work on all my favorite things!! I was machinist for 23 years specializing in wire EDM, so I used to use an early version of cad/cam to create geometry for whatever shape I had to cut. But anyway, talking about how big Saturn Rocket is when you see it in person, I forgot to say how big the Lunar rover is in person also, and it folds up into a small shape that fits in the Lunar Landers only available space on the decent stage. They land, go outside to the back of the L.E.M. open a outer door, pull on a rope that's inside, and the Lunar rover pops out and unfolds itself into a pretty good sized car or dune buggy with 4 wheel steering and 4 wheel drive and it was a great machine to get around on. I think the last mission they drove around over 75 miles during a 3 day mission, in 1972!!!, we had the coolest space ships, moon buggys and a reliable system to get large payloads to the moon to build a moon base, which was a original mission goal. They already paid for the research and production of this incredible machine so the rocket got alot cheaper because now they just had to build them, design and testing is over and we have 3 fully completed Saturn Rockets ready to go! All we had to do was figure out what we wanted to put on them and go to the moon. That's why it doesn't surprise me our smart government used the excuse that it was getting to expensive to keep launching and building Saturn Rockets when it was to the point where everything had been perfected, all they had to do is build them, and we could do that pretty fast now, we already built around 20 or more and 3 completed, ready to go!! But this amazing thing we actually pulled off, very successfully doing this in the 60s, dune buggys on the moon and all !!! Ya know, let's cancel it and not take advantage of this incredible,reliable machine we managed to build and build an even more expensive space shuttle, and we can reuse the shuttle but after a space flight it has to be overhauled, which was way more expensive than the Apollo Saturn mission single use ships, can't leave orbit or go anywhere like the moon, but it looks and lands like an airplane. And managed to kill a decent amount of astronauts. It just eats me up inside!! That's why Vonbraun quit being the head of NASA. They lied to him, they said get us to moon and we will build bases so we could build a space ship as big as we want and travel our solar system. He saw what was happening moving to the space shuttle that can't go anywhere. He quit NASA and was dead 2 to 3 years after the last visit to the moon.
@normt63
@normt63 4 жыл бұрын
Very interesting this video but I'd like to add a comment , the LEM might have been built in the U.S.A. but a lot of people don't know that the legs of the lunar module ( LEM ) was created and done by the company HEROUX-DEVTEK in Longueuil (Quebec) Canada and we are proud of that .
@DFX2KX
@DFX2KX 4 жыл бұрын
Huh, that's neat!
@ilovecops5499
@ilovecops5499 4 жыл бұрын
LOL! Sure they did Frenchie Boy. Go kiss your hero Miss Trudeau!
@its1110
@its1110 4 жыл бұрын
There were quite a few things in the American Space Program going to the Moon that were from Canada.
@philanglade2745
@philanglade2745 4 жыл бұрын
and the mirrors (reflectors), left on the Moon, were French ! Salut, les gars !
@johnh1001
@johnh1001 4 жыл бұрын
Also one of the main engineers was a Canadian . He had the design back in the days of the AVRO ARROW.
@cursedcliff7562
@cursedcliff7562 3 жыл бұрын
Kubrick was such a perfectionist, he had the moon landing shot on location
@abigailcruz1977
@abigailcruz1977 3 жыл бұрын
?!
@jeffj126
@jeffj126 23 күн бұрын
Yeah and Star Wars, Star Trek and the MC universe are what's real. You're a smuck
@PCCphoenix
@PCCphoenix Жыл бұрын
3:40--This answered my question on how they got the Luner Rover into the LM.
@marxman00
@marxman00 11 ай бұрын
Yeah , they just used computer graphics !
@thecausalgamer7916
@thecausalgamer7916 4 жыл бұрын
Nasa: we need to create something to land on the moon Grumman: i got you fam
@marksmith8667
@marksmith8667 3 жыл бұрын
You rock dude! Thanks for all this work. I followed the space program from Mercury through Apollo as a kid. This brings it all back.
@shots-shots-shotseverybody2707
@shots-shots-shotseverybody2707 Жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/b4W0nGptipx9d7s
@wgoulding
@wgoulding 2 жыл бұрын
I'm very proud to have worked for Northrop Grumman in Bethpage, to have sat in the building where the Lunar Module was designed.
@johnguilfoyle3073
@johnguilfoyle3073 4 ай бұрын
Every good answer spurs another question. The Ascent Stage had a docking window to help alignment for docking with the Command Module. From The Earth to The Moon episode called Spider tells the story of the process quite nicely. They decided to lose the seats, large bubble windows, and second docking hatch to save weight. Initially, they believed that the LM would need to have a Docking Window for the Commander to dock with the CSM, but it was easier for the Command Module Pilot to dock with the LM Ascent stage in the same manner it had already been done when extracting the LM from the upper stage.
@carollutsinger3910
@carollutsinger3910 Жыл бұрын
this is fascinating! Thanks-glad I found your site! A little old lady now who once thrilled watching this on the grainy tv and wished.
@rogertulk8607
@rogertulk8607 Жыл бұрын
🧡💘
@johnnie2638
@johnnie2638 3 жыл бұрын
Dude, that was amazing. I'm an Apollo era kid & had models of the lunar lander. I loved the way it looked. The lander always filled me with a sense of awe and I always wondered what was inside it! Thanks a lot. Great video.
@marcgoff7881
@marcgoff7881 Жыл бұрын
I had the same experience as kid and built a model LEM. Then around 1979 there was a video game with a black and white screen. The name of the game was Lunar Lander and the object of the the game was to land a LEM On the moon with a set amount of fuel. I would enjoy playing it today.
@johnnie2638
@johnnie2638 Жыл бұрын
@@marcgoff7881 I remember that game. I'd play it at the arcade. It was fun because you had to think strategically while looking for a place to put down you also had to pay attention to fuel consumption and speed or the little lander would break up. I enjoyed that game and asteroids. That's where all my quarters went. Lol
@marcgoff7881
@marcgoff7881 Жыл бұрын
@@johnnie2638as I recall you had to use thrust all the way to landing unlike the real LEM that could hover 10 feet above the lunar surface and had it ran out of fuel it still would landed safely and softly. Matter of fact Neil Armstrong would have preferred to cut the engine higher than the 5 feet as planned. They were not sure how far they would sink into the lunar soil and were concerned that if the landing legs pads sank to far in the lunar surface while the engine was running the engine might have contacted the surface and exploded. Everything however worked as designed and the 5 foot long Lunar Surface Sensing Probes alerted the crew with Armstrong announcing “Contact light, Engine stop”. One of the things the Hoax nuts like to point out is there is little blast disturbance in the lunar soil under the engine bell. I had an opportunity to meet Buzz Aldrin and asked asked about it and he said that they were hovering at around 10’ feet and reduced power to basically idle and just settled down on the surface .
@IllinoisChannelTV
@IllinoisChannelTV Жыл бұрын
Thanks Jared -- very informative! It's amazing to see how small the crew compartment was -- and then to think the Apollo 13 astronauts had to all fit inside that small area for days when they used the LEM as a life raft on the way back from circling the moon
@rogertulk8607
@rogertulk8607 Жыл бұрын
The configuration of the descent and ascent engines is completely different from what I thought, watching the event in real time. Very interesting presentation.
@robertneville2022
@robertneville2022 3 ай бұрын
I think the LEM is still the coolest space craft ever made I was 10 when Eagle landed in the Sea of Tranquility, seems like yesterday
@andythurlow1614
@andythurlow1614 4 жыл бұрын
Fantastic. That's the best and easiest to understand presentation of the LEMs. Thanks so much
@dalemettee1147
@dalemettee1147 Жыл бұрын
Jared, thanks for the info. I used to work for a sub contractor that made the trainers for the personnel on the flights. I remember working on the LEM. Standing inside the LEM and looking at all of the gauges, switch panels, and dials. Absolutely breathtaking. Still remember thoise images to this day. Thanks again.
@tvre0
@tvre0 11 ай бұрын
I’d love to be in one of those. I’m a young space nerd who can only fly simulators, but it’d be amazing being in one of those
@mariabowers9604
@mariabowers9604 9 ай бұрын
I was always curious about this but I wanted a description clear and easy to understand. Your narrative is clear and objective. Thank you. The landing on the moon in 1969 was the most unique of all.
@jf2063
@jf2063 Күн бұрын
Wie sicher bin ich, dass noch nie ein Mensch die Mondoberfläche betreten hat? 100%. Mit damaligen Stand der Technik ausgeschlossen. Unternehmungen der USA sollen sechsmal hintereinander ohne einen einzigen desaströsen Fehlschlag gelungen sein? No way.
@XtremeRCNG
@XtremeRCNG 4 жыл бұрын
Jared, thank you for this detailed illustration. Learnt a lot. 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽
@teenconservative3433
@teenconservative3433 4 жыл бұрын
My grandfather worked on this at Grumman on Long Island, and I’m working to become an aerospace engineer and pilot as well!
@lancer525
@lancer525 4 жыл бұрын
You're likely going to find that being "conservative" and studying science are incompatible.
@digitalblasphemy1100
@digitalblasphemy1100 4 жыл бұрын
@@lancer525 not true at all.
@dukecraig2402
@dukecraig2402 4 жыл бұрын
Teen Conservative Good for you, don't let anyone stop you, my uncle worked for Boeing at the Cape and when I was a kid in the 70's he was like a rock star to me.
@kurtfrancis4621
@kurtfrancis4621 4 жыл бұрын
@@lancer525 I've been an engineer for over 30 years, and had to study a lot of science to do so. I've been conservative even longer than that. Your assumptions are incorrect.
@kurtfrancis4621
@kurtfrancis4621 4 жыл бұрын
@OldPlaces Gee, what a nice guy you are...NOT!
@user-kn6sz8ji1j
@user-kn6sz8ji1j Жыл бұрын
Thank you, this is the best video that I have ever seen of the detailed breakdown of the LEM. When I was in elementary school during the 1960s, the space missions were extremely interesting. Like many other children at the time, I wanted to be an astronaut. My father worked at Dover Air Force Base and took us kids to a loading dock where one of the Mercury capsules had been received for transport to the Smithsonian. My father said that occasionally the astronauts would fly into Dover to get fitted for spacesuits at nearby International Latex Corporation (ILC). I once talked with a woman that worked at ILC as a seamstress on the spacesuits. She said Gus Grissom and two other astronauts told her and some other seamstresses that they were taking them to lunch. When one of the seamstresses said that her boss would be upset, apparently Gus Grissom insisted and they went to lunch. I speculate that the other two astronauts with Grissom were Ed White and Roger Chaffee. Tragically, those three astronauts died during an Apollo ground test when a spark ignited the capsules Oxygen rich environment. Well, I never became an astronaut but while in years later, I read a book titled, "The U.S. Navy Submarine School". It sounded as if it was the closest that I may ever get to many of the same technologies that are used in space and I became a commissioning crewmember of a nuclear submarine.
@andrewrixon2347
@andrewrixon2347 9 ай бұрын
In the prototypes the hatch was round until it was pointed out that the astronauts would be wearing a square backpack (PLSS) so the hatch was made square. The landing legs contained a crushable honeycomb structure to act as a shock absorber.
@marxman00
@marxman00 9 ай бұрын
and gold mylar foil to ...stop..the .. landing pads getting hot...or something
@solium3114
@solium3114 4 жыл бұрын
Not gonna lie that lander looks epic
@stefanhenson4673
@stefanhenson4673 3 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/iJKTeHSeq9VlY8k
@TheWagonroast
@TheWagonroast 3 жыл бұрын
where does that link go...
@bifftadrickson208
@bifftadrickson208 3 жыл бұрын
Compared to an elementary school recital set?
@EricBlair-jg2ux
@EricBlair-jg2ux 3 жыл бұрын
Have you seen the actual images of the supposed 'lunar' lander? It looks like it was made in a highschool art project. The fact is the apollo missions never went to the moon, the evidence proving this is beyond doubt and the official story and pseudo science of it is laughable.
@solium3114
@solium3114 3 жыл бұрын
@@EricBlair-jg2ux *where brain*
@Warhorse26
@Warhorse26 4 жыл бұрын
Once again, beautiful animation and explanation!! It's like Christmas seeing all these Moon videos from my favorite KZbinrs :D And what a treat this one was. Thanks, and amazing work!
@user-nx6bn6ip5o
@user-nx6bn6ip5o Жыл бұрын
مركبة LM القمريه كانت معجزه هندسية وعبقرية علميه مكنت الانسان من الهبوط والعوده الآمنه على سطح القمر . تحياتى لكل العاملين بوكالة الطيران والفضاء الامريكيه ناسا .
@johnkirk3279
@johnkirk3279 2 ай бұрын
GOD Bless Neil, Buzz and Mike. All three of these guys had big brass ones and I love them for their courage, too.
@therealuncleowen2588
@therealuncleowen2588 Жыл бұрын
The LM was an amazing vehicle. Humanity's first true dedicated spacecraft, she never suffered a major failure nor caused a fatality. The Apollo 13 LM, Aquarius, served as the lifeboat to save the astronauts after the command module oxygen tank explosion. As someone from NASA described it, on Apollo 13, the LM's performance "greatly exceeded" its design specifications. The Grumman employees who designed and built them should rightfully be very proud.
@davidsheckler4450
@davidsheckler4450 Жыл бұрын
Bcs space isn't real so nothing can go wrong Sheeple
@maxfan1591
@maxfan1591 Жыл бұрын
@@davidsheckler4450 "Bcs space isn't real so nothing can go wrong Sheeple" Evidence to follow in 3, 2, 1...
@davidsheckler4450
@davidsheckler4450 Жыл бұрын
@@maxfan1591 You can't prove space
@maxfan1591
@maxfan1591 Жыл бұрын
@@davidsheckler4450 "You can't prove space" Directly, perhaps not. But I know how big the Earth is, I know the distance to the Moon, and I know the Earth's atmosphere has a pressure gradient. Put those together, and indirectly I know space is a Thing.
@davidsheckler4450
@davidsheckler4450 Жыл бұрын
@@maxfan1591 Ok...by all means show you went into fake space & took measurements...words mean nothing
@adamwaterhouse7412
@adamwaterhouse7412 3 жыл бұрын
Oh neat. The sequence at 4:18 showing the Earth - Moon & back laser bounce is to scale both in size and the time it would take to bounce that signal...
@Shabon67
@Shabon67 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, except for the little pause the laser (in the animation) does when it hits the moon.
@tracycapilot2002
@tracycapilot2002 21 күн бұрын
Thank you for your excellent animation of the LM! I had just turned 11 when Apollo 11 made its historic mission, and we watched every broadcast that NASA offered to the networks. I later purchased and built the Revelle 1/144 scale Saturn V with all stages and components removable, including the LM. I then built the LM model itself complete with gold mylar descent stage covering! However, the interior was not a finished feature and I had always wondered exactly how the cockpit looked and what was in all the compartments. Again, thank you for fulfilling a decades long wish! You're very talented Jared. Keep up the great work!
@JaredOwen
@JaredOwen 20 күн бұрын
That's so cool! I'm so glad these videos can help your passion. Thank you for watching!
@mako88sb
@mako88sb 20 күн бұрын
Yes, his work is amazing. There’s another guy by the name of Kevin Hughes who did 2 fantastic videos about the probe and drogue system used for docking. Highly recommended.
@Nobody_896
@Nobody_896 Жыл бұрын
Growing up in the early seventies the world was space mad I would get luner models for Christmas to glue together and paint and put on display with great pride, so in fact I knew a lot of what was on board these space craft , I remember getting luner modules as miniature toys at the bottom of cornflake boxes that was very exciting for a seven year old too, anyway thankyou Jared another excellent video , cheers mate, ps I was six years old when I watched Neil Armstrong walk on the moon at school ,the entire world seemed to stop for an hour or two on that day so my teachers were literally screaming with excitement ,as Neil said those few words, man you really had to be there it was something else, Apollo 13 by Ron Howard caught a little bit of that excitement surrounding the Apollo missions but it wasn't like the real thing,
@danisr2241
@danisr2241 4 жыл бұрын
I’ve had a chance to see one of the lunar modules that was never used,the one in the cradle of aviation in garden city Long Island, it was an experience unlike any other
@TacticalBaguette
@TacticalBaguette 4 жыл бұрын
@PAID IN FULL All of the proof that space and the moon landings are real is literally so easy to find that even a 5 year old can make a reasonable conclusion that they are real.
@stratoleft
@stratoleft 4 жыл бұрын
It was never used because it can't be used. Just like all the other fakes.
@paulsiegle4153
@paulsiegle4153 4 жыл бұрын
You are an idiot!
@13DarkForce
@13DarkForce 4 жыл бұрын
@PAID IN FULL Garbage? Y'mean, like the Bible?
@stevewittwer7444
@stevewittwer7444 4 жыл бұрын
You're fucking stupid.
@apollo11guy
@apollo11guy 2 жыл бұрын
I was an engineer on the Apollo launch team at Kennedy; VERY well done!
@nigelwilliams9307
@nigelwilliams9307 2 жыл бұрын
Of course you were..
@apollo11guy
@apollo11guy 2 жыл бұрын
@@nigelwilliams9307 meaning?
@JeepTeriyaki
@JeepTeriyaki 2 жыл бұрын
@@nigelwilliams9307 Right! he probably watched the launch on lsd and thought he was an astronaut 😂
@geoffreydowen5793
@geoffreydowen5793 Жыл бұрын
Watching this in January 2023 clever boy. Thank you Jared.respect from Suffolk, England..
@GermanGreetings
@GermanGreetings Жыл бұрын
The best description and visualization ever ! Thank you, Sir.
@user-mr1um1cg5v
@user-mr1um1cg5v 4 жыл бұрын
Jared, this a very very nice, simple and at the time comprehensive animation.
@TommoCarroll
@TommoCarroll 4 жыл бұрын
Couldn't agree more! It was great!
@rty1955
@rty1955 4 жыл бұрын
My best friends dad was in charge of the wiring for the LEM. Anyone who lives in Bethpage calls it the LEM. The ascent stage mixed a combination of fuel that when combined created the thrust, no pumps, no igniter. Each egine was a throw away engine, meaning it could never be used again after it was fired The ascent and decent stage was connected with wiring that ran through a guillotine. As soon as the rocket fired the explosive guillotine cute the wires to allow it to separate. If that failed or the engine failed, the astronauts would be stranded. My friends father had to stay at the plant until the astronauts were safely aboard the command module. I lived in Bethpage across from the plant where they built the LEM. Did you know they always built two of them that were identical? If something went wrong, the engineers could use the one on the ground to help correct the problem. After the moon landing, Grumman pushed the secondary LEM into the parking lot and spray painted it camo green. I used to see it out there every day. It was so sad to see it out there in the rain, snow etc. Grumman waa bought out by Northrop, they closed the plant, layed off 100s of thousands of employees, sold some of the land to developers, ripped up the runway they had (they landed a Grumman Guppy there to xport the LEM to NASA) the huge hangers are now used as a sound stage for movies. The HQ building is used by a cable company. It brings a tear to my eye every time I see the plant. Leroy Grumman built a wonderful company and Northrop ruined it
@jakeglenn2246
@jakeglenn2246 4 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/fnWtc417g7V-gcU
@christsrevenge8030
@christsrevenge8030 4 жыл бұрын
jake glenn. Again... your mom wants her phone back little man. Play time is over.
@stephenhumble7627
@stephenhumble7627 2 жыл бұрын
Yep people more interested in watching ego inflating fantasy superhero movies and fictional drama movies than real engineering. Cant blame them though it's much easier that having to think and work out real stuff and it can be inspiring. But imagine what really cool new technology we may have if more money was spent on engineering instead of so much making movies and if people were more industrious.
@hectorheath9742
@hectorheath9742 Жыл бұрын
Beyond impressive, both the engineering and the animation .
@davidputt4638
@davidputt4638 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent attention to detail! I love how you even got the sparks that appear when the accent stage launches.
@Doctor699
@Doctor699 3 жыл бұрын
Very informative, and you got it spot on. It's amazing how simple and lightweight they kept it. It's got rigid sides and looks strong, but if you're careless you can drop a screwdriver right through the floor. It's sad they're all gone now. Except for the decent stages still on the Moon, and the Apollo 10 Ascent Stage which is lost in solar orbit somewhere.
@homemadecringeycontent6363
@homemadecringeycontent6363 Жыл бұрын
Ok, hear me out. We use starship to grab Snoopy, and bring it back and redock it to Charlie Brown in a badass museum display.
@alonsogem
@alonsogem 4 жыл бұрын
After 50 years, finally I knew where they kept the lunar roving vehicle inside the lunar excursion module; Thank you, Jared Owen
@TheGreatOne16439
@TheGreatOne16439 4 жыл бұрын
Yes I've always wondered that myself!
@DubzCo
@DubzCo 4 жыл бұрын
Eugenio M. Alonso González was that in the ORIGINAL LM plans though?
@JSP_1147
@JSP_1147 4 жыл бұрын
Same here
@YDDES
@YDDES 4 жыл бұрын
I have known it all the time. It was described back Then.
@stevewittwer7444
@stevewittwer7444 4 жыл бұрын
You are fucking stupid to believe that crap. Guliable fool.
@billabdallah7825
@billabdallah7825 Жыл бұрын
I too am I'm an Apollo era kid and watched the Apollo 11 launch in grade school. Your videos explained a lot of things I had been curious about over the years. I look forward to visiting the National Air and Space Museum when it reopens in 2023. Thank you.
@Tirelesswarrior
@Tirelesswarrior 9 ай бұрын
This is incredibly educative. I'm so glad I came across this. I respect the minds of engineers. Phenomenal.
@startrekking359
@startrekking359 4 жыл бұрын
I followed the moon missions since I was a kid in the mid 60s I was 12 at that time and still research it and so forth build models i never knew what the LM all consisted of I do now thanks a million.
@startrekking359
@startrekking359 4 жыл бұрын
@6ix 9ine are you FOR real dude come on.
@stevewittwer7444
@stevewittwer7444 4 жыл бұрын
Liar. Mr NASA fúckstick talking shit again using Another of his multitude of aliases he uses to write his many troll posts on every fe video he can find. Loser
@JK-vp2ux
@JK-vp2ux 4 жыл бұрын
Nice, simple, piecemeal description. Good job.
@romansthirteen-four8626
@romansthirteen-four8626 Жыл бұрын
I’m working on various scale models & some from Metal Earth - I was intrigued by how this thing which has so many odd shapes worked & you explained it. I’m a picture guy so your animations provide very educational entertaining descriptions that keep me intrigued the whole way through. Your other video that demonstrates how the L[e]M got from being below the command module in the Saturn V assembly, to the nose of the command module & connected was also something I was grateful to have animated clearly!! - I didn’t know if the crew space walked to the door of the LM & climbed in because I kept thinking the connection was too small to accommodate the movement. Thank you for taking the time - I’ll be sharing with a few of my adolescent relatives who are eager to get my completed models of these craft.
@KPL400
@KPL400 Жыл бұрын
history.nasa.gov/alsj/CSM08_LM_&_SLA_Overview_pp61-68.pdf
@nobleroman5601
@nobleroman5601 Жыл бұрын
When I was around 10 years old, that would be around 1970 ,my parents took me to Radio City Music Hall in NYC , but across the street they had set up a full sized replica of the LEM , as a young boy it was better than the movie we saw in Radio City , it was like the future was right in front of me, and now that I'm a old man we have rocket technology that takes off and lands like those rockets in the 50s Syfy movies , I wish I could see what space travel looks like in the next 100 years. Great video here , thanks so very much for sharing it with us all.
@spaceflightengr
@spaceflightengr 4 жыл бұрын
The thermal blanket material is called "Kapton," not "mylar." Kapton is MADE of mylar and flash vaporized gold. You've done a nice job here Jared, thanks.
@invisiblekincajou
@invisiblekincajou 4 жыл бұрын
nop, kapton has nothing to do with gold. Actually, this protection multi-layer cover was made from aluminized mylar (which looks like clear metallic foil), sometimes aluminized kapton (this one looks like gold foil), sometimes nickel and nickel-chrome alloy woven sheets for most tough parts.
@NoSTs123
@NoSTs123 4 жыл бұрын
Damn! I was about to type that.
@skunkjobb
@skunkjobb 3 жыл бұрын
Right and wrong. Mylar is boPET and kapton is polyimide, two different polymers so none of them is made from the other. And it's aluminum instead of gold. The blankets on Apollo was probably aluminized mylar but aluminized kapton has been used on other space hardware. I say probably mylar because googling it gives references for both mylar and kapton on the LM descent stage. Since the lead designer of the LM, Tom Kelly at Grumman wrote in his book "Moon lander, how we developed the Apollo lunar module" that it was mylar, I it really was mylar. (See page 174, the section "Where the action is".) Oh shit, even in this document written by Grumman and published by NASA, they seem to confuse mylar and kapton: www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/LM04_Lunar_Module_ppLV1-17.pdf It says "polyimid (mylar)" but polyimide is not mylar but kapton. Then I don't know whom to believe anymore. They talk about some "H-film" as a more heat tolerant alternative to mylar that was also used. I wonder if H-film was kapton. Then I think they used both mylar and kapton and only used the kapton for the hottest places.
@-First-Last
@-First-Last 3 жыл бұрын
@@invisiblekincajou 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 Yes, sometimes titanium vapor oxidine woven with cadmium powder cloroquine alloy mixed with cotton dioxide hemp which looks like the one in Stanley Kubrick's movie.
@-First-Last
@-First-Last 3 жыл бұрын
@@skunkjobb Yes, that's the one.
@jshepard152
@jshepard152 4 жыл бұрын
I thought I knew a lot about the LM but you've taught me something new. Thumbs up so hard it hurts.
@flatearthclock
@flatearthclock 4 жыл бұрын
It's all BS. Please wake up.
@stevewittwer7444
@stevewittwer7444 4 жыл бұрын
Praising yourself fúckstick. Cannot find any real people to support you so you invent aliases to praise you.
@stevewittwer7444
@stevewittwer7444 4 жыл бұрын
@Limey Lemon The fact that someone "believes" something doesn't make it true. You are fucking stupid. A belief is only a guess, not a fact. Where is your spinning Ballshit model evidence.. You don't have any, you don't have any. Hardy Hardy har har.. We get to laugh at you and mock you.. Bwaahhaahhhaahhaa..
@stevewittwer7444
@stevewittwer7444 4 жыл бұрын
@Limey Lemon It isn't what we want dipstick, it is reality. Something you are shit scared of so you live in a fantasy world where you think that you live on a spinning ball in the middle of space. Hahahaa. And you also believe in that big bang bullshit. The day when for no reason, nothing decided to explode in the middle of nothing and put of nothing everything just magically appeared.. Bwaahhaahhhaahhaa.
@stevewittwer7444
@stevewittwer7444 4 жыл бұрын
@Limey Lemon when more people believe in THE FLAT EARTH, than the spinning Ballshit model, will it then be correct,simply because more people believe in it?
@lrzezak
@lrzezak 3 ай бұрын
Very nice job. Worth to see. The moon landing, when I was a little kid, had such an impact on me that I still remember that moment in my life.
@MyNaday
@MyNaday Жыл бұрын
I wish to express my most sincere gratitude for such a wonderful document
@samthomas9389
@samthomas9389 Жыл бұрын
Hi Jared, urban legend had it that the foil wrap on the Descent Stage consisted of pure gold foil. Thanks for clarifying what this material actually was (mylar).
@garyhaber333
@garyhaber333 3 жыл бұрын
I love your channel! My father in law worked on the Apollo capsule on all the flights, and he kept all of the tools he used to perform that work.
@tortysoft
@tortysoft 2 жыл бұрын
Bravo that man/men - and all the women !
@gokuhawks14
@gokuhawks14 2 жыл бұрын
@ G H That's awesome. It must really bother you when you hear somebody you say that the moon landing was faked.
@invisibleimpostor299
@invisibleimpostor299 4 жыл бұрын
Wow! This is almost like as if I was an astronaut being explained about landing module. Great Stuff mate!
@williammarnoch174
@williammarnoch174 4 жыл бұрын
Pranav Desai lunar*
@jackbond5348
@jackbond5348 4 жыл бұрын
Wow... Pranav Desai And when you were a little boy Regarding astronauts, did your mom make you a pretend space suite, and a cardboard luner lander, did you pretend to be on the moon too? Did she get any pictures to prove that you were pretending to be on the moon, like nasa presented to the world nearly fifty years ago? Have you got any jokes about pigs flying over white houses? #WWJD #usaFAGGOTS #ENDOFDAYS #nasaFAGS
@jakeglenn2246
@jakeglenn2246 4 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/fnWtc417g7V-gcU
@bomblade15
@bomblade15 4 жыл бұрын
@Adi Adiani Troll and troll and troll. You’ve impressed no one.
@bomblade15
@bomblade15 4 жыл бұрын
@Cam hahahagahahahahahsggafywua Hilarious. You don’t sound like a deranged lunatic. Find yourself a hole in the ground and don’t resurface.
@MatthewBaileyBeAfraid
@MatthewBaileyBeAfraid Жыл бұрын
Oh! And one of my best-friends from HS had his father build the Seismometers used on some of the ALSEP Missions, some of which are still in use and returning data (these also contained the Mirrors used to bounce lasers off). The father was “Raymond Staton” who was a Seismic/Geological Engineer (or, still is, but is long retired). That was something of an awe inspiring discovery to make when it was casually mentioned during lunch one day.
@mako88sb
@mako88sb Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately due to budget constraints the money used for the ALSEP’s program was cutoff in 1977.
@Nightscream72
@Nightscream72 2 жыл бұрын
Easily my favorite video that I've seen it from your channel so far. Excellent!
@Declan-pg8cg
@Declan-pg8cg 4 жыл бұрын
Beautifully done video Jerad. You should do one of the various pieces of scientific equipment brought along on the LEMs.
@jakeglenn2246
@jakeglenn2246 4 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/fnWtc417g7V-gcU
@christsrevenge8030
@christsrevenge8030 4 жыл бұрын
jake glenn. Your mom is waiting to beat you bad if you don't give her phone back.
@mrs.dairycow62
@mrs.dairycow62 4 жыл бұрын
What’s inside of the voyager probes should be next.
@creature6232
@creature6232 2 жыл бұрын
Something so complex to build and so easy to explain. Wow. Thank you.
@kongmik
@kongmik Жыл бұрын
So easy to debunk
@iansands8607
@iansands8607 2 ай бұрын
Great video, I was 10 when Neil Armstrong first stepped on the moon but on the later missions when they took the moon rover it always boggled my mind how they managed to stow it on the LEM, now it makes sense. Thankyou, and again great video.
@bulshtbnd
@bulshtbnd 4 жыл бұрын
You started with ..." 2019 being the 50th anniversary of the first lunar landing.". 50 years! And after Apollo 17, we never went back! Or established a lunar base! No country did! Think how far we have advanced, technologically, in that span of time. Now think how much more advanced we could have been, had we stayed the course, that we started as a species. Excellent video, by the way.
@thesauciestboss4039
@thesauciestboss4039 4 жыл бұрын
Such a shame we rather participated in war. USA is like the bipolar child of Britain
@cursedcliff7562
@cursedcliff7562 3 жыл бұрын
*cough* Artemis *cough*
@honkhonk8009
@honkhonk8009 3 жыл бұрын
@@thesauciestboss4039 Cept the US is making an actual moonbase and does 90% of space shit compared to britain who had to beg to buy out an American satellite corporation because they cant use EU ones, despite the corporation employing americans only.
@alt8791
@alt8791 3 жыл бұрын
If only Apollo continued, if only the full STS got approved, if only RL-10s were cheaper...
@tortysoft
@tortysoft 2 жыл бұрын
@@honkhonk8009 The UK cancelled our space programme one day after achieving orbit with a British rocket. Michael Hessltine wreaked it for us all.
@rexdt
@rexdt 4 жыл бұрын
I must say i have always LOVED the design of the LM.
@stefanhenson4673
@stefanhenson4673 3 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/iJKTeHSeq9VlY8k
@natureandphysics403
@natureandphysics403 3 жыл бұрын
Fun fact: the LM descent stage turned up on one last mission--the telescope mount on Skylab!
@yafuker6046
@yafuker6046 3 жыл бұрын
@@natureandphysics403 I thought that looked familiar!
@cronos42
@cronos42 Жыл бұрын
This is frikkin' awesome. I suddenly had all these questions answered that I should always have had, but didn't. You are most excellent.
@rollbot
@rollbot Ай бұрын
amazing. mind blown away completely. . it feels like even today we do not have the tech available to do this again which is sad. things would be overly complicated and messy.
@brndesk
@brndesk 4 жыл бұрын
Great video! Since I was a kid, I was always wondering about the nomenclature of the LEM. I built the Revel model of the LEM in 1973 which taught me a lot, but your video gave me the full picture. Thank you.
@bubbie3533
@bubbie3533 4 жыл бұрын
Like you Sub, I was curious how Apollo 11 got to the Moon and how they got back. I found the small details about the LM fascinating. 🚀
@emersoncoelho7187
@emersoncoelho7187 3 жыл бұрын
I was at Kennedy space center in Florida a couple years ago and I entered into a lunar space module, pretty cool.
@BradWatsonMiami
@BradWatsonMiami 3 жыл бұрын
One of the unused real ones or a mock-up? GOD=7_4. 7/4=July 4th was encoded by Freemasons who were also in-charge of NASA. The Lunar Module was 23'1"/7.04 m tall and was designed for excursions up to 75 hours. 7 LMs were supposed to land on the Moon - 4 were not J-type. Skylab ended in '74. GOD=7_4 or FOD=6_4 (on Planet Nestor) is Design Worlds Theory & the 'Theory of Everything' (Seal #2). See 7seals.blogspot.com - only the returned Christ & Albert Einstein reincarnated could produce that. It's triggered The Apocalypse/ Revelation which is NOT the 'end of the world'. COVID-19 is part of Seal #2: S=19 (18.6) Theory.
@mizzo9
@mizzo9 Жыл бұрын
When I was 7 yrs old and living on Long Island, I got to see this bird in the Grumman plant because we knew an engineer that worked on it. What a thrill!
@s51curtis
@s51curtis Ай бұрын
This is one of the best videos I've ever seen on KZbin. Well done!
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