I can't get all that detail into my 3" tall Revell Lunar Lander...thank heavens. Doing the motors for the Saturn V was already a crusade and a half. I'm thinking Rocket Lamp!
Great 3D visualization of one of the greatest moments in US and world history. When you look at this piece of hardware and the excruciating detail in the mission planning documents its clear they left nothing, or almost nothing to chance. Apollo 13 and the LiOH canister issue made it clear that there is still room to improve.
Imagine flying to the moon 250,000 miles away while everything outside your can of beans is certain death. To me it's incredible how fine the margin for errors were, one critical failure and hope diminishes rapidly. For example the Apollo 13 crew only survived because the accident happened when it happened. Much sooner or later in the mission and they were doomed, without adequate resources or oxygen and electrical power to get back.
@@GunnerHeatFire yeah Neal, Buzz and Micheal spent 3 days to get there and 3 days to get back in the CM then Micheal spent an additional 21.5 hours in the CM orbiting the moon while Neal and buzz explored using the LM
You've missed it. 3:17. Urine was dumped overboard, feces were done in an adhesive bag, dried out, hit with strong disinfectant, and since they couldn't be dumped overboard, they were either left in the LM when it was detached for the last time or returned to Earth, depending on mission rules.
The later Apollo missions were almost 2 weeks!
I can't get all that detail into my 3" tall Revell Lunar Lander...thank heavens. Doing the motors for the Saturn V was already a crusade and a half. I'm thinking Rocket Lamp!
Very interesting video, thanks for sharing !
Great 3D visualization of one of the greatest moments in US and world history. When you look at this piece of hardware and the excruciating detail in the mission planning documents its clear they left nothing, or almost nothing to chance. Apollo 13 and the LiOH canister issue made it clear that there is still room to improve.
Lol, suddenly the whole world gets credit.
@@OneOfThoseTypes Troll elsewhere troll
To be fair much of this great design was the result of the horrible mistakes in the Block 1 module which killed the Apollo 1 crew.
Fabulous interior inspection, this will help with some scratch build modelling. Cheers and thanks.
If you the playback speed down to .5 this is a great vid
Thanks for posting it
Me: absolutely, sign me up. My Claustrophobia; no f&$@ing way. 😂
Imagine flying to the moon 250,000 miles away while everything outside your can of beans is certain death. To me it's incredible how fine the margin for errors were, one critical failure and hope diminishes rapidly. For example the Apollo 13 crew only survived because the accident happened when it happened. Much sooner or later in the mission and they were doomed, without adequate resources or oxygen and electrical power to get back.
Their saving grace was the lunar module Without it they possibly would not have survived.
Life support systems are designed around human ergonomics. Anything and everything man-made is based on this concept.
Now musk has a couple touch tone screens
Should play reentry orbital simulator, can do mercury Gemini and Apollo missions it is fantastic
Imagine spending three a week in this like the astronauts did!
It wasn't a whole week
@@whix-e41 Exactly They Were In The LM For Some Time (Or Atleast 2 Of Them)
@@GunnerHeatFire yeah Neal, Buzz and Micheal spent 3 days to get there and 3 days to get back in the CM then Micheal spent an additional 21.5 hours in the CM orbiting the moon while Neal and buzz explored using the LM
@@whix-e41 Correct.
💕😘💕 Still incredible you are
Amazing! Don't know how to say thanks in your language. If you can read this where are you from?
Hallo, in Deutsch sagen wir "Danke" oder "Vielen Dank" :-) . I wish you Merry Christmas and a healthy New Year.
@@curiosityman959 Danke schon for your arbeit herr Detlev
This is great
Danke
Kommentar von DOWNHILL Spastis wurde wegen Verstoß gegen die Netiquette gelöscht
Unless I missed it, I can't help but notice the lack of lavatory equipment....?
You've missed it. 3:17. Urine was dumped overboard, feces were done in an adhesive bag, dried out, hit with strong disinfectant, and since they couldn't be dumped overboard, they were either left in the LM when it was detached for the last time or returned to Earth, depending on mission rules.
1 cosmonaut didn't like this
Petz