Apollo 13: Houston, We Have a Problem

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
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Комментарии • 611

  • @jacoboconnell7518
    @jacoboconnell7518 3 года назад +497

    Simon sponsoring his own channel=infinite money loop. Legend.

    • @sirmingusdewiv8325
      @sirmingusdewiv8325 3 года назад +40

      He's becoming more American by the day.

    • @DrewNorthup
      @DrewNorthup 3 года назад +3

      There are a number of other staff...

    • @joeystrittmatter6890
      @joeystrittmatter6890 3 года назад +15

      @@DrewNorthup true but they're just chained up in the basement LMFAO

    • @nealhoffman7518
      @nealhoffman7518 3 года назад +2

      I'm pretty sure it took off after his video about how Hollywood movies never make a profit lol

    • @delurkor
      @delurkor 3 года назад +2

      Just don't confuse your beard oil with your Shave Club ball spray.

  • @robertslater8293
    @robertslater8293 3 года назад +168

    Thanks for the awesome video! My grandpa actually worked on the team that came up with the co2 scrubber and fun fact the astronauts went around and personally thanked each person at mission control and nasa that helped bring them home safe so we have a picture of my mom as a baby sitting on one of their laps.

    • @retrosim4197
      @retrosim4197 3 года назад +9

      I always wondered what happened on the subsequent missions after 13. Did they redesign the scrubbers to be the same on both spacecraft or did they they manufacture a more permanent adapter in case a similar situation ever came up again?

    • @DrewNorthup
      @DrewNorthup 3 года назад +5

      @@retrosim4197 The adapter had actually be designed as a brainstorming type exercise prior to Apollo 13. The main things they would have had to do during the mission itself would be to update the design to match the known resource pool as needed and make sure the instructions were usable by the astronauts.

    • @megaprojects9649
      @megaprojects9649  3 года назад +18

      legend

    • @Terri_MacKay
      @Terri_MacKay 3 года назад +5

      I'm loving all the commenters who have family members who worked for NASA, and were involved in this Apollo mission. It must be riveting to be able to hear about it firsthand from someone who was there. 😃

    • @robertslater8293
      @robertslater8293 3 года назад +4

      @@megaprojects9649Thanks Simon (and/or whoever you have locked in your basement to reply to your video comments 🤣)

  • @Spiritus_Invictus
    @Spiritus_Invictus 3 года назад +247

    The one sentence in that movie that gives me chills every time.
    "this could become NASA greatest failure."
    "I disagree sir, this will become our greatest achievement"

    • @charlesstaats9902
      @charlesstaats9902 3 года назад +3

      Of course, almost the same sentence(s) feature in HBO’s Chernobyl.

    • @kriskay5020
      @kriskay5020 3 года назад +1

      death or glory

    • @kremesauce
      @kremesauce 3 года назад +15

      “This will be our finest hour”

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 3 года назад +1

      @@kremesauce It was!

    • @grahampowelljr1
      @grahampowelljr1 3 года назад +14

      My favorite line in the movie was from Lovell's mother: "Son, if they could make a washing machine fly, my Jimmy could land it."

  • @scottwilliamson9506
    @scottwilliamson9506 3 года назад +247

    My dad was one of the young engineers working at NASA-JSC on the Apollo project who was called in the night of the accident. On top of this, I was born the day of the launch. So when I was just a couple of days old he had to cut any paternity leave short. He tells the story that they basically called everyone, creating a traffic jam in the middle of the night to get into the center... I get emotional every time I hear this story. Great video.

    • @michel5148
      @michel5148 3 года назад +6

      wish my dad was a engineer, my dad smokes. so i heard.

    • @bimblinghill
      @bimblinghill 3 года назад +4

      That's really cool!

    • @Hollylivengood
      @Hollylivengood 3 года назад +22

      That is awesome! My father was a mechanical engineer, and when we watched the landing on the news - of course people cheered an all, like they showed - but he joked about how apollo 13 made the engineers finally look cooler than the astronauts.

    • @unclerojelio6320
      @unclerojelio6320 3 года назад +5

      “Paternity leave” lol

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 3 года назад +2

      I once had a roommate who was born during the Apollo 13 mission. She hadn't known that until she mentioned her birthdate, which sounded to me like that very week. I looked it up and sure enough, it was. Interestingly, her life has had a whole bunch of problems. But I believe she will safely "splash down."

  • @amb163
    @amb163 3 года назад +51

    Another Megaprojects idea: The 2010 Copiapó Rescue Operation, a world-wide effort to save the 33 Chilean miners and development of the Phoenix Capsule.

  • @thekidfromcleveland3944
    @thekidfromcleveland3944 3 года назад +66

    Perhaps even more impressive is how calm the atronaunts were during the whole thing Despite the dire circumstances. The uncomfortable conditions. The possibilty of death. The audio recording will put you to sleep. All that yelling n drama in the movie was fabricated because the real astronaunts were so cool and collected. Theres a very small group of people that wouldve been the same way. Yes it was close to zero c. But those guys had ice in their veins on the launchpad. Absolute legends

    • @oig40203
      @oig40203 3 года назад +3

      That's because they had practiced in the sim for hundreds of hours, dealing with all kinds of failures. This prepared them.

    • @simonm1447
      @simonm1447 3 года назад +3

      For Jim Lovell this was not the first moon flight, he flew around the moon with Apollo 8 before.
      Unfortunately for him he could never land on the moon, Apollo 8 had no LEM (it was not ready) and with the exploding oxygen tank his only chance to land on the moon was gone

    • @Zoom15000
      @Zoom15000 Год назад

      Not necessarily. What was transmitted over the radio doesn't mean there may not have been tense and heated discussion among the three men. They make this point in the film when they're having an argument, Mission Control radios and Lovell shouts "are we on vox?" then switches to a calm voice to talk to MC

  • @ClimptheGreat
    @ClimptheGreat 3 года назад +127

    My grandfather was in the control room in houston during apollo 13, he was the chief retro grade officer (which he received the NASA presidential medal of honor for his service to nasa)... ive meet like everyone in this video. There is actually a story about his division coming up with the formula for their return back to earth that was told to me by Gene Kranz

    • @C2K777
      @C2K777 3 года назад +16

      Now that is a family history that would earn you a beer or twenty if we were to ever cross paths.

    • @marcuswilson3485
      @marcuswilson3485 3 года назад

      Was he involved with Operation Paperclip?

    • @wrightmf
      @wrightmf 3 года назад +2

      He talked about what it was like viewing data on those CRT monitors, those didn't have the clarity like today's monitors. What it was like working in that room where everyone smoked?

    • @Terri_MacKay
      @Terri_MacKay 3 года назад +2

      I would never get tired of listening to him talking about that mission. You're so lucky to have been able to hear about it firsthand from him.

    • @kdids
      @kdids 3 года назад

      now thats freaking epic! what a story and family history!

  • @jsfbr
    @jsfbr 3 года назад +50

    My mom, my sister and I prayed together every night at our home in Brazil for their safe return to Earth.

    • @mjelves
      @mjelves 3 года назад

      So I guess they should thank you?🙄

    • @diego_z90
      @diego_z90 2 года назад +1

      @@mjelves why you so salty

    • @mjelves
      @mjelves 2 года назад

      @@diego_z90 you’ve mistken salt for sarcasm

  • @deviljelly3
    @deviljelly3 3 года назад +197

    I have a MegaProject topic idea for you: "The Human Genome Project"

  • @spnhm34
    @spnhm34 3 года назад +48

    The mission controllers who saved the day were led by Gene Kranz and Glynn Lunney, the latter of whom pulled off (to quote Mattingley) “the most magnificent display of personal leadership I’ve ever seen”. These are the standouts in a story of many heroes

    • @Gallade082
      @Gallade082 3 года назад +1

      John Aaron also played a big role!

    • @michaelhart7569
      @michaelhart7569 3 года назад +1

      Whenever I watch TV footage of the events, Gene Kranz strikes me as a man who might otherwise have been a famous General in WWII. The kind of leader that soldiers would die for.

    • @spnhm34
      @spnhm34 3 года назад

      @@michaelhart7569 absolutely. He was in the service as a younger man. Lunney was a quieter character but for me his leadership was equally inspired

  • @mho...
    @mho... 3 года назад +44

    i said it before i say it again:
    *The Modern Shipping Container* and its impact on global trade
    needs an episode on Megaprojects/Geographics!, nothing has changed the planet like these millions of steel boxes traveling the globe every day!

    • @gudmunduringigudmundsson9287
      @gudmunduringigudmundsson9287 3 года назад +1

      If that, then the plastic and aluminum containers for beverages too.

    • @Rex-ii2yz
      @Rex-ii2yz 3 года назад +1

      And if you are in the US military, you can get to live and work in one for up to a year at a time! :P

    • @mho...
      @mho... 3 года назад +3

      @Kainpiller wow, get some manners!

    • @Wootguy238
      @Wootguy238 3 года назад +1

      @@gudmunduringigudmundsson9287 Coor's!

    • @888johnmac
      @888johnmac 3 года назад

      yeah .. this ( doesn't even need to look at the dozens of other uses for a shipping container )

  • @nazukeoya
    @nazukeoya 3 года назад +31

    I watched Apollo 13 in the theater and it was the first time I ever saw people clap at the end of a movie.

  • @addikay7097
    @addikay7097 3 года назад +54

    If you guys ever get the chance, the Apollo 13 capsule currently resides at the Cosmosphere in Hutchinson, Kansas

    • @wrightmf
      @wrightmf 3 года назад +2

      it used to be in France, but with Lovell's book and the movie, US wanted it back.

    • @Acrophobia2
      @Acrophobia2 3 года назад +1

      Why did they decide to put it there?

    • @wrightmf
      @wrightmf 3 года назад +1

      @@Acrophobia2 I don't know, I can only speculate Apollo 13 was the "flight that failed" title of a early 1970s book by Henry SF Cooper.

    • @Virtuous_Rogue
      @Virtuous_Rogue 3 года назад +3

      @@Acrophobia2 If you were referring to Hutchinson with your comment, Hutchinson has the second largest air and space museum in the US. It started out as a planetarium and I guess it grew because rural Kansas has plenty of land. The lobby has a retired SR-71 Blackbird.

    • @Acrophobia2
      @Acrophobia2 3 года назад +1

      @@Virtuous_Rogue yes that answered my question! Thanks!

  • @otakuribo
    @otakuribo 3 года назад +126

    Clear heads, creative thinking, and a roll of duct tape can literally save lives! 🌌🚀

    • @garywalker447
      @garywalker447 3 года назад +6

      Items brought on board Apollo were closely monitored, weight was critical but when loading the craft several days before the launch, one of the astronaughts tossed in an extra roll of duck tape. The CO2 kluge was only one of the emergency uses for the tape and by the time they landed, they were mostly through the second roll of tape.
      All future Apollo missions flew with two rolls of duck tape.

    • @Ghostvertigo
      @Ghostvertigo 3 года назад +4

      Just like red green always said duct tape can fix anything LOLOL 😂

    • @otakuribo
      @otakuribo 3 года назад +2

      @@garywalker447 I love this addition! 💜 I've heard that duct tape is like the Force; it has a light side and a dark side, and it holds the universe together

    • @garywalker447
      @garywalker447 3 года назад

      @jared price Actually much of this tape is made on a basis of cotton duck cloth so both terms are correct.

    • @Jedi.Toby.M
      @Jedi.Toby.M 3 года назад

      And you don't even need a clear head or creativity...as long as you have duct tape

  • @delurkor
    @delurkor 3 года назад +14

    I was 25 when this occurred, in the Army, in Viet Nam. Listening to people saying that their grand parents worked on this, Gad I'm old!

  • @htc86752
    @htc86752 3 года назад +17

    I'm dating myself when I say this, but I remember the re-entry of 13. My folks got up and turned off the TV when the spacecraft didn't establish comms on schedule so we didn't know until the next day that the crew was back safely. I can clearly remember my mom crying when we founnd out. It was that kind of time back then. Godspeed.

    • @randyhager2054
      @randyhager2054 3 года назад

      Yeah...I'm old too and can remember watching almost every Apollo mission. I ended up working for Rockwell International on the B-1B and met one or two guys that had their hand in the command module workings. Got to inspect the front window bulkhead of the last shuttle Endeavour while at Rockwell in Columbus Ohio. I even remember the LAST Gemini mission too.

  • @HankD13
    @HankD13 3 года назад +12

    Remember it well, and listened to it live (in Kenya). I watched the moon landing live on the first tv I had ever seen, while on holiday in London, and remember the colour photos! in the newspaper the following day. Been a space nut ever since.

  • @starcrafsf7101
    @starcrafsf7101 3 года назад +12

    My grandmother was one of the head math aids with NASA during the whole Apollo project, in fact if I remember correctly she was the head of the department, and was one of the key figures that worked on the math for the Apollo 13 crisis.

    • @Terri_MacKay
      @Terri_MacKay 3 года назад +1

      It must be fascinating listening to her talk about the mission.
      And, congrats to your grandmother for being a pioneer and a trailblazer!!

    • @starcrafsf7101
      @starcrafsf7101 3 года назад +1

      @@Terri_MacKay she had a lot of interesting stories for sure.

  • @marsgal42
    @marsgal42 3 года назад +20

    I remember when this happened. Like Apollo 11, *everybody* was glued to their radios and tvs for the duration.

    • @WildeFyre69
      @WildeFyre69 3 года назад +2

      I was young at the time, but I had watched every space mission that had been televised. When news of Apollo 13 broke we were all glued to the television, hoping and praying for the safe return of the crew. When they finally landed safely, you could hear the sound of applause and relief from around the world. Truly a magnificent acheivment.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 3 года назад +2

      I was in Israel at the time of Apollo 11's landing in a hotel with only one TV in the lobby. Every guest & employee was gathered at that one set.

  • @Hounds-m9f
    @Hounds-m9f 3 года назад +6

    Personally knew Jack Swigert before he died in '82 at 51. Absolute Legend!

  • @johnw7602
    @johnw7602 3 года назад +19

    The tragedy is, it takes a tragedy for the world to come together like it did then.

    • @ForgivenMan-jl7bp
      @ForgivenMan-jl7bp 3 года назад

      You shut up and keep your opinions to yourself. Dont you ever post on here again.

    • @dragonhealer7588
      @dragonhealer7588 3 года назад

      @@ForgivenMan-jl7bp
      ???????

    • @ForgivenMan-jl7bp
      @ForgivenMan-jl7bp 3 года назад +2

      @@dragonhealer7588 he talking about people coming together, so I figured I would be as rude as possible. Just playing though. Little bit of fun.

    • @danielnaylor3434
      @danielnaylor3434 3 года назад +1

      We are at our best when things are at their worst. It is both an inspiring strength, and most damning flaw.

    • @shrimpflea
      @shrimpflea 2 года назад

      But it wasn't a tragedy.

  • @karllewis735
    @karllewis735 3 года назад +28

    You didn't mention that Gruman, maker of the Lunar Module, sent a bill for towing to North American, makers of the Command Module.

    • @karllewis735
      @karllewis735 3 года назад +3

      @Galileo7of9 Yes. Grumman. I am, if not the world's worst typist, somewhere in the top 4 or 5. (And if there's a way to edit RUclips comments I've not found it.)

    • @karllewis735
      @karllewis735 3 года назад +8

      @Galileo7of9 [slaps forehead] So... in addition to being a piss poor typist, I'm also a moron, or blind, or... something. Damn. Well... one learns something nearly every day. Thanks. Now I know.

    • @leeeastwood6368
      @leeeastwood6368 3 года назад +3

      @@karllewis735, welcome to my world!

    • @Morris2182
      @Morris2182 3 года назад +3

      Awesome 😂. I never knew that

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 3 года назад +2

      Didn't Grumman also make buses at one time?

  • @MultiBlackman13
    @MultiBlackman13 3 года назад +4

    SMASH THE DISLIKE... Sorry, wrong channel.

  • @andrewirwin
    @andrewirwin 3 года назад +8

    Fantastic! *13 Minutes to the Moon* is a fantastic podcast series which goes into in-depth analysis on the audio from the mission. Would Highly recommend.

  • @Dysan72
    @Dysan72 3 года назад +4

    Slight correction, only 1 engine of the 2nd Stage cutout (specifically the inboard engine, the one in the middle) they burned the remaining 4 for longer (from the same fuel tank) to get to orbit.

  • @adamreynolds3863
    @adamreynolds3863 3 года назад +20

    Just when you almost lose hope for humanity, stories like this bringing everyone together, gives a huge positivity boost!

  • @302racing3
    @302racing3 3 года назад +25

    My favorite bit of trivia about this is that when the movie was in early press screenings, some critics down rated it saying it had to be manufactured since there’s no way that astronauts could have survived such ordeals

    • @9sunstar9
      @9sunstar9 3 года назад +3

      🤦🏼‍♀️🤦🏼‍♀️🤦🏼‍♀️🤦🏼‍♀️

    • @wolfario1144
      @wolfario1144 3 года назад +2

      LOL

    • @RobertBrown-jz4qj
      @RobertBrown-jz4qj 3 года назад +3

      Man. My age is showing.. They did n p t know any of the history.

    • @wrightmf
      @wrightmf 3 года назад +4

      Most people cannot survive such ordeals, that's why only a few qualify as astronauts. Besides being very smart and good shape, they have the mental attitude of not freaking out when circumstances are really bad as if no way to safely return home.

    • @Rybo-Senpai
      @Rybo-Senpai 3 года назад +1

      actually i believe it was a singular individual among the audience at a test preview of the movie, but however this person was not a critic or aware that the movie was based on a true story (most likely cos they weren't born when it happened or they lived under a rock since the 1950's and only recently resurfaced in the 90's lol)
      Edit: after looking up the IMDB trivia page for the Apollo 13 Movie the comment card indicated "total disdain" and that it was "a typical Hollywood ending, no-one could have survived what happened in the movie" so one could speculate that this was possibly a flat earther....which makes anyone who lived under a rock for 40 years infinitely more intelligent

  • @lukewilliams8485
    @lukewilliams8485 3 года назад +5

    I loved the book Jim Lovell wrote on his account of the mission

  • @yousifkenick9886
    @yousifkenick9886 3 года назад +6

    I was just one and a half years old and was present for the launch in a boat just offshore. My father says I may be the only person alive who actually slept through an entire Saturn V launch that close to the launch site (a blessed skill I still use on planes, trains, and other conveyances of very long trips).

  • @doxx2265
    @doxx2265 3 года назад +12

    Simon: “we care about the facts here at mega projects”
    Also Simon, but on cocaine: “WHAT YOU EXPECT FACTS FRIM MR.BLAZE” * asmr* “raid shadow legends”

  • @michaelhowell2326
    @michaelhowell2326 3 года назад +14

    I honestly think the Apollo 13 mission is the greatest achievement in all human history since the wheel. Just slightly ahead of the actual Moon Landing.

    • @texan-american200
      @texan-american200 3 года назад

      It was certainly was an incredible successful unplanned mission.
      Learning to steer a lunar module with a command module still attached to it making it unbalanced.
      Learning to create new procedures for a successful command module shut down and restart when they returned.
      Learning how to fit a large square peg into tiny round hole for oxygen.
      Learning to align the Aquarius to the Earth for proper return trajectory as well as speed their return home.
      That and a myriad of other things such as simply surviving and keeping their wits about them as just one example

  • @annvictor9627
    @annvictor9627 3 года назад +8

    Dad bought each of us a commemorative Apollo 13 glass after they came back.

  • @PeterCombs
    @PeterCombs 3 года назад +4

    I remember this story well from the time, the world was holding its collective breath. An amazing story..

  • @skwervin1
    @skwervin1 3 года назад +15

    I read Jim Lovell's book that tells of his astronaut career including how he got into the program initially. An amazing read. He tells the story of how Gene Krantz would have his wife make a waistcoat for each launch which you see arriving at the command centre in the movie but Gene refused to start the pre launch until he had it - it was his good luck charm. He would not take it off until the crews landed safely.
    Love you Simon and all your channels.

  • @kittthegryphon748
    @kittthegryphon748 3 года назад +7

    Mega project ideas: the moon buggy, from the final few Apollo missions to the moon and the final Apollo mission to meet up with the Russian space craft

    • @wmarkwitherspoon
      @wmarkwitherspoon 3 года назад

      My late Father In Law worked on the buggy, he came up with the idea of using screen wire and light plates to create the tires. As well as he worked on the decent module.

  • @annvictor9627
    @annvictor9627 3 года назад +5

    Watching your replaying of the footage of the safe landing brought tears to my eyes. I was still in high school when it happened -- didn't expect to get teary-eyed over something I knew had safely taken place over 50 years ago.

  • @patrickwong4824
    @patrickwong4824 3 года назад +16

    My dream is to see Tom Hanks play Simmon Whistler someday.

    • @Markle2k
      @Markle2k 3 года назад

      You want a 60-something to play a 30 year-old?

    • @patrickwong4824
      @patrickwong4824 3 года назад

      That why it calls acting and nothing a little makeup can’t fix.

  • @RS49059
    @RS49059 3 года назад +7

    🤣🤣🤣🤣 literally yesterday my husband was saying he wanted to get a beard brush and oil... Now he's getting some with Simon's face on it!

  • @cullenandersen3512
    @cullenandersen3512 3 года назад +10

    Next Video: Theoretical mega project on what it would take to terraform and or colonize Mars.

    • @mho...
      @mho... 3 года назад +1

      ooh lol on first glance i was wondering why the MAGA ppl would try & terraform Mars for 🤣

    • @cullenandersen3512
      @cullenandersen3512 3 года назад +2

      @@mho... Those damn martians are taking our jobs 🤣

  • @KPearce57
    @KPearce57 3 года назад +3

    My Uncle worked for IBM/NASA working on computer programs from Gemini to the end of Apollo .

    • @Terri_MacKay
      @Terri_MacKay 3 года назад

      He was there while history was being made!!

  • @mikev230
    @mikev230 3 года назад +4

    One of my professors in college was in the room when they had to fit a square peg into a square hole. It was just amazing what they had to do.

  • @Rickinvegas
    @Rickinvegas 3 года назад +10

    Great video! This is not a criticism but your comment about the “Darkside of the moon“ reminded me of my astronomy professor in college jumping on me when I used that phrase. He sternly corrected me by pointing out that the “far side“ of the moon gets just as much sunlight light as the near side. I’ve never made that mistake again LOL

    • @888johnmac
      @888johnmac 3 года назад +6

      " Darkside of the moon " excuse me i'm just going to listen to some Floyd

    • @MrTexasDan
      @MrTexasDan 3 года назад +5

      @@888johnmac There is no dark side of the moon really. As a matter of fact it's all dark.

    • @Restilia_ch
      @Restilia_ch 3 года назад

      But it is "dark" to our line-of-sight, in particular to radio transmissions straight from Earth. So while it does get sunlight, it's still "dark" to us.

    • @robertgraybeard3750
      @robertgraybeard3750 3 года назад

      @@MrTexasDan - ah, yes . . albedo

    • @MrTexasDan
      @MrTexasDan 3 года назад

      @@robertgraybeard3750 No ... Pink Floyd

  • @bmhd6598
    @bmhd6598 3 года назад +3

    I loved the space program, and as I child, I could not understand why NASA couldn't send another ship to rescue them. My mother kept assuring me, it would be OK. Of course she had no way of knowing that, but what else are you going to tell a 7 year old.

  • @jimmyryan5880
    @jimmyryan5880 3 года назад +17

    I loves that everything came down to putting a square peg into a round hole

    • @guccimain89
      @guccimain89 3 года назад +1

      Exactly...and they freaking did it. And then, after doing it, the communicated precisely how to do it through radio to 3 astronauts currently being poisoned by their own breath.

  • @Nowhereman10
    @Nowhereman10 3 года назад +1

    It was only the single center engine on the S-II 2nd stage shut down early and the stage burned longer and then the longer burn on the S-IVB 3rd stage that put the stack into its proper initial low Earth orbit.

  • @russellzauner
    @russellzauner 3 года назад +3

    Best case of "I'm not even supposed to be here today" ever.

  • @jeffagain7516
    @jeffagain7516 2 года назад +2

    Howard did a wonderful job bringing this incredibly tense drama to the movie screen, as did all the actors of course. Still one of my fave films of all time.
    I remember well, listening to every piece of news with frantic fear and anticipation, as the events played out in real time. As you mentioned Simon, it was an incredible moment that brought the entire world together in joint harmony, hoping and praying the lads would get home alive. Thanks for this.

  • @TechnikMeister2
    @TechnikMeister2 3 года назад +3

    I am old enough to have watched all the milestones into space live on TV...Mercury through to Apollo 13. It eclipsed Apollo 11 which in itself was awe inspiring. My Dad was a program leader at the Parkes Radio Telescope in Parkes in Australia which was the relay station for all the communications. He watched and listened to everything. He said to me that despite the horrendous stress on the astronauts, he said he did not hear one swear word uttered. They were true professionals.

    • @MrTexasDan
      @MrTexasDan 3 года назад

      Who played your dad in The Dish?

  • @phmwu7368
    @phmwu7368 3 года назад +1

    Apollo 13 CMP John Jack Swigert said: " Houston, we have had a problem here" !
    Apollo 13 Commander James Lovell repeated: " Houston, we have had a problem " !

  • @caleblarsen5490
    @caleblarsen5490 3 года назад +2

    If Ken Mattingly had gone to the moon, Apollo 13 would have never come home. It was a huge blessing he didn't go.

    • @simonm1447
      @simonm1447 3 года назад +1

      They were lucky it happened that early, if the oxygen tank would have exoded after a moon landing there would not have been enough fuel in the LEM to power the complete spacecraft back to earth, and the command module was unusable.

  • @longingforsleep9578
    @longingforsleep9578 3 года назад +1

    CORONA satellite program!!! Pleeeeease Simon. They used c-130's to catch film canisters from satellites. Would be a great topic!!

  • @888johnmac
    @888johnmac 3 года назад +1

    every time someone Mentions Ron Howards Apollo 13 film i'm reminded of a story he told .. as usual the film studio held pre-release screenings to get viewer feedback , mostly positive but someone slammed the film , in the comments he put ' Hollywood BS if it was real they'd never have survived & made it back to Earth '

  • @martinknowles8657
    @martinknowles8657 3 года назад +1

    It's the 'far side of the moon'...NOT the 'dark side of the moon', there's no such thing. That's a Pink Floyd album!!

  • @progkarma944
    @progkarma944 3 года назад +1

    Excellent Video! Please consider the Cassini-Huygens for a Megaprojects episode! :) Cheers from Canada!

  • @richpaul6806
    @richpaul6806 3 года назад +1

    I always laughed at the story Ron Howard told about the comments they received during the test screening of the movie. One person said they didn't like it because it was "just more Hollywood BS. They would have never survived."

  • @Jemzuki
    @Jemzuki 3 года назад +1

    If anyone wants to hear more on this, I HIGHLY recommend checking out BBC podcast 13 minutes to the Moon and its 2nd season which focuses on Apollo 13. Lots of recordings and interviews with the astronauts and the mission control team and a hugely thrilling story. So many things happened that could have been the end of the crew.

  • @12hairyjohn
    @12hairyjohn 3 года назад +2

    No one who lived through it will ever forget it.

  • @andreaslermen2008
    @andreaslermen2008 3 года назад +1

    Th emovie was real good. I men, you know how it ended in real life and you sit there in the cinema and think: I hope they make it.

  • @samweaver5095
    @samweaver5095 3 года назад +9

    Who disliked within 3 minutes, that’s sad

    • @claycountybrian5645
      @claycountybrian5645 3 года назад +2

      someone who can't grow a GLORIOUS, but standard, beard, no doubt

  • @Zachattack-ot2un
    @Zachattack-ot2un 3 года назад +1

    if you have never have heard of Apollo 13, you have been living under a rock for the past 50 or so years

  • @ShaneScott69
    @ShaneScott69 3 года назад +1

    MegaProject topic idea for you Convair B 36 Peacemaker

  • @FatManWalking18
    @FatManWalking18 3 года назад +3

    what kind of sadist would give a thumbs down to Apollo 13?

    • @cattibingo
      @cattibingo 3 года назад +2

      A bitter cosmonaut

    • @Virtuous_Rogue
      @Virtuous_Rogue 3 года назад +3

      Looks like several faulty oxygen tanks watched this video.

    • @mjelves
      @mjelves 3 года назад

      Space deniers

  • @g4r8f3j4l8g
    @g4r8f3j4l8g 3 года назад +2

    I'd love to see a mega projects video on "Project Habakkuk" the British aircraft carrier made mostly of ice(pykrete)

  • @NigelsModellingBench
    @NigelsModellingBench Год назад

    I was there.. I saw Apollo 13 launch. As an English boy.. probably the only one there?? Never forget it.......

  • @stusue9733
    @stusue9733 3 года назад +1

    I think you'll find the LEM has a descent motor and another for accent.

  • @AniketParandkar
    @AniketParandkar 3 года назад +2

    Chandrayaan by ISRO

  • @joethemariner
    @joethemariner 3 года назад +1

    Can Beard Blaze be used in pubic hair? I'm asking for a friend.

  • @jodi_kreiner
    @jodi_kreiner 3 года назад +1

    you should do the event horizon telescope!!! or james webb 🤩

  • @Nowhereman10
    @Nowhereman10 3 года назад +3

    Also not mentioned in this video is that the "mailbox" adapter was not improvised on the spot as shown in the Apollo 13 movie, it was actually part of emergency procedures, which included powering up and using the LEM was a lifeboat that were developed in between Apollo 10 and 13.

    • @mjelves
      @mjelves 3 года назад

      Ehm no it wasn’t. They had to design and test it on the spot. It was never considered as a scenario

    • @Nowhereman10
      @Nowhereman10 3 года назад

      @@mjelves Oh, yes it was. Scott Manley goes into that here: ruclips.net/video/pPBKBOuyYPI/видео.html
      After Apollo 9 or 10, someone brought up "what if the air in the command module is contaminated" and the idea of using the LEM as lifeboat was developed.
      Sorry. Fun scene in the movie, but not something that happened during Apollo 13 for real.

  • @doublemoonchild
    @doublemoonchild 3 года назад +1

    Sponsoring you own video like a BOSS
    Hold my beer 🍻

  • @maxnarvaez8155
    @maxnarvaez8155 3 года назад +1

    Jim Lovell is my great great uncle. Amazing video

  • @jaytrock3217
    @jaytrock3217 3 года назад +2

    I don't think today this could be accomplish. This was when a team was a team.

    • @QBCPerdition
      @QBCPerdition 3 года назад +1

      The biggest point is that the average age of the NASA engineers during this crisis was in their mid to late 20s. Now, those same people are still a good chunk of NASA engineers. We need more young people to go into engineering and gets jobs at NASA, but NASA would need to be better funded to afford them.

  • @eugeneoliveros5814
    @eugeneoliveros5814 3 года назад +9

    My co worker sends me the “Houston, we have a problem” text whenever something bad happens

  • @MrTWICETHEPRESHA
    @MrTWICETHEPRESHA 3 года назад +1

    *I know it seems pedantic but it’s just the most crucial line people always get wrong. It’s “Houston we’ve had a problem”*

    • @Andrew-Kerr
      @Andrew-Kerr 3 года назад

      Houston, we have a pedant!^ 🤣

  • @TailSpinRCSpain
    @TailSpinRCSpain 3 года назад +3

    Beard Oil is a thing? No wonder my beard is dry.

    • @Rockoblocko
      @Rockoblocko 3 года назад

      Beard oil is essential to a strong and healthy beard 🧔

  • @patrickbrookings
    @patrickbrookings 3 года назад +2

    Oh man, that is one of my favourite movies ever! I am a space geek, but well, that's how it is.

    • @-Awareness
      @-Awareness 3 года назад

      Don’t forget to have your vaccination...

  • @hawkboy451
    @hawkboy451 3 года назад +1

    Jackanory...... We cannot put man through the Van Allen Belts even today ! 300 miles, that yer limit......no more.

    • @QBCPerdition
      @QBCPerdition 3 года назад +1

      What?
      I hope you're joking, but I know this is an actual belief, so I'll reply. Passing through the Van Allen Belts as quickly as the astronauts did only imparted the equivalent radiation dose as a handful of X-Rays would give. They are not a place you would want to hang out in for very long, but luckily, they don't have to.

    • @owenshebbeare2999
      @owenshebbeare2999 3 года назад +1

      Anti-science bollocks! The VA belts are entirely safe to cross.

  • @kaiying74
    @kaiying74 3 года назад +1

    I'd argue that this is humanity's finest achievement. It's when things go wrong you learn what you're made of.

  • @kenshores9900
    @kenshores9900 3 года назад +1

    Yes Simon, I did and do find this an interesting topic. You did an excellent job in telling the tale. It was one of the greatest Engineering and Scientific successful failures. It shows the efforts that can be exerted do solve very difficult and seemingly unsolvable problems.

  • @bateman2112
    @bateman2112 3 года назад +2

    I haven't even watched this yet and I love that the thumbnail makes it look like Simon's about to run screaming through the control room because Apollo 13 just broke the moon.

  • @jaysonl
    @jaysonl 3 года назад +1

    Oxygen tanks, Simon. Not fuel tanks.

  • @AsianPaulConrad
    @AsianPaulConrad 3 года назад +2

    ive been playing cities skylines for a few weeks now and it came to my mind that a nice mega project would be those massive highway interchanges

    • @ethannorton564
      @ethannorton564 3 года назад +1

      Or just a video about the interstate highway system in general, it was one of the largest developments in the eisenhower administration

  • @kakakamoi
    @kakakamoi 3 года назад +1

    Video about soviet's over the horizon radar duga.

  • @icu_corey_rn_903
    @icu_corey_rn_903 3 года назад +1

    The engineers building a co2 filter with literal duct tape and telling the astronauts how to do it and everything working is insanely impressive.

  • @lisarenee3505
    @lisarenee3505 3 года назад +7

    I don't even have the right chromosomes to have a beard, yet I was captivated by Simon's pitch for his product. 😁

    • @LisaBowers
      @LisaBowers 3 года назад +2

      Simon, his _glorious_ beard and his superb product pitching skills seems to have that effect on all of us. 🤩

  • @jeremys.950
    @jeremys.950 3 года назад +1

    I guess I will be trying your "beauty" line, my beard is always looking like I am a Bush hobo so we will see

  • @wrightmf
    @wrightmf 3 года назад

    I remember reading early 1970s book by Henry SF Cooper "The Flight That Failed" in later 1970s. Obviously following the space program Apollo 13 was noted. A year before the movie release, Jim Lovell was at Moffett Field (his carrier wing was based there so him and Marilyn lived in Mountain View before he got accepted to NTPS). He gave a talk, signed autographs on his new book "Lost Moon." I remember there was some talk about Ron Howard will soon release a movie about this particular mission. My reaction why would someone like Ron Howard make a movie as esoteric for people that don't follow the space program. Next thing I knew it seemed Lovell was the most famous of the Apollo astronauts.
    I also read the release of "Marooned" in 1969, that many at NASA and contracting companies thought the whole plot was ridiculous, there are many ways to ignite the CSM engine and many quadruple backup systems. After Apollo 13, well there can be significant systems failure. We also see North American did an outstanding job redesigning the CM after Apollo 1. The module can be cold started in 45 minutes by three guys where it usually takes armies of technicians and engineers over two weeks to power it up. But then there were armies of technicians and engineers pulling all-nighters preparing the power up checklist, and other checklists for flying with out the SM plus entry procedures.

  • @wrightmf
    @wrightmf 3 года назад

    Shortly after the movie Apollo 13 appeared in theatres, local SF bay area section of AIAA had Gene Kranz as the speaker. Standing room only! He also met a friend there he hadn't seen in years. Obviously excellent speaker. They didn't know exactly what caused the explosion but Gene said for the Shuttle they would have known instantly because so much more was telemetered, they know every switch position. Mr. Kranz said he got the job at NASA from a ad in Aviation Week. This was also a few years before smoking was banned from federal buildings, he joked "us old guys should smuggle in cigars to the MOCR." I asked him about Don Arabian who managed the MER (mission evaluation room), Gene said if you want to know every technical detail, Don still knows. I also talked with his wife Marta about was it true barely completed her husband's vest for Apollo 13. She said no, and vests she made were easy. There were plenty of fabric places including those stores managed by hippies so she had wide variety of materials to choose from. I even got her autographed which she tagged "the vest lady."

  • @DrewberTravels
    @DrewberTravels 3 года назад +6

    Simon is truly a 21st century renaissance man.

  • @wrightmf
    @wrightmf 3 года назад

    John Aaron, also known as the best EECOM, lead the team to devise CM powerup procedure. Sy Liebergot was EECOM on shift during the O2 tank explosion (Clint Howard played his character in the movie). When Sy saw all the data go offline and then most of the values railed (too high or too low) he first said "I think we have an instrumentation problem" (in the movie, "It's gotta be instrumentation"). To him it looked like a PCM data stream error because the spacecraft was designed that it can never have a quadruple major systems failure. Of course they soon figured something bad happened, and everyone in MOCR was asking Sy what's going on with systems. At that moment Sy felt all he wanted to do was go home, obviously that was to never happened so like everyone else began working the problem. At the moment Sy had no idea what started the chain of events, it was not until he got off shift went to his back room where they have stripchart recorders which showed the moment O2 temperatures began to rise which was same time when Swigert turned on tank stirrers.
    After safely landed, they don't light up victory cigars until crew safely on carrier, there was some time wrapping things up but most everyone didn't head to the bars for celebration, they went home to catch up on sleep.

  • @ceciliaarvidsson269
    @ceciliaarvidsson269 3 года назад +2

    PLEASE tell me that the ”beard-accessories” are as follows: Glitterspray. LED-lights. Coloured mascara. A guide to braiding. And of vourse: Beads and festive feathers!

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 3 года назад +1

    3:05 - Chapter 1 - Background
    4:55 - Chapter 2 - Launch
    7:20 - Chapter 3 - Disaster
    8:55 - Chapter 4 - To the moon
    10:55 - Chapter 5 - The burn
    12:30 - Chapter 6 - CO2
    13:50 - Chapter 7 - Reentry
    16:20 - Chapter 8 - The successful failure

  • @DownloadeousMaximus
    @DownloadeousMaximus 3 года назад +2

    I love your videos and you as a host Simon. By far, some of the best content on RUclips. You have enough work for your own cable channel.

    • @DownloadeousMaximus
      @DownloadeousMaximus 3 года назад +1

      @Kirk Oglesby without question. But, look at the competition. It’s all trash.

  • @Sutterjack
    @Sutterjack 3 года назад

    I had the honor of having lunch with Jim Lovell years ago and he was amazing. If I was going to be stuck in a damaged spacecraft 1/4 million miles from earth, I would hope it would be with him. Those astronauts were amazing - they could be looking at death in 5 minutes and still be disciplined on procedure and not panic.

  • @eTraxx
    @eTraxx 3 года назад

    I couldn't remember joining everyone in watching this on TV .. April 11, 1970. Oh. Yeah. Ok. April 1970 I arrived in Vietnam .. suppose I had other concerns at the time. :)

  • @cravenmoordik
    @cravenmoordik 3 года назад

    I've listened to the entire mission recordings from launch to recovery.
    Those three guys, TOTALLY FUCKING COOL the entire time.
    Correction, though, at 12:02 you said they use the DPS which was designed to go to the moon and then back up. The DPS was only for descent. After a successful landing and EVA the descent stage would stay on the lunar surface and the ascent stage would separate to bring the LM back to redock with the CSM and would therefor be using the APS or Ascent Propultion System.

  • @tbeller80
    @tbeller80 3 года назад

    "Inexplicably" the CO2 scrubbers were different sizes. Not really. The command module and LEM were made by two different companies.

  • @neilzukov2921
    @neilzukov2921 3 года назад

    Mega Project idea: The "Mining and Chemical Combine" in Zheleznogorsk, Russia. A Plutonium production plant. The entire facility was built 200 meters into the mountain, and contains 3 Nuclear Reactors (Basically the same design as РБМК, like in Chernobyl),1 АД and 2 АДЭ (АДЭ-2 provided power and heating to the workers city, Zheleznogorsk). The facility has its own railway and electric locomotive.
    Now the Plutonium production is stopped (since 95'), and the reactors were shut down. Now they produce MOX fuel for fast liquid metal Reactors (for now, БН-800).

  • @Thesnakerox
    @Thesnakerox 2 года назад

    For anyone curious, Apollo 13's reentry blackout was so much longer than expected because they were reentering the atmosphere at a much shallower angle than expected, so the types of reentry events that caused disruption to the comms simply occurred for a longer duration.

  • @mccpcorn2000
    @mccpcorn2000 3 года назад

    As I recall, the reason the CO2 scrubbers were different sizes was because the two spacecraft were built for different objectives. Ergo, with the LEM, space saving was paramount. Compatibility of the different canisters never entered into the thinking when it came to design requirements. Talk about a government operation.