Thank you for the exceptional footage, live coverage, inside scientific glimpse, and historic moments of Apollo 11 today! Julie Ann Racino, ASPA, SSTIG, 2017-2019
We have the true experiments are always the live events, as opposed to those that are in the experimental boxes! Exactly what are the effects of that moon walk, and now repressurizing the cabin of the first astronauts on the moon. Proud to be an American and a global citizen.
3:45:20 Huh??? Why is the clapper dated April 1970? Also, one of the vehicle registrations is labelled 1970. This footage must be from a later Apollo mission. Those guys were living the dream back then.
3:15:40 "Congratulations! I was giving up hope of finding you at the console, I thought it was too early for you!" "Actually, I've been in here for almost 2 hours" "Unfortunately..." 😜
3:09:40 Dealing with NASA tech (presumably a console monitor): "Hey JP, you know how to tune that thing in from scratch? Bla bla bla... it's just shitty!" 😆 "Howzat?" "Poor. That's uh... _discernible_"
Just had to give this a listen again after 3 years and discover stuff I overhead 1st time round. 2:58:30 Some really stilted comms there! "Booster... uh guidance... uh ecom... uh who are we again?" "... uh, we don't have an interface..." [No reaction] "..and ... uhhh... may not get one..." [No reaction] "... uhhh... EVERYBODY UNDERSTAND THAT?" [No reaction] "ANYBODY GOT ANYTHING TO SAY ABOUT THAT?" The other guys were probably thinking, "not my department". 😆
I remember that all children in my neighborhood understand the difference between "Lunar Module" and "Command Module". The unique thing was, whenever someone started to talk about "Apollo" -- we sang in unison -- the Beatles' "Don't Let Me Down".
Discussion about whether or not to save a stairs from getting blown away by the launch: 7:07:18. There's a long pause in the middle; the conversation doesn't end until 7:11:29. From what I can tell, it's decided they don't need to be removed because the launch pad they're using protects the stairs.
4:52:53 Did that guy burp into the phone? :^D And to think Chuck's (Charlie Duke's?) quest for the elusive DPS boundaries could have jeopardised the whole mission...
Thanks for posting this! Incredible stuff... if you have the patience to listen to it all! Isn't that rocket pioneer Hermann Oberth at 6:44? Looks like he'd rather be somewhere else... ;^)
Thank you very much for constructing this web site, I watched through all the video footage and felt really honoured to have been able to see it as a document.
Fascinating material, thanks for posting this! It's still mindboggling how much infrastructure and effort went into this. We're listening to an entire army of engineers and controllers (most of them still "kids" in their 20s) in a concerted effort to get this thing off the ground. Nobody knows the exact number of people involved in the Apollo 11 mission, but figures have been quoted into the several thousand. Even more impressive that is that, just 7 years earlier when JFK made his famous "we choose to go" speech in '62, nobody had a clue how to get to the moon (never mind beyond) , and the necessary tech had to be developed -- some totally from scratch. These guys were in complete no-man's-land, with formidable unknowns to deal with.
59:42
2:50:43 eepy
Thank you for the exceptional footage, live coverage, inside scientific glimpse, and historic moments of Apollo 11 today! Julie Ann Racino, ASPA, SSTIG, 2017-2019
We have the true experiments are always the live events, as opposed to those that are in the experimental boxes! Exactly what are the effects of that moon walk, and now repressurizing the cabin of the first astronauts on the moon. Proud to be an American and a global citizen.
EL MEJOR MOMENTO DE LA HUMANIDAD !!
INCREIBLE !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! HERMOSO !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I wish the president had honored the engineers and control center people as well.
:D
incredible
fantastic
4:35:41 KMSC 102.1 call sign? It sounds like there was an interview.
Wow
2:56:30 "If you'll excuse me a minute, I'm going to have a cup of coffee."
Johnny Carson at 1:17:37 Isaac Asimov wearing a light blue jacket at 1:17:48
3:45:20 Huh??? Why is the clapper dated April 1970? Also, one of the vehicle registrations is labelled 1970. This footage must be from a later Apollo mission. Those guys were living the dream back then.
3:39:50 "Have you checked your mike to see if you don't have chocolate ice cream or something in it?" [Laughter in background] 😄
3:15:40 "Congratulations! I was giving up hope of finding you at the console, I thought it was too early for you!" "Actually, I've been in here for almost 2 hours" "Unfortunately..." 😜
3:09:40 Dealing with NASA tech (presumably a console monitor): "Hey JP, you know how to tune that thing in from scratch? Bla bla bla... it's just shitty!" 😆 "Howzat?" "Poor. That's uh... _discernible_"
Just had to give this a listen again after 3 years and discover stuff I overhead 1st time round. 2:58:30 Some really stilted comms there! "Booster... uh guidance... uh ecom... uh who are we again?" "... uh, we don't have an interface..." [No reaction] "..and ... uhhh... may not get one..." [No reaction] "... uhhh... EVERYBODY UNDERSTAND THAT?" [No reaction] "ANYBODY GOT ANYTHING TO SAY ABOUT THAT?" The other guys were probably thinking, "not my department". 😆
102:38:22 1202
59:00
ligma
I appreciate the effort to put this up.. Superb!!
7:17:30 Chang'e folklore read up to Apollo 11
I remember that all children in my neighborhood understand the difference between "Lunar Module" and "Command Module". The unique thing was, whenever someone started to talk about "Apollo" -- we sang in unison -- the Beatles' "Don't Let Me Down".
3:57 webcast begin 3:55
Fascinating !!!!
How where the earth-orbit sections filmed around 1:10:00 ? Or are these illustrations for public relations?
I'm also curious about how they got the camera shot for 1:11:35 . Stunning, but also I imagine they sacrificed a camera and radio transmitter?
These are old animations done by CBS during the mission
They were not filmed lol.
You've got to be kidding me? You can't tell that that's a mannequin? Good luck when the aliens invade in 2025 ..
This is excellent. Great job guys.
59:59 liftoff this happened
LOVE IT!! LOVE IT!! LOVE IT!!
Does the SD in your duplicate videos stand for standard definition? It's a shame that the PAO anouncements are all mixed up with the FD loop early on.
about 3.15.30 begins
4:18:30 Yeah, we're in Texas, alright... and there's lots of cigar chomping going on! ;^)
I hope whoever disliked this gets stranded on the far side of the moon.
It's BEAUTIFUL
"It's a little bit too quiet" 7:31:34
Discussion about whether or not to save a stairs from getting blown away by the launch: 7:07:18. There's a long pause in the middle; the conversation doesn't end until 7:11:29. From what I can tell, it's decided they don't need to be removed because the launch pad they're using protects the stairs.
4:52:53 Did that guy burp into the phone? :^D And to think Chuck's (Charlie Duke's?) quest for the elusive DPS boundaries could have jeopardised the whole mission...
4:50: Do they realise their trivial, private phone call has been preserved for posterity? ;^)
Interesting phone conversation about badges and Apollo phone books starts at 5:15:30.
You might want to add these finds at forum.apolloinrealtime.org
Thanks for posting this! Incredible stuff... if you have the patience to listen to it all! Isn't that rocket pioneer Hermann Oberth at 6:44? Looks like he'd rather be somewhere else... ;^)
1:01:29 "Somebody farted"
Хороший мультик!!! Оскара немедленно!!!
Thank you very much for constructing this web site, I watched through all the video footage and felt really honoured to have been able to see it as a document.
I would watch every single mission. Yes. YES YES YES. _YEES_
"If we're late in answering, it's because we're a bunch of amateurs"?!? :^D
One viewer didn't wanna go to the moon... :^)
2 viewers didn't wanna go to the moon... :^)
3 viewers didn't wanna go to the moon... :^)
"Rocket man" Wernher Von Braun at 51:03! Also, did that techie at 38:38 say he "fucked up"??? :^D
Fascinating material, thanks for posting this! It's still mindboggling how much infrastructure and effort went into this. We're listening to an entire army of engineers and controllers (most of them still "kids" in their 20s) in a concerted effort to get this thing off the ground. Nobody knows the exact number of people involved in the Apollo 11 mission, but figures have been quoted into the several thousand. Even more impressive that is that, just 7 years earlier when JFK made his famous "we choose to go" speech in '62, nobody had a clue how to get to the moon (never mind beyond) , and the necessary tech had to be developed -- some totally from scratch. These guys were in complete no-man's-land, with formidable unknowns to deal with.
<3 Amazing.....and JUST 5000 views?