1972: Apollo 17 (NASA)

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  • Опубліковано 20 лип 2009
  • Apollo 17 was the eleventh manned space mission in the NASA Apollo programme. It was the first night launch of a U.S. human spaceflight and the sixth and final lunar landing mission. The mission was launched at 12:33 a.m. EST on 7 December 1972, and concluded on December 19.
    One of the last two men to set foot on the Moon was also the first scientist-astronaut, geologist Harrison ("Jack") Schmitt. While Evans circled in America, Schmitt and Cernan collected a record 109 lb (49 kg) of rocks during three Moonwalks. The crew roamed for 34 km (21 mi) through the Taurus-Littrow valley in their rover, discovered orange-colored soil, and left the most comprehensive set of instruments in the ALSEP on the lunar surface. Their mission was the last in the Apollo lunar landing missions. The last 4 Apollo craft were used for the three Skylab missions and the ASTP, mission in 1975.
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 7 тис.

  • @larrymonske8086
    @larrymonske8086 6 років тому +295

    I had the honor of being the first person to see Apollo 17 re-enter the atmosphere. 90 Miles off North Vietnam it looked like someone fired a missile at us. I was bridge watch on USS Saratoga. The xo came out and watched this red hot thing zoom across the sky. It took 4 hours and a call to Fleet to figure out what that was.The CO called me inside at the end of my watch. He is the one that told me that .

    • @chezza81
      @chezza81 6 років тому +7

      Larry Monske wow that’s amazing!

    • @mikehunt3688
      @mikehunt3688 5 років тому +5

      Yeah, I’ve gotta say that’s pretty damn cool

    • @pajasa62
      @pajasa62 5 років тому +15

      Larry Monske
      Great story....and THANKS for your service.

    • @ilikecheese237
      @ilikecheese237 5 років тому +6

      Great story, amazing!

    • @jasontipton8430
      @jasontipton8430 5 років тому +4

      That is so cool larry

  • @Raaaaaaahhhhhhh
    @Raaaaaaahhhhhhh 4 роки тому +250

    7:38 this has gotta be one of the most bruh moments in my life

    • @philippelestrat3276
      @philippelestrat3276 4 роки тому +33

      "Bruh"
      Gene Cernan , on the surface of the moon

    • @bee_fearful4807
      @bee_fearful4807 4 роки тому +8

      LMAO! I was dead. 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @Z_12121
      @Z_12121 4 роки тому

      .

    • @gamingthisera6339
      @gamingthisera6339 3 роки тому

      @Adi Adiani its 1972, what do you expect? 4k with hq sounds recorder?

    • @gamingthisera6339
      @gamingthisera6339 3 роки тому

      @Adi Adiani which version are you talking about? There is a alot of Charlie Chaplin version, remastered where the quality were alot better, you can also find a better footage about the moon landing on UA-cam

  • @efremtommasi1387
    @efremtommasi1387 5 років тому +46

    The footage about landing and leaving from the moon view has been filmed by an important alien director, the same who directed the alien movie "Human vs Predator"

    • @antoniorangel9784
      @antoniorangel9784 3 роки тому +3

      So it’s fake

    • @Visonvibes
      @Visonvibes 3 роки тому

      No they don’t have footage of them leaving so they used another one...... brain dead

    • @thegreatdivide825
      @thegreatdivide825 Рік тому

      @@antoniorangel9784 No it's not fake, he's just full of shit

    • @Buckxxxxxx1
      @Buckxxxxxx1 4 місяці тому +4

      They left the moon with the rainbow accelerator booster. Glad they had bluetooth from the moon back to earth for the videos.

    • @YDDES
      @YDDES 3 місяці тому +2

      @@Buckxxxxxx1What makes You think they would have needed bluetooth to transmitt radio signals???

  • @KevinMurphy0403
    @KevinMurphy0403 6 років тому +11

    Fantastic. Incredible achievement and the icing on the cake of manned lunar exploration.

    • @appletongallery
      @appletongallery Рік тому

      The icing on the cake- Like been there, done that? Imagine if the world acted that way after the Wright Brothers got their plane off the ground. Gee guys - been there done that no need to ever get a plane off the ground again- “icing on the cake”!

    • @davidlafleche1142
      @davidlafleche1142 Рік тому

      @@appletongalleryManned space travel is pointless at best and an act of rebellion against God at worst.

  • @Pongant
    @Pongant 5 років тому +49

    Watching these guys improvising and doing all kinds of stuff just shows how important human presence is for exploration...

    • @rudirosti5501
      @rudirosti5501 4 роки тому +1

      Pongant yes,billions for stupid stones!!

    • @jackdull5699
      @jackdull5699 4 роки тому +12

      @@rudirosti5501 : Really moron? It's for scientific knowledge about the moon. We need to go back to the moon and learn more it.

    • @LennyBruiser
      @LennyBruiser 4 роки тому +7

      Jack dull “we’ve” never been there. NASa is a farce and simply a way to extract money from the people to distribute it among the elites

    • @Pongant
      @Pongant 4 роки тому +9

      @@rudirosti5501 I would rather pump billions of dollars into space exploration than into an uncontrolled, tumorous capitalism as we have today...

    • @trinivagrant
      @trinivagrant 4 роки тому +4

      Space travel doesn't exist.
      They said they travelled 800,000 km in the 60's. Through extreme temperatures, radiation, space debris, etc
      Look at how techology like virtual reality evolved from pong around 60's.
      We went 800,000 km to moon supposedly 5 times 55 years ago
      We cant do it anymore?
      We cant even get commercial flights 100km into orbit?
      We have 10,000 satellites and no videos of them in orbit?
      0 for 10,000?
      We can build an ISS that has no construction videos exactly proving the theoretical into the actual?
      0 minutes of actual construction out of over millions of minutes of construction
      Showing us how modules were tracked in those conditions and how astronauts linked to modules and built sealant valves in vaccum like conditions etc
      There are third party
      pictures of iss but no videos showing the iss, planet, stars?
      0 hours out of thousands of hours?

  • @jlh4jc
    @jlh4jc Рік тому +26

    9:56 "I was strolling on the Moon one day, in the very very month of May/December". It was like Cernan and Schmidt were a couple of good friends having fun on the town. They did extraordinary things in space, but deep down they were folks like us.

  • @ssqxw5564
    @ssqxw5564 3 місяці тому +8

    They cleaned the studio very well spotless

  • @larrymanning5925
    @larrymanning5925 Рік тому +20

    I've lived on the space coast all my life and I'm almost 50. Those night launches are truly spectacular. I've seen so many launches, but the night ones are the most memorable.

    • @enzopasquini1931
      @enzopasquini1931 Рік тому

      Gli arrivi invece sono più difficili da vedere, perché non ci siete mai andati!! Svegliate i neuroni sopiti!

    • @Milkomeda_Galaxy
      @Milkomeda_Galaxy 11 місяців тому +1

      It feels like they’re making the night to the day for some seconds

  • @Black-Maple
    @Black-Maple 5 років тому +37

    Most Amazing and epic human adventure. Will be like a kid until my death when i look at this.. thanks for that.

    • @ohger1
      @ohger1 5 років тому +4

      Bedtime for us was 8 pm. Mom let me stay up and watch Apollo 11 live. I'll never forget that.

    • @gumpyflyale2542
      @gumpyflyale2542 4 роки тому +1

      Its been over 47 years and counting no one has left LEO since December 1972 and no one ever will because we have been lied to for over 50 years

    • @NoelistAvenger
      @NoelistAvenger 4 роки тому +4

      @@gumpyflyale2542 No conspiracy of that magnitude could possibly hold up for over 50 years. Bill Clinton couldn't get blowjobs from an intern without the whole world knowing about it one year later, but the US would've been able to fake SIX multi-billion dollars moon missions involving hundreds of thousands people, tricking not only their own polation but also every single other nation in the world ? Come on...

    • @PradeepGupta-ku2sr
      @PradeepGupta-ku2sr 3 роки тому

      If possible moon should be revisited. It will keep the world busy. Also some new technologies may emerge. the world will find a purpose.

    • @PradeepGupta-ku2sr
      @PradeepGupta-ku2sr 3 роки тому +2

      moon has been demystefied. science has won.

  • @anatomycat98
    @anatomycat98 11 років тому +76

    I can't even imagine how awesome it would have been like to be one of the guys who walked on the moon.

    • @Legorreta.M.D
      @Legorreta.M.D 2 роки тому +3

      I would imagine O2 must deplete incredibly quickly with the toddler like excitement

    • @certainpointofview3860
      @certainpointofview3860 2 роки тому +5

      Become a Freemason and maybe you can.

    • @queenbabymama5635
      @queenbabymama5635 2 роки тому +25

      Nobody walked on the moon🤓

    • @ChrisPBacon777
      @ChrisPBacon777 2 роки тому +14

      @@queenbabymama5635 actually, quite few people walked on the moon. You seem to think there was only one moon mission, but there were several.

    • @ChrisPBacon777
      @ChrisPBacon777 2 роки тому

      @@certainpointofview3860 what percentage of total freemason membership got to walk on the moon? What exactly are my chances?

  • @Wet_Deer
    @Wet_Deer 4 роки тому +21

    I love how happy they were to be on the moon

    • @gustav_ostervall_92
      @gustav_ostervall_92 3 роки тому +12

      I love how unhappy they were in conjunction with the interviews afterwards. After all, lying to the overall population sure takes its toll.

    • @lulupinkus5627
      @lulupinkus5627 2 роки тому

      Happy to be in a studio, dummie

    • @EuanWhitehead
      @EuanWhitehead Рік тому

      @@gustav_ostervall_92 Yea must have been pretty tough for the USSR to lie about it for their enemies protection too. And China... and India... and every other country too...

    • @sinenkaari5477
      @sinenkaari5477 2 місяці тому

      Moonlanding is one of those things i can't decide in my head do i believe it or not, there's so many things that are off about it like the black space without stars and that interview where they are almost scared for their life. In this video by the end i can see one time it looks like the guy is hanging out there with his helmet open couse his face is showing. I don't think it would be impossible to go there so did they fake the footage only? Those "simulation" s on the TV station are pretty close to the thing seen in the supposed real footage. This thing remains mystery to me at this point.

  • @killgazmotron
    @killgazmotron Рік тому +1

    such a positive attitude the whole time, joking around etc.
    Cant help but think i would be in a constant state of tense paranoia of something going wrong.
    Balls of steel.

    • @appletongallery
      @appletongallery Рік тому +2

      Balls of deception more like it. They were sitting around in Arizona.

    • @marshallcello1128
      @marshallcello1128 Рік тому +2

      They did have balls of steel, but they also trained their asses off. They were prepared.

    • @appletongallery
      @appletongallery Рік тому

      @@marshallcello1128 They we’re actors. This was a ho*ax.

  • @dejanhaskovic5204
    @dejanhaskovic5204 7 років тому +434

    Oh god, i get so frustrated when i see "Where are the stars?" comments...

    • @blakesnipe5347
      @blakesnipe5347 7 років тому +78

      I'd bet that AT LEAST 95% of the people making that comment are trolls.

    • @backstabber765
      @backstabber765 7 років тому +41

      The rocket flies above the clouds, then levels out when you can no longer see it, then lands... How do you people believe this "footage." 2:55 has to be my favourite. At 8 minutes leave the video at double speed. There was no moon landing. I can't believe the intellect of this generation.

    • @dejanhaskovic5204
      @dejanhaskovic5204 7 років тому +78

      Julian S
      I dont get it. Why do you think its impossible to go to the Moon?
      Second, rockets *never* fly on cloudy day.
      Third, in order to get into orbit, you must turn and burn towards the horizon if you want to pull the orbit out. If you are such and expert in debunking nasa, you need to be introduced with basics of orbital mechanics in order to judge what is legit and what not. Since you dont research anything, i consider you as a troll.

    • @blakesnipe5347
      @blakesnipe5347 7 років тому +18

      james dean You would have to deliberately avoid seeking an answer to your question to have never heard it explained.
      The reason is a matter of exposure. To capture star light, the film/sensor must be exposed to the scene for 15-20 seconds. This is known as a shutter speed and is a MINIMUM for capturing star light. However, for the lunar photographs (and photos of the Earth from the ISS), the subjects are large and brightly lit by the sun, so to properly expose those subjects, a much shorter shutter speed is necessary. 15 full seconds is FAR too long an exposure. For the Apollo Lunar photographs, exposures between 1/60th and 1/250th of a second were used. Since at least 15 full seconds of exposure is required to capture star light on film, you should be able to imagine that an exposure of 1/60th of a second is far too short an exposure to capture star light. So, the very fact that the lunar surface is properly exposed tells anyone familiar with photography - and specifically exposure - that the settings prohibit star light from.showing up.
      They COULD take photos of stars from the ISS on the dark side of Earth (and they do - just not many). The problem is again - they need 15-20 seconds of exposure and the ISS is in orbit - so the stars move a lot relative to the orientation of the camera in that time. It's difficult, so a lot of the photos of stars you get from the ISS are star trails - for this very reason.
      There is no reason to attempt to take quality pictures of the stars from the ISS when things like Hubble exist. Hubble can take far better pictures because it is designed to take pictures. Ts designed to take its own orbit around Earth into account to track and maintain focus on a partuclar area of the sky. That's literally Hubble's job. When you have that, taking photographs from the ISS is more for artistic purposes than scientific.

    • @rockwoodcomic
      @rockwoodcomic 7 років тому +36

      Go outside at night with your iPhone. Take a picture of a streetlight with the stars in the background. Now count the visible stars in your picture. There won't be any. The camera exposes for the streetlight (the rocket) and in doing so, the faint stars are too dim to appear. This is basic photography.

  • @jack-nicholson1470
    @jack-nicholson1470 4 роки тому +25

    In the 2019 it's ridiculous

  • @freddyferrillo9704
    @freddyferrillo9704 5 років тому +9

    At 1:38 When he goes, "Houston we're right in the middle of a snowstorm", notice all the orbs moving in random direction. He was speaking in code.

  • @jacob5728
    @jacob5728 2 роки тому +18

    Wow, about hit 50 years anniversary. An amazing feat showing that humans can achieve the impossible

    • @freddybob807
      @freddybob807 2 роки тому +13

      Yup. Unfortunately that poor camera guy who filmed them leaving is still there on the moon. We should celebrate him.

    • @carlkinder8201
      @carlkinder8201 Рік тому +6

      @@freddybob807 lol, you must think that every drone has a tiny person inside operating the camera.

    • @freddybob807
      @freddybob807 Рік тому +6

      @@carlkinder8201 And you must think whatever your masters tell you to think.

    • @carlkinder8201
      @carlkinder8201 Рік тому

      @@freddybob807 I believe what science and education tell me to believe. You believe what an uneducated failed cab driver (Bart Sibrel) tells you to believe.

    • @Lowonfuel
      @Lowonfuel Рік тому +11

      ​@@freddybob807 You can hear them at NASA talking what they'll do next as they turn that camera lens down, to a side, etc. In the Apollo 14 video you can hear the camera handler (by RC) say he will turn the camera off. Most of you unbelievers seem to think that Remote Control was unknown at the time.

  • @jagosingh85
    @jagosingh85 4 роки тому +22

    Wow!!! A night launch of the Saturn!! What an amazing sight.

  • @trapper439
    @trapper439 11 років тому +26

    Schmitt sounds so happy and confident on the descent, calling Cernan "Gene-o" etc. The guy was obviously having a blast the whole time, trusting in their training and really enjoying himself during the epic event of his life. Awesome.

    • @Serhya
      @Serhya Рік тому +4

      he's confident because it's bullshit

    • @aussiefan354
      @aussiefan354 Рік тому +2

      @@Serhya It is absolutley fake

    • @rewdwarf123
      @rewdwarf123 Рік тому

      @@aussiefan354 Well, you've got to admire them for keep doing that funny walk for several hours a day.

    • @Bibiisachildkiller
      @Bibiisachildkiller Рік тому +2

      Yeah he was having a blast lying to millions of people, do you consider that "awesome"?

  • @makeamericagreatagain7586
    @makeamericagreatagain7586 7 років тому

    THANKS FOR SHARING YOUR VIDEO !!!!

  • @furerorban9324
    @furerorban9324 10 місяців тому +4

    It was nice to relive a moment that I shared with my family years ago. My dad saw to it that we were interested in the things that went on around us. At that age...I would have missed it had it not been for him and my mom!❤

  • @TourOfTorun
    @TourOfTorun 10 років тому +3

    Question: do you think all rock is of equal hardness and density? Do you think you'd need the same equipment to drill a narrow 2m long core in say, granite and shale? Did you know that the Apollo core samples are in regolith rather than solid rock?

  • @dan_rad
    @dan_rad 3 роки тому +13

    "I hope I'm living when we leave this solar system on a venture to find another planet earth"... Nearly 50 years ago :(

    • @alexanderleto7287
      @alexanderleto7287 3 роки тому

      As a Scientist I believe we will not leave the solar system in 50 years. Maybe we reach Mars but more will not be possible

    • @YDDES
      @YDDES 5 місяців тому

      @@alexanderleto7287 Agree.

  • @SR71ABCD
    @SR71ABCD Рік тому +4

    *Apollo 17* : That's that and were done!
    *Artemis 1* : Hold My Beer, were going back!

    • @appletongallery
      @appletongallery Рік тому

      Also Artemis- “it will take us another 30 years because space flight is hard”.

    • @deltaiii3158
      @deltaiii3158 2 місяці тому

      You are going nowhere buddy. First "real" moon mission not before 2040 and first human on mars not before 2100

    • @longlivetheking1065
      @longlivetheking1065 2 дні тому

      @@deltaiii3158 moon landing was real, cope

  • @ipor1
    @ipor1 5 років тому

    man,i wish i was one of them!imagine the filling to be standing on the moon.crazy awesome!!!!!

  • @dincadan78
    @dincadan78 14 років тому +11

    Very impressive movie. It is a pity that no other expeditions for the Moon have took place since then :( But we must remain optimistic for the Mars landing.

    • @BCO216
      @BCO216 2 роки тому +7

      The only real comment on this bs Hollywood movie. My question is 1, where did the rover come from. 2, the moon landing capsule is totally different from the earth landing capsule?? 3, where is all the fuel stored. 3, why hasn't anyone in earth been back to the moon????

    • @thegreatdivide825
      @thegreatdivide825 Рік тому +1

      @@BCO216 Google has more friends than you

    • @BCO216
      @BCO216 Рік тому

      @Terrence Owen government Google been lying to gullible people for decades. At some point QandA's need to be answered to support stories being told. Many countries were racing to get to the moon, and US wanted/needed to be first by all means necessary.

    • @redabdab
      @redabdab 10 місяців тому +4

      @@BCO216oh wow! I had always believed this up to now, but your brilliant and well-informed analysis has completely changed my mind. You have demolished all the so-called experts and I can only assume you must be the most intelligent person ever to walk the earth

    • @darthos6257
      @darthos6257 6 місяців тому

      ​@@BCO216 I'd like to think there's no such thing as a stupid question, but all of yours seem to tow that line.
      1. The rover was slung and folded against the side of the descent stage. It's very small in comparison to the lander.
      2. The Lunar Module was designed for exactly that; to land astronauts on the Moon. It lacks sufficient thermal shielding to enter Earth's atmosphere; the Command Module was what the Apollo astronauts used to re-enter the atmosphere, attached to the Service Module which separates just before re-entry.
      3. Fuel is stored in several tanks inside the descent and ascent stages. They're hidden from view.
      4. NASA's funding peaked in 1966 but fell year after year following, especially after Apollo 11. It was decided that Skylab and the Space Shuttle would be better value for money, which is why the final missions were postponed and then cancelled. Apollo's 18 & 19 were cancelled in 1970 due to the aforementioned budget cuts, and the Saturn V rocket that was to take Apollo 20 to the Moon was reassigned as the launcher for Skylab. Going to the Moon was expensive, and required a lot of political will, as well as considerably risk to men and machine. Why return to the Moon when probes and landers could get there a lot cheaper?

  • @MrVonKruger
    @MrVonKruger 10 років тому +11

    Just awesome...
    Can't wait to watch the new Orion launch, that's going to be some show.

  • @RhodriSmith
    @RhodriSmith 6 років тому +9

    "May is the month of the year!" Those chums are delighted to be on the moon.

  • @Gravyballs2011
    @Gravyballs2011 5 років тому +65

    The Apollo missions 1961-1972 $25.4 billion
    The war on drugs throughout the 1980s (which failed) $1 trillion

    • @bradwooldidge6979
      @bradwooldidge6979 4 роки тому +6

      Phillip S There was a war on drugs, and drugs won!

    • @davidlafleche1142
      @davidlafleche1142 4 роки тому

      Then stop using drugs...DUUUUH. Getting high is a sin (Revelation 9:21, KJV).

    • @Kp10neer
      @Kp10neer 4 роки тому

      @@davidlafleche1142 or 2 Corinthians 7:1

    • @davidlafleche1142
      @davidlafleche1142 4 роки тому

      @@Kp10neer The USA is hopelessly filthy. America has absolutely no future (Isaiah 40:17, 65:17, KJV). Even so, come, Lord Jesus! Establish the Kingdom in Jerusalem, and keep the world safe from Democracy!

    • @Kp10neer
      @Kp10neer 4 роки тому

      David Lafleche Are you a bot?

  • @eliaspeter7689
    @eliaspeter7689 2 роки тому +4

    People commenting stupid fake things:
    *You know I'm something of a scientist myself.*

  • @Jellybeantiger
    @Jellybeantiger 4 роки тому +12

    Awesome the view of the Earth,half sleeping,half awake. 10:17

  • @nasaskywatcher5200
    @nasaskywatcher5200 3 роки тому +2

    Apollo 17 was the eleventh manned space mission in the NASA Apollo
    programme. It was the first night launch of a U.S. human spaceflight and
    the sixth and final lunar landing mission. The mission was launched at
    12:33 a.m. EST on 7 December 1972, and concluded on December 19.
    One of the last two men to set foot on the Moon was also the first
    scientist-astronaut, geologist Harrison ("Jack") Schmitt. While Evans
    circled in America, Schmitt and Cernan collected a record 109 lb (49 kg)
    of rocks during three Moonwalks. The crew roamed for 34 km (21 mi)
    through the Taurus-Littrow valley in their rover, discovered
    orange-colored soil, and left the most comprehensive set of instruments
    in the ALSEP on the lunar surface. Their mission was the last in the
    Apollo lunar landing missions. The last 4 Apollo craft were used for the
    three Skylab missions and the ASTP, mission in 1975.

  • @allgood6760
    @allgood6760 3 роки тому +1

    Awesome! .. thanks from NZ 👍🇳🇿

  • @jimwg1
    @jimwg1 10 років тому +27

    Thanks for this! Don't let the nuts get you down! You did a great job keeping history alive!

    • @DefianceGal
      @DefianceGal 3 роки тому +4

      Which nuts? Pecans, Walnuts, Cashews?

    • @piyushsrivastavjaipuriasch8356
      @piyushsrivastavjaipuriasch8356 2 роки тому

      You find nuts impressed with communism in all walks of life. 😅😅

    • @appletongallery
      @appletongallery Рік тому +2

      Reminds me when I was 9 and went on heroically believing in Santa Claus one more year even though some nut at school told me Santa wasn’t real.

    • @SharlLegrerg
      @SharlLegrerg Рік тому

      @@appletongallery so the moon landings were faked?

    • @thegreatdivide825
      @thegreatdivide825 Рік тому

      @@appletongallery Your mother still breastfeeds you though

  • @moseswashington1654
    @moseswashington1654 9 років тому +5

    Simply Amazing

  • @dragancosic6745
    @dragancosic6745 6 років тому

    what cables are thay talking about in the end of 11 minut?

    • @YDDES
      @YDDES 6 років тому

      They had a lot of cables between the LM and the different experiments they set up

  • @DrReginaldFinleySr
    @DrReginaldFinleySr 6 років тому +1

    Beautiful!!!

  • @fernandoalves67
    @fernandoalves67 7 років тому +16

    Lindo trabalho.

    • @alenico9028
      @alenico9028 10 місяців тому

      No minuto 8:50 , um cabo puxa o astronauta para tras e ele cai. Esse cabo colocado nas costas do astronauta servia para simular os movimentos do mesmo na Lua.

  • @fazejax5255
    @fazejax5255 2 роки тому +4

    This is probably my favorite Apollo mission because it was so funny

  • @justinmadrid8712
    @justinmadrid8712 Рік тому

    What is that tri-pod shadow at 19:33 ?

    • @ChrisPBacon777
      @ChrisPBacon777 Рік тому

      Obviously part of the rover where the camera was mounted.

  • @heyneken2156
    @heyneken2156 Рік тому +10

    "Apollo Program"
    Producer: Walt Disney deceased at that time.
    Co-producer: Wernher Von Braun.
    Director: Stanley Kubrick
    Art Director: John Hoesli.
    Writer: Arthur C Clarke.
    Photographer: Geoffrey Unsworth.
    Total cost = 169.51 billion current dollars.....
    Something very logical is that the Apollo missions were carried out in the 🌎because if it had been true that NASA in 1962 sent its first astronaut into space, taking just "6" years to take them to the 🌙 because in 1968 they orbited it, in 1969 they walked on it , in 1972 they were for the last time, bone today "50" years later at least we were vacationing in the 🌒 and traveling to Mars.

    • @YDDES
      @YDDES 3 місяці тому

      Heyneken2156. Liar.

    • @YDDES
      @YDDES 3 місяці тому

      heyneken2156 What was Kubrick ”directing”? What the different instruments in the modules were supposed to do, or How they should move on ”Moon”? He was an expert of nothing of it.

    • @damianista
      @damianista 3 місяці тому

      Shhhh...! The Earth is Flat! Nothing and no one can enter or leave this Kingdom...

    • @YDDES
      @YDDES 3 місяці тому +1

      @@damianista Except the meteorites… 🤪

  • @Javier23gol
    @Javier23gol 8 років тому +93

    9:56 Damn I feel a little jealousy cause they were having an awesome time on the moon. I would love to feel that experience.

    • @apxpandy4965
      @apxpandy4965 8 років тому +14

      +Javier Torres Just go outside and jump around - that's what the astronauts did!

    • @TheBeresford7
      @TheBeresford7 8 років тому +6

      Get someone to attach a wire to you above you on a scaffold, go out at night to the desert paint the sand.
      That's how Nasa did it basically.

    • @apxpandy4965
      @apxpandy4965 8 років тому +1

      There's a lot of people on these pages that wanna attach a wire to my neck and then attach it to a scaffold! But you're right - there's plenty of nasa footage showing them using wire suspended activity. Strange how not too many can make the correlation between nasa showing them what they did and the later footage that pretends to be on the moon.

    • @nebtheweb8885
      @nebtheweb8885 8 років тому +14

      You have obviously never been to a launch. Thats a lot of power. Why waste a perfectly good rocket just to make you pendejos think it was real? As for the moon shots, well there were no wires. At 1/6th the gravity of the earth even carrying 300 pounds on a 200 pound man amounts to about 83 pounds total. On earth it would be 500 pounds. But then again I am a little prejudiced because I have had the pleasure of meeting Harrison Hagan "Jack" Schmitt, the American geologist, retired NASA astronaut, university professor and former U.S. senator from New Mexico when he was Senator here. My brother was the the lucky one though as he actually worked for the man for a few years after his astronaut days. You might want to pick up one of his books to read when you are not trolling Utube looking for trouble.

    • @apxpandy4965
      @apxpandy4965 8 років тому +1

      Oh Boy! You must be a s'thick as a brick? I mean, what's wrong with your brain? Why would going to the moon suddenly make you 'slow down'? Any idiot knows that agility in movement is all about 'power-to-weight' - and yet your own figures show that even suited up, and astronaut is only going to weight around 1/3 as much as he would on earth. So wouldn't that make him more agile?
      But then, I guess, if you're an idiot, why would you ever reach that conclusion? You're (obviously) also so stupid, yo haven't seen the reduced-gravity simulations that nasa did, way before they ever launched anyone. That footage shows quite clearly that what you're saying is utter bullshit!
      All that makes me wonder - are you from the moon? A brain made for the moon would slow down somewhat when re-located to earth. Sounds like you?

  • @Momo-bb2fn
    @Momo-bb2fn 3 роки тому +7

    15:46 what a dream... one much more tangible back then, being that we hadn’t even sent *anything* to space a decade before going to the moon. Almost half a century later and we haven’t even gone back.

    • @Momo-bb2fn
      @Momo-bb2fn 3 роки тому +1

      We’ve had great advances, don’t get me wrong, but imagine what would be if America still had that fervor for space, one fueled by curiosity and a spirit of exploration, rather than a Cold War

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 3 роки тому +2

      @@Momo-bb2fn
      Yeah. But, very few people want to fork over their money for so few people to be able to do those explorations. For example, it took a dictatorship to fund Magellan's voyage around the world, because if left up to the general populous, they wouldn't have wanted to pay for it. Even Magellan's own country's king (Portugal) didn't want to pay for it, and that's why Magellan ended up being paid by Spain's king instead. And, Magellan's voyage costed nowhere near Apollo, not by a long shot, not even close. And, that was for hundreds of people to go, and lasted three years. Apollo costed orders of magnitude more, and only resulted in 12 men walking on the moon for a few hours each. Yeah, you're right, the cold war produced that, while we are left only imagining what would happen if the public funded things like that purely for the sake of curiosity. We, as a species, don't tend to do that very much. Most of the time, we fund voyages that we ourselves can go on. We very rarely dump that level of money, funding from hundreds of millions of people, into voyages that only a dozen people get to make. You're right, it is a bit of a shame. But, that's the reality about humanity.

    • @Momo-bb2fn
      @Momo-bb2fn 3 роки тому

      @@rockethead7 exactly, only I’d change ur second sentence to “very few want to fork over their money for _exploration_ “ In my mind, people going on explorations is hardly even part of the question. I’m more referring to the technology, which in itself is an exploration, one people don’t appreciate. As u said, such is humanity

    • @queenbabymama5635
      @queenbabymama5635 2 роки тому

      With all our advanced technology and NASA they would have gone back had they went at all. This is so fake. I do not believe they walked on the moon. This is Hollywood.

    • @justinmadrid8712
      @justinmadrid8712 Рік тому

      Watch the video footage of this take-off from the camera inside the LM. Watch it side-by-side with this take-off. It does not match at all. When the LM performs ‘pitch over’, absolutely no pitch over can be seen in the video from within the LM.
      “Surely a mistake like this would be front page news!”
      Nope, the Moon landings are perhaps the biggest real life example of the ‘Emperor has no no clothes’.

  • @MrHuNTeR_exe
    @MrHuNTeR_exe 3 місяці тому +1

    Camera man is world class with the shots.

  • @remoteviewer3465
    @remoteviewer3465 4 роки тому

    why is the NASA logo muddy. is it a sticker on the lens, (mirrored) or is it pasted after the shooting. ?????

  • @TrTV7
    @TrTV7 3 роки тому +19

    8:48 the cutest thing i ever seen :3

    • @YeetDisDude
      @YeetDisDude 3 роки тому +1

      thats a astronaut struggling for hid life, if he fell hard he'd die on the moon

    • @palyze
      @palyze 3 роки тому

      its not cute lol, falling on the moon is extremely dangerous

    • @TheLondonCyclist
      @TheLondonCyclist 3 роки тому

      His wire kept him up slightly.

    • @moritz7613
      @moritz7613 3 роки тому

      @@TheLondonCyclist you know that moon gravity is 9 times less than earths gravity. this means btw you fall 9 times slower

    • @TheLondonCyclist
      @TheLondonCyclist 3 роки тому

      @@moritz7613 Did you know I'm superman?

  • @jesoby
    @jesoby 6 років тому +17

    Imagine how exciting landing on Earth would be if you had only lived on the moon.

    • @YDDES
      @YDDES 6 років тому +3

      Yeah! You would be crawling like an amoeba in the gravity, that is 6 times what you were used to...

    • @arcosprey4811
      @arcosprey4811 Рік тому

      @@YDDES actually its about 1.6x Moons gravity not 6x

    • @YDDES
      @YDDES Рік тому

      @@arcosprey4811 Moons gravity is 6 times weaker than Earths . Nothing else.

  • @dinosaws
    @dinosaws 6 років тому +1

    13:10 what is that thing on the right that seems to appear out of no where??

    • @z_monty
      @z_monty 4 роки тому

      it's there the whole time, it just comes out of shadow

  • @antonioluvara2033
    @antonioluvara2033 6 років тому

    Who was recording the shuttle from the outside?

  • @tomjohnson7529
    @tomjohnson7529 6 років тому +3

    45 years ago today Challenger landed. RIP Gene and Apollo. I know you really did it. Tell the story Senator Schmitt.

  • @chetanphoenix
    @chetanphoenix 8 років тому +45

    Lol it's so funny when the astronaut fell down at 8:52

    • @RevolverAnthology
      @RevolverAnthology 8 років тому +8

      +Chetan Bhadrashette yeah, shame it was on earth !

    • @Dreadpirateflappy
      @Dreadpirateflappy 8 років тому +15

      +Ackyman that's it... ignore all the evidence and proof, just show your ignorance instead.

    • @RevolverAnthology
      @RevolverAnthology 8 років тому

      +Monkeybox Gaming proof? Ha ha ha. When they going back again did you say?

    • @Angelkid190
      @Angelkid190 7 років тому +3

      Ackyman Naw silly, it was actually in space. Lol

    • @ctrlaltrepeat245
      @ctrlaltrepeat245 5 років тому

      Weell despite the entire, if he fell on a rock his suit would tear up causing him to slowley be deprived of oxygen

  • @TwoSopranos
    @TwoSopranos 6 років тому

    How was the craft filmed , from what ? I can understand the pictures coming from the camera inside the craft, but not the ones of the craft, unless they were filmed from the space telescope?

    • @willoughbykrenzteinburg
      @willoughbykrenzteinburg 6 років тому

      The Apollo space craft consisted of three parts. The LM (which is actually two stages), the command module and the service module. The LM separated from the command/service module and went down to land on the moon. Every Apollo mission had 3 astronauts. 2 went down to the surface while the third stayed in the command module and remained in lunar orbit for the duration the other two were on the surface. The footage of the LM in space was taken by that third astronaut in the command module.

  • @ofabc
    @ofabc 4 роки тому

    How did they filmed the return?

  • @fitdogStudios
    @fitdogStudios 4 роки тому +236

    Could I suggest flat earthers plan a scientific mission to the underside of the earth.

    • @ghostwhite1648
      @ghostwhite1648 4 роки тому +11

      How about allocating some of NASAs 18+b$ budget towards it... oh yeah all you get it cut and edited videos still bro.

    • @MattExzy
      @MattExzy 4 роки тому +28

      @@ghostwhite1648 Flat Earthers don't even know their own underside from their mouths. That's why they dribble so much shit.

    • @juliaread2003
      @juliaread2003 4 роки тому +11

      Ghost White. Not a good enough argument that it was fake. It happened a long time ago and at the time this was going to be a continuous project. Lack of enthusiasm by the public, Funding and more important and pressing issues on planet earth put an end to space exploration for the time being.. Blimey in those 50 years the importance of keeping the video safe and in its entirety perhaps as the years went by didn't seem as important. The BBC insanley taped over their coverge of the 69 moon landing because video was expensive and had to be reused. People do stupid things, but you don't need to make a conspiracy out of it.

    • @daniellanyi8287
      @daniellanyi8287 4 роки тому +1

      No just tell them to travel around the Earth genius

    • @andrewmossop6547
      @andrewmossop6547 4 роки тому +1

      @@juliaread2003 read what you wrote haha

  • @Relativisticism
    @Relativisticism 10 років тому +4

    On apollo 17 they were 16 silver oxide-zinc cells. The power head operated around 430 watts. The handle contained the battery pack which could be removed from the power head but also the handle pack and power head could be removed together to allow for additional drill stems to be attached to allow for the desired depth to be achieved. The power head would then be re-attached and drilling would continue.

  • @TechNed
    @TechNed 6 років тому

    Magnificent.

  • @jemjemi-ol6ev
    @jemjemi-ol6ev 2 місяці тому +2

    they feel pretty safe there

  • @irwincrook567
    @irwincrook567 7 років тому +45

    8:46 😂😂😂haha

  • @mlasko74
    @mlasko74 5 років тому +12

    The first astronauts had unbelievably solid nuts! 😀

    • @antoniorangel9784
      @antoniorangel9784 3 роки тому

      Poklando he rediscovered it lol, never seen someone glorify Columbus so much lol

  • @obamaissatan590
    @obamaissatan590 Рік тому

    This is unreal,so bravo

  • @mariofpv
    @mariofpv Рік тому

    19:42 If the camera is outside of the spacecraft on the surface of the moon recording how do we have the video…? 🤔

    • @ChrisPBacon777
      @ChrisPBacon777 Рік тому +1

      That camera wasn't outside of the window, that was filmed through the window. It's a compilation of various footage taken. Also, cameras can be mounted outside of spacecraft, as we've seen with the Space X footage.

  • @deltasword1994
    @deltasword1994 11 років тому +2

    Going to space isn't just an American, Russian, or Chinese endeavor. It's a human endeavor. It benefits us all, and is a status for our intelligence.

  • @TourOfTorun
    @TourOfTorun 11 років тому +4

    Try watching some of the videos taken from the lunar rover - it drives for a long towards the distant mountains whih you claim to be backdrops, and they come no nearer or change in perspective, proving they're many miles away.
    In addition, many stereo-pair images were taken, which show that the landscape is exactly what is seems: vast. If there was a backdrop 100 feet away, stereo pairs would show it up immediately.

  • @arelortal6580
    @arelortal6580 3 роки тому

    How did they maintain the crew compartment and mid section pressurised when opening the hatch to get in and out of it ?

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 3 роки тому +3

      Over the last few years, you have gone from video to video, asking questions like this, while denying Apollo happened. All you've done is prove that your entire position comes from ignorance. "I don't know how anything worked, therefore it's fake." I've answered you over 100x for various questions like this. And, you have yet to acknowledge a single time about being wrong about ANYTHING. And, yet, here you are, still displaying that you actually don't know the first thing about how stuff worked on Apollo. If you have to ask questions about how Apollo worked, you are not in a position to deny its veracity. Sane people, on the other hand, learn how things work, THEN come to their conclusions. You (an insane person) start by denying things happened, then make it your life's mission to ask a million questions to waste people's time answering you, when you have zero intention of listening to any of the answers anyway.

    • @arelortal6580
      @arelortal6580 3 роки тому

      @@rockethead7 Guess what ? Someone posted a link : lunar module - LM10 to LM14 Vehicle familiarisation manual by Grumman and pointed the section 3.7.1 in the manual Environmental Control Subsystem ( ECS ) .
      He answered my question simply, efficiently and he took him one posting to do it. I thank him for his help, and that was the end of it.
      Kick rocks

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 3 роки тому +1

      @@arelortal6580
      Yet, you used to say that those manuals don't even exist. Do you remember that?

    • @arelortal6580
      @arelortal6580 3 роки тому +1

      @@rockethead7 well , instead of wasting your time insulting and denigrating, if you had posted the link and I had persisted with my denial, I would have been exposed, in front of the entire world, as the emperor of idiotsl. What I do remember though, is the last time I asked you about some article mentioning the apologies of the authors regarding an editing error in a documentary, where astronauts appeared in identical backgrounds as the narrator says they are in different days and locations, your reply sounded like : I ain't wasting my f*cking time searching that for you. Do you remember ? Peace.

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 3 роки тому +1

      @@arelortal6580
      No, that wasn't the last time. The last time was when you insisted a certain photograph wasn't possible (because you were too lazy to look it up), and you said you expected to see the LEM in frame in that photo, therefore you concluded that Apollo was fake. And, I looked it up for you, and the photo was taken from INSIDE THE LEM, out the window (thus, the photo was not impossible, nor would you expect to have the LEM in frame, when the astronauts took the photo from INSIDE THE LEM). And, you immediately disappeared, never to make another comment again in that thread, never admitting you were wrong, never saying another word about it. Why? Because arrogant (and ignorant) people like you are incapable of ever admitting to yourself that you're wrong about ANYTHING.
      As for the Apollo 16 error in the footage in the documentary, yeah, I wasn't going to waste my time on tracking down the note from the editor (or distributor, or whoever) that admitted the error made in the documentary. Why? Because, exactly as I said, it's a waste of time, because you never admit being wrong anyway. And, beyond that, who cares? It was a documentary!!! The original footage doesn't have the error!!!! So, what difference does it make that the editors of the documentary accidentally put one piece of footage where it didn't belong? All anybody needs to do is watch the original footage to know that the error wasn't there. You can't prove Apollo was fake from that. The most you'd ever prove is that the editors made a mistake when piecing together the documentary. Period. And, I pointed out to you that I could show you hundreds of examples of similar editing mistakes in documentaries about WWII, when they intermix a scene from the wrong battle into the final footage. This doesn't mean WWII was fake. It just means that there was an error in editing. But, mentally crippled people (like you) don't care about simple explanations like this. Your only agenda is to slander people. That is literally all you want to do. You don't want to really know anything about the topic. Years ago, when you started this crusade of yours to slander everyone who worked on Apollo, you literally didn't even know anything about the topic at all. You didn't know how many missions there were. You didn't know which spacecraft did what. You knew virtually nothing about Apollo, like 0.001% about what you should know. Yet, you had already concluded it was fake. Now, years later, you know about 3% about Apollo (a vast improvement over where you started, but still virtually nothing in the bigger scheme of things), and still, you have not learned to quit slandering people based on your own ignorance.
      Don't complain to me about "insulting and denigrating" you, while simultaneously, you've spent the last 3-4-5 years accusing thousands of people involved with Apollo of being criminals. That's just ridiculous and hypocritical. YOU are the one insulting not only the people who worked on Apollo, but you're an insult to humanity as a whole. Nobody likes people like you. Absolutely nobody.

  • @bobbyward7929
    @bobbyward7929 6 років тому

    Can anyone explain the shining lines that seem to flash above the back packs when they are walking on the moon?

    • @YDDES
      @YDDES 3 місяці тому

      Bobbyward7929 The ”shining lines” above the backpacks are glimpses in the Camera created by their antennas.

  • @1arritechno
    @1arritechno 10 років тому +8

    Apollo 17 was the last mission to the Moon ; at the time, no one would have thought that most of the staff at NASA, would have passed on from old age ; waiting for another Moon mission. The question is whether we see it return in our life time ?

    • @pipercub123456
      @pipercub123456 10 років тому

      IMO Moon travel will certainly happen in 5 years at most...can you say China..Russia ..and India...or possibly a company located in private industry but ...I seriously doubt if the USA nation as a whole..will return to the Moon during the lifetime of anyone now living who is past the age of 20

    • @1arritechno
      @1arritechno 10 років тому +1

      pipercub123456 Within five years to the next Moon landing ? I wish you were right, although it maybe attempted, the chance of success is extremely unlikely.
      Rocket science on the scale of the Saturn 5 is so often taken for granted today !
      F1 is still the most powerful built, the most reliable rocket and it made the Apollo program a success. Records show: everything else has been either too small or fails during test ; all the rest is just theory ! Once we witness some large rocket launch into the heavens ; "only then" a landing will be within 5 years at most....

    • @danacostello5908
      @danacostello5908 5 років тому +2

      We destroyed the technology and erased the tapes. It was a bad memory I guess.

    • @NzJohny
      @NzJohny Рік тому +1

      ​@@pipercub123456this aged well ;)

  • @Gen3Benz
    @Gen3Benz 5 років тому +17

    You can tell they are nearly floating with the low moon gravity. 100% real.

    • @valentinotera3244
      @valentinotera3244 4 роки тому +3

      Dust properties prove it 100%.

    • @gustav_ostervall_92
      @gustav_ostervall_92 3 роки тому

      Actually, they doctored the recording of the "astronaut" walking in terms of changing the video to slow-motion. In normal speed, the astronauts are seen walking or running, and the prevalence of gravity becomes all to clear.

    • @mike.j3913
      @mike.j3913 Рік тому

      😂🤣

  • @ohbrianCAP
    @ohbrianCAP Рік тому

    Good Apollo 17 mission footage. But, location information of the landing site wasn't provided (somewhere in the lunar highlands?). The landing site expressed the appearance of a diverse selection of rocks at (valley name?). But, visual details about the rocks wasn't provided in the video. The use of fixes to the lunar rover (a repair to its fender), and handheld drilling tools were attractions in this program.

  • @spacerider12
    @spacerider12 3 роки тому

    Can somebody explain to me why the footage looks so bad in terms of quality? 2001 was filmed a few years prior to this and is still looking great. Were these cinematic cameras too big to be brought on this mission or is there another reason?

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 3 роки тому +4

      Most of the video you see was transmitted live (a couple of seconds of transmission delay). With the exception of the videos they took with the hand-held 16mm film camera, most of the video from Apollo 15/16/17 was taken with an RCA field sequential scanning TV camera, mounted to the front of the rover, and transmitted back to Earth, live, as it was happening. Not film. This meant that they didn't have a heck of a lot of "bandwidth" (using that term loosely, because it was analog, not digital) for HD signals. So, it was only a few hundred lines of resolution at best. And, making matters worse (for picture quality), they used a very lightweight camera that only had one video pickup. Most color TV cameras used three pickups (red, green, blue), back in those days, which not only meant they had 3 lenses and pickups, but also big bulky electronics to combine the 3 signals into one. But, to save on weight and size (they didn't want a big heavy camera bouncing around on the front of the rover), they went with a single pickup camera. So, how did they make colors with only one pickup? They put a small spinning color wheel (Google "RCA color wheel") behind the lens in order to make a single pickup be able to deal with multiple colors. This doesn't produce as good of a picture as a true 3-pickup camera. But, it did the job, was light, portable, didn't break from bouncing around, was remote controlled from Houston, and was able to send live video 238,000 miles.

  • @theianova9856
    @theianova9856 5 років тому +10

    Un beau montage de cinéma ,tous mes compliments.

    • @ericdu6499
      @ericdu6499 4 місяці тому

      Le plus grand mensonge de l'humanité surtout. Le drapeau qui flotte au vent . Plus c'est gros mieux ça passe. La reconnaissance faciale vient de mettre à jour le montage bois ,aluminium de cette mascarade. C'est le serpent qui se mort la queue .

  • @lyon406
    @lyon406 8 років тому +37

    10:22 The earth and stars

    • @topg7290
      @topg7290 4 роки тому

      lyon406 nice to see the earth from a other planet

    • @user-ms3jo1zh2k
      @user-ms3jo1zh2k 3 роки тому

      Faaaaaakeeeee lol

    • @eniix4681
      @eniix4681 3 роки тому +3

      @@user-ms3jo1zh2k Not you idiotic kids again...

    • @factodark5076
      @factodark5076 3 роки тому

      @@user-ms3jo1zh2k moron

  • @brightlight3520
    @brightlight3520 2 роки тому

    Why did the camera pan down just as he was going into the hatch? Was he too small to fit?

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 2 роки тому

      When are you talking about? Timestamp? And, how can he be too small to fit? I wouldn't even understand what that would mean.

    • @dansv1
      @dansv1 2 роки тому

      @@rockethead7
      18:57
      Hey, I have a question for you. What type of display was the large screen used in mission control during Apollo 11 when they first viewed the EVA on the lunar surface?

    • @dansv1
      @dansv1 2 роки тому

      Ok I just found the answer. Writing the question in the comment gave me the right words to put into a google search.
      Eidophor rear projection screen.
      ArsTechnica has a very good article titled Apollo Flight Controller 101: Every console explained.

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 2 роки тому

      @@dansv1
      No idea. Sorry.

  • @damachine3
    @damachine3 5 років тому +52

    10:08 "May is the year of the month." Oxygen running low...get back inside!

  • @Anxian
    @Anxian 9 років тому +136

    There's a mirror on the surface of the Moon (Lunar Laser Ranging experiment) that we can point a laser at and measure it's distance from us. If we didn't go there, how the hell did that get there?

    • @pornstarnarek
      @pornstarnarek 9 років тому +16

      The sand on the moon are like glass shards, so maybe it formed naturally

    • @RobertPlattBell
      @RobertPlattBell 9 років тому +80

      Do not feed the trolls

    • @randymarshole
      @randymarshole 9 років тому +13

      There's also some man made shit on Mars yet no human has stepped on it's surface but I still believe man has walked on the moon.

    • @robotguy4
      @robotguy4 9 років тому +62

      Robotic landing craft.
      However, there's a better piece of evidence that doesn't require any technical knowledge:
      The Russians didn't call bullshit.
      I mean, if the moon landing was faked, they probably would have known. The USSR had an unmanned spacecraft in lunar orbit at the time and probably had KGB spies infiltrating the US government and its allies (at least in British intelligence. See Oxford Five).

    • @RobertPlattBell
      @RobertPlattBell 9 років тому +6

      robotguy4
      Exactly.

  • @thealt1375
    @thealt1375 3 роки тому +10

    I would love to see the earth from the moon. Just looking at the blue marble in the sky.

    • @dotdot607
      @dotdot607 3 роки тому

      Space*

    • @thealt1375
      @thealt1375 3 роки тому

      @@dotdot607 . It takes a while before you can completely see the earth

  • @OuterSpaceandTimelapses4
    @OuterSpaceandTimelapses4 Рік тому +5

    Today’s the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 17 lunar landing!

  • @roxannemapache826
    @roxannemapache826 2 роки тому

    Amazing 🤩

  • @zachecho4260
    @zachecho4260 10 років тому +4

    if you speed the moon walking by x2 you just see normal people in suits running in earths atmosphere

    • @ArnoldsGaming
      @ArnoldsGaming 10 років тому

      uh okay?

    • @rawnac5036
      @rawnac5036 5 років тому +1

      you are correct ...i still think all was fake

    • @YDDES
      @YDDES 4 місяці тому

      But the arms and legs move all to fast and jerky…

  • @pasch1mw
    @pasch1mw 11 років тому +5

    I remember watching these blastoffs. God, how exciting they were.

    • @appletongallery
      @appletongallery Рік тому +1

      That’s about the achievement of it- get the rocket off the ground and out of detection with the naked eye. The rest of Apollo was filmed on earth.

    • @rewdwarf123
      @rewdwarf123 Рік тому +1

      @@appletongalleryThe naked eye isn't that good for detecting things. Lots of people have to wear glasses!

    • @gmnboss
      @gmnboss Рік тому

      @@appletongallery lol

  • @emeyer2710
    @emeyer2710 4 роки тому +1

    How did they get that huge vehicle on that little space ship

  • @genesioribeiro9443
    @genesioribeiro9443 5 років тому +6

    Uma importante conquista para a humanidade, em tudo que fazemos é preciso ousadia. Parabéns!

  • @YDDES
    @YDDES 11 років тому +3

    If You look thorougly, the camera is often "left behind" when the astronauts move. Sometimes the camera operator knew in advance in which direction they would move and could start the panning in time.
    When he followed the LM's lift off, he knew exactly when the count down should reach "zero" and started the tilt up about a second in advance.

    • @personalg3754
      @personalg3754 5 місяців тому

      All that 50 years ago 😂😂😂

    • @YDDES
      @YDDES 5 місяців тому

      @@personalg3754 Were You even around 50 years ago, so You know anything about What they could do in that time? I was.

    • @personalg3754
      @personalg3754 5 місяців тому

      @@YDDES yes, I was

    • @YDDES
      @YDDES 5 місяців тому

      @@personalg3754 Well, Then You should know they were quite advanced in that time too and just as intelligent that we are today.

    • @personalg3754
      @personalg3754 5 місяців тому

      @@YDDES I know all this crap is fake. I served in Desert Storm, Iraqi Freedom and years as a DOD contractor in Afghanistan. Trust me, I know what kind of fiction our government comes up with. Time is catching up with the lies but all involved will be dead.

  • @dub2459
    @dub2459 6 років тому +4

    People be like "where are all the stars" and I be like "it's day time,the moon just doesn't have a blue sky"

    • @AustinALiboiron
      @AustinALiboiron 5 років тому +3

      Because the cameras are set to expose the lunar surface, which is so bright that in order to show any detail, the cameras need to be set very very dark. If you were standing there and you looked up, your eyes would adjust and you would see everything

    • @sergiolandz6056
      @sergiolandz6056 4 роки тому +1

      @@AustinALiboiron i dont know at the press conference one said yes and the other said no... so yeah fck them liars !!

  • @markcrouch2847
    @markcrouch2847 5 років тому

    Who filmed the lunar take off from the moon?

    • @willoughbykrenzteinburg
      @willoughbykrenzteinburg 5 років тому

      www.letmegooglethat.com/?q=Who+filmed+the+lunar+take+off+from+the+moon%3F%EF%BB%BF

  • @carolinetaylor8575
    @carolinetaylor8575 5 років тому +1

    Who's filming these guys ?

    • @EyeswideOpen22
      @EyeswideOpen22 5 років тому

      Stanley Kubrick ua-cam.com/video/5IyRTd0nJjU/v-deo.html

  • @wadejustanamerican1201
    @wadejustanamerican1201 5 років тому +3

    This is Awesome I don't know why people would say it's fake. It's just a sham people don't believe. If they just would open their eyes they could see the bigger picture.

  • @marcoaurelio9527
    @marcoaurelio9527 4 роки тому +6

    19:43 Who filmed this part?

    • @serhatlindemann4327
      @serhatlindemann4327 4 роки тому +5

      It is a robot camera controlled from the earth

    • @sergiolandz6056
      @sergiolandz6056 4 роки тому +2

      @@serhatlindemann4327 and yet we cant even get clear signal for a cell phone here on earth.... mhmmm you gotta be guillible and naiive to believe this.

    • @gumpyflyale2542
      @gumpyflyale2542 4 роки тому +2

      @@sergiolandz6056 its anolog which explains everything if your a boomer

    • @trinivagrant
      @trinivagrant 4 роки тому

      No can answer as this is all not real.
      We would have thousands of hours of actual space footage if we had capability to do that

    • @lucabrasi5070
      @lucabrasi5070 3 роки тому

      Randy James , thanks for being that one idiot . Your village misses you, go back to it.

  • @DarkLord666SK
    @DarkLord666SK 4 роки тому

    Who filmed them taking off? :D

    • @Forest_Fifer
      @Forest_Fifer 4 роки тому +1

      Not another one...
      The remotely controlled camera on the lunar rover filmed them.

    • @DarkLord666SK
      @DarkLord666SK 4 роки тому

      @@Forest_Fifer sure :D

  • @drago2835
    @drago2835 6 років тому

    9:32 what cable are they talking about?

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 6 років тому

      Not 100% sure, but it might be because they were worried about a repeat of what happened on Apollo 16. John Young had tripped over the heat flow experiment, and destroyed the cable and the connections, thus rendering the experiment completely useless. Perhaps they were worried about the same thing happening on Apollo 17 for one of the experiments?

  • @PatrickLensch
    @PatrickLensch 3 роки тому +47

    They behaved exact the way I would do on moon because: YOLO 🙃

  • @cvnavolus5
    @cvnavolus5 6 років тому +4

    why is the video quality so poor?

    • @swinger2
      @swinger2 5 років тому +2

      bruh this was 1972 and even that they had to get cameras that can withstand the pressure of the trip

  • @tiktok-qq4hx
    @tiktok-qq4hx 3 роки тому

    amazing

  • @letmejustdoit
    @letmejustdoit 5 років тому

    No continuous shot of the landing or departure from the moon. Both cameras look away or went black at the exact moment. Why?

    • @letmejustdoit
      @letmejustdoit 5 років тому

      Same take off footage of the Apollo 12 mission, but surprisingly this is a lower quality version.

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 5 років тому +1

      @@letmejustdoit
      Yeah, it's weird that the editors of this documentary didn't just use the Apollo 17 footage for this Apollo 17 video. But, then again, this is why I tend not to watch documentaries that are subject to bad editing. I usually just go to the original source material.

    • @letmejustdoit
      @letmejustdoit 5 років тому

      @Cliff Yablonski You gotta come here calling me names when I'm just asking perfectly reasonable questions? Are you an ignorant "fuctard" yourself? When did I say or even implied the moon missions were fake? The footage leaves suspicions, that's it.

    • @willoughbykrenzteinburg
      @willoughbykrenzteinburg 5 років тому

      @@letmejustdoit meanwhile, other hoaxers argue that it is fake because the liftoff footage from Apollo 17 is too good to be real. At some point, you fellas ought to get together and get your stories straight.

  • @troycole3996
    @troycole3996 10 років тому +3

    i just love the way they skip and bounce around on the moon haha

  • @FruityLoopsas
    @FruityLoopsas 9 років тому +3

    I think Albert Einsteins frame would help: once Albert was asked: can you prove me that moon is there in the sky when I am not looking at it? Albert answered. NO ITS IMPOSSIBLE. After I thought about it for a long time I realised what he meant. He meant that no matter how hard you try to prove something the success of proving belongs to the observer, and if the observer is not looking and is stupid, the only proof would be to force open his eyes and show him the moon. Proof is the subject to convincing. And if people don't want to believe, they won't believe till they friend goes to the moon, and they know it.

  • @freddyferrillo9704
    @freddyferrillo9704 5 років тому +1

    Does anyone know what happens to the rover? Do they leave it behind or pack it back up? They leave it behind on the moon correct? Being that the jettison every other module except the capsule, i suspect they leave it behind, on the moon right?

    • @ohger1
      @ohger1 5 років тому +1

      The rovers are still on the moon as are the descent stages, several flags, and three (I believe) reflectors.

    • @freddyferrillo9704
      @freddyferrillo9704 5 років тому +1

      @@ohger1 : That's what I thought. Thanks for confirming.

    • @sailorman8668
      @sailorman8668 5 років тому

      @@ohger1 Why be non-specific about the flags, and mention 'several flags'?
      Surely you know that each of the 6 Apollo moon landing missions left a flag on the surface?
      Also, you are strangely specific about how many retroreflectors were left (correct with 3) but you fail to mention how many rovers were left, also 3?

  • @stanlee5766
    @stanlee5766 3 роки тому

    Is that a moon leaf at 19:42?

    • @ChrisPBacon777
      @ChrisPBacon777 3 роки тому

      There are no leaves on the moon. That is a bit of the thermal protective mylar blowing off.

  • @starview1
    @starview1 10 років тому +46

    Apollo was absolutely outstanding. So much of what is used everyday today came from NASA's programs.

    • @PaulGreenwald
      @PaulGreenwald 10 років тому +3

      What like a washing machine ?

    • @paulkalma6406
      @paulkalma6406 10 років тому +4

      Paul Batchelor Hand drills that don't use a cable is also a NASA invention

    • @fatcatnwo
      @fatcatnwo 10 років тому +2

      Paul Kalma Now, name the person who came up with a cordless drill from 'NASA'.

    • @tomogburn2462
      @tomogburn2462 10 років тому +4

      fatcatnwo Black & Decker did. Martin Marietta Corporation contracted with Black & Decker to design tools for NASA.

    • @fatcatnwo
      @fatcatnwo 10 років тому

      Tom Ogburn See? in your world, people don't exist. A real human being came up with a cordless drill. Now find out who, and then, you will be an individual again. The person who came up with it was an individual, and his name was not NASA, or BLACK & DECKER.

  • @mynamenotimportant7784
    @mynamenotimportant7784 10 років тому +33

    how did they fit the rover on such a small module ?

    • @willoughbykrenzteinburg
      @willoughbykrenzteinburg 10 років тому +12

      How big do you think the rover is? It fit because it fit.

    • @mynamenotimportant7784
      @mynamenotimportant7784 10 років тому +9

      but why isn't there footage of them assembling it? they land, then......its there. and did they have time to pack it up? I have seen rover (actual one, not replicated) exhibited on display before.......

    • @timulbrich954
      @timulbrich954 10 років тому +15

      Mynamenotimportant
      the lrv, the lunar roving vehicle, was actually folded into a small space, they opened a hatch on the lander and took it out by hand, its actual weight on the moon was about 35 kilograms, so it was no Problem at all

    • @mtmindtoo7669
      @mtmindtoo7669 10 років тому +13

      Mynamenotimportant
      Hi, here's some footage of the rover being deployed on the moon;
      /watch?v=-ShauSWcTC4
      And here's the procedure being tested on earth;
      /watch?v=ObEjEEfnBj8
      I hope that helps.

    • @TerryBadger
      @TerryBadger 10 років тому +1

      ***** Typical NASA

  • @RobertSmith-gl5vs
    @RobertSmith-gl5vs 6 років тому

    Good video

  • @SEBAS31077
    @SEBAS31077 5 років тому

    Who is on the camera