The quality of this archive of Apollo 11 is amazing! The Legendary mission that made history. It's amazing to see this 54 years after it happened in this quality.
If you haven't seen the Apollo 11 movie that was released on 50th anniversary in 2019, you surely would love it. All original film from archives, rescanned at 16K I believe, and just unbelievable how sharp it looks as much of it was shot on IMAX cameras. I saw it on limited release in 2019 on IMAX screen, but on a home 4K TV it looks amazing too of course. It honestly makes all of this footage look like dirt.
I never cease to be amazed at the gullibility of people. There were no flights to the Moon. the first stage was only normal, and the rest were empty. In all the videos, the rocket takes off slower than necessary before launching into space. for example, in this video the moment of undocking of the rocket stages is accelerated by 1.33 times compared to the video from "Moonwalk One (1970)"
I've watched Apollo 11 liftoff hundreds of times, but still had to pause because tears clouded my eyes. In my lifetime, this will always be the crowning moment of what we human beings can achieve if we set our eyes on a common goal, and every individual doing their utmost. Thanks to all the heroes involved in past and future endeavors to explore and populate space.
On July 17th , while those boys were still on their way to making their legendary landing, my family was serving me my first birthday cake with only 1 little candle in it. I was still learning to walk and talk.
Seeing again the faces and voices of those years in the replay of the longest televised marathon that was the Apollo 11 mission - Walter Cronkite, Eric Sevareid, Jack King, A.C. Clarke, made like 54 years never truly passed...
Apollo 17 was the last to leave the moon- the liftoff video of the last moon walk is on UA-cam. I like to watch it and ponder how great this accomplishment was.
@@JusticeAlways An amazing part of history and the video shows how well of a job NASA did with the moon landings. Everyone should watch this important event and watch in awe as Apollo 17 leaves the moon surface as the last moon mission winds down into the history books.
The Apollo program consumed about 2.5% of US gross domestic product in the 1960s. By comparison, the Vietnam War was consuming 2.3% GDP, and the Manhattan Project consumed 0.4% GDP during its run. When one considers the enormity of the Apollo Program its seemingly unlikely success is more explainable. Apollo was an economic success too because each Dollar spent, perhaps invested is a better term, there was a five to seven Dollar return. 60+ years later all of us use technology daily which resulted from basic research to support Apollo which otherwise may have never been done, of if done, done later and on a smaller scale.
Yup. And all because the US had to one-up the Soviets. Let's be honest. That's all they cared about. (Not saying it was a bad thing. Going to the moon 6 times is an incredible feat)
@@bobtillman5769which is why NASA is so slow today with the Artemis program, if there was some “big bad guy” to beat, or other type of major political/competitive motivation to drive more funding and ambition toward NASA, we’d have already returned to the moon with constellation by 2019/2020, a permanent moonbase/outpost, and actual physical progress toward eventual manned NASA mars missions by the time I’m posting this unnecessary comment.
@@bobtillman5769 Yes, the purpose was to one-up the soviets, however there were parallel goals of improving the level of education in general and technological education in particular. The apparently civilian space program was also a way of funding parallel military technological development without calling it military funding per se (through military spending was already huge on its own).
*Fun Fact:* The first untethered spacewalk was by astronaut Bruce McCandless using the Manned Maneuvering Unit (MMU) during a Shuttle flight. But McCandless was also the Capsule Communicator (CAPCOM) during the Apollo 11 moonwalk. When Neil Armstrong started coming down the ladder of the LM, he pulled a cord that released a panel which had the TV camera mounted to it. As the images started to come in, that was Bruce McCandless saying _"We're getting a picture on the TV!"._
Конечно - ведь это обработанное и ускоренное видео... в частности момент отстыковки ступеней ракеты ускорен в 1,33 раза, чтобы соответствовать теоритически необходимой скорости полёта.
I was just a day over twenty five months old. My great grandmother watched this and the moon landing with the rest of the family at the time. She was born in 1882. Eight years old during the Wounded Knee Massacre, then on to the inventions of the radio, car, then both world wars, the invention of T.V., the Korean War, Vietnam and then to see the moon landing at 87 years of age. She died in 1972 at age 90. Quite an eventful stretch of time to be alive.
What a time to be 18 years old. Woodstock came one month later. You could watch the moon shot on TV or get drafted to go to Vietnam if you weren't bound for some university. I watched Neil step off the LEM and onto the lunar surface on a crummy little black-and-white TV late in the evening in the US eastern time zone. I confess, it didn't then have the impact on me that it has now. Whatever happens to humanity in the climate crisis, we can still sing, "They Can't Take That Away From Me", at least until there's nobody left to sing.
@@Ayeshteni Probably closer to a billion. In America there are 6% that believe it was a hoax, and 6% of 350 million is about 21 million. In England 25% believe its a hoax, so 25% of 53 million is 13.25 million. I could go on but the further you get from America the number goes up. Most people in my home town think its an outright lie to draw attention away from 'God'. My uncle went to his grave saying it was impossible to land on a 'light'.
I was just 15 when this happened and I was at my grandparents home. I remember the TV screen was so small back then and nothing like what we have had for decades. It will be really cool that my grandchildren will be at my home to watch when we go back to the moon in a couple years. Shalom
If only 4kHD technology existed on July 16, 1969. Imagine getting real-time SpaceX-style coverage on the Apollo 11 launch as opposed to the film camera footage from the two unmanned Saturn V launches (being Apollo 4 and Apollo 6).
When they landed on the moon, we were at my grandmother’s house. I was 6. She said, “I never thought I would see this in my life time.” I thought, don’t we do this all the time?
Im crying. I would have loved to be alive in that time.. i hope i can see something like this in my lifetime. Salute to everyone involved in such a fantastic mission
Yes it was an incredible time. As a 13 yo I was glued to TV for days. This was in my opinion man's most remarkable achievement. And something else, the broadcasting was something I miss. People like Walter Cronkite delivered news without all that juvenile nonsense that they find necessary today
I was 9 years old. I remember this interrupting my Flintstones cartoons I think .. I recall mainly them stepping off the platform. One small step..... They did all this with no internet and tubes in tv's..
Kind of a trip reading some of your comments about remembering this from childhood or early adulthood. Seems so long ago yet also not that long. My parents were 3 and 1 on this date, now I’m 36 with a 11 year old daughter.
I happened to be working in a newsroom in China during the early years of their manned spaceflight program and the similarities between their TV coverage and that done by Cronkite and CBS in 1969 were remarkable. The TV studio design and construction, use of scale models on the anchor desk, expert guest analysis from scientists and former astronauts. It will be interesting to see how they will cover China's first attempts at a crewed moon landing.
I know I could look it up, but I thought it might be fun to ask it here. Was the launch made on it's first attempt? I ask because many launches during this time of year are delayed simply because of weather. Apollo 11 launched right near the beginning of our stormy season here in Florida.
Yeah, we came together through our mutual fear of the Russian building a moon base or putting nukes in space. We can do anything if we allow our government to manipulate us into supporting thier projects.
@@FWtravels Oyeah, we definitely were united before then. the media and social media play a far bigger role than any individual. I mean look at you, you're part of the problem. You come in here on a topic about the moon landing to talk about Trump. You are literally sowing division. You're a joke and just as bad as any republican.
I'd say it started with the left. They've been doing this all over the world since the eighteen hundreds, at least. They even have had a whole team of intellectuals and faculties devoted to this for decades. But people are too lazy to check this out
I watched this in a bowling alley. Coin operated television. A quarter for every 15 minutes. I'd like to go back to my 14 year old self and show it to him on my cellphone.
Dear China and India and everyone else. This was 1969. It took the rest of you decades and none of you have put a human being on the moon. The USA is the greatest country in the history of the world. I will ignore all America hater's comments.
the lower stages did drop into the oceans yes. the 3rd stage and apollo spacecraft were visible from the ground as they were in orbit prepping for TLI.
So many bad things were happening in that time frame: MLK and RFK assassinations, civil rights struggle, anti-war demonstrations, Vietnam War, Tet Offensive, etc. Apollo 13 was the one shining light, showing all of humanity that we could work together for a better world, that things could and would get better.
@@rathertiredofthemess2841 Why not? It was the most expensive project ever. It required more technological innovation than anything else mankind has ever done, and it's not even close. It required more people and educated brains than anything in human history. Nothing comes close.
@@rathertiredofthemess2841 Nah. That was highly regional, took forever, and relied on brute force and slavery. The moon landing required the work of a MUCH larger portion of the world, was done far faster than anybody thought possible, and required vast amounts of innovation and tens of millions of people willingly working together, rather than a bunch of dead victims of Egyptian conquest and the Egyptian aristocracy. The pyramids are a monument of Egyptian power during the old kingdom, that's it.
@@boydrobertson2362 yeah the moon shot wasn’t brute force? I’d say it an extraordinary achievement to do either, but the first was done when in the Bronze Age. The space folks were more apt to succeed than the Pharaohs.
I’ve been watching the SpaceX and Starliner coverage and the young people providing coverage are very knowledgeable, but they don’t have the gravitas of Jack King, the voice of Launch Control. I also enjoyed listening to to Paul Haney, the voice of Mission Control.
I remember this happened just a few days after my 13th birthday. I'd persuaded mum and dad to let me have the day off school to watch it on our tv as I knew that the school would have some crappy tv at the end of an assembly hall and I see next to nothing. As it was, the transmission was pretty bad. I was struggling to tell what I was seeing. Our TV was badly positioned too and the glare from the sun reflected on the screen and washed it out. Still, I knew what a momentous event I was witnessing.
Once back in the command/service module they used the service module engine to achieve escape velocity from the moon. Once free of the moon’s gravity, earth’s gravity pulled them back. Starting from about 3600 mph at the moon they arrived back the earth travelling at almost earth’s escape velocity. They used the service module engine to slow the capsule enough to allow the command module to enter the atmosphere. The service module was jettisoned and discarded to go its own way, the atmosphere slowed the command module from 20,000 mph to a speed slow enough to allow parachutes to be deployed. The rest, I believe, you know.
Yep...I still remember when we watched rocket launches in school... I don't think the shuttle came out until 2nd grade... Back when we did nuclear drills in school.... God, I was so happy when they said the cold-war was over....
@@user-wb8iu1hl6i Unfortunately, anti-intellectualism permeates both left and right. Many on the left can't decide what gender is and where they fit. That is true.
There were no flights to the Moon. the first stage was only normal filled, and the rest were empty. In all the videos, the rocket takes off slower than necessary before launching into space. for example, in this video the moment of undocking of the rocket stages is accelerated by 1.33 times compared to the video from "Moonwalk One (1970)"
@@Greens_gambit NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft imaged the Apollo 11 landing site. The descent stage is visible along with the astronauts' footprints. In April 2021, The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO)'s Chandrayaan2 Orbiter captured images of NASA's Apollo 11 & 12 landing sites and Lunar Modules from 100km altitude. In the Apollo 12 image, Astronaut boot tracks are visible.
the first and second stage did... third stage was used to accelerate to TLI on the Apollo missions. For safety AP8, 10 and 11 TLI burn set the path to the moon on a free return trajectory...
Это провокатор . Чем хуже тем лучше... Обычный человек говорит то что думает. Если для меня выход на Луну имеет много сомнений, то совсем не означает того что мы будем врагами . В августе полетит Луна 25 , у вас полетит большая ракета Маска , это будет хорошее зрелище...
Oh they redid the footage to high quality did they. That’s convenient. In 2024 we can’t even get rovers to land upright or have rockets reliably take off without exploding in seconds 😂 but this happened in 1969 😂
Um... Yes, this happened in 1969. There was an estimated 1 million people that turned out to watch the launch, and there is plenty of footage of the crowds, so I'm not sure what in the world you're talking about. This was probably the most documented, single event of the 20th century.
You are delusional. We've launched many rockets successfully and landed craft even on Mars. There are footprints on the moon. We can spot them today. That's simply a fact.
The quality of this archive of Apollo 11 is amazing! The Legendary mission that made history.
It's amazing to see this 54 years after it happened in this quality.
If you haven't seen the Apollo 11 movie that was released on 50th anniversary in 2019, you surely would love it. All original film from archives, rescanned at 16K I believe, and just unbelievable how sharp it looks as much of it was shot on IMAX cameras. I saw it on limited release in 2019 on IMAX screen, but on a home 4K TV it looks amazing too of course.
It honestly makes all of this footage look like dirt.
Film, not video…
Кадры снятые через какую то тряпку . Тоже видел и это не нравится...
@@tunemxr480 The CBS News coverage of the Apollo 11 launch was recorded on magnetic video tape.
I never cease to be amazed at the gullibility of people. There were no flights to the Moon. the first stage was only normal, and the rest were empty. In all the videos, the rocket takes off slower than necessary before launching into space. for example, in this video the moment of undocking of the rocket stages is accelerated by 1.33 times compared to the video from "Moonwalk One (1970)"
I remember this moment like it was yesterday. Thanks CBS. R.I.P. Walter Cronkite, Neil Armstrong as well…
This event happened on my 14th birthday.
…two weeks before my sixth birthday
I remember it well. The quietest day all around the nation as everyone was in front of their TV watching history being made.
@@tunemxr480 ~2 weeks before my 6th birthday, too.
And R.I.P. Michael Collins who was in Columbia...
I've watched Apollo 11 liftoff hundreds of times, but still had to pause because tears clouded my eyes. In my lifetime, this will always be the crowning moment of what we human beings can achieve if we set our eyes on a common goal, and every individual doing their utmost. Thanks to all the heroes involved in past and future endeavors to explore and populate space.
So was I ...
On July 17th , while those boys were still on their way to making their legendary landing, my family was serving me my first birthday cake with only 1 little candle in it. I was still learning to walk and talk.
I was in summer school, between 1st and 2nd grade.
Happy Birthday
@@ChrisConner1 Thank You.
I was eight months old. Apparently I “watched” the landing on my mother’s knee. Don’t remember it, though.
500 years from now this will be the only thing they remember about us.
And nuclear fusion once we achieve it nothing else
Wow. even though I was 2 and half years old when they launched, 54 years later, the launch gives me chills.
Seeing again the faces and voices of those years in the replay of the longest televised marathon that was the Apollo 11 mission - Walter Cronkite, Eric Sevareid, Jack King, A.C. Clarke, made like 54 years never truly passed...
I remember that day and where I was as if it was yesterday 😮 what a beautiful memory
It never ever gets old!
And some folks still think not was faked.
Apollo 17 was the last to leave the moon- the liftoff video of the last moon walk is on UA-cam. I like to watch it and ponder how great this accomplishment was.
@@JusticeAlways
An amazing part of history and the video shows how well of a job NASA did with the moon landings.
Everyone should watch this important event and watch in awe as Apollo 17 leaves the moon surface as the last moon mission winds down into the history books.
Takes me back! I was glued to the TV then.
The Apollo program consumed about 2.5% of US gross domestic product in the 1960s. By comparison, the Vietnam War was consuming 2.3% GDP, and the Manhattan Project consumed 0.4% GDP during its run. When one considers the enormity of the Apollo Program its seemingly unlikely success is more explainable. Apollo was an economic success too because each Dollar spent, perhaps invested is a better term, there was a five to seven Dollar return. 60+ years later all of us use technology daily which resulted from basic research to support Apollo which otherwise may have never been done, of if done, done later and on a smaller scale.
Velcro, for instance…
Velcro came way back just after WWII
Yup. And all because the US had to one-up the Soviets. Let's be honest. That's all they cared about. (Not saying it was a bad thing. Going to the moon 6 times is an incredible feat)
@@bobtillman5769which is why NASA is so slow today with the Artemis program, if there was some “big bad guy” to beat, or other type of major political/competitive motivation to drive more funding and ambition toward NASA, we’d have already returned to the moon with constellation by 2019/2020, a permanent moonbase/outpost, and actual physical progress toward eventual manned NASA mars missions by the time I’m posting this unnecessary comment.
@@bobtillman5769 Yes, the purpose was to one-up the soviets, however there were parallel goals of improving the level of education in general and technological education in particular. The apparently civilian space program was also a way of funding parallel military technological development without calling it military funding per se (through military spending was already huge on its own).
*Fun Fact:* The first untethered spacewalk was by astronaut Bruce McCandless using the Manned Maneuvering Unit (MMU) during a Shuttle flight. But McCandless was also the Capsule Communicator (CAPCOM) during the Apollo 11 moonwalk. When Neil Armstrong started coming down the ladder of the LM, he pulled a cord that released a panel which had the TV camera mounted to it. As the images started to come in, that was Bruce McCandless saying _"We're getting a picture on the TV!"._
Nice n' clear. Thanks CBS... The once king of news reporting.
Конечно - ведь это обработанное и ускоренное видео... в частности момент отстыковки ступеней ракеты ускорен в 1,33 раза, чтобы соответствовать теоритически необходимой скорости полёта.
The Saturn V blasting off is still the most impressive display of power ever!!
It seemed a little slow, compared to recent ones.
Awesome launch
@@jilbertbWell yeah, it’s also the heaviest rocket ever
@@jilbertbIt was 3,000 tons very heavy
@@Veegs. >> Well, Starship is the heaviest rocket ever. It’s an iterative process!
Watched it live and it’s good to see it again!
I was in 4th grade
Доказательств, что полётов на Луну не было огромное количество.. как можно быть такими глупыми?
Awesome!.. I saw Buzz Aldrin speak for an hour here in NZ in 2010 about his experience ON the Moon and in space.. great achievement 👍🚀🇳🇿
Never get tired of seeing those F1 roar to life.
I was just a day over twenty five months old. My great grandmother watched this and the moon landing with the rest of the family at the time. She was born in 1882. Eight years old during the Wounded Knee Massacre, then on to the inventions of the radio, car, then both world wars, the invention of T.V., the Korean War, Vietnam and then to see the moon landing at 87 years of age. She died in 1972 at age 90. Quite an eventful stretch of time to be alive.
What a time to be 18 years old. Woodstock came one month later. You could watch the moon shot on TV or get drafted to go to Vietnam if you weren't bound for some university. I watched Neil step off the LEM and onto the lunar surface on a crummy little black-and-white TV late in the evening in the US eastern time zone. I confess, it didn't then have the impact on me that it has now. Whatever happens to humanity in the climate crisis, we can still sing, "They Can't Take That Away From Me", at least until there's nobody left to sing.
watch this is like seeing a old friend
The greatest journey of exploration that man has ever embarked on took place on that date.
The crazy part is hundreds of millions of people still think this was a hoax.
I hate when people say that
I wouldn't say hundreds of millions...
@@Ayeshteni Probably closer to a billion.
In America there are 6% that believe it was a hoax, and 6% of 350 million is about 21 million.
In England 25% believe its a hoax, so 25% of 53 million is 13.25 million.
I could go on but the further you get from America the number goes up.
Most people in my home town think its an outright lie to draw attention away from 'God'.
My uncle went to his grave saying it was impossible to land on a 'light'.
@@tarandfeathersallgov
It’s you that needs to wake up. When you have a valid explanation for EASEP, ALSEP, and LRRR then we might listen to you
@@yelleryoung5870
If I lived in a place with so many dummies I’d move!
I was just 15 when this happened and I was at my grandparents home. I remember the TV screen was so small back then and nothing like what we have had for decades. It will be really cool that my grandchildren will be at my home to watch when we go back to the moon in a couple years. Shalom
Superb video and audio quality. Thank you for making this archive video available!
If only 4kHD technology existed on July 16, 1969. Imagine getting real-time SpaceX-style coverage on the Apollo 11 launch as opposed to the film camera footage from the two unmanned Saturn V launches (being Apollo 4 and Apollo 6).
What an amazing achievement. This is getting me excited for humans to get back on the moon with Artemis! 🙌
A very special memory indeed.❤
The narration by Walter Cronkite makes it all that much better!
A moment in history that I will never forget...
США обманули весь Мир - но об этом быстро забудут
When they landed on the moon, we were at my grandmother’s house. I was 6. She said, “I never thought I would see this in my life time.” I thought, don’t we do this all the time?
Im crying. I would have loved to be alive in that time.. i hope i can see something like this in my lifetime.
Salute to everyone involved in such a fantastic mission
Yes it was an incredible time. As a 13 yo I was glued to TV for days. This was in my opinion man's most remarkable achievement. And something else, the broadcasting was something I miss. People like Walter Cronkite delivered news without all that juvenile nonsense that they find necessary today
Crazy we did this 54 years ago!
Yes!
And China is SO excited, they just built their first plane!!!
@@jilbertb:Yeah but China also put men in orbit years ago.
I have family members (who are fully grown human beings) who think this is all *fake*
...and then they wonder why i dont want to have children
The Saturn V and Saturn 1B were great rockets
What a sweet moment from my childhood!
a wonderful moment
I was 9 years old. I remember this interrupting my Flintstones cartoons I think .. I recall mainly them stepping off the platform. One small step..... They did all this with no internet and tubes in tv's..
there was a full moon up at my HS at night, and I looked up to the moon and thought: wow, there's men up there!!
Kind of a trip reading some of your comments about remembering this from childhood or early adulthood. Seems so long ago yet also not that long. My parents were 3 and 1 on this date, now I’m 36 with a 11 year old daughter.
What a mankind had achieve in so a short time, amazing.
I love that beep, and narrative t minus 12 11 0 lift off we got a lift off 3:30 eastern standard time, Houston do you copy.
That was also the day I was born. What an amazing thing to have shared on my Birth!
Funny how the commentators in the late 60's sound so much more intelligent than today's commentators .
Probably because they were.
Impressive
I happened to be working in a newsroom in China during the early years of their manned spaceflight program and the similarities between their TV coverage and that done by Cronkite and CBS in 1969 were remarkable. The TV studio design and construction, use of scale models on the anchor desk, expert guest analysis from scientists and former astronauts. It will be interesting to see how they will cover China's first attempts at a crewed moon landing.
I know I could look it up, but I thought it might be fun to ask it here. Was the launch made on it's first attempt? I ask because many launches during this time of year are delayed simply because of weather. Apollo 11 launched right near the beginning of our stormy season here in Florida.
Interesting question and you’re right, I too would need to hunt up that information.
Can anyone tell me what's happening at around 6:09, please?
It looks like a separation beginning to happen but I know it couldn't be…
I think it's condensation from the supersonic shockwave.
@@wtmvm thanks👍
Thank U TEAM!
Proof that as Americans, we can attain anything, but not if we remain divided.
Yeah, we came together through our mutual fear of the Russian building a moon base or putting nukes in space.
We can do anything if we allow our government to manipulate us into supporting thier projects.
Thank trump for dividing us so bad
@@FWtravels Oyeah, we definitely were united before then. the media and social media play a far bigger role than any individual.
I mean look at you, you're part of the problem. You come in here on a topic about the moon landing to talk about Trump. You are literally sowing division. You're a joke and just as bad as any republican.
@@FWtravels oh I’d say it started with Reagan.
I'd say it started with the left. They've been doing this all over the world since the eighteen hundreds, at least. They even have had a whole team of intellectuals and faculties devoted to this for decades. But people are too lazy to check this out
Well....I'm glad WE GOT von Braun .
The greatest technical achievement by mankind in my view.
here 55 years later
2:28 "Temperatures and pressures..."
They are really serious about their science, those folks at NASA...
I watched this in a bowling alley. Coin operated television. A quarter for every 15 minutes. I'd like to go back to my 14 year old self and show it to him on my cellphone.
In 200 years: “Class, raise your hand if you know anything about the United States of America”
Post-America student: “They landed people on the Moon”
Saturn V, a rocket that never failed...
never failed enough at least (it had several issues, including engines failing)
I was 5 years old in kindergarten
Dear China and India and everyone else. This was 1969. It took the rest of you decades and none of you have put a human being on the moon. The USA is the greatest country in the history of the world. I will ignore all America hater's comments.
Its heading for the ocean
the lower stages did drop into the oceans yes. the 3rd stage and apollo spacecraft were visible from the ground as they were in orbit prepping for TLI.
So many bad things were happening in that time frame: MLK and RFK assassinations, civil rights struggle, anti-war demonstrations, Vietnam War, Tet Offensive, etc.
Apollo 13 was the one shining light, showing all of humanity that we could work together for a better world, that things could and would get better.
Mankind's greatest achievement! What a glorious event to witness.
Greatest achievement?👀. I wouldn’t say that!
@@rathertiredofthemess2841 Why not? It was the most expensive project ever. It required more technological innovation than anything else mankind has ever done, and it's not even close. It required more people and educated brains than anything in human history. Nothing comes close.
@@boydrobertson2362 well? I’d say building things like the Pyramids without machinery is right up there.
@@rathertiredofthemess2841 Nah. That was highly regional, took forever, and relied on brute force and slavery. The moon landing required the work of a MUCH larger portion of the world, was done far faster than anybody thought possible, and required vast amounts of innovation and tens of millions of people willingly working together, rather than a bunch of dead victims of Egyptian conquest and the Egyptian aristocracy.
The pyramids are a monument of Egyptian power during the old kingdom, that's it.
@@boydrobertson2362 yeah the moon shot wasn’t brute force? I’d say it an extraordinary achievement to do either, but the first was done when in the Bronze Age. The space folks were more apt to succeed than the Pharaohs.
History. And yet. . . To all those clowns 🤡 who deny it ever happened- Grow Up ❕️
这是我的一小步,却是人类的一大步
50 years before this the plane was invented
LIFTOFF we have a liftoff 32 minutes pass the hour liftoff of apollo 11.
What a great video
Apollo 11 is true,
That was a good day. God bless America. 🙏💛🙌🇺🇸
Name
This is how you do it Elon.
I’ve been watching the SpaceX and Starliner coverage and the young people providing coverage are very knowledgeable, but they don’t have the gravitas of Jack King, the voice of Launch Control. I also enjoyed listening to to Paul Haney, the voice of Mission Control.
At 10,000 feet per second how can the only be at 70 miles 2-mins into flight. The math isn’t right.
It's accelerating. At T+0 seconds it's at zero feet per second.
I remember this happened just a few days after my 13th birthday.
I'd persuaded mum and dad to let me have the day off school to watch it on our tv as I knew that the school would have some crappy tv at the end of an assembly hall and I see next to nothing.
As it was, the transmission was pretty bad. I was struggling to tell what I was seeing.
Our TV was badly positioned too and the glare from the sun reflected on the screen and washed it out.
Still, I knew what a momentous event I was witnessing.
School, this was during Summer vacation.
@@edwardpate6128 You automatically presume I'm in America.
Our summer holidays are in December.
我的天,你多少岁了
So how did they return to the earth???
They hitchhiked via VW hippie van
Once back in the command/service module they used the service module engine to achieve escape velocity from the moon. Once free of the moon’s gravity, earth’s gravity pulled them back. Starting from about 3600 mph at the moon they arrived back the earth travelling at almost earth’s escape velocity. They used the service module engine to slow the capsule enough to allow the command module to enter the atmosphere. The service module was jettisoned and discarded to go its own way, the atmosphere slowed the command module from 20,000 mph to a speed slow enough to allow parachutes to be deployed. The rest, I believe, you know.
@@boycott-Msnbc: I think it was actually the Mystery Machine.
Yep...I still remember when we watched rocket launches in school... I don't think the shuttle came out until 2nd grade... Back when we did nuclear drills in school.... God, I was so happy when they said the cold-war was over....
The saddest part,we had better technology back than
my mom was 1 year old
I was 9!
Brilliant video!
I want to do that.
Фриянка кульбароса букта стика рубикон лояска кафритакуска бундароса кухкаруска.
We had a purpose back then. Now, we can't even figure out what gender we are. How far we have fallen.
Lol, nowadays half of the country are tinfoil hats who don't even think the moon landing happened. But sure blame gay people for anti-intellectualism
@@user-wb8iu1hl6i Unfortunately, anti-intellectualism permeates both left and right. Many on the left can't decide what gender is and where they fit. That is true.
they landed today.;
🇺🇸
There were no flights to the Moon. the first stage was only normal filled, and the rest were empty. In all the videos, the rocket takes off slower than necessary before launching into space. for example, in this video the moment of undocking of the rocket stages is accelerated by 1.33 times compared to the video from "Moonwalk One (1970)"
LOL and you know this because someone told you on youtube?
@carlhawkins-tu9yl you know bc someone told you on TV
You are delusional. There are footprints on the moon. How do you think they got there?
Did you saw the footprints ?! 😂 our strongest telescopes cant do that. And i have fact checked that
@donjindra
@@Greens_gambit NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft imaged the Apollo 11 landing site. The descent stage is visible along with the astronauts' footprints.
In April 2021, The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO)'s Chandrayaan2 Orbiter captured images of NASA's Apollo 11 & 12 landing sites and Lunar Modules from 100km altitude. In the Apollo 12 image, Astronaut boot tracks are visible.
So did this rocket just drop into the ocean like most all of North Korea's passive aggressive sparklers?
the first and second stage did... third stage was used to accelerate to TLI on the Apollo missions. For safety AP8, 10 and 11 TLI burn set the path to the moon on a free return trajectory...
Apparently it matters to few here that it completely changed trajectory to flying sideways then to the point of tilting downwards ...
You are seeing what you want to see.
What did you expect it to do?
It's like you never held a camera except in one position.
@@donjindra What a ridiculous statement. Even if you turn the camera, the picture will be in an upright position. What world do you live in?
@@JohnHazenhousen Continue upwards... SMH
Did they evah get there ???😮
#:## ##:## left BRUH TAGS-
Гугразия мордокрет гудрофолт ияска.
Лартака сток бунданка рок 👍 фияркута бонза бугазотка тутка сияние бухта.
Каркустка страктакта барзактория бакраска буструкт фиграния фидачкот.
Гуфиниякта гадраст.
Did it ever get there? \(°•°)\
yes.They sure did.
Дранкта гулизгат кадраскта гублана лугарот бензикта кугланкта лигазот трикдрастка.
301st comment.
Whats with the Rus wumao in the comments?!
Это провокатор . Чем хуже тем лучше... Обычный человек говорит то что думает. Если для меня выход на Луну имеет много сомнений, то совсем не означает того что мы будем
врагами . В августе полетит
Луна 25 , у вас полетит большая ракета Маска , это будет хорошее зрелище...
Гардрикта мугазот боракта каскрот ияхта гуфраниякта гудракт.
Крагунана бракта дриктоскт кубланкт гизания гранкта каринакт габланкта графинкта.
Oh they redid the footage to high quality did they. That’s convenient. In 2024 we can’t even get rovers to land upright or have rockets reliably take off without exploding in seconds 😂 but this happened in 1969 😂
Um... Yes, this happened in 1969. There was an estimated 1 million people that turned out to watch the launch, and there is plenty of footage of the crowds, so I'm not sure what in the world you're talking about. This was probably the most documented, single event of the 20th century.
@celica1740 Huh? Next time just bang your forehead on the keyboard. It will make more sense.
You are delusional. We've launched many rockets successfully and landed craft even on Mars. There are footprints on the moon. We can spot them today. That's simply a fact.
Maybe China will get there one day
Chances are good.
Easily
Already did. Just not with people.
@@msidc1238 well, if you're including 'not with people' then Voyager has reached the Kuiper Belt.
Ah, the old NSAS. Elon Musk is taking over now
Fake
Thick
tens of thousands watched this live.
Delusional.