Apollo 17 Launch - CSM Onboard Audio

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 29 сер 2012
  • Apollo 17 launch - December 1972. This is the onboard CSM recording of Cernan, Evans and Schmitt. The video starts with the TV broadcast of the countdown. The CSM audio can first be heard at T-30sec. The sequence ends just after S2 cut off.
    Video is approximately synched to audio. Orbiter Spaceflight Simulator is used to add a visual after S1C burnout. The actual launch was in darkness and I have used a "daylight" launch sequence to show the sequence (or nothing but a faint glow would be seen!).
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 240

  • @104thDIVTimberwolf
    @104thDIVTimberwolf 5 років тому +55

    Of all of the astronauts whom I've had the privilege of meeting, I was most in awe of Armstrong and Aldrin, but I enjoyed talking to Cernan the most. This was his second ride on a Saturn V and second trip to the moon (he was the Lunar Module Pilot on Apollo 10) and you can still hear his amazement at the ride.

    • @naughtydog201
      @naughtydog201 5 років тому +4

      104thDIVTimberwolf How did you come by the fortune of meeting so many of the Apollo astronauts? Many people would consider themselves fortunate to meet even one of them during their lifetime

    • @brentboswell1294
      @brentboswell1294 4 роки тому +6

      I shook hands with John Young in 1982 at an air show, I was only 10 years old. I knew him from the Space Shuttle, had no idea until much later that he was also an Apollo astronaut! 8 years later, I was working at the airport as a lineboy during college, and our most important customer (the owner of the Ford dealer) was a Mr. Frank Borman, had no idea he was an Apollo astronaut until later...he owned a sweet TF-51 (P-51 Mustang with an instructor's seat in the back) and a Mitsubishi MU-2, put fuel in both of them...

  • @hotdog8214
    @hotdog8214 5 років тому +105

    Try to digest this in your mind..This machine was 363 feet tall and 8 million pounds..it achieved a speed of 6000 mph in 3 minutes as it was heading out... absolutely hands down the most bad ass thing man ever made

    • @WhoisVinnie
      @WhoisVinnie 4 роки тому +1

      Yep! It's considered to be the tallest rocket ever built. Until SLS, or big Falcon.

    • @russells9687
      @russells9687 4 роки тому +9

      Actually, Patrick, the total vehicle weight was something like 6.2 million pounds (with a first stage liftoff thrust of 7.5 million), but what's a couple of million pounds between friends? : ]

    • @F-Man
      @F-Man 4 роки тому +5

      Indeed. And that’s why the Saturn V has got to be the single greatest device ever crafted by the minds and hands of men.

    • @1697djh
      @1697djh 4 роки тому +2

      Great German engineering

    • @Jellybeantiger
      @Jellybeantiger 4 роки тому +5

      The coolest looking rocket ever made.

  • @throatgorge2
    @throatgorge2 11 років тому +24

    I was there, age 5, sitting on the roof of my parent's station wagon. lots of people parked outside a chain link fence to watch lawn chairs. lots of excitement. God what a roar! It was awesome!

  • @shredder0073
    @shredder0073 5 років тому +15

    Since 1961 I grew up on the space coast as a kid. My dad was an engineer for a NASA subcontractor. Every launch from the Mercury to the Gemini to the Apollo, I watched from my backyard. This particular launch though, was special to me. The last of the Apollo Saturn 5 rocket, was to be launched at night, was when I was 13. I wanted to view it up close. My father was able to get our family VIP seats for the launch. It was and will always be the most amazing thing I will ever see in my lifetime,. The unbelievable rumbling, followed by the night sky turning in to daylight. To this day, I've never felt so proud to be an American. Afterwards, the Apollo program shut down...the Nixon scandal began...and even though I still was proud of the USA... I felt as though I was told that Santa Claus didn't exist for the second time. But I still had the memory of that one beautiful night.

    • @Camop-iz9kt
      @Camop-iz9kt Рік тому

      The first Saturn V launch must have blown you away!

  • @daffidavit
    @daffidavit 6 років тому +28

    Gene Cernan was one of my favorites. RIP Gene.

  • @onlyme112
    @onlyme112 11 років тому +38

    Loved hearing the banter and laughter between the astronauts. It's a reminder of what an exhilarating ride it must have been, not some solemn and fear-filled experience. This adds a whole new dimension to these historic missions. Thank you!

    • @F-Man
      @F-Man 4 роки тому +5

      I love hearing these guys just being a bunch of big, highly skilled and highly trained, kids. Consummate professionals they all were, but the raw power and unfathomable cool factor of that big Saturn brought out the 10 year old in all of them!

  • @At0micPunk90
    @At0micPunk90 11 років тому +17

    Fitting that the final Apollo launch was probably the most impressive.

  • @bozhijak
    @bozhijak 2 роки тому +5

    Me and my dad were 5 miles away when she went up. ULTIMATE !! the very air shook and in your chest!

  • @JosephHF
    @JosephHF 8 років тому +30

    I just can't get enough of this recording.

  • @olentangy74
    @olentangy74 12 років тому +12

    I love this. I last saw this on launch night 40 years ago. I was 18. Cernan was having the time of his life, and so was Evans and Schmitt.

  • @david-joeklotz9558
    @david-joeklotz9558 3 роки тому +8

    "Those are kind words Robert" :-] RIP Captain Cernan. You were a humble man and the astronaut's astronaut. And a naval aviator to your core

  • @MegaFPVFlyer
    @MegaFPVFlyer 8 років тому +32

    I absolutely loved their reactions to the G forces
    "I can barely hold my hand up!"
    And of course the sound of them getting thrown forward after S-IC cutoff.

  • @JacksonTyler
    @JacksonTyler 9 років тому +49

    Gene Cernan is and always was a great talker. When he said "What a ride, babe - what a ride" on Apollo 10, it sent chills down my spine. Listening to Gene and Jack during 17's landing, Charlie and John during 16's landing, and Pete and Al during 12's landing is a hell of a lot of fun. Ron Evans' reaction to S-IC staging is hilarious! Thank you very much for this awesome audio. You feel like you're really on board.

    • @JacksonTyler
      @JacksonTyler 8 років тому +9

      That was Ron Evans, who did not heed Commander Cernan's warning to "hold on". As for the "look at that sunofabitch", I believe that was Cernan. Jack would have been busy monitoring the cabin depressurization, and Cernan was actively engaged in conversation with Evans on the experience of the launch regarding vibrations and Max-Q.
      "This thing shakes like a son-of-a!" - Ron
      "Yeah that's max-Q" - Gene
      Thanks for the question! Always love getting a chance to share information that is useless most of the time in my day-to-day life, but what the heck - its fun for me.

    • @JacksonTyler
      @JacksonTyler 8 років тому +2

      Cernan and Schmitt most definitely have incredibly similar voices, especially on the "tonsil mics" used by the astronauts.
      As for EVA footage - Cernan (the commander) is wearing the red-striped suit, a nice feature implemented on Apollo 14.

    • @Benex101
      @Benex101 8 років тому +4

      +Jackson Tyler My favorite remark from Cernan was "Son of a bitch" as the LM was tumbling over around 10k feet over the moon :P
      E: And getting within 5-10 degree towards gimbal lock, btw

    • @brucetharpe762
      @brucetharpe762 5 років тому +3

      *Staging*
      Ron: JESUS CHRIST!
      Gene: Look at that son - bitch!
      Ron: WOOHOO JESUS CHRIST!

  • @TomTimeTraveler
    @TomTimeTraveler 3 роки тому +5

    Watching the Apollo videos never gets old.

  • @Fitfirefighter
    @Fitfirefighter 11 років тому +8

    You can tell how much Cernan truly had a heart for what he was doing!

  • @edfou5
    @edfou5 9 років тому +77

    I had the immense good fortune about ten years ago to meet Gene Cernan and have a long conversation with him, and I gotta say...
    Coolest guy in the universe.

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  9 років тому +8

      edfou5 anytime you get to meet a moonwalker, that's got to be a good moment!

    • @Zoomer30
      @Zoomer30 9 років тому +4

      You should look up the story about the guy who was making the Lunar Landing simulator game for PC, on his own. He was showing it off at bar on his Alienware laptop and who should walk over and introduce himself
      Gene Cernan. Naturally they "programmer pilot" handed the controls over to "the guy that actually did it". He was quite impressed and said it was spot on except for the placeholder radio calls, since (ironically) the mission he had up was Apollo 17 but he had a few "1201 program alarms" which only happened on Apollo 11. Had to be a big moment.

    • @JosephHF
      @JosephHF 7 років тому

      Right-O, babe.

    • @seanbaskett5506
      @seanbaskett5506 6 років тому

      I hope I end up looking like him when I'm older.

    • @tonyholder4326
      @tonyholder4326 6 років тому

      if i get to meet any of the apollo astronauts i would go straight to heaven

  • @skyprop
    @skyprop 9 років тому +31

    Apollo 17 'Cussing all the way to orbit" :)

  • @bethmcavoy8062
    @bethmcavoy8062 7 років тому +14

    Terrific com from Gene, Ron, and Jack. They sounded like kids on the ride of their lives ( which they were!) Capt. Gene is all business, keeping them focused on the mission, pushing ahead.
    Rest In Peace, Gene, Heaven just got the life of the party walking through the door! 🇺🇸

  • @heythere135
    @heythere135 3 роки тому +3

    I come back to this video time and time again. It never gets old listening to the banter and reactions of everything happening. Especially that S1C staging. Man that whole experience on board must've been something else... Incredible!

  • @aceblazer25
    @aceblazer25 8 років тому +28

    "We're in a roll Bob!"

  • @christufts5286
    @christufts5286 7 років тому +12

    I pains me a little to think of how people used to live moments instead of being so focused on capturing moments... If that were today, it would be a field of smartphones in the air.

  • @Plumbership
    @Plumbership 9 років тому +22

    That night launch must have been incredible to watch...

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  9 років тому +9

      Plumbership For those of us that didnt see it we will always be very envious of those who did - regards LM5

    • @TimothyOBrien1958
      @TimothyOBrien1958 9 років тому +6

      ***** I saw it live

    • @MrLaughmaster1
      @MrLaughmaster1 5 років тому +7

      I lived in DeLand and we watched from the backyard about 60 miles away probably more. The sky lit up brighter than daylight! Those who did not see a Saturn 5 launch and only shuttles and such cannot understand. So powerful.

    • @russells9687
      @russells9687 4 роки тому

      Lucky enough to be at the KSC Press Site (approx. 3 miles). Not only did we watch it... we felt it too: the noise and vibration of course, but also the warmth on our faces from the F-1 fire on what had become after midnight a chilly December morning in rural central Florida. Unforgettable.

  • @w9gb
    @w9gb 5 років тому +7

    This launch was special, being the only night-time launch of the Saturn V.

  • @slehar
    @slehar 3 роки тому +4

    Awesome moments in history! Amazing reconstruction! Like I was there and saw it all myself. Thanks!

  • @bradrtorgersen_videos
    @bradrtorgersen_videos 3 роки тому +3

    Staging: "JEEEEZUS Christ!" That *bump* from SI to SII was legendary.

  • @EricIrl
    @EricIrl 10 років тому +6

    Nice to hear the internal intercom communications between the crew. Not heard that before.

  • @olentangy74
    @olentangy74 12 років тому +4

    it is a wonderful channel you have. A real labor of love. Although I followed the shuttle flights, I feel that nothing had the excitement factor like Apollo did. I am still an Apollo geek. (I still have the original mission patches framed in velvet in my office on the wall to my left.).I pray that one day our manned program will return strong. So sorry for the passing of Niel Armstrong.

  • @johnpaulmierz6978
    @johnpaulmierz6978 5 років тому +16

    This was the last time that we witnessed mankind at its finest I was so sad after 17 I thought we'd be having moon base in 10 years I'm 64 and I'm still waiting

    • @bipolarbear9917
      @bipolarbear9917 3 роки тому +2

      Totally agree. I turn 64 in 6 days time. We're the Children of Apollo, and those were the days. It gave us the belief that we could do anything we put our mind to. Now we live in the age of disinformation and fake news, where cynicism and narcissism rule, where millennials and Gen Z (Zoomers) are obsessively glued to their smartphones like mindless anti-social zombies. You have people believing in 'Flat Earth' and QAnon conspiracy theories. WTF happened to our world?

  • @aarondelong9926
    @aarondelong9926 11 років тому +5

    Amazing stuff! Thanks for the work you've done here!

  • @yassm
    @yassm 6 років тому +6

    I love that sound from the command module 😍

  • @lousanto1054
    @lousanto1054 3 роки тому +2

    This was the only moon launch during my lifetime. When I am going through a stage of depression, I turn this on and it cheers me up. I first taped the launch when it aired on a documentary in 1986 and would play it back.
    5:58 Cernan was a hoot! "Jesus Christ...look at that sonofabitch" he says after the 1st stage separates. He was SO animated during the launches!

  • @RobertRFalk
    @RobertRFalk 10 років тому +11

    Love these videos, thanks for posting them!! I really enjoy listening to the CSM audio.

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  10 років тому +3

      Rob Falk Glad you like it Rob - keep watching!

  • @Peter_1986
    @Peter_1986 3 роки тому +1

    Me and my family used to travel on vacation in the middle of the night during the 90s in order to avoid the heat during the day, and I always found that very thrilling. I can't imagine what it must have felt like to travel _into space_ during the night.

  • @robbhahn8897
    @robbhahn8897 5 років тому +5

    Fascinating. I remember watching the A17 launch on TV after waiting out the initial launch Hold. Really interesting to hear what was going on inside the cm with the astronauts themselves.

  • @TimothyOBrien1958
    @TimothyOBrien1958 9 років тому +49

    I watched this live.

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  9 років тому +5

      Timothy O'Brien I am enviius!!

    • @TimothyOBrien1958
      @TimothyOBrien1958 9 років тому +6

      I saw every Apollo launch. And my Earth Science Teacher from 9th Grade worked with NASA till his retirement after Apollo 14.

    • @iNDREI_Ro
      @iNDREI_Ro 9 років тому

      Timothy O'Brien Lucky! I'm too young and on a different continent.

    • @TimothyOBrien1958
      @TimothyOBrien1958 9 років тому +3

      It's amazing for me now to watch the old films of the launches. I don't much remember Mercury. I'm sure I watched launches. But I was only five when Faith 7 launched. I was three when Freedom 7 launched. I remember Gemini.

    • @iNDREI_Ro
      @iNDREI_Ro 9 років тому +1

      The sight and aseptically the sound, must of been... breath taking!

  • @blueb0g
    @blueb0g 11 років тому +5

    God damn, your videos are a goldmine. Fantastic videos.

  • @realmarcusfontaine
    @realmarcusfontaine 10 років тому +15

    Those were the days, going to the Moon.

  • @chesterfran1
    @chesterfran1 11 років тому +2

    A great video. Love watching this one. Nice work again!!!

  • @lunarmodule5
    @lunarmodule5  10 років тому +7

    Welcome aboard!

  • @Astrobrant2
    @Astrobrant2 5 років тому +3

    I never heard this before. Great video. Thanks a lot!

  • @joeritchie8653
    @joeritchie8653 5 років тому +2

    I was fortunate to meet Herman Schmitt when he came to talk at the University of Mount Union. Very interesting and inspiring. Wishing we would have kept going on the Apollo missions.

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  5 років тому +3

      I take it you mean Harrison...not Herman?

  • @eternal5930
    @eternal5930 5 років тому +3

    That was the 2nd rocket launch I ever saw. My first was Apollo 13.

  • @GaryW48
    @GaryW48 11 років тому +2

    I still remember watching this launch on NBC-TV. The networks had to use special filters through the camera lens to prevent the TV camera tubes from burning out due to the extreme difference between the black sky and the searing bright light of engine ignition. They placed a camera a few miles away at a building, 'Top of the Cape' in Cocoa Beach to show how bright Merritt Island became after the Saturn V cleared the tower. TV showed the blue exhaust light, from the kerosene burning 1st stage.

  • @MightySaturn5
    @MightySaturn5 11 років тому +1

    what a great clip, thanks again

  • @gavinmackie5185
    @gavinmackie5185 10 років тому +9

    A silver star for the launch, a gold star for LM5.

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  10 років тому +7

      Always got red or green ones at school...! Nice to get gold lol

  • @TheSports50
    @TheSports50 Рік тому +1

    What a moment to be a part of in US space history

  • @aliens12341
    @aliens12341 2 роки тому +1

    You can feel the utter joy of the astronauts during this launch

  • @moocow256
    @moocow256 11 років тому +5

    Is there any CSM Onboard Audio for the other launches? Really great upload.

  • @lunarmodule5
    @lunarmodule5  10 років тому +5

    Well, Apollo 12 is available - but I havent got the others as they still are to be released

  • @seanbaskett5506
    @seanbaskett5506 6 років тому +12

    Five seconds (until staging).........JESUS CHRIST! Told 'ya to hold on. Lookit that sumbitch! That competes with John Young's farts and F Bombs on the moon as the best conversation ever held in a spacecraft.

    • @ShazzleDazzle87
      @ShazzleDazzle87 6 років тому +2

      Sean Baskett Pete Conrad's hysterical laughter after the lightning strike is one my faves

    • @devintariel3769
      @devintariel3769 4 роки тому

      @@ShazzleDazzle87 "what the hell was that?"

  • @pajasa62
    @pajasa62 4 роки тому +1

    Looking at this now is one thing, but watching these missions live was another matter. I found the lunar module descents incredibly emotionally scary...particularly Charlie Duke’s voice on Apollo 16...I had an absolute pit in my stomach.

  • @DrMackSplackem
    @DrMackSplackem 4 роки тому +2

    Dawn arrives quickly after a night launch.

  • @AOXOMOXO
    @AOXOMOXO 6 років тому +1

    Great stuff!

  • @thydusk666
    @thydusk666 12 років тому +1

    Beautiful, thanks for posting and congrats for your work! I wish some telemetry data was available as well. More food for mind, if you know what I mean :)

  • @Buzzbox3rd
    @Buzzbox3rd 10 років тому +2

    Brilliant !!!!

  • @DeathStarBH2011
    @DeathStarBH2011 11 років тому +2

    Great job lunarmodule5! To me Apollo 17 is one of the most interesting missions of the Apollo Program. Thank you so much.

  • @don312000
    @don312000 11 років тому +3

    Great clip! Is there any footage of the abort a few hours earlier where the count stopped at T-30 seconds?

  • @rogerdavis3896
    @rogerdavis3896 4 місяці тому

    The Saturn V contained 98 railroad tank cars of fuel. A piece of trivia that I learned from Walter Cronkite, who called it “Ninety-eight railroad tank cars of highly volatile fuel.”

  • @Zoomer30
    @Zoomer30 9 років тому +11

    Would be nice to here something like this for Apollo 12.
    "one long bleeeeeeep as astronauts figure out they got hit by lightning..... "

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  9 років тому +2

      Heads Tails Thanks Tails !

    • @marvintpandroid2213
      @marvintpandroid2213 9 років тому +2

      Any time, its a good bit of audio, love the giggling

    • @tomjohnson7529
      @tomjohnson7529 9 років тому +4

      That's funny because Pete Conrad was famous for his foul language. NASA was worried he drop a few bombs over the hot mike. He said it would never be him though, but someone who didn't cuss who would slip up. He was correct. Ended up being Gene Cernan in Apollo 10 when a lunar gravity anomaly pulled 10 downward. He also dropped one during the launch of 17 just after staging.

    • @incargeek
      @incargeek 7 років тому +3

      John Young dropped the best ones on a hot mike during Apollo 16

    • @johnvargo7338
      @johnvargo7338 5 років тому

      "here"?

  • @lawrencet83
    @lawrencet83 8 років тому +11

    Conspiracy theories believers that believe we never landed on the moon are obviously are the ones who gave the 4 thumbs down. LAMF!

    • @MrDoneboy
      @MrDoneboy 6 років тому

      Stupid pinko-commies voted down their flat earth asses!

    • @richardvernon317
      @richardvernon317 4 роки тому

      @@MrDoneboy I think you will find that most of the Moon Hoaxers are right wing. Fox TV isn't known for its left wing content.

  • @williamdunphy352
    @williamdunphy352 6 років тому +1

    Chuck Hollinshead is in Apollo Saturn Launch Control.

  • @wonder528
    @wonder528 12 років тому

    damn interesting! thanks for putting it up. anymore to come?

  • @woodykelleher9253
    @woodykelleher9253 3 роки тому +1

    Night time launch! Neat!

  • @MrBimirud
    @MrBimirud 4 роки тому +2

    @10:39 “Am I glad I took my hand off that abort handle.” WHAT!?!

  • @taylerkzz2818
    @taylerkzz2818 3 роки тому

    I was 8 yrs old ,all I remember was night turning to day could even see the blue sky

  • @WhoisVinnie
    @WhoisVinnie 2 роки тому +1

    So cooler that they did the launch at night

  • @don312000
    @don312000 11 років тому

    Thanks! I found an audio-only version from BBC radio but I'd like to see video/film if there is any to be had!

  • @MrDoneboy
    @MrDoneboy 6 років тому +2

    Good ole Geno!

  • @johnschreitmueller5452
    @johnschreitmueller5452 8 років тому +3

    Excellent audio of a fine Apollo crew in action. This was when the United States understood the importance of a bold manned space program. Mercury, Gemini and Apollo proved what Americans can do when the right leadership and commitment are in place. Compare what we were doing then to the sad state of affairs now. It's all about leadership... and lack of it.

    • @soxnation1000
      @soxnation1000 7 років тому +1

      John Schreitmueller Well, it also has a lot to do with taxes. Taxes were a lot higher back then, that's why the government could afford to do stuff like this.

  • @firehat87
    @firehat87 12 років тому +2

    Where did you come up with this treasure? Is there some CD collection somewhere of this stuff?

  • @samurai1999
    @samurai1999 10 років тому +2

    subscribed!
    :o)

  • @jonbryn4
    @jonbryn4 5 років тому +1

    ive got my own home movie of this, the launch was amazing, lit the sky up and i could feel my chest punding

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  5 років тому

      Have you thought of putting that movie on UA-cam so we can all see what you saw?

    • @jonbryn4
      @jonbryn4 5 років тому +1

      @@lunarmodule5 Good idea i will do that,thanks

    • @jonbryn4
      @jonbryn4 5 років тому +1

      @@lunarmodule5 I have to figutre this ou somehow, i have the super 8, and the VHS is here

    • @Heliosphan33
      @Heliosphan33 Рік тому

      @@jonbryn4 need help getting those digitized?

  • @tomjohnson7529
    @tomjohnson7529 7 років тому +13

    I was just 14. This was a funeral of sorts. Loved 'look at those sum bitches', 'skirt sep' calls and the yucks of cabin sealed. I've missed them with the shuttle. Somehow, no matter how often they press it, the next 'heavy booster' isn't as handsome, or pleasing as the Saturn V. Sorry just an old fart whose generation actually did do it.

  • @Dickusification
    @Dickusification Рік тому +2

    Whenever I need inspiration I watch this video

  • @RushdenHigham
    @RushdenHigham 6 місяців тому

    Only topped by the Apollo 12 launch onboard audio!

  • @lfrankow
    @lfrankow 10 років тому +2

    where'd you get the CSM audio from? i looked at lunar surface journal and there's only the PAO track.

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  10 років тому +5

      lfrankow I have had it for ages on mp3 - think it was sent to me by another enthusiast way back

  • @brentboswell1294
    @brentboswell1294 4 роки тому +1

    Anyone notice how the tv announcer NASA was using for this launch talks just like a 70's sports commentator?

    • @lousanto1054
      @lousanto1054 3 роки тому +1

      Listen to Rob Navias commentate STS 129. THAT sounds like a football play by play, complete with using terms "going into the pocket' and 'kicking off'. Lol!

  • @gast128
    @gast128 4 роки тому +1

    Fantastic night time launch for which I was too young to witness live. Nothing beats though the Apollo 4 launch video with Walter Cronkite's live comment.

  • @ThomasLover-fr8nh
    @ThomasLover-fr8nh 2 роки тому

    Apollo 17 is, sadly, the final mission of the Apollo program, and there were no more missions to the moon after that because of budget concerns.

  • @Zoomer30_
    @Zoomer30_ 2 роки тому +1

    Sounds like it was taped live inside.

  • @billhughes869
    @billhughes869 7 років тому

    I've got a magnet, too!

  • @Aerospaceman
    @Aerospaceman 5 років тому

    Does anyone know if new astronauts are taught how to use a sextant to take fixes?

  • @Zoomer30
    @Zoomer30 9 років тому +2

    The game is Eagle Lander 3D.While on a family vacation the sole creator of the game had the good fortune to be showing off the game at a bar (Alienware laptop) and who should happen by but Gene Cernan. Id tell Mr Programmer to not even bother buying a lotto ticket again, he just used up all his luck :)
    eaglelander3d.com

    • @Zoomer30
      @Zoomer30 8 років тому

      I remember that story. That would be my life ending Whisky Tango Bravo moment. Showing off your Lunar Lander Simulator and who walks up but Gene freaking Cernan (by far the most genial and down to earth of the Apollo astronauts).
      It's like being a harpsichord maker and having Mozart stop by. Cernan did mention it would be easier with 2 joysticks like the real LEM (one for translation and one for rotation). The designer kicked himself because had had a perfectly good joystick up in the hotel room (the sim did support dual sticks)
      Off topic, but I really hope that Kerbal Space Program for the PS4 uses both of the sticks like that.

  • @dreballs1
    @dreballs1 11 років тому

    I like when they say hey look a silver star lol ...

  • @fanaberia2010
    @fanaberia2010 9 років тому +2

    Sorry for my bad english, but i've got one quesion.
    In 4:27 CAP COMM say:
    - Gene, you are feet wet - feet wet.
    CDR answer:
    - Roger, Feet wet.
    What does it mean? I can't find the answer.
    Greetings from Poland and thanks for this great video! :)

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  9 років тому +4

      hi fanaberia - thanks for your comment - I have always assumed that "feet wet" was a 2nd part of the MODE1B abort mode - and that the feet wet call was meant to tell the crew that they had enough velocity that if there was an abort they would be able to splashdown, rather than on land (which Schirra eluded to in his book was a real possibility for Apollo 7 and was most undesirable in that the crew could be injured).
      Here is an extract from the Apollo 16 flight journal:
      000:01:06 Fullerton: You’re feet wet now, [Apollo] 16.
      ["Feet wet" is the US Naval aviator radio call for flight over the coast from land to sea. Young and Mattingly are both US Navy officers, Duke is USAF as is Gordon Fullerton.]
      000:01:08 Young: Roger.
      Public Affairs Officer: "That callout from CapCom Gordon Fullerton says Apollo 16 now capable of water landing. Mark. One minute, 12 seconds. Coming up on period of maximum aerodynamic pressure on the vehicle."
      I can't find any other reference to it with regard to explaining the call and it seems to have only been used on Apollo 16 and 17 (I havent checked the Skylab ASTP flights but recall it is used on those flights...could be wrong though!).
      I hope that this answer helps a bit?
      regards
      LM5

    • @fanaberia2010
      @fanaberia2010 9 років тому

      ***** Yes, it's clear now. I also found that transcripts from Apollo 16 - cool stuff. Thanks for your answer :)
      Beautifull launch at night... It must be an amazing ride. I wish i were there, on the top of Saturn V, even it can be the last thing of my life.

    • @tomjohnson7529
      @tomjohnson7529 9 років тому

      In earlier flights the call was "cleared the beach", meaning that the vehicle was over the ocean for an abort and not the land.

    • @joeblow9558
      @joeblow9558 9 років тому +1

      "Feet wet" is fighter pilot jargon for flying over the water. You call "feet wet" the moment you cross from flying over the land to flying over the water. Why do the astronauts need to know it? I'm not sure. Maybe it has some relevance if they have to use the launch abort system- the Apollo capsule was designed to land on water, not land.

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  9 років тому

      Tom Johnson that call was made on ASTP too!

  • @filiplinhart9034
    @filiplinhart9034 2 роки тому

    It's interesting, when a rocket is using kerozene or solid rocket boosters, a night launch looks like a sunrise. When it is hypergolic, it's not spectacular. A night Proton launch will disappoint you. But in case of explosion, it is still spectacular. With liquid hydrogen, a failure is not spectacular (when Challenger exploded, many people did not even realize)

  • @glennjohnston2267
    @glennjohnston2267 2 роки тому +1

    I don't know the voices of these 3 yet, so who is the one who made the joke about the "cabin is sealed "?

  • @harleytitanic999games1
    @harleytitanic999games1 Рік тому +1

    03:15 Lift-off!

  • @andrewsolie5036
    @andrewsolie5036 2 роки тому

    Did that blow up or?

  • @Musicman81Indy
    @Musicman81Indy 6 років тому

    Where can I find the CSM onboard audio (at launch) for all the other Apollo missions? Apollo 12 and 17 seem to be the only two in existence. I know onboard audio recordings were made of each flight, but why are 12 and 17 the only two available? Did NASA never release the others to the pubic? Or are 12 and 17 the only two that anyone has bothered to post on UA-cam? If onboard audio of each launch was available, I would think someone would have made an entire set of videos of all of them by now.

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  6 років тому +1

      Hi MM...if the others exist they haven't been released. I know there isnt one for Apollo 11 as they forgot to hit record lol

    • @Musicman81Indy
      @Musicman81Indy 6 років тому

      They FORGOT to hit RECORD?? WOW!!! I would have loved to be a fly on the wall for the post flight debriefing on THAT one. I also wonder why NASA would only release 12 and 17 and not the rest of them, especially after all these years.

  • @104thDIVTimberwolf
    @104thDIVTimberwolf 6 років тому +1

    Who is Capcom? Is that Bob Crippen?

  • @fernandoalves67
    @fernandoalves67 5 років тому

    Glaube Mut Liebe .

  • @Obvioustroller
    @Obvioustroller 5 років тому

    Who's bob?

  • @WhoisVinnie
    @WhoisVinnie 4 роки тому +1

    3:12 3, 2, 1, Spongebob
    LMAO
    This wasn't meant to be offensive

  • @cynthia7564
    @cynthia7564 6 місяців тому

    To me, this is an extremely sad video....because that magnificent machine would never again fly to the moon. I still don't understand why NASA felt they had to complete a new machine (Artemis) when the Saturn was proven perfect.

  • @multiio1424
    @multiio1424 6 років тому +1

    NeverTwiceTheSameColor TV.

  • @BigDMartial
    @BigDMartial 2 роки тому

    4:12 mode one Bravo
    5:10 mode one Charlie

  • @xxhansonmaxx
    @xxhansonmaxx 9 років тому +2

    why do they always say babe....

  • @paulcatania1315
    @paulcatania1315 9 років тому +1

    "There is nothing up there! Nothing, nothing!"
    -- Capt. Billy Cutshaw in the Ninth Configuration ;-)

    • @harryandruschak2843
      @harryandruschak2843 8 років тому

      And your point is......

    • @paulcatania1315
      @paulcatania1315 8 років тому

      Harry Andruschak
      There is no point. Take it easy. It's a humorous quote from a movie you're probably not familiar with. I was just trying to be funny.
      My fault for assuming that such an obscure
      reference would be understood. I was really just amusing myself.

    • @harryandruschak2843
      @harryandruschak2843 8 років тому

      Paul Catania The problem is...you sounded a lot like the anti-NASA trolls claiming it is all fake. I routinely troll-block them after confirmation. And I rarely go to movies....cannot stand the noise, the rude crowds, and the rest of it. Now to see if anyone else is reading this comment thread to tell what movie is being referred to :)

    • @lawrencet83
      @lawrencet83 8 років тому

      Hey dude, chill out! I know what movie he was referring to, and I do believe him he meant it as a joke. And I am a firm believer that we did land on the moon, and anyone believe that we didn't are the ones who have not one piece of evidence that we didn't land there. And he did mention what movie it was, " The Ninth Configuration"

    • @harryandruschak2843
      @harryandruschak2843 8 років тому +1

      lawrencet83 Sorry, I never saw that movie....and sometimes it is very hard to seperate the trolls from the humorists.

  • @SpeedFireARL
    @SpeedFireARL 4 роки тому

    3:25 рукотворное солнце в небе