A Soviet Moon: If History Had Gone Differently - Kerbal Space Program (RSS/RO)

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  • čas přidán 22. 06. 2017
  • Due to stupid copyright laws, some audio has been removed from this video. If you want to hear the full thing, hit that like button, subscribe to the channel, and download this! - drive.google.com/file/d/1MLMa...
    You can support the channel at - / kevingustafson
    In this imagining of an alternate history, the Soviet Union's Moon rocket - the N1L3 - proved to be a successful design and sent Soviet Cosmonauts, Alexy Leonov and Yuri Gagarin to the Moon.
    For more information on the N1 - www.astronautix.com/n/n1.html
    Made with Kerbal Space Program with Real Solar System and Realism Overhaul modifications.
    Mods: AIES Aerospace, AnimatedDecouplers, BahaSP, CameraTools, CommunityResourcePack, DistantObject, DMagicScienceAnimate, EngingeGroup Controller, EVE, FAR, Firespitter, Docking Sounds, JSI, KAS, Kerbal Engineer, KerbalJointReinforcement, Kerbaltek, KIS, Kopernicus, KCSwitcher, Launchers Pack, MagicSmokeIndustries, MechJeb2, ModularFlightIntegrator, NAR_MEM, OLDD, Planetside, ProceduralFairings, Proceduralparts, RCS sounds, realchute, realheat, realismoverhaul, realplume, realscaleboosters, realsolarsystem, renentryparticleEffect, RSS dateTime, RSS textures (HI RES), RSSVE, Scatterer, Science818, SM_Chite, SmokeScreen, SolverEngines, Soviet Ships, Soviet Rockets, TantaresLV, TextureReplacer, ThunderAerospace, TriggerTexh, Tweakscale, Vapor Vent
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Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @bradensmith8006
    @bradensmith8006 Před 7 lety +530

    This is way underrated, this is hands down the best kerbal space program video I've ever seen. This is the first time I've ever seen that honeycomb-like docking port on the lander. Do you have any information on that?

    • @kevincgustafson
      @kevincgustafson  Před 7 lety +75

      First, thanks for the compliment. Second, it was called the Kontak System. You can read more here:
      www.astronautix.com/s/soyuzkontakt.html
      www.svengrahn.pp.se/histind/RvDRadar/KOntakt.html
      It was essentially the most simple design that ensures greatest chance for success and demanded no access tunnel between the lander and the LOK.

    • @trainsfemme
      @trainsfemme Před 6 lety +34

      Quote: "I've ever seen." No, I think your comment is the dumbest.

    • @clausejoke1985
      @clausejoke1985 Před 6 lety +17

      @Argon
      You are a disgusting human being.

    • @Shrekfromthehitmovieshrek
      @Shrekfromthehitmovieshrek Před 6 lety +22

      Argon I would call you a poopoo head but we are in a more civilised time so I shall call you a faeces cranium.

    • @sparetime2475
      @sparetime2475 Před 6 lety +8

      Argon I doubt that you have seen all the "700,000" kerbal space program videos on the internet so don't judge
      And the grammar "most dumb should be" dumbest

  • @maxpetra9176
    @maxpetra9176 Před 5 lety +292

    Alternate history idea: Apollo-Soyuz meeting BUT ON THE MOON

    • @JuchePasa
      @JuchePasa Před 4 lety +26

      Oh my god... That would be great

    • @Mrcaton..
      @Mrcaton.. Před 3 lety +20

      If they apollo-soyuz meeting on moon. They will make moon base on moon

    • @fannyliem3536
      @fannyliem3536 Před 3 lety +8

      @@Mrcaton.. A new idea to my "lack of ideas Moon Space Station"
      Note: I didn't play ksp, another app, sorry

    • @mikhailiagacesa3406
      @mikhailiagacesa3406 Před 3 lety +7

      I think the U.S. attitude was the more the merrier; but, the Soviets had given up by that point. Lunar surface rendezvous had been first demonstrated by Apollo 12/Surveyor 3. Would have been nice if we cooperated on missions 15,16 and 17(the Science-heavy missions). Also, maybe have 1 or 2 Soviet LK missions to the Lunar poles (After risk assessment, of course).

    • @mikhailiagacesa3406
      @mikhailiagacesa3406 Před 3 lety +2

      @Elyas Dezendorf Cheeseburger WITH Vodka? lol...

  • @aronenark8184
    @aronenark8184 Před 6 lety +261

    I don't remember Leonov being that short.
    Or green.

    • @robertnovady4866
      @robertnovady4866 Před 5 lety +3

      There was the Group of the Moon crews and A.Leonov was the member of this society.The Soviet Moon programm wasnt lucky because there wasnt the right politic of the tech-competition butween the greatest Soviet space teams..And in the end of the 60es the Soviet Union continue SST (Tu-144) and started the Soviet STS programm.

    • @gabrielesimionato1210
      @gabrielesimionato1210 Před 4 lety +1

      It was pink!

    • @tfranken1561
      @tfranken1561 Před 4 lety +1

      Robert Novady he stole me Lucky Charms.

    • @astrosasha
      @astrosasha Před 4 lety +2

      He’s not green in the video lmao

    • @spacenerd2782
      @spacenerd2782 Před 3 lety +3

      It's what russian moon landing does to comrade

  • @DyingCr0w
    @DyingCr0w Před 7 lety +92

    10/10 for production value

    • @jkenny1
      @jkenny1 Před 4 lety +1

      I did laugh a little at the capsule landing (must have been rough inside tumbling around with the parachute deployment and landing) and the Kerbal on the moon forgetting to put this visor down, but yes an excellent production.

  • @vojislavdabic3604
    @vojislavdabic3604 Před 6 lety +80

    This guy deserves a lot more subs! I know how hard it is to make videos like this!

    • @kevincgustafson
      @kevincgustafson  Před 6 lety +15

      Thank you, kind sir!

    • @premaseem8914
      @premaseem8914 Před 11 měsíci

      His heart also broken💔 like me on soviet failure😢, that's why he fulfilling his unsatisfied desire by making such vedio & iam by viewing😊

  • @reddeath4242
    @reddeath4242 Před 7 lety +168

    Oh yes, I love daydreaming and imagining alternate history scenarios like this. This has to be the best breakdown of a potential Soviet Moon mission on youtube. Awesome work, I hope you keep making videos as good as this one!

    • @kevincgustafson
      @kevincgustafson  Před 7 lety +12

      Thanks! I did notice a fair amount of other N1L3 videos, even from KSP, but none appears to use the real Earth and Moon in favor of Kerbin and the Mun. Using RSS with Realism Overhaul (meaning real rocket engines, real fuel, need to ullage and so on) make it a much different - albeit more rewarding - experience. I suppose I could have added more information, but I wanted it to be a bit more story-like.

    • @kurtu5
      @kurtu5 Před 7 lety

      Speaking of ullage, why didn't you do hot staging? Did I just miss seeing the engines due to the FX not being perfect?

    • @kevincgustafson
      @kevincgustafson  Před 7 lety +4

      Technically it was hot staging but the effects don't appear until a tiny bit after ignition so while there is propulsion which is helping separate the stages, you don't necessarily see the plume right away.
      But good eye, could have been a bit more obvious. Noted for next time!

  • @pyrusrex2882
    @pyrusrex2882 Před 5 lety +30

    Good thing they had Gagarin as a pilot, he was already used to spinning out of control upon reentry

  • @ultimatesteve9647
    @ultimatesteve9647 Před 6 lety +385

    First 4 minutes: Am I watching a KSP video or a Soviet propaganda film?
    Great job.

    • @sova3463
      @sova3463 Před 6 lety +22

      this is not a Soviet film but an educational program. if you look closely you can see the Roscosmos logo in the upper left corner

    • @x-fun3149
      @x-fun3149 Před 6 lety +4

      Sova 34
      That's the windows logo lmao

    • @sova3463
      @sova3463 Před 6 lety +6

      2:14

    • @riccards
      @riccards Před 6 lety +1

      X-Fun no its not you dont know how looks roscosmos logo

    • @sova3463
      @sova3463 Před 6 lety +1

      Тебе ли знать как выглядит лого российской корпорации

  • @Tramseskumbanan
    @Tramseskumbanan Před 4 lety +84

    The Block A was the most powerful rocket stage ever ignited.

    • @chemsilestrat280
      @chemsilestrat280 Před 4 lety +16

      Too bad the N-1 failed

    • @KarolOfGutovo
      @KarolOfGutovo Před 4 lety +13

      @@chemsilestrat280 four times. On the blok a stage. There is a non-zero probability that the rest of the rocket was capable of doing the whole mission, but that's just my guesswork.

    • @ianeons9278
      @ianeons9278 Před 3 lety +3

      SpaceX Starship: Hold my rocket fuel

    • @Tramseskumbanan
      @Tramseskumbanan Před 3 lety +8

      @@ianeons9278 Yeah? Fifty years or so later?

    • @lil__boi3027
      @lil__boi3027 Před 3 lety +1

      Isen't the energia more powerful?

  • @hagerty1952
    @hagerty1952 Před 5 lety +21

    This is a pretty good overview of the mission, but here are a few nit-picks. Some of these might be the way the game is set up, thus beyond the control of the player, but for historical accuracy:
    1- That launch complex is actually KSC's Complex 39. The N-1 launched from Baikonur Complex 110 which has a flat pad with buried flame trenches (three of them) as shown in the actual film footage at the start. Also, the hold-down arms shown are from the Saturn V (just twice as many of them). The N-1 didn't use arms, it had a hold-down ring on the base in between the inner and outer rings of engines. The ring had 24 blocks attaching it to the rocket, and each block had two explosive bolts. The 48 bolts all had to fire at once to release the rocket to flight.
    2- Neither "Blok-A" (first stage) nor "Blok-B" (second stage) shut down completely before jettison. They kept running (at reduced thrust) while the stage above it came up to full thrust before firing the explosive bolts to separate the stages. This was done to keep the propellants in the upper stage from sloshing forward, away from the pump inlets. That's the reason it has the open trusswork between Blok-A and Blok-B, and between Blok-B and Blok-V (to let the exhaust gasses escape).
    3- The fairing around the LK did not split and jettison from Blok-D as shown, exposing the LK. It (the fairing) was a load-bearing member that conducted the thrust from Blok-D up to the base of the Soyuz during the TLI and LOI burns. Otherwise the force would have had to been transmitted through the LK, squashing it in the middle. When the landing Cosmonaut transferred to the LK (as shown, correctly, by EVA) he had to open a hatch in the fairing to expose the hatch in the LK. Once inside he backed the LK/Blok-D combination "out of the garage" prior to the first descent burn.
    4- The Block-D stage did not neutralize all the forward velocity prior to jettison. There was still a little to be done by the LK. BTW, this separation happens at only 4,000 meters above the surface!
    5- The L3 mission profile specifies that there should be both a Lunokhod rover and a backup LK already on the moon at the landing site prior to this LK arriving.
    6- After getting back into orbit and transferring all the samples back into the Soyuz, the LK ascent stage can't be jettisoned as shown. The "Kontakt" docking coupler is one-way, one-time. Once docked it can't be separated, so the Soyuz Orbital Module (the round part at the front) has to be jettisoned along with the LK. On a regular orbital Soyuz flight this is not done until just before reentry, but here they have to get rid of the OM before the TEI burn and ride all the way home in the Reentry Module (cramped!). This did have the advantage of reducing the mass that had to be boosted back to Earth by about 20%.
    This is all from "N-1, A Reference Guide to the Soviet Superbooster" from ARA Press.

    • @kevincgustafson
      @kevincgustafson  Před 5 lety +3

      Thanks!

    • @hagerty1952
      @hagerty1952 Před 5 lety +8

      @@kevincgustafson You're welcome. Thank you for not seeing this as an attack (like so many of the comments below seem to).

  • @pedrodelacabra1855
    @pedrodelacabra1855 Před 5 lety +6

    Excellent idea, editing and KSP! Good to see Gagarin on board and loved that Leonov walked on the moon! Fantastic.

  • @MrZhefish
    @MrZhefish Před 5 lety +7

    how acurrate, even down to the two phases of re-entry - amazingly done

  • @augustus6285
    @augustus6285 Před 7 lety +54

    You should do an Apollo Applications Program Mars mission that takes place after the Soviets land on the Moon.

  • @maroon5man
    @maroon5man Před 7 lety +176

    When in doubt add more engines

    • @RED40HOURS
      @RED40HOURS Před 6 lety +14

      John Stevens its called "the kerbal way".

    • @elwen9477
      @elwen9477 Před 5 lety +2

      What we need is moar boosterz!

    • @dawid12301d
      @dawid12301d Před 5 lety +12

      george nolte That's not true. Korolev died during surgery. Without him the whole soviet Moon program was pretty much over. He was in charge of almost everything space related in Russia back then, true genius.

    • @TonyAA33
      @TonyAA33 Před 5 lety +1

      george nolte dude wtf man...

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 5 lety +5

      @george nolte Might help to read on the subject. One N-1 did indeed lift off about its own height, half its engines shut down (due to the KORD control system being damaged by a fire in the thrust structure under the first stage, which controlled the rocket by throttling opposing pairs of engines to 'steer' the rocket, rather than using gimbaling engines as the US rockets did, or even gimballing vernier engines like the USSR's other rockets (like R-7) did. Hence, when one engine on the first stage suffered a problem and the KORD system detected it, it had to shut down TWO engines-- the one effected, and the one 180 degrees OPPOSITE it. Hence when when an engine exploded and caught fire, damaging several other engines adjacent to it, the KORD system shut down a similar number of engines on the other side of the rocket, which was about half the engines, thus the rocket ended up crashing back down onto the pad and exploding, severely damaging the pad and killing a number of technicians working in the underground part of the structure below. The designer was NOT killed (Sergei Korolev, he died of a botched surgery when they discovered he had colon cancer in January of 1966). You're probably thinking of the "Nedelin disaster" where a test firing of a new ballistic missile was botched and the upper stage fired inadvertantly on the launch pad while the missile was being worked on, overseen by the head of the Soviet Strategic Rocket Forces, Marshal Nedelin, who was present at the test to "motivate the troops" so to speak. Over 100 people were killed, including the Marshal himself.
      Later! OL J R :)

  • @mmananquil18
    @mmananquil18 Před 7 lety +108

    The russian engineers were kerbals in disguise. How you may ask ? well, when the russians saw that the n1 couldn't get pff the ground, they just added in more boosters.

    • @silverdarlin
      @silverdarlin Před 6 lety +3

      John F. Kennedy no, that was just the Russian response to EVERYTHING!
      (Including their politics)

    • @Shrekfromthehitmovieshrek
      @Shrekfromthehitmovieshrek Před 6 lety +4

      JFK Kennedy you do realise your name is john F. Kennedy Kennedy.

    • @thomaswijgerse723
      @thomaswijgerse723 Před 6 lety

      Uranus, no no no, jfk kennedy stands for John FranKlin Kennedy.

    • @alex_inside
      @alex_inside Před 6 lety +4

      That's more like the American approach just look at the Saturn V its basically just a tube with 5 of the biggest engines they could find and strapped them onto the rocket. That's why I love the Saturn V

    • @thomaswijgerse723
      @thomaswijgerse723 Před 6 lety +3

      well, "find", it was a huge project to research and produce those engines, while the russians just took engines they already had instead of R&D'ing a new huge one.

  • @wisestminer555
    @wisestminer555 Před 4 lety +2

    Your videos are great! I'm seriously considering installing these mods sooner or later.

  • @thom3124
    @thom3124 Před 5 lety +2

    The N1 rockets biggest problem was that it had to use 30 engines in the first stage. Trying to sync all those engines had to be a fucking nightmare.

  • @christianlabanca5377
    @christianlabanca5377 Před 7 lety +129

    maybe soviets didnt land on moon...but they were the firsts landing a vessel in other planet (venus)

    • @nickfelten5068
      @nickfelten5068 Před 6 lety +74

      They did the first moon landing... just not a crewed one

    • @c.a.g.3130
      @c.a.g.3130 Před 5 lety +20

      Amazing what German engineering can do!

    • @cosmicwakes6443
      @cosmicwakes6443 Před 5 lety +8

      No, communist engineering. Fuck off racist.

    • @X_RayLT
      @X_RayLT Před 5 lety +24

      @@cosmicwakes6443 hows he a racist?

    • @xavierrodriguez2463
      @xavierrodriguez2463 Před 5 lety +8

      @@cosmicwakes6443 calm down LARPy boy

  • @PacificPounding
    @PacificPounding Před 7 lety +154

    nice music choice comrade

    • @Autumn_red_fox
      @Autumn_red_fox Před 6 lety +4

      Check this out
      O say can you see, by the dawn's early light,
      What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming,
      Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight,
      O'er the ramparts we watched, were so gallantly streaming?
      And the rockets' red glare, the bombs bursting in air,
      Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there;
      O say does that star-spangled banner yet wave
      O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?

    • @Autumn_red_fox
      @Autumn_red_fox Před 6 lety +1

      Yeah im American

    • @crustyplunger8738
      @crustyplunger8738 Před 6 lety +12

      begone kapitolist. your filthy music does not kompare to the glorious Red Army Choir!

    • @donut5818
      @donut5818 Před 6 lety +4

      Koviet Union

    • @thesenate4004
      @thesenate4004 Před 6 lety

      Comrads*

  • @badcornflakes6374
    @badcornflakes6374 Před 5 lety +6

    What a proud people the Soviets were. Their music and their rocket and their plan to go into space was awesome. My utmost respect for the scientist who devoted their time to this project that never finished.

  • @vietthanhbui5964
    @vietthanhbui5964 Před 6 lety +75

    I have to admit that the N1 looks much more extraodinary than the Saturn 5

    • @bigbob1699
      @bigbob1699 Před 5 lety +1

      It looks like a slash up to me.

    • @charlesvan13
      @charlesvan13 Před 5 lety +11

      The Soviet technology has an austere look to it, just like their music.
      I prefer the Saturn rocket with it's massive first stage engine.
      I think the Americans were capable of solving more problems. The Soviet spacecraft had no docking passage between the command and lunar modules.

    • @MrAzazel666
      @MrAzazel666 Před 5 lety +13

      It was a beautiful rocket. Shame that it never had a successful launch. I think the Soviets would have been able to work out the kinks had they continued to fund its development.

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 Před 5 lety +9

      @@MrAzazel666 Strong economies fund vigorous successful space programs. JFK knew this, hence his work on both the space vision and a strong American economy. He cut taxes; the only Democrat president in modern history to do so.

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 5 lety +25

      N-1 was a different approach, that's for sure. Firstly, the Soviets didn't have the technology to make large hydrogen-powered upper stages at that point in time, since their technology was driven (and slave to) military requirements, and hydrogen propellants are highly undesirable for military missiles. In fact, their development at the time was focused on room-temperature storable hypergolic propellants, which are of course, ideal for ballistic missiles in silos on alert, but which are highly toxic and ignite on contact, and have relatively low specific impulse. In fact, chief Soviet engine designer Valentin Glushko and chief rocket designer Sergei Korolev got into a heated dispute over the design of N-1; Glushko insisted on developing large hypergolic propellant engines for the vehicle, forcing it to be designed around hypergolic propellants, and Korolev insisted, with good reasons, that large kerosene-based engines be developed and the rocket designed around kerosene/oxygen propellants (he surmised correctly that if a rocket as massive as N-1 would have to be was fueled by hypergolic propellants and it crashed, it would create not only an enormous fire but the unburned propellants that didn't come into direct contact with each other would create an absolutely ENORMOUS cloud of poisonous gases that would be lethal to everything for miles around, and would poison huge areas near the crash site.) When Glushko refused, Korolev didn't relent; he recruited Kuznetsov, a noted designer of Soviet jet engines, but who had never developed a rocket engine before, to design and build the NK-33 high-pressure advanced closed-cycle kerosene engines for the N-1. The Soviets, in addition to their almost complete lack of hydrogen rocket technology, also didn't have the technology to build rocket engines as large and powerful as the US F-1. They also didn't have the technology to design and build enormous cylindrical pressurized fuel tanks with ellipsoidal top and bottom domes, on the scale of the Saturn V. SO, they decided to design and build spherical propellant tanks for the N-1; simpler and easier to design and build, but MUCH less efficient structurally and weight-wise. This caused the N-1 design to be a series of conical stages, as the larger spherical oxygen tank was topped by a very long inter-tank structure creating a stage "hull" with the smaller kerosene tank above it, topped by a large open trusswork inter-stage structure, with the thrust structure, heat shielding, and engines at the bottom. The lack of hydrogen upper stages meant that the rocket was much less efficient (since LOX/kerosene has a significantly lower specific impulse, as does hypergolic storable propellants in the L-3 spacecraft stack, but in fairness, the Apollo service module and Lunar Module were powered by hypergolic propellants as well, so the principle difference was the Saturn V's much more efficient hydrogen propellant second and third stages, where N-1's upper stages were kerosene/LOX powered). This basically drove the design from the 'top down' and meant the lower stages had to be truly enormous to provide the required payload capability. The Soviets DID develop much more highly advanced kerosene engines in the NK-33's powering the N-1; they used advanced closed-cycle combustion, versus the more simplictic but MUCH larger open-cycle combustion on the US F-1 engines.
      That's the main differences and why the N-1 looks SO much different than the US Saturn V.
      Later! OL J R :)

  • @maroon5man
    @maroon5man Před 7 lety +94

    Did you know this rocket was originally designed for a manned flyby of Mars or Venus and was retrofitted after America landed on the moon?

    • @jbaltusstuff5908
      @jbaltusstuff5908 Před 7 lety +14

      Yeah, pretty cool stuff. I heard that the US planned to so something that too. But it got cancelled.

    • @translunarinjectionstudios6104
      @translunarinjectionstudios6104 Před 7 lety +25

      Yeah. The U.S. was thinking about converting the third stage of the Saturn V so it could provide more room to the crew for a Mars/Venus flyby mission.

    • @granddukeofmecklenburg
      @granddukeofmecklenburg Před 5 lety +5

      @@translunarinjectionstudios6104 essentially a skylab...

    • @Inedit3
      @Inedit3 Před 5 lety

      @@translunarinjectionstudios6104
      Can you give us where a you see that ?

    • @user-lv7ph7hs7l
      @user-lv7ph7hs7l Před 5 lety +8

      @@Inedit3 It was the Apollo Applications program, which looked into using Apollo hardware for other things. They looked at lunar bases, space stations and the Venus fly-by. In the end only Skylab was funded. Unlike Skylab they wouldn't just have converted the empty tank but it would have actually had the living quarters submerged in the hydrogen tank with stuff that couldn't be submerged in the interstage.

  • @corneliuscrewe677
    @corneliuscrewe677 Před 5 lety +10

    @8:46 Is that music the recording from the Hunt for Red October? One of my favorite pieces of music and that is my favorite version of it.
    Though I’m personally thrilled at the outcome of the space race, it’s truly a damned shame the Soviets never got one of those to work. Would have been every bit as impressive as Apollo/Saturn.

  • @MyrMerek
    @MyrMerek Před 6 lety +24

    initially russians planned be the first to go around the moon withou landing with the launch vehicle UR500, now known to you as the Proton the ISS lorry.. To land, they wanted to have even a reserve vehicle and an operable lunokhod to get to it in cas there is something wrong with the first one. Later, it was planned to install a moon station Zvezda, using inflatable folded metal structures 4 meters in diameter. The problem with the N1 (unoficcialy Nauka 1 or Nositel 1(translated as science or carrier) was the rivalry between Glushkov, whom you might not have heard of, but he was the second most respected person in soviet cosmonautics after Korolyov, and Korolyov. Korolyov wanted non toxic engines be installed, while Glushkov pushed for more powerful but also deadly toxic engines made by his bureau. Like real deadly, more toxic then warfare gases.
    So when Glushkov said he could do the safer kerosene engines because he didnt know how to, they asked another factory to design engines for the N1 and they designed the NK33 (putrid, as commented on by Glushkov). It is now sometimes used to fly stuff in space on commercial basis, and it still explodes while doing so sometimes.
    the reason it does is because soviet moon program was thought of late and they rushed without exhaustive testing, using the normal kerbal procedure of "launch first, repair what broke later", instead of costly simulating on the ground. But while it worked with small scale rockets with reliable hardware, it was too many systems working together on the N1. It has been always the failure of the first stage, with so many engines working and usually caused by something you cannot estimate until you launch alltogether, like the fuel in the fuel lines entering resonance and vibration making stuff disconnect and or short circuit.
    The soviets still tested the Ur500 non lander, to orbit the moon with some live tortoises, which experienced 20G on the shallow entry back home, and were the first living beings to orbit the moon and come back, before Appolo 8. Mind you, other soviet cosmonauts also experienced 20g on some routine flights and were fine with that later. But it still was considered unsafe.
    The requirement for the soviet moon mission was "3 absolutely reliable test launches, then goes the manned mission". Unfortunately, all four n1 launches resulted in a failure of some system, some causing the destruction of the cosmodrome and the necessity to repair it for a long time.
    Soviet cosmonauts for the moon mission trained to orient the ship manually using the stars and were training in Somalia with the souther hemisphere. .
    The polar orbit was chosen so that the orbiter enters over soviet territory.
    Despite having to traverse to the lander in space, the ship had some advantages over Appolo, like fully automated sequences of landing and redocking, with cosmonaut overseeing, as well asbeing smaller and lightweight. It still allowed less then a kilo of lunar soil to be taken back tho.
    2 weeks before the Appolo launch, the soviet cosmonauts wrote a letter to Politburo asking to be allowed on the test flight and travelled to the cosmodrome awaiting positive response, training hardly. It was denied, and the test flight went unmanned, with the rocket exploding and the test ship evacuated by the rocket ejection mechanism

    • @quoniam426
      @quoniam426 Před 5 lety +2

      Proton uses dangerous propellants and would never have been used for human transport. If anything, the ship would have been launched empty and the crew separately on a Soyouz rocket to rendez vous in orbit.

    • @nickolsky
      @nickolsky Před 5 lety +3

      KSP developers are mistaken about Soviet space program,
      UR500 is 3-block of Proton. N-1 did not imply the landing of the descent vehicle on the lunar surface. With the help of N-1, it was supposed to bring the Salyut-1 stations to the orbit of the Moon, where they were to be combined into a lunar station (like ISS or MIR), which should have docked many moon landing vehicles sent by Proton rockets.

  • @kryptoniteyt9610
    @kryptoniteyt9610 Před 5 lety +5

    *sees the reveal, sees the launch clamps* "OMG HE'S USING THE APOLLO LAUNCH CLAMPS WTH??!!" *continues to watch the video*

  • @user-cj8xm9uk1h
    @user-cj8xm9uk1h Před 7 lety +43

    I notice that the TLI burn does not even try to align the inclination with the Moon's orbit. Maybe it is due to that the launch pod of Soviet is too north.

    • @kevincgustafson
      @kevincgustafson  Před 7 lety +18

      That is right, too much extra dV to do that alignment so better to time it for a capture going north.

    • @AB9_
      @AB9_ Před 4 lety +5

      They are talking the language of the gods

    • @rbxless
      @rbxless Před 3 lety +1

      @@AB9_ hahaha xD

  • @thejasonknightfiascoband5099

    A+! Brilliant editing during the intro. Genius move to overdub the national anthem!!🎼🎵🎶

  • @Cby0530
    @Cby0530 Před 5 lety +6

    This is the VERY video that introduced me to KSP!

  • @jaykay4137
    @jaykay4137 Před 6 lety +255

    in soviet russia, moon lands on you

  • @user-no7zq3sn4l
    @user-no7zq3sn4l Před 5 lety +8

    Да очень жаль, что Королев умер так и не довел до конца создание Н-1.. Уверен что если бы прожил лет 5 еще довел бы все до логического конца и мы бы вторыми побывали бы на Луне.. И Н-1 летала бы до сих пор, на надо было бы трехкратно расходовать деньги на создание Энергии, а теперь мол мощного РН.. Было всего 4 пуска Н-1 без всякой имитации, это лишь половина испытательного цикла.. Так что следующий бы 5 запуск был бы удачный на все 90 процентов.. Очень жаль что Королев ушел из жизни так рано.. Такие люди раз в 100 лет рождаются...

    • @altor5438
      @altor5438 Před 5 lety

      Меньше по лагерям потаскали,подольше бы прожил.

    • @GANYBEISENOV
      @GANYBEISENOV Před 5 lety

      я думаю он умер не случайно. и гагарин тоже....

    • @4crecs
      @4crecs Před 5 lety

      @@altor5438 - тебя надо бы в лагерь... чтоб дисциплину познал. А то бездельничаешь тут и , вместо того чтоб ударно трудиться.. Глядишь и из тебя бы вышел какой толк.. А то пустозвонишь только.

  • @stuartyoung4182
    @stuartyoung4182 Před 6 lety

    I agree with previous comments: BEST overall KSP video I've watched yet, with a great blend of real Soviet footage, realistic backgrounds and spacecraft, and music! VERY well done!

    • @stuartyoung4182
      @stuartyoung4182 Před 6 lety

      Just wanted to add that this is also the most detailed depiction I have EVER seen of the total N1 lunar crewed landing profile - even including the "double dip" reentry and spin stabilization of the reentry module. Better than any documentaries I have seen - and using KSP! Only thing it missed was the retro-rockets right before the touchdown on the steppes - I assume due to KSP's LOK mod lacking them.

  • @tsmgguy
    @tsmgguy Před 5 lety +1

    Wonderful visualization, thanks! Exploding N1s aside, I can't imagine that the Soviets were very far along in perfecting their hardware and that enormously complex mission profile when the program was cancelled.

  • @kevinmiller2240
    @kevinmiller2240 Před 5 lety +5

    Just one of the problems with this: while being set in the 1960s, it features the 1977 lyrics of the USSR anthem. (In the period between destalinization and 1977, there were no lyrics.)

  • @MrNBelkov
    @MrNBelkov Před 6 lety +84

    Надеюсь ты переведешь))
    ОТДОХНУЛ ДУШОЙ эти 24 минуты))
    Пойду покормлю медведя и снова пересмотрю))

    • @limonaduz5197
      @limonaduz5197 Před 6 lety +2

      русский

    • @deluzh
      @deluzh Před 6 lety +1

      Да россий!

    • @maxvakker7719
      @maxvakker7719 Před 6 lety +4

      Пойду ещё водяры возьму))))

    • @agtshaw
      @agtshaw Před 5 lety +5

      Sorry i dont speak cant land on the moon

    • @user-mb1jv3co7z
      @user-mb1jv3co7z Před 5 lety +7

      В России, отсталой стране дураков уверены ,что "путинизм" или Власть Воров-это и есть Демократия !

  • @Warriorking.1963
    @Warriorking.1963 Před 6 lety

    Superb work, almost a work of art.

  • @sawyerawr5783
    @sawyerawr5783 Před 3 lety +2

    Can I just point out how on point the song choices are: the soviet anthem to begin with, "Let's Go!" as the launch sequence, and Hymn to Red October for the TLI burn...which begins with "Farewell to the Motherland!" ("Das Vidanya, Rodina!") just to start.

  • @TomTimeTraveler
    @TomTimeTraveler Před 6 lety +11

    There is a film from A&E's "Time Machine" series that shows a cosmonaut descending the ladder of the LK during a training session. There is also a photo of a helmeted cosmonaut inside the LK. Are there any other videoes or photos showing lunar cosmonauts in training?

    • @kevincgustafson
      @kevincgustafson  Před 6 lety +3

      I'm sure some do exist, but not necessarily public.

  • @rossmum
    @rossmum Před 6 lety +6

    Wonderful video. That re-entry sequence was absolutely stunning, I'd forgotten how good KSP looks nowadays.
    Looks like I need to update my mods and get back into it...

  • @SpacePonder
    @SpacePonder Před 4 lety

    Astonishing video making !

  • @nicolas2419
    @nicolas2419 Před 5 lety +1

    I opened the video and I saw a 24 minutes video about KSP mission... too long... that will be boring with long minutes of real boredom! And I began to watch it... and I didn't see the time passing. A real great KSP video with a great sense of filmmaking and of the detail. The images and the music were well chosen. Thank you for this little piece of art and alternate history, tovaritch! :)

    • @kevincgustafson
      @kevincgustafson  Před 5 lety

      Thanks for the pick-me-up. Also check out my other videos for more conceivable and actual missions!

  • @Asmodeus.Daemon
    @Asmodeus.Daemon Před 5 lety +6

    Это было прекрасно! Спасибо, Товарищ!

  • @fractalelf7760
    @fractalelf7760 Před 4 lety +9

    How on earth did you get that CCCP and red star logo? It looks awesome!

  • @lukestrawwalker
    @lukestrawwalker Před 5 lety +1

    Very nice... launch pad is all wrong in the launch simulation; the N-1 pads weren't raised like the US pads at Kennedy Space Center launch complex 39 A and B were. The N-1 pads used a 'flame bucket' and three "blast tunnels" to divert the rocket exhaust and vent it away from the rocket, spaced 120 degrees apart like a triangle. Also, the Soviets favored what we called "fire in the hole" staging (which was used on Titan II, for instance) where the second stage engines ignite and come up to rated thrust BEFORE the stage below it shuts down... this is why the Soviets always had those large open-trusswork interstages, rather than panel-constructed interstage rings like the US rockets did (such as Saturn V) or "blow out panels" and openings in the interstage (like Titan 2)... So the second stage would fire up its engines moments before the first stage engines shut down; this does away with complicated "ullage motor" arrangements required to "seat" the propellants against the bottoms of the tanks and ensure the propellant lines going to the upper stage engines are full of propellants (and not pressurization gases) at engine startup, which simplifies the event timing and staging of the vehicle. Once the upper stage engines are ignited, the interstage connectors holding the stages together are released and the lower stage engines are commanded to shut down simultaneously, freeing the upper stages.
    Also, when the LK lander touches down, the four upward-facing rocket motors on the top of the landing legs would fire off to "plant" the LK solidly down onto the surface, to ensure it didn't "bounce" back up off the surface in the low gravity and possibly tip over, which was a concern the Soviet engineers had.
    Nice skip reentry, too. The Soviets pioneered the skip reentry technique to minimize heating and enable spacecraft on those trajectories to land back on Soviet territory. The spacecraft *could* survive a direct entry, but the g-loads were SO high that it was thought the astronauts would be injured or killed, and direct entries ended up landing in the Indian Ocean because of the trajectories... Some of their Zonds ended up landing in the Indian Ocean, as well as some other tests.
    Very good effort, comrade. Of course, had they succeeded, there'd be a lot of guys drunk on vodka claiming it was all faked in a secret facility in Siberia, and the Motherland never actually sent men to the Moon...
    Later! OL J R :)

  • @Kinopanorama1
    @Kinopanorama1 Před 5 lety +1

    This is an excellent production. Sincere thanks to Kevin Gustafson for uploading.

  • @darthrevan2961
    @darthrevan2961 Před 2 lety +3

    My one and only criticism, is that Yuri Gagarin would never have been able to partake in a Soviet Moon Landing during or after 1969. Gagarin was killed in a plane crash while performing a routine flight exercise in a MiG in March of 1968. However, I will say that Valentina Tereshkova would make a fine replacement to remain in the Soyuz command ship, due to her famed status as the first woman in space 👍

  • @draKoowl247
    @draKoowl247 Před 5 lety +19

    What if Soviet Russia ia the first man in the -sun- mars

    • @IvanIvanov-vb9nm
      @IvanIvanov-vb9nm Před 4 lety

      of course it will.Everything is ready for the flight to Mars, follow the news.

  • @IzackN
    @IzackN Před 5 lety

    nice! that reentry and landing got pretty kerbal.

  • @species8472cze
    @species8472cze Před 6 lety +1

    did NOT know that soviets planned to use the same stage for orbital insertion AND powered descend, awesome :O Great video!

  • @badgerdog4809
    @badgerdog4809 Před 5 lety +5

    I would have wished them a successful moon landing sometime after Apollo 11.

  • @LexieAssassin
    @LexieAssassin Před 6 lety +9

    The Soviets would've never broadcast a lunar landing live... It would either be after a successful landing or more likely after the mission. At best, it would be a delayed transmission. Perhaps an hour?

    • @kevincgustafson
      @kevincgustafson  Před 6 lety +7

      I tend to agree, though with ASTP, they broadcast everything live!

    • @LexieAssassin
      @LexieAssassin Před 6 lety

      ASTP...?!?

    • @LexieAssassin
      @LexieAssassin Před 6 lety +1

      Ohhh! Apollo-Soyuz!

    • @davidbowerman6433
      @davidbowerman6433 Před 5 lety

      but everyone with a radio telescope would have watched it.....Just not the general public. Like the Apollo missions.

  • @Technoid_Mutant
    @Technoid_Mutant Před 2 lety

    Really well-done brother.

  • @ZawcheeOnYoutubeDotCoom

    Nice Video!
    10/10, keep going!

  • @chenkunnie
    @chenkunnie Před 4 lety +4

    that bgm got the taste of the red army choir, nice choice

    • @JuchePasa
      @JuchePasa Před 4 lety

      Imma download this video just in case.

  • @robertoneill1979
    @robertoneill1979 Před 6 lety +7

    Hey, that Soviet flag was waving in the breeze!
    😂

    • @oremooremo5075
      @oremooremo5075 Před 6 lety +7

      Robert O'Neill No actually a flag will still wave in a vaccum since it has mass and therefore possesses inertia. They will also tend to wave for longer since there is no air to dampen the motion of the flag

    • @KentuckyFriedDoge
      @KentuckyFriedDoge Před 3 lety

      @@oremooremo5075 no, the mun landings were faked!

    • @alexandergamingrus6022
      @alexandergamingrus6022 Před 2 lety

      @@KentuckyFriedDoge oh if N1 fake appolo 11 is too fake.

  • @Charles35401
    @Charles35401 Před 4 lety +1

    Great video, would be cool if we could see the saturn v launching on the the background at re-entry but that's just too hard to happen

  • @josephcope7637
    @josephcope7637 Před 5 lety +2

    I can't help wonder if the Soviet lunar lander had sufficient cross ranging control to avoid a boulder filled crater like the one Apollo 11 was heading into until Neil Armstrong took manual control.

  • @syedalwisitifatimah
    @syedalwisitifatimah Před 5 lety +37

    Salute U.S.S.R 👍
    The First Country Go To Space
    🚀🛰

    • @5Puff
      @5Puff Před 4 lety +2

      Honestly, as an American, I think the Russians did beat us. They won everything, except the moon. And somehow they lost the space race?

    • @mr.insectoid
      @mr.insectoid Před 4 lety

      @@5Puff The Americans won, the moon is very far, and I am from Russia

    • @maorbar6957
      @maorbar6957 Před 4 lety

      @@mr.insectoid about 350,000 km

    • @jacko4932
      @jacko4932 Před 4 lety

      wrong, germany was.

    • @maorbar6957
      @maorbar6957 Před 4 lety

      @@jacko4932 yeah it was equipped with a nuclear warhead

  • @user-no7zq3sn4l
    @user-no7zq3sn4l Před 5 lety +3

    Да самый опасный и трудный участок полета посадка на Луну.. Одни человек в посадочном модуле... И всего одна минута на посадку, время работы двигателя лунного модуля после отделения ступени, которая выводит на орбиту систему и дает импульс на посадку... В течении одной минуты надо все решить и успеть.. У американцев куа больше времени было на посадку и запас топлива в посадочной ступени, взлетная ступень отдельно....

  • @tounsi7orr14
    @tounsi7orr14 Před 5 lety

    very good work

  • @Theodorus5
    @Theodorus5 Před 5 lety

    Excellent choice of music comrade :)

  • @Maxi-ky4fz
    @Maxi-ky4fz Před 5 lety +3

    Things that would bei interessting:
    What if...
    -The N1 worked
    -no accident in Tschernobyl
    -The Soviet Union would still exist

  • @dedmazai007
    @dedmazai007 Před 7 lety +5

    Грандиозно! Спасибо!

    • @kevincgustafson
      @kevincgustafson  Před 7 lety +2

      Добро пожаловать, товарищ

    • @dedmazai007
      @dedmazai007 Před 7 lety

      Я в восхищении! :)

    • @kevincgustafson
      @kevincgustafson  Před 7 lety +2

      спасибa!

    • @user-bc1xg9ih3p
      @user-bc1xg9ih3p Před 6 lety

      Kevin Gustafson Все очень круто)Но с советскими аудио записями переборщили)

  • @randomkerbal
    @randomkerbal Před 3 lety

    10/10 realistic flight profile, and camera shots.

  • @isekaiexpress9450
    @isekaiexpress9450 Před 5 lety

    The "Your grace, Lady Luck" song would be fitting for the start, since it's from the soundtrack from the "White sun of the desert" movie, that is being screened to cosmonauts before every start (as a lucky charm tradition)

  • @Ksescel
    @Ksescel Před rokem +3

    23:39 I think the crew just threw up

  • @Shipwright1918
    @Shipwright1918 Před 7 lety +3

    Well, they got close, maybe if the design bureaus hadn't bickered among themselves, they'd had a bit more money and support from the USSR's leadership, and in general they'd gotten their shit together, they might've done it.
    In any case, great video Comrade! An interesting look at what might've been. What mods did you use?

    • @rossmum
      @rossmum Před 6 lety +2

      It's funny - a lot of people claim capitalism drives innovation when Soviet OKBs were churning out ideas nobody in the West would even touch, but the moment they were required to STOP competing with each other and work together on common goals, then it became a problem!

  • @iskraivan7431
    @iskraivan7431 Před 5 lety +2

    Odlična muzika i animacija!

  • @berndp3426
    @berndp3426 Před 5 lety +2

    The real program got halted for financial reasons. On the other hand, this first ascend stage would have driven a crewman's capability on holding acceleration (g-) forces to a quite high limit. Image this tremendous amounts of rockets attached to it, burning a lot of fuel already in the very first seconds of flight, so the rocket's weight is reducing quickly, while acceleration increases.

  • @thepanamguy431
    @thepanamguy431 Před 4 lety +4

    You missed the retrorocket firing before touchdown on Earth.

    • @spinningsquare1325
      @spinningsquare1325 Před 3 lety

      Yeah because this is how soyuz lands on the ground without killing ppl inside

  • @alanrobbie4851
    @alanrobbie4851 Před 7 lety +121

    That's fake! The Russians NEVER put a Kerbal on the Mun! :D
    Pity they didn't. It would be so much more interesting in space right now. Great vid.!

    • @fbicknel
      @fbicknel Před 6 lety +5

      I was gonna say this proves that the Mun landing was a fake. You beat me to it.

    • @exospaceman8209
      @exospaceman8209 Před 6 lety

      The moon landings wasent fake though it was REAL.

    • @thomaswijgerse723
      @thomaswijgerse723 Před 6 lety +17

      @exospace man, yes, but the mun landings are fake, they filmed them in a studio on duna.

    • @redactedagentdataexpunged9431
      @redactedagentdataexpunged9431 Před 6 lety

      It's supposed to be a alternate to the space race

    • @the_honkler778
      @the_honkler778 Před 6 lety +3

      Thomas Wijgerse look at the shadows in the pictures taken on the Moon. They are parallel, that can't be recreated in a studio. It's because the light source (the sun) is millions of miles away. The shadows alone say it was real. People that think the moon landings where fake are just as dumb as flat earthers. They have no scientific knowledge and half the time don't even have real proof and only make accusations. If you want people to belive that the moon landing was fake, give some concrete evidence and stop just making accusations.

  • @MichaelThomas-be7gq
    @MichaelThomas-be7gq Před 5 lety +1

    Holy moly, three stages to get into Earth orbit, then another two to get the 'thing' down on the Moon. Far too much to go wrong, it often did. This is a great Kerbal vid though. As for the N1: the world's biggest firework which Glushko emulated with the Nedelin disaster.

  • @6011508
    @6011508 Před rokem

    That was most enjoyable. Thank you.

  • @jbaltusstuff5908
    @jbaltusstuff5908 Před 7 lety +3

    What mod did you use for the parts? (Talking about the lander and the soyuz used)
    By the way, amazing video! Should be used in history classes!

    • @kevincgustafson
      @kevincgustafson  Před 7 lety +3

      It's the Soviet Spacecraft mod found here - forum.kerbalspaceprogram.com/index.php?/topic/133579-13-soviet-spacecraft-soyuzvostokvoskhodloklk-v17-6-19-17/

    • @kevincgustafson
      @kevincgustafson  Před 7 lety +2

      A combo of the Soviet Rockets (forum.kerbalspaceprogram.com/index.php?/topic/79433-13-soviet-probes-soviet-rockets-r7soyuzprotonzenit-6-19-17/) and Soviet Spacecraft (forum.kerbalspaceprogram.com/index.php?/topic/133579-13-soviet-spacecraft-soyuzvostokvoskhodloklk-v17-6-19-17/) with Tantares LV (github.com/Tantares/TantaresLV/releases) for the N1

  • @alexchivilev
    @alexchivilev Před 7 lety +38

    Good video, really good. But i had to say that N-1 was crap. Sergey Korolyov was a genius, but his confrontation with Vyalentin Glushko buried the Soviet dream of the Moonю Glushko's rocket, UR-700 was much more advanced and it had much more chances to get o the moon, and Korolev used all his authority from the party leadership to prevent it from being produced in favor on his own N-1.

    • @bottlekruiser
      @bottlekruiser Před 6 lety +1

      ю

    • @rwboa22
      @rwboa22 Před 6 lety +6

      Also, the USSR didn't do the extensive testing on the N-1 like NASA and von Braun did with the Saturn V. The biggest problem the Soviet Union had was "go fever," all in the name of Communist propaganda. And even if the N-1 was properly tested, it was still less powerful than the Saturn V; the Energia rocket designed by Glushko outmatched the Saturn V and had two perfect flights. Now the Russian Federation is developing the Anagra rocket, but even that will only match the Proton booster (another Glushko rocket) and the Falcon 9 Heavy, but not the Saturn V, Energia, or the Block II SLS.

    • @riccards
      @riccards Před 6 lety

      alexchivilev but the real N1-L3 rocket have not been launched with cosmonauts because at all tests it blowed up

    • @riccards
      @riccards Před 6 lety

      Richard Bowley not falcon 9 heavy but falcon heavy and the most powerful rocket is N1-L3

    • @cwoassont4385
      @cwoassont4385 Před 6 lety +3

      Nosty GamerLV By usual definition, the Saturn V is still more "powerful" than the N1-L3. The N1-L3's Block A first stage may have produced more thrust at liftoff (10 200 000 pounds) than the Saturn V's S-IC booster stage (7 500 000 pounds), but it burned significantly shorter at 125 seconds vs the S-IC's 168 seconds. All further stages compare similarly, resulting in a payload capacity to LEO of 95 000 kg for the N1-L3 as opposed to the Saturn V's significantly higher 140 000 kg. On a side note, the space shuttle (STS for you nitpickers) produces 7 800 000 pounds of thrust at liftoff, slightly more than the Saturn V, but only has an LEO payload capability of 27 500 kg. No one would argue that the Space Shuttle is more "powerful" than the Saturn V just because its thrust at liftoff is higher, just as no one would (or should) argue that the N1-L3 outmatches the Saturn V, because the definition of the " power" a rocket has is its payload capacity.

  • @malcolmabram2957
    @malcolmabram2957 Před 5 lety

    Shame the N1 project did not succeed. But it is amazing what esoteric stuff one can find on CZcams. Superb video. Superb animation. Well chosen background music.

  • @kirien5610
    @kirien5610 Před 6 lety

    those are some nice apollo launch clamps youve got there

  • @laiphone8972
    @laiphone8972 Před 5 lety +4

    Snif beautiful glory to the motherland

  • @user-fq1kl7mx5t
    @user-fq1kl7mx5t Před 5 lety +5

    Korolev's dream came true

  • @timothydutton4249
    @timothydutton4249 Před 5 lety

    It looks as if the cosmonauts may have needed medical attention after that landing. Cool Video.

  • @amperzand9162
    @amperzand9162 Před 4 lety +1

    Looks like a big section around the lander separation got muted.

  • @nanozine6033
    @nanozine6033 Před 7 lety +61

    Russian logic: just stick 100 engines into a rocket and watah it explo- I mean fly to space

    • @czarnubenisciepiess5126
      @czarnubenisciepiess5126 Před 6 lety +5

      Nanozine 21 more is stronker!!!!

    • @user-gi5jc4ce5d
      @user-gi5jc4ce5d Před 5 lety +4

      It's isn't logic. Just technologies and 1950's design don't let it to stick only 10 engines.

    • @davidbowerman6433
      @davidbowerman6433 Před 5 lety +1

      @@user-gi5jc4ce5d supply issues of Soviet era hardware limited designing engines to a certain size. Even so, production flaws in the NK-15 doomed the first 3 attempts (plus the KORD computer) and even the N-33 engines were later found to have many of the same metallurgical flaws in the turbos that the NK-15 had. of the 5 N-33 bench tested, 2 exploded. The rest were disassembled and the flaws discovered. Makes you wonder who was building the turbo pumps....
      But design wise, brillant! Still not a fan of "hot fire" separation of a rocket.... I think NASA had the better approach using strap on booster rockets to maintain fuel feed.

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 Před 5 lety +1

      like 32 in R7

    • @quoniam426
      @quoniam426 Před 5 lety +6

      Irony. N1 was a wreck train with 30 engines. Nowadays with better computers and building, Falcon Heavy has 3 time 9 so 27 engines. Superheavy will have more than 30. Elon Musk will probably succeeed where Korolev failed. But as said, it was the quality of the work that was bad, the design itself was brilliant on many things.
      Super Heavy and Starship is what the N1 should have been. In that it is more of an offspring to the N1 than to the Saturn V.

  • @will7254
    @will7254 Před 4 lety +5

    Farewell of Slavianka playing over a Soviet moon landing is something I never thought I needed.

  • @spatialfrance
    @spatialfrance Před 5 lety

    Excellent, thanks a lot.

  • @gamestv4875
    @gamestv4875 Před 5 lety +2

    Might have had fatalities at the last moment when it landed on earth.
    That was one hard landing ...lol

  • @doreybain
    @doreybain Před 5 lety +6

    There's a conspiracy theory that says the Russians never had an imaginary landing on the moon.

  • @lucasnicoara7400
    @lucasnicoara7400 Před 7 lety +30

    So many engines it failed

    • @JohnnosaurusREX
      @JohnnosaurusREX Před 7 lety +18

      The story is more complex. Years before the first flight the soviet chief designer died and with him not only crucial engineering knowledge, but also the decent relationship with the soviet leadership (which never really saw much benefit in this rocket), so funding became even more of an issue.
      With the time pressure by the Americans and severely limited resources, the majority of engines where never even tested before installation, let alone the entire stack combined. Not to mention, that Americans eventually landed on the moon, so it became just a resource eating project for a feat, they already got beaten on and got scraped.
      Note that the Falcon Heavy will fire 27 engines in the first stage, which should be flown in the coming months (also keep in mind the ITS with a whopping 42 engines should it ever be build). There are advantages to adding a lot of engines instead of building massive ones (for example easier combustion stability, more thrust to weight ratio, and of course more redundancy in case engines fail, unless of course the rocked decides to shut down most of the engines like the N1 enjoyed doing).
      But once again the story is also more complex than this...

    • @kurtu5
      @kurtu5 Před 7 lety +7

      Too many pipes. All vibrating at unfirgureable modes that shook the poor thing apart. Today computers would be able to solve those issues.

    • @mrsturm519
      @mrsturm519 Před 7 lety

      The design was fundamentaly flawed and bound to fail. Time and funding weren't as much of the issue soviet scientist like to pretend to justify their failures.

    • @mkd2839
      @mkd2839 Před 7 lety +5

      Mr Sturm Not really. It was took down due to a computer glitch in the guidance system. They could have easily fixed it with enough resource and time

    • @mowogfpv7582
      @mowogfpv7582 Před 5 lety +3

      It's more complex than that. N1 had 30 engines. Falcon heavy has 27. So is 30 too many and 27 just fine? Antares only had two engines in it's first stage but they were NK33s...

  • @humppi.2304
    @humppi.2304 Před 6 lety +1

    I did my first mun landing last week, and i did it on basically vostok 1 but little modifications (like landing legs)

  • @rdhd99
    @rdhd99 Před rokem

    Again excellent

  • @geofisika8838
    @geofisika8838 Před 6 lety +15

    kaaaAAAALIN(stage separation)

  • @aai3661
    @aai3661 Před 5 lety +4

    Peter Dinklage was a Soviet cosmonaut?

  • @alexanderyuvensky4913
    @alexanderyuvensky4913 Před 3 lety

    Photos and videos are interesting, but the soundtrack is killer! :))

  • @sammatthews1953
    @sammatthews1953 Před 4 lety +1

    Music: hunt for red october

  • @vetal-mq9ce
    @vetal-mq9ce Před 4 lety +4

    respect for the Soviet anthem

  • @t65bx25
    @t65bx25 Před 5 lety +4

    it’s soooo russian...
    I LOVE IT!

  • @jmstudios457
    @jmstudios457 Před 4 lety +1

    To be honest, the N1 is a beautiful and underrated spacecraft. On par with the Saturn V.

  • @TheWilliamTW
    @TheWilliamTW Před 5 lety

    The best Soviet Moon Mission i ever seen :D

  • @AnthonyParcmans
    @AnthonyParcmans Před 7 lety +3

    so what is all this music it is amazing

    • @kevincgustafson
      @kevincgustafson  Před 7 lety +2

      Red Army Choir

    • @AnthonyParcmans
      @AnthonyParcmans Před 7 lety

      thanks mate, your videos are astounding like truly incredible glad to have found you

    • @rossmum
      @rossmum Před 6 lety

      Not quite all of them. The theme from Hunt for Red October (~7:56) is often attributed to the Red Army Choir but is definitely not (and they don't sound exactly like native Russian speakers, either). It was written by Basil Poledouris who also did the soundtrack for Starship Troopers. The Soviet Anthem here is also sung by the Bolshoi Theatre choir, the Red Army Choir version is more commonly used but is male vocals only.

    • @rossmum
      @rossmum Před 6 lety +5

      00:20 Anthem of the Soviet Union - Choir & orchestra of the Bolshoi Theatre
      03:45 V Put' (usually translated as Let's Go/On the March) - Red Army Choir. Not the version from the film it was originally written for, this is from a live concert. Not sure where.
      07:07 Kalinka - Red Army Choir (only the beginning)
      07:29 Utyos (The Cliff) - Red Army Choir, soloist Leonid Kharitonov (only the beginning, which is a shame because it's an incredibly powerful piece)
      07:40 Hunt for Red October theme, written by Basil Poledouris, I have no idea who the choir is but it's not the RAC
      12:43 Farewell of Slavianka - Red Army Choir
      15:28 The Partisans' Song - Red Army Choir
      18:30 I don't know the title of this one though I recognise the tune. It's used on military parades.
      20:52 Svyaschennaya Voina (The Sacred War) - Red Army Choir

    • @PaulKurz
      @PaulKurz Před 6 lety

      rossmum thank you comrade

  • @alexchivilev
    @alexchivilev Před 7 lety +11

    Good job, good video, i subbed. But next time, please, do not insert into the video songs, the meaning of which you do not know. I mean this is a good songs, but it is all military marches, and i think there is no place for militaries in space. We, have several good soviet/russian songs about space exploration, wich should be in this video instead of these marches

    • @santiagob.1071
      @santiagob.1071 Před 6 lety +1

      alexchivilev out of curiosity, do you have the names of those Soviet songs about space exploration?

    • @PaulKurz
      @PaulKurz Před 6 lety +1

      alexchivilev Успокойся

    • @bottlekruiser
      @bottlekruiser Před 6 lety +1

      Santiago B.
      "Трава у дома"
      czcams.com/video/2seJEwKPx7s/video.html
      "К дальним планетам!"
      czcams.com/video/Ys8I5OiRhho/video.html
      "И на Марсе будут яблони цвести"
      czcams.com/video/zUxm2kJ5Jbo/video.html
      "Я верю, друзья"
      czcams.com/video/wzPZZjSksoY/video.html

    • @AdamMaykov
      @AdamMaykov Před 6 lety +1

      И с чего ты решил, что они не понимают смысл? или что трудно найти эти песни и перевести на любой язык? в каком веке живем?

  • @madelinewright5739
    @madelinewright5739 Před rokem

    Wow the rockets and lunar lander look so realistic great job!

  • @charlesvan13
    @charlesvan13 Před 4 lety +2

    The USA rocket, Command/service module and lander were much more attractive.
    An obvious observation, the Americans knew how to dock modules with passage. The Russians must have developed that technology with the Apollo/Soyutz test project.