What They Really Had Planned for Apollo

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  • čas přidán 14. 05. 2024
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    When we look back at Apollo we see the landing of the first humans on the moon with Apollo 11 and the following 6 missions up to Apollo 17 but the planners wanted a larger and longer program with a moon base and space stations but the Apollo 1 fire triggered the beginning of the end of this dream of lunar exploration. This is what the planners had in mind for Apollo after the initial landings.
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    Written, researched and presented by Paul Shillito
    Images and footage : NASA
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Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @jgunther3398
    @jgunther3398 Před 2 lety +188

    When I was a kid in the '60s the magazines casually expected humans on Mars around 1986, using mostly Saturn/Apollo hardware as the basis. The movie 2001 was what we in the late 1960s expected space technology would have advanced to by the year 2001. I mean we went to the Moon in 10 years, in 40 years we could do anything. It would be interesting to try and seriously project what we would have today if those things had been accomplished

    • @robertthomas5906
      @robertthomas5906 Před 2 lety +13

      Now we know what happened. It was that idiot LBJ and his new FDR type social deal that didn't work out. He also screwed up Vietnam. Money spent on the space program is still with us today. Money thrown away on those social programs is gone. The reparations of the 1960s.

    • @remo27
      @remo27 Před 2 lety +24

      @@robertthomas5906 It was partly that. But even if you discount the ascendent leftwing of the time (Greenies and various Racial and Sexual activists) which basically regarded space as a distraction at best, there's the fact that Congress and the White House (but mostly Congress due to their control of the Budgeting Committees)refused to throw political capital into the fray to save the Apollo Applications Programme, or indeed much of anything Space related at the time. A few years later, in the early and mid 70's Congress discovered the Pork possibilities, both for themselves and their native States when they could hold funding hostage to repay their constituents or political benefactors (often large corporations). Since the status quo was so profitable, why change it? Hence why we got 40 years of stagnation when it came to manned flights, let alone things like mining asteroids, space factories, bases on the moon , exploring Mars or any of that. In fact one of the reasons Space X has been so disruptive is its current partial reuse of rockets is still far better than anyone else has (and its currently working on full reuse with its Starship), and has enabled large scale price reductions which is why it currently dominates not only the US launch market but the global one. Reuse isn't as profitable as 'one shot' bespoke space ships, hence why congress had no interest in programs like the Delta Clipper. Of course one could make the argument that the cheaper you make it to get to space the more you can do there and the larger the economics of spaceflight get (which means a bigger pie), but expecting mostly corrupt old lawyers (most of congress) to understand this is a rather hopeless fight, esp as that is not what Boeing pays them for. Anyway, in between corrupt short sighted congresses and Presidents mostly unwilling to spend real political capital to push any large spaceflight (esp manned) projects since Apollo, it's a miracle NASA even got to send those small unmanned probes out to the outer planets.

    • @Jogeta5
      @Jogeta5 Před 2 lety +14

      The closest thing to that I've seen would* be the AppleTV series For All Mankind which depicts what would happen if the Soviets got to the moon first and how the space program is affected by that.

    • @fiddledotgoth
      @fiddledotgoth Před 2 lety +3

      Or maybe its because all that money had been wasted on faked missions...

    • @adidell
      @adidell Před 2 lety +3

      @@Jogeta5 ^This

  • @tag1462
    @tag1462 Před 2 lety +78

    Born in '62 I grew up with this. Now, as an adult, I have a deeper appreciation for the entire Apollo program. What could have been eventually did happen and all of it due to the Apollo program. I'm glad we are going back. This time having learned from our mistakes and our successes.

    • @nakfan
      @nakfan Před 2 lety +3

      I was also born in 1962 👍 I heard the moon landing on the radio, as we only got a TV in 1970. Still very captivating, though. BR, Per (Denmark)

    • @QuantumRift
      @QuantumRift Před 2 lety +1

      I was born in '57, and remember and appreciate Apollo as well, and Gemini. I was a bit too young to grasp Mercury but as they were emphasizing the space race in school, I absorbed all I could about the Gemini missions, and the Apollo program.

    • @paulhaynes8045
      @paulhaynes8045 Před 2 lety +3

      53 for me. This was all part of the 60s to me - an incredible decade, especially in the UK, where we had the Beatles instead of Vietnam... At the time I loved it - such an exciting time to be alive. But then, as I got older, the realisation set in that I might never see us go back to the moon - very depressing. So the whole Space X thing was wonderful - it looked like I might live to see people back on the moon after all.
      But climate change has changed all that. I'm still interested, of course, but now I find myself wishing that all this cleverness and money could be spent on saving this planet, rather than flying to another. I can see a moon base being feasible, but we are never going to colonise Mars - apart from the cost and all the technical difficulties, I think we'll find that humans can't survive long-term in low gravity. We have to face up to the reality that there is only one planet suitable for us, and we're currently doing our best to destroy that. I can live with never going back to moon, but I don't want to die knowing that I have bequeathed a dying Earth to my children and grandchildren.

    • @charlestaylor253
      @charlestaylor253 Před 2 lety +1

      I was born in '69, and not only are we NEVER going back, we're headed toward Authoritarian Marxist tyranny...😞💀

    • @SpirosPagiatakis
      @SpirosPagiatakis Před 2 lety +1

      @@charlestaylor253 We are fucked! I heard China is about to laser burn the likeness of Marx on the moon surface along with the stars from their flag. Every time we look at the moon we will have Marx shoved down our throats! Bring back slavery and child labour now or else we will all suffer under the boot of communism! Do your research sheeple!!!!

  • @seanurquhart3179
    @seanurquhart3179 Před 2 lety +55

    You are just a natural at hosting. Such a great delivery, explanation and tone every time.

  • @trickert3129
    @trickert3129 Před 2 lety +163

    Paul and Mark Felton are in a league of their own when it comes to the mini-documentary format on YoutTube.

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Před 2 lety +2

      EXCEPT, MARK FELTON RELIES ENTIRELY ON FACTS !

    • @kubajackiewicz2
      @kubajackiewicz2 Před 2 lety +15

      Ah yes, Mark felton, let me narrate a Wikipedia article while unrelated stock footage plays

    • @simony2801
      @simony2801 Před 2 lety +13

      @@kubajackiewicz2 that’s simply not true.

    • @narsimhas1360
      @narsimhas1360 Před 2 lety +5

      @@kubajackiewicz2 DOCTOR Felton doesn’t do such things

    • @trickert3129
      @trickert3129 Před 2 lety +5

      @@kubajackiewicz2haha, I don't think you understand the genre. Dr. Felton cover obscure historical events and overly flashy media would deminish the quality of his videos. Head over to the 'Dark' channels if you want lots of filters over the video.

  • @scottweisel3640
    @scottweisel3640 Před 2 lety +267

    Of the three items that competed for money in LBJ’s budget, The Vietnam War, The Great Society, and The Apollo Project: Only the Apollo Project could be considered a success. All three had their detractors, but lessons learned from Apollo led to further space successes, while it seems the lessons from Vietnam have been forgotten, and despite the trillions of dollars spent on poverty, we still create more of it.

    • @G58
      @G58 Před 2 lety +12

      Except for the well documented fact that all government projects go over budget, so blaming reduction in the budget appears very difficult to sustain.

    • @jamallabarge2665
      @jamallabarge2665 Před 2 lety +25

      The idea of making "equality of outcomes" denies the unequal abilities of people. Pareto's law applied to "wealth distributions". Seems to apply to all sorts of scenarios. LBJ's Great Society was mostly cancelled by Nixon.
      The Vietnam war was a jobs program and profit bonanza for elites. LBJ himself said, "I'd like to get out of Vietnam but my friends make too much money there". Poor boys were sent to Vietnam, hammered for a year in heavy combat. Thanks to special training nine out of ten would fire at the enemy. Meanwhile the Viets just wanted all foreigners to go home. They were fed up with any sort of colonization.
      The Apollo failed due to its own success. Once you put someone on the moon and bring them back, then what do you do?

    • @fnamelname9077
      @fnamelname9077 Před 2 lety +18

      @@jamallabarge2665 I don't think all of the people who were tortured to death after America pulled out were "fed up with any sort of colonization". South Korea wasn't in a hurry to rejoin NK. If America had stayed, a nation that was murdered, would have lived.

    • @philipbay1548
      @philipbay1548 Před 2 lety +3

      @@jamallabarge2665 stay on the moon and then head to Mars.

    • @user-fs9mv8px1y
      @user-fs9mv8px1y Před 2 lety +22

      trying to solve poverty under capitalism is like trying to light wood on fire underwater

  • @siegeteamcweir6859
    @siegeteamcweir6859 Před 2 lety +327

    Really liking these recent subjects, Paul. Fascinating stuff. Keep it up!

    • @kekons23
      @kekons23 Před 2 lety +2

      that comma you used, frightens me.

    • @fiddledotgoth
      @fiddledotgoth Před 2 lety +1

      Still wondering why the command module had pure oxygen for a test launch...

    • @bobcastro9386
      @bobcastro9386 Před 2 lety

      @@fiddledotgoth in addition to weight and complexity, using nitrogen and oxygen mixture was more hazardous in its own way. During an earlier ground test, the oxygen pump failed and only pure nitrogen was pumped into the spacecraft. Nitrogen-only as a breathing gas causes suffocation and the ground crew almost did not get the astronaut stand-in out of the spacecraft in time.

    • @fiddledotgoth
      @fiddledotgoth Před 2 lety

      @@bobcastro9386 So instead of a backup supply of oxygen (as is provided for every passenger of commercial air flights) they decided to go with pure oxygen...?

    • @Tuning3434
      @Tuning3434 Před 2 lety

      @@fiddledotgoth Amy got you covered: czcams.com/video/FvA7N_j_8os/video.html

  • @mickeyfilmer5551
    @mickeyfilmer5551 Před 2 lety +138

    More extremely interesting stuff that passed me by, as a kid in the 60's

    • @oxcart4172
      @oxcart4172 Před 2 lety +5

      U should check out 'The Vintage Space' channel as well. That girl is a big fan of the early space missions

    • @ross-carlson
      @ross-carlson Před 2 lety +4

      @@oxcart4172 By "That girl" I assume you mean Amy Shira Teitel - and yes, she's awesome.

    • @oxcart4172
      @oxcart4172 Před 2 lety +5

      @@ross-carlson I did mean Amy! I'm terrible with names!

    • @uzogsi
      @uzogsi Před 2 lety +3

      Amy's channel is awesome. She has a half hour drill down on the planned Apollo mission to Venus for example.

    • @MrDoneboy
      @MrDoneboy Před 2 lety

      Were you asleep?

  • @andrewatkins1635
    @andrewatkins1635 Před 2 lety +78

    Fantastic as always. Glad to see the wardrobe magic has returned.

  • @devins7457
    @devins7457 Před 2 lety +28

    The algorithm favors your worthy content.

  • @ettorebugatti6846
    @ettorebugatti6846 Před 2 lety +65

    not exagerating, i really like your vids, enjoying the content and naration. Just wanted to give a friendly tap! Thank you sir.

  • @johnassal5838
    @johnassal5838 Před 2 lety +44

    The key fact and unthinkable stupidity of the Apollo 1 fire is that they very carefully included design features that mitigated the extra risks of a pure O2 atmosphere but then for the manned ground test _systematically negated all those measures_ to run a test with very close to zero chance of survival.
    In that gas mix _any_ spark could ignite aluminum like kindling making it very unlikely it could've been run without so much as one static shock ending in tragedy. Simple insanity expressed in the diligent purpose of a group somehow going totally off the rails.

    • @Wired4Life2
      @Wired4Life2 Před 2 lety +1

      “Go” fever, bruv.

    • @WaxPaper
      @WaxPaper Před 2 lety +13

      They were acting like cowboys. I doubt any of the Apollo missions would fly today, with NASA's modern safety protocols. Or at least not the early ones. Even the Mercury ones were crazy when you think about how young the rocket technology was. There's an parallel universe where half the astronauts blew up on the launch pad.

    • @johnassal5838
      @johnassal5838 Před 2 lety +1

      @@WaxPaper Idk. A lot of these newer protocols seem like they compensate (psychologically) for all the things they have little to no control over by massively over doing the regimentation on what they can control but no amount of polishing the floor is going to make up for frozen insulation hitting the -Endeavor's- Challenger's wing leading edge, no matter how much they refuse to consider that unconstrained (and _supposedly_ unconstrainable) possibility. They wouldn't even look on orbit. SMH. At least in those earlier cases they generally had a good idea of just how many corners they were cutting and the risks they *knowingly* took. These days they've got a 300 page checklist to make the tacos so they're covered if the meat was bad. Followed the checklist✔️

    • @SFKelvin
      @SFKelvin Před 2 lety +1

      Remember, these were the 60s when they killed JFK, RFK, LBJ. Grissom’s family has insisted for years the fire was premeditated, and there has been some evidence to support this. He was a troublemaker and had been debriefed into some Cold War espionage matters. For many parties the “accident” was convenient.

    • @Wired4Life2
      @Wired4Life2 Před 2 lety +1

      @@johnassal5838 _Endeavor?_ Don’t you mean _Columbia?_

  • @Capitan0Guinea
    @Capitan0Guinea Před 2 lety +3

    I really enjoy this video and the very gentle style they are put together!

  • @dj_sp3rmcount
    @dj_sp3rmcount Před 2 lety +24

    You are by far the most interesting CZcamsr on the planet, also how did I turn on CZcams and get here within 2 minutes of it uploading, also would love to see more content on British history and technology (like harriers)

    • @stevebroadbent5080
      @stevebroadbent5080 Před 2 lety +1

      I'll second that.

    • @colinhughes5302
      @colinhughes5302 Před 2 lety

      The Simpsons episode "And now, for the pride of the US Air Force, the British-made Harrier jump jets!" (Yes, a few inaccuracies, but it's a cartoon...)

  • @SaturnCanuck
    @SaturnCanuck Před 2 lety +64

    Thanks Paul. Always great. Ah, what could have been, but wasn't. Oh and perhaps you can do one on the Space Transportation System, if which the Space Shuttle was just one of four parts -- and the only one made.

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 2 lety +1

      Fun fact: Originally, the Space Shuttle had a two-stage fully-reusable winged flyback design, but that was too expensive to develop on NASA's shoestring budget after Apollo. #FundNASA

    • @SaturnCanuck
      @SaturnCanuck Před 2 lety +1

      @@HalNordmann That is correct. That is why the Shuttle was referred to as The Orbiter as there was also a Launcher

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 2 lety +2

      @@SaturnCanuck BTW, the first stage was more often called a Lifter or a Booster, as a Launcher is a term used for a full rocket. Too bad nobody wanted to fund the full version - some of the Phase B concepts could do everything the TAOS shuttle could, and be fully reusable.

    • @bogdog999
      @bogdog999 Před 2 lety

      @@SaturnCanuck Yes. The full assembly was called "The Space Shuttle". The actual manned spacecraft portion is the shuttle orbiter.

  • @GRosa250
    @GRosa250 Před 2 lety +2

    Excellent and informative video as always Paul. Thank you for all your hard work.

  • @MrAndyLocksmith
    @MrAndyLocksmith Před 2 lety +31

    Yet another informative, well presented and researched video.

    • @Wok-y-Taco
      @Wok-y-Taco Před 2 lety +1

      Was there a video after the 2 minute plus Magellan commercial?

    • @MrAndyLocksmith
      @MrAndyLocksmith Před 2 lety

      @@Wok-y-Taco The two minute commercial you can fast forward you mean. Yes there was.

  • @chubbster80
    @chubbster80 Před 2 lety +6

    Great video! I really appreciate your content, the level of detail you cram into each episode is mind boggling! I really hope you will be doing an episode on the recent US military UAP disclosures, I can imagine it would be fantastic!

  • @teddy.d174
    @teddy.d174 Před 2 lety +4

    I found my love of space through my dad. I think it’s fascinating that many decades later, and the death of my dad…I’m still learning from awesome videos, such as yours. Excellent stuff per usual!

  • @manikiro
    @manikiro Před 2 lety +2

    Congratulations on 1M!!! Thank you for all your hard work!

    • @manikiro
      @manikiro Před 2 lety

      Oh, and forgot to say, I love your shirts!

  • @bgdx.5049
    @bgdx.5049 Před 2 lety +1

    Magnificent. So informative about the real context of the Apollo era! Thank you!

  • @mastasolo
    @mastasolo Před 2 lety +63

    i want to know what shirt Paul would wear if he actually got a ride to space

    • @MrSatyre1
      @MrSatyre1 Před 2 lety

      @Noel Coward You must be lots of fun at parties.

    • @colinhughes5302
      @colinhughes5302 Před 2 lety

      Probably a T-shirt because he'd have to wear a space suit. And therefore, we launch a brand new line of t-shirts. For bonus points. Look up Magellan and take a look at his portrait. This look is what you may incur if you do not check it out :D

    • @desperatemohammedantheworl5833
      @desperatemohammedantheworl5833 Před 2 lety +1

      @@MrSatyre1 It's a parody account.

    • @SiliconBong
      @SiliconBong Před 2 lety

      I want to know what he's smoking, must be some really good gear.

    • @melvinjansen2338
      @melvinjansen2338 Před 2 lety +1

      A paisley shirt ofc

  • @johnassal5838
    @johnassal5838 Před 2 lety +100

    Of course they couldn't figure out the precise cause. The only safe way to use a pure Oxygen atmosphere was to keep the partial pressure the same as in our air, by reducing total pressure to about 0.2 bar. The risk of fire is slightly higher still but not by much.
    *Except* part of the test was a _leak check_ leading them to *pressurize the capsule to 1.25 bar* ... That's right. They made it safe but then made it into an even better lighter just for the _manned_ test they'd be unable to escape what with the above ambient pressure holding the hatch shut.
    It was a systemic *procedural* failure that would never be duplicated in any realistic flight scenario. Claiming there was any "silver lining" was just PR and the redesign of the environmental system just a guilty conscience making sure they couldn't forget the basic operating limitations and kill someone...again.
    Blame the pure O2 and all the flammable Velcro but ignore the fact you can burn an I-beam in a pure O2 atmosphere at or above 1 bar which everyone diligently checked off the task list.

    • @jeffalvich9434
      @jeffalvich9434 Před 2 lety +50

      My dad was one of the engineers working on the Saturn (and Gemini and Mercury) programs.... as usual, budgets were getting tight and per my dad, the engineers at Rockwell had spec'd a valve that cost about $70 (back then) and the "accountants" insisted they were going to use a valve from another company that cost $30 (literally).... the engineers were very upset but despite their objections they were overruled. The $30 valve failed. Following the accident investigation, anyone who had a title or degree had an idea of how to address an escape system (not unusual) for the crew while on the pad (as far as getting out of the capsule). It was getting frustrating for the NASA crews who were very much participating in this due to mostly complexity of the proposed solutions. Somehow, Alan Shepard got my dad's name, called him direct and they spoke numerous times on this. Dad's ideas supported the other engineers, ultimately the hatch was redesigned where class C explosive bolts were used to attach the hatch to the capsule and in the event of an escape, the crew could literally "blow the hatch" with the push of a single button, get out and slide down a telpher line. Dad was the engineer who designed the explosive bolts.

    • @johnassal5838
      @johnassal5838 Před 2 lety +6

      @@jeffalvich9434 Thanks for sharing, it's an amazing story. Maybe Shepard got ahold of a directory and picked his name out to bypass all the organizational B.S. He was a test pilot used to close contact with his ground crew and the designers so it makes sense he'd want to check the guys doing presentations especially after the pad fire. Virtually all the fatal incidents NASA has had were a result of the organization getting too big to operate the same way as he was going for. Something about the organizational structure at that scale keeps mirroring that old Lee Iacocca quote about logic sometimes being a way to go wrong, with confidence. Just crunching the numbers carrying the one while at the team level inadvertently circumventing or disregarding key measures making prior tradeoffs workable. They could still learn a lot from your dad and Shepard.

    • @foreverpinkf.7603
      @foreverpinkf.7603 Před 2 lety +1

      An inward opening door? Serious?

    • @johnassal5838
      @johnassal5838 Před 2 lety +11

      @@foreverpinkf.7603 Yeah. It actually makes sense considering it's primary job is keeping air inside while in vacuum. _Unfortunaly_ you can't do a leak test unless the pressure inside is higher than outside. And everyone just kind of set to work putting a live crew in the one condition the environmental system was designed to avoid (er, other than vacuum and high CO2 I guess.) Nobody considered they could just install a check valve and pump in whole air for the leak test. Heck, they could put it in the middle of a window that could fit inside the standard door without replacing anything else for the test but that piece of glass. Nope. Instead they just dialed the pressure way up and made a passable crematorium.
      I'm sure you've heard references to how stupid groups of people can be but it's usually referring to mobs not high level engineering efforts. It's a major design flaw evident in your Mk1 human being that I just can't get over.

    • @johnpotter4750
      @johnpotter4750 Před 2 lety

      @@johnassal5838 But was it NASA or the Contractors, best, don't answer !

  • @MatthewCMaw
    @MatthewCMaw Před 2 lety +2

    Great content, really enjoyed this!! 👌🏻

  • @anguscovoflyer95
    @anguscovoflyer95 Před 2 lety +59

    I think they were planning to use a Saturn 5 for the manned Venus flyby rather than a Saturn 1B

    • @AdelaeR
      @AdelaeR Před 2 lety +8

      A Saturn V for take-off, surely, but I think he meant they wanted to re-use a part of the 1B for the module doing the fly-by.

    • @sunnyjim1355
      @sunnyjim1355 Před 2 lety +6

      Really, what would be the point of a manned Venus flyby anyway, other than kudos.

    • @sbvera13
      @sbvera13 Před 2 lety +16

      @@sunnyjim1355 At the time the plans were made, automated vehicles were extremely limited. Having a crew would allow for adjustment of experiments and instruments in process.
      That had changed by time the mission was scheduled to occur, but there's no way they could have known that would happen when they planned it. Technology was advancing crazy fast at that time.

    • @noahhess4955
      @noahhess4955 Před 2 lety +2

      @@sbvera13 I would have loved to go on that mission, pictures are awesome but I bet it’s nothing like the real thing

    • @Graeme_Lastname
      @Graeme_Lastname Před 2 lety

      @@noahhess4955 Can be very uncomfortable. Do you get sea sick? :)

  • @BCjeffro420
    @BCjeffro420 Před 2 lety +5

    thanks!! very interesting

  • @Novobranec
    @Novobranec Před 2 lety

    Thank you, Asid Varys! Grate video as always.

  • @briantaylor8197
    @briantaylor8197 Před 2 lety +1

    As always, great job!

  • @TungstenCarbideTempe
    @TungstenCarbideTempe Před 2 lety +3

    Paul keeps producing top quality videos, both - educational and interesting ! Personally I think he’s one of the most underrated CZcamsrs
    👍👌P.S. just shirts alone is fascinating enough to earn a subscription. I love that style, color and design, and personally have a few Robert Graham embroidered long sleeves shirts, similar kind.

  • @Klaus80804
    @Klaus80804 Před 2 lety +4

    Great video Paul. Brings back memories of reading in articles and books during the 60s about further NASA programs with permanent moon stations and trips to Mars, all with improved Apollo type hardware. Well, for the politicians and funders, with Apollo 11 and the raising of the American flag on the moon, the job was done. Now it is up to private entrepreneurs such as Bezos or Musk to continue these ideas. I am glad that there is anyone at all who is tackling these projects and thus humanity is advancing further into space.

  • @youerny
    @youerny Před 2 lety

    Stupendo! Bravissimo!! (Just seen the intro but already loving it for the topic.), wowowowow

  • @stephenmorrissey1254
    @stephenmorrissey1254 Před 2 lety +2

    I clicked the thumbs up with gusto this time. Love this channel!

  • @danielene7904
    @danielene7904 Před 2 lety +3

    Feels like you've had a second wind of inspiration and amazing content ♥️👌

  • @Holimont2010
    @Holimont2010 Před 2 lety +4

    Great stuff!
    Topic option….Avro Arrow?
    I think the audience would like it a lot.
    One of the best kept secrets in military history.
    🤞. Thanks Paul

    • @wrightmf
      @wrightmf Před 2 lety

      >Avro Arrow
      there are still some old Canucks griping about when Diefenbaker cancelled that program.

  • @snawsomes
    @snawsomes Před 2 lety +1

    You provide an amazing service. Thanks for what you do.

  • @BuzzKiller23
    @BuzzKiller23 Před 2 lety +2

    Great content as always!

  • @josephstevens9888
    @josephstevens9888 Před 2 lety +11

    Thank you Paul for discussing the forgotten"I" Missions of the Apollo Program - the Lunar mapping missions. One time I saw that those missions would carry a module that carried a bank of high-powered cameras similar to the ones used on CIA satellites at the time. This module would have been carried into orbit tucked away in the S-IVB 3rd stage, and extracted similar to the Lunar Module during the coast phase to the Moon. It did not specify if a crew member later in the mission would conduct an EVA to extract the film from the module.
    Ah, what Apollo could have been. You must forgive us Paul, us Americans tend to be short sighted in our goals.

  • @mattsmedley.onehandedgamin9029

    I was born in 1974, I'm now the best part of fifty years old and in my entire lifetime no human has stepped foot on the moon.

    • @hankkingsley2976
      @hankkingsley2976 Před 2 lety +9

      I was born in 1964, I'm pushing 60 and in my entire lifetime no human has stepped foot on the Moon.

    • @sunnyjim1355
      @sunnyjim1355 Před 2 lety +38

      @@hankkingsley2976 Either you are bad a maths are you are bad a joking.

    • @hankkingsley2976
      @hankkingsley2976 Před 2 lety +3

      @@sunnyjim1355 1964 to 2021 is 57 years that's pushing 60 b****I love how people like you get all bent out of shape when you even suggest we didn't land on the Moon. you didn't land on the moon --what do you have in it? nothing. What difference is it in my life or your life if we landed on the moon or not? Nothing.

    • @hankkingsley2976
      @hankkingsley2976 Před 2 lety +6

      @@zeev Michael Jackson was a moonwalker and he's been dead for quite a while

    • @TheDoctor1225
      @TheDoctor1225 Před 2 lety +9

      For someone who is (a) expressing nothing more than their opinion and (b) has a BAD case of internet muscles, you're sure getting worked up over something you claim doesn't matter. Looks like they aren't the one acting like a bitch here.

  • @noisyboy87
    @noisyboy87 Před 2 lety +2

    Congratulations Paul on your amazing subscription milestone. Awesome content as always and exciting to wonder what the next video will feature. Maybe a ‘Project AURORA’ video next..? 😏

  • @KJohansson
    @KJohansson Před 2 lety +1

    Good monday sir! Thanks for a excellent video!

  • @taylorjohnson4943
    @taylorjohnson4943 Před 2 lety +2

    Using the fuel tanks or modifying fuel tanks. For habitation or the use as additions to modules is genius

  • @Noone-of-your-Business
    @Noone-of-your-Business Před 2 lety +2

    Duuuuude... your shirts are killing my bandwidth! 😘

  • @PortalooSunset
    @PortalooSunset Před 2 lety +1

    These videos are really interesting. I'm a space geek and I still learn so much from them - no sensationalization or whacky presentation, just good interesting facts.

  • @tinkeringinthailand8147

    I love your work Paul and, as a space nerd, this was a great post for me. Thanks.

  • @mirador698
    @mirador698 Před 2 lety +9

    00:33 This shirt matches nicely with the background - or is it the other way? 🤔
    Anyways a very good video about space history.

  • @MrSatyre1
    @MrSatyre1 Před 2 lety +6

    I've been an Apollo aficionado since I was a wee lad (insert Benny Hill joke here), and really enjoyed this very informative video. 👍 👍

  • @avejst
    @avejst Před 2 lety

    Grat video as always
    Thanks for sharing :-)

  • @tinyredgiant9915
    @tinyredgiant9915 Před 2 lety

    Great content as always. Thanks!

  • @nicholasscott6418
    @nicholasscott6418 Před 2 lety +10

    I really wish the time line in the Apple TV + show For All Mankind is what NASA and the USA did after the Apollo 11 moon mission.

    • @wallaroo1295
      @wallaroo1295 Před 2 lety +4

      The USA teamed up with Optimus Prime to defeat Megatron.

    • @genghiskhan5701
      @genghiskhan5701 Před 2 lety +4

      Yeah, having the US and Soviets duking it out in the moon would be fun to watch

    • @wallaroo1295
      @wallaroo1295 Před 2 lety +2

      @@genghiskhan5701 Russia vs. China would be a cool movie matchup to see.

    • @DavidPlantz
      @DavidPlantz Před 2 lety +4

      My thoughts exactly. The timeline of the show sure beats reality. I do believe commercial space would have happened anyways in All Man Kinds timeline.

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 2 lety

      FAMK is stupid. Just the premise - there was an such a perception of Soviet space superiority that if they claimed another "first", there is a decent chance the whole space program would've folded. It would be enough if the Soviets landed on the Moon at all - they wouldn't even need to be first to force bigger American commitment to space exploration.

  • @GadreelAdvocat
    @GadreelAdvocat Před 2 lety +22

    Had thought of a concept for a lunar lander that uses drop tanks attached to the inside of a lunar Landers legs. As the legs are a good solid structure to anchor fuel tanks off of, rather than another structure being used. Then only a single center rocket engine is needed. Reduces weight and complexity. Could go moon direct with a reentry capsule that way. Would be compact, then able to shed weight when the fuel tanks are expended. To distribute weight, they would need to be dropped in two sets. Two to a set. Or four empty fuel tanks each time. Some tanks could be taken off manually while on the moon to further reduce weight and complexity for a mechanism for such an action if needed.

    • @sigkil
      @sigkil Před 2 lety +6

      The original Dynetics Alpaca lander for the Artemis program had drop tanks.

    • @bobcastro9386
      @bobcastro9386 Před 2 lety +5

      @@sigkil Drop tanks have a potentially serious drawback. As studied in the early 1960's as the "Lunar Crasher", the idea was to have a decent propulsion module that would slow the vertical velocity but not bring it to a complete halt at the surface but jettison first at altitude. That is a make or break maneuver, if one tank doesn't drop at all (or drops later than its matching pair) the sudden change to the center of gravity could flip the vehicle over and be unrecoverable. It was passed over as an 'inelegant design'

  • @travelinman70
    @travelinman70 Před 2 lety

    Great stuff, Thanks Again!

  • @lanternsown3525
    @lanternsown3525 Před 2 lety

    Nice Job! covering the Apollo Applications Program would've loved to seen a lunar base we missed out on.

  • @Velothu
    @Velothu Před 2 lety +4

    Great video- but you mentioning SLS without mentioning Starship is a bit of a miss there.

  • @squirrelarch
    @squirrelarch Před 2 lety +6

    The proposed Venus fly by was a bold idea and would have clearly pushed the current technology and experience in space to the very limit. Would've been either a bold move or merely reckless. We'll never know.

    • @sunnyjim1355
      @sunnyjim1355 Před 2 lety +1

      I'd say it would have been completely pointless other than kudos.

    • @josephcope7637
      @josephcope7637 Před 2 lety

      Automated probes of Venus to increase our knowledge should be done but I can't understand why any nation would want to send crews anywhere near that hell hole.

    • @digitalnomad9985
      @digitalnomad9985 Před 2 lety +2

      It would be absurdly cruel to send any crew on a year long interplanetary mission in a craft with so little internal space. For that length of time that's too little space for even one person. Same thing for Orion. Orion might be good as a reentry vehicle but BY ITSELF, it's no good as an interplanetary transfer vehicle. You'd need a transfer HAB, at least an inflated one. A Venus round trip (no landing) would be shorter than a Mars mission, but not ENOUGH shorter. Even the week plus long Apollo missions were pushing it. Inevitable hardships and risks are bad enough without adding torture. Apollo didn't have the exercise facilities of Skylab, ISS, and (for some missions) the Shuttle. Apollo didn't even have a microgravity toilet (though I think Orion has one).
      The proposed "Apollo Applications" manned Venus flyby would also need a completely different Service Module, The Apollo ones didn't have enough volatiles to provide life support for even one person that long.
      I like the idea of having a Moon base established before the '80s, however.

  • @jamesrapp9778
    @jamesrapp9778 Před 2 lety

    Love your videos! Cheers for that efforts 😎👌

  • @frankgulla2335
    @frankgulla2335 Před 9 měsíci

    Well done, Paul. Thank you.

  • @nobilesnovushomo58
    @nobilesnovushomo58 Před 2 lety +3

    I believe this overlooks the fact that Congress cut funding because the Apollo mission's prerogative goal was met: to assure the American public and as of yet decided nations that in the race to develop militaristically advantageous space technology the USA wasn't just playing catch-up or merely on par with Soviet Space Technology, but better, and more capable.
    Lyndon B. Johnson didn't think the "War on poverty" would eliminate racial injustice. *Funding and support for the Apollo program primarily came from the Military Industrial Complex, as they were the only ones negotiating for the proceeding funding of up to 1 in every 22.6 dollars of tax spent, or capable of convincing congress.*

  • @MonkeyspankO
    @MonkeyspankO Před 2 lety +5

    Inspiring...but also sad, for what could have been.

    • @ArKritz84
      @ArKritz84 Před 2 lety

      Indeed. I still have hopes for the future, but the arms race and social inequality in the world needs to end so we can pull for a common goal as a species.

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Před 2 lety +1

      @@ArKritz84 Naivety reigns

  • @alphabeets
    @alphabeets Před 2 lety

    Fantastic. I had no idea this was all planned. Thank you.

  • @JavSusLar
    @JavSusLar Před 2 lety

    Fantastic topic. My mind blew when I saw the 3D image on the magic eye image of your shirt.

  • @robertmiller9735
    @robertmiller9735 Před 2 lety +5

    In hindsight, it seems unlikely that the big post-Apollo program would have been funded in any circumstances, except, maybe, if Soviet cosmonauts landed on the Moon too. Even then I wouldn't give it very good odds.

    • @SteveGrason59
      @SteveGrason59 Před 2 lety

      The Apple TV series ‘For All Mankind’ covers this scenario and as a similar alternative time line to the one discussed in this video.

    • @robertmiller9735
      @robertmiller9735 Před 2 lety +1

      @@SteveGrason59 Yeah, I've heard that. After a lifetime of fending off why-don't-we-spend-the-money-on-Earth, and seeing the same line in things written in the 60's, it's still implausible, but that could be my bias.

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 2 lety

      @@SteveGrason59 FAMK is stupid. Just the premise - there was an such a perception of Soviet space superiority that if they claimed another "first", there is a decent chance the whole space program would've folded. It would be enough if the Soviets landed on the Moon at all - they wouldn't even need to be first to force bigger American commitment to space exploration.

    • @SteveGrason59
      @SteveGrason59 Před 2 lety

      @@HalNordmann Calm down Hal 😂, it’s just a fictional show with an interesting premise whether realistic or not. I enjoyed watching the two seasons.The show sort of delivered what I thought would happen as a kid who grow up in the sixties ie we would go to moon ,establish moon bases and then head onto Mars. As a 9 year old boy who watched the moon landing live I was always disappointed that the Apollo program didn’t progress. I never liked the space shuttle program.

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 2 lety +1

      @@SteveGrason59 Fun fact: Originally, the Space Shuttle had a two-stage fully-reusable winged flyback design, but that was too expensive to develop on NASA's shoestring budget after Apollo. #FundNASA

  • @Ingens_Scherz
    @Ingens_Scherz Před 2 lety +8

    Isn't Starship more powerful than Artemis?
    Lovely video, as always :)

    • @simongeard4824
      @simongeard4824 Před 2 lety +4

      You mean SLS (the rocket), not Artemis (the program). And it depends on how you want to define things. Starship is unquestionably more powerful in terms of thrust - but SLS can deliver a larger payload in a single launch (indeed, Starship cannot deliver *any* payload direct to lunar orbit). That's not a failing of Starship of course... it just reflects that it's designed with orbital refuelling in mind, and is therefore optimised for that use case.

    • @thex9165
      @thex9165 Před 2 lety

      @@simongeard4824 or SpaceX can do it in expendable config

    • @simongeard4824
      @simongeard4824 Před 2 lety

      @@thex9165 Theoretically, perhaps, but they have no intention of expending boosters with Starship, so not a factor...

    • @_mikolaj_
      @_mikolaj_ Před 2 lety +2

      @@thex9165 even expendable starship still has very high dry mass, and with 380s Isp, it may still loose at some distances with EUS with like 460s Isp and lightweight AlLi tanks

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 2 lety +1

      @@_mikolaj_ Fun fact: A winged flyback/aluminium construction Heavy-lift Vehicle from NASA's SPS study has similar payload to Starship, yet only 4000t mass when full (less than simply the mass of fuel for Starship)! And that is even with some mass reserve!

  • @alecgrolimond1678
    @alecgrolimond1678 Před 2 lety

    I thank you for the additional information. I remeber vaugley watching the events that were brodcast and we had watched it on a BW TV so many years ago.

  • @gersonboav1
    @gersonboav1 Před 2 lety +2

    This channel is amazing.

  • @kevinurben6005
    @kevinurben6005 Před 2 lety +5

    As far as I am aware there is no problem with 100% oxygen at 0.2 bar as would be the case in space. The problem was that the O2 pressure for the ground test was raised to 1.2 bar to simulate the correct differential pressure on the capsule. What could possibly go wrong? Edit: sorry - this has been mentioned already :-/

    • @milantrcka121
      @milantrcka121 Před 2 lety +1

      Indeed. O2 at 1 atmosphere with all the rework in the CM electrical wiring. What could possibly... Still, the atmosphere in the CM was ultimately vented to 0.2 bar and nitrogen ultimately purged. Not entirely sure what was done during reentry. N2 introduced to increase the CM internal pressure?

    • @fiddledotgoth
      @fiddledotgoth Před 2 lety +1

      Which means there was no reason at all for having pure O2 in the command module for a test launch...

    • @milantrcka121
      @milantrcka121 Před 2 lety

      @@fiddledotgoth Well, hindsight = 20/20; one bar pure oxygen is bad news. And yes, there was a reason. Nitrogen has mass. Support hardware complexity - more mass/weight. Apollo was fighting for every ounce (no grams at that time). The test was a launch simulation where "Test as you fly, fly as you test". Pesky earth atmosphere pressure got in the way along with whole bunch of rework of harnesses which ultimately - most probably - resulted in short and fire. Remember the news vividly...
      Apollo 13 is another good example of "should have, would have, could have". And (way too) many more...
      Space is hard.

    • @fiddledotgoth
      @fiddledotgoth Před 2 lety

      @@milantrcka121 Hindsight ??? Are you kidding me ? These people are supposed to be top scientists; it was murder plain and simple...!

  • @ShadetreeArmorer
    @ShadetreeArmorer Před 2 lety +7

    2:02 "The most powerful machine for over 50 years, until the upcoming SLS rocket"
    Starship: *am I a joke to you?*

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 2 lety +1

      If Starship will fly. There is a pretty good possibility it will blow up on pad, or they will need to close their unauthorized testing site. Starship isn't good for anything, really. It is too heavy to go beyond LEO, and for LEO trucking a winged vehicle would be better. A winged flyback/aluminium construction Heavy-lift Vehicle from NASA's SPS study has similar payload to Starship, yet only 4000t mass when full (less than simply the mass of fuel for Starship)! And that is even with some mass reserve!

    • @ShadetreeArmorer
      @ShadetreeArmorer Před 2 lety

      Oh shit @@HalNordmann let me get you on a conference call with SpaceX ASAP so you can explain to them all the horrible mistakes they're making.

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 2 lety +1

      @@ShadetreeArmorer For one, Starship has terrible dry mass. Steel may be cheap, but it is simply too heavy. And in spaceflight, mass is everything, every gram counts. Remember the orange tank on the Shuttle? It used to be painted white, but they later left it orange, just to save those few kilos. The weight limits on rockets are far more strict than the ones on airplanes - and you don't see any airplanes made of steel, do you?

    • @ShadetreeArmorer
      @ShadetreeArmorer Před 2 lety

      Please @@HalNordmann I have SpaceX on the phone right now, what is your phone number so I can conference you in. You simply must relay all this earth-shattering information to them ASAP.

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 2 lety +1

      @@ShadetreeArmorer I suppose you think that is funny. But really. Even a lot of experts say there is a ton of problems with Starship, mass being one of them. Besides - either you want fast reusability, or cheap construction. You don't need both at once, and if you try that, you risk your system will be neither.

  • @StaK_1980
    @StaK_1980 Před 2 lety

    As always, quality content!

  • @parveen7520
    @parveen7520 Před 2 lety

    This channel deserve much more appreciation.

  • @jonnyswalk4674
    @jonnyswalk4674 Před 2 lety +3

    As always a banging video Paul 👏 along with your usual snappy threads (though it does look slightly like an illustration for how the coronavirus multiples&spreads 😉) Just kidding mate - I’m just jealous 😉 😛 👍 Warmest wishes from South Wales 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿- Jonathan 😊 👍

  • @Nightstalker314
    @Nightstalker314 Před 2 lety +4

    They wanted to shoot the next Kubrik movie on the moon.

  • @stephenirwin2761
    @stephenirwin2761 Před 2 lety

    Great video Paul!

  • @thilo_117
    @thilo_117 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for sharing and open talking, I was curious :-) why there were no new videos. I'm glad everything went well. And you also advertise to be tested.

  • @dlifedt
    @dlifedt Před 2 lety +4

    Wait I thought an O+N mixed air system was already planned for real missions when Apollo 1 happened?
    Or did they originally plan to implement it much later?

  • @Patchuchan
    @Patchuchan Před 2 lety +4

    Another issue NIxon started the war on drugs and created the DEA which ended up being a two trillion dollar failure.
    The irony is they could have afforded to keep to Apollo applications program and spent more on the shuttle's development.
    At they very least they should have kept the Saturn IB in production eventually replacing the CSM with a lifting craft.

    • @jamallabarge2665
      @jamallabarge2665 Před 2 lety

      The War on Drugs was a jobs program for rural America. Lots of people out this way work in "corrections". Once people in rural areas get used to such things you need a crowbar to get them away from it.
      Nixon was a boozer. Drank a lot. To him Hippies were moral degenerates. Sending the DEA after them seemed to make sense. I still remember the Paraquat program. The US would spray "marijuana" fields with the the gunk. Smokers got dosed with it.
      Joe Biden, of all people, helped create "Civil Forfeiture" . Any money or property, including cars and land, were to be taken if it were ALLEGED to be "drug related". I put alleged in capital letters. When Police take this stuff, you have to go to court to prove that it was not drug related.
      In 2014 police took more private property than burglars. Outside of the places where weed is legal, people continue to use it. They use lots of it.

    • @Patchuchan
      @Patchuchan Před 2 lety

      @@jamallabarge2665 A space jobs program would have been better for the country.
      Some of the contractors can be operations in small towns.

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 2 lety +1

      Fun fact: Originally, the Space Shuttle had a two-stage fully-reusable winged flyback design, but that was too expensive to develop on NASA's shoestring budget after Apollo. #FundNASA

    • @Patchuchan
      @Patchuchan Před 2 lety

      @@HalNordmann The SRBs were a budgetary shortcut as they felt they would be cheaper to develop but proved to be problematic on a vehicle of that configuration.

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 2 lety +1

      @@Patchuchan They were indeed a budgetary shortcut. There were plans to replace them with liquid fuel boosters, but those were also too expensive to develop.

  • @jaysinha0
    @jaysinha0 Před 2 lety

    Fascinating and very well presented.

  • @lancer525
    @lancer525 Před 2 lety

    Great video, Paul... Well done you.

  • @FoxBoi69
    @FoxBoi69 Před 2 lety +9

    2:02 yeah.... no
    starship is more powerful than sls. even more powerful than the previous reckord holder, the n1
    and starship will very likely fly before sls anyways

    • @oliverford5367
      @oliverford5367 Před 2 lety +1

      NASA should leave launches to SpaceX and the other private companies. Focus on science and leave the basic launch capability to companies

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 2 lety

      SLS is already fully stacked at Cape, and could fly anytime if they wanted to. And BTW, the BN4/SN20 test isn't planned to reach full orbit, assuming it doesn't blow up on pad.

    • @FoxBoi69
      @FoxBoi69 Před 2 lety +1

      @@HalNordmann that is correct.
      but the first starship will still fly first most likely. it will definetly be able to launch, even if it doesn't have permission. so by the time artemis 1 launches, the sls won't be the most powerful rocket
      this could all turn out to be wrong and starship needs to take more time, but that is very unlikely. i'd say it is about as unlikely as elon musk and jeff who playing monopoly together n low earth orbit

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 2 lety

      @@FoxBoi69 As I said, the BN4/SN-20 test DOESN'T REACH ORBIT! So, the SLS will be the most powerful.

    • @FoxBoi69
      @FoxBoi69 Před 2 lety

      @@HalNordmann kinda ture. the first starship launch to space won't be orbital, but it is still the stronger rocket, even tho it is flying a suborbital trajectory

  • @ChaJ67
    @ChaJ67 Před 2 lety +3

    What about the whole NERVA program? I thought this was supposed to be the much more efficient nuclear thermal 3rd stage to the Saturn V that was never built. Do the Moon bases incorporate this to get extra performance for more payload or was this for something else like going to Mars?

    • @steverogers8163
      @steverogers8163 Před 2 lety

      They actually did build a prototype and test fired it. You can find the video on youtube. czcams.com/video/eDNX65d-FBY/video.html The idea was it would be the engine used for Mars missions but maybe also carry larger payloads to the Moon.

    • @ChaJ67
      @ChaJ67 Před 2 lety

      @@steverogers8163 I meant it was never built into a working rocket stage to fly. It was just a prototype engine on a test stand. Prototypes are built all the time and then discarded without ever becoming the full end product. At some point the line needs to be drawn between developing something and saying you are ready to go with the completed product. I tend to draw that line when someone claims they are ready for the intended use, not just when some tests were done on a test stand with a prototype. Getting too far into prototypes, one could say go on about how Blue Origin has the BE-4 rocket engine and say a ULA could promise to fly rockets that use the BE-4 engine. Then various customers, say the US military could book up launches with said rocket. Obviously with only prototype BE-4 engines so far and this remains the case years after Blue Origin promised they would be done prototyping and testing the BE-4 engine, the real BE-4 engine does not exist. On the other hand Elon Musk can claim that he has Raptor engines with this criteria because he has flown and landed rockets using these engines and at least the last time he flew a rocket with them, they all worked great and got the job at hand done. At this with all of that instrumentation for the version 1 series, it is still kind of a prototype and the version 2 has a lot less crap hanging off of it, so it is probably getting closer to what the eventual mass production units will look like.

  • @tez6693
    @tez6693 Před rokem

    Always love Curious Droids documentaries.
    Good switch from the bad news stories all over the place.

  • @uofmer30
    @uofmer30 Před 2 lety

    thanks! great content and presentation

  • @jennywilson2562
    @jennywilson2562 Před 2 lety +3

    The issue for Apollo 1 during the plugs out test was, because the test was conducted at sea level, the cabin was pressurized to approximately 16.7 psi, not 5 psi used during actual missions. This made the internal environment much more combustible.

  • @briannewman6216
    @briannewman6216 Před 2 lety +4

    So they effectively ended the Apollo program by saving $328 million a year.
    Now over 50 years later there is talk of doing the things they were planning to do in the 1970s.

    • @marzsit9833
      @marzsit9833 Před 2 lety

      50 years ago the only nations interested in space were the usa and the soviet union. that has now changed, and now technology has advanced so much that a lot of the things that they wanted to do in the 70's that would have been extremely expensive are actually almost affordable now. who knows, if they discover a big deposit of lithium or gold on the moon that could really change things up dramatically. keep in mind nobody has ever taken a soil sample more than a meter or so deep on the moon.. there could be more there.

    • @jonathanedwardgibson
      @jonathanedwardgibson Před 2 lety

      It was always a cover for milspec spending on ballistic missile tech… it continued, just not ‘productively’ as far as space exploration.

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 2 lety

      Fun fact: Originally, the Space Shuttle had a two-stage fully-reusable winged flyback design, but that was too expensive to develop on NASA's shoestring budget after Apollo. #FundNASA

  • @jannek5757
    @jannek5757 Před 2 lety +1

    Great stuff, as always!!

  • @muttman325
    @muttman325 Před 2 lety

    Best looked into subjects in science on yt.

  • @andyrbush
    @andyrbush Před 2 lety +2

    Pity they waited until the docking to shake hands. If they had done it on the ground and cooperated a bit, it might have been a better solution. Waring politicians are the scourge of the world

  • @thedarkknight3107
    @thedarkknight3107 Před 2 lety +2

    Wernher von braun 💪💪💪

  • @johnnyc3186
    @johnnyc3186 Před 2 lety

    Thanks bro!!

  • @thutmosera2943
    @thutmosera2943 Před 2 lety +1

    Very educational, always interesting.

  • @Waldemarvonanhalt
    @Waldemarvonanhalt Před 2 lety +6

    You could pretty much get anything to burn in a pure oxygen environment.

    • @joe7272
      @joe7272 Před 2 lety

      NASA's internal review found the cabin to be lined with a total of 34 square feet (3.2m2) of velcro, which is flammable in a 100% oxygen enviroment. Once that fire is started any plastics would catch fire very fast.

  • @patrickdurham8393
    @patrickdurham8393 Před 2 lety +2

    This is why I love commercial space exploration. Not beholden to whitless political hacks and old time space companies.

  • @allgood6760
    @allgood6760 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for this

  • @RomainFleuryWhatever
    @RomainFleuryWhatever Před 2 lety +1

    Initail moon landings typo :P great video though ! Like always ! Thank you for this quality content !

  • @40nakedniggasonahugespacecraft

    Nice

  • @sevenpastmidnight9542
    @sevenpastmidnight9542 Před 2 lety +3

    It's kind of amazing what some of this equipment is capable of looking like a box with 2 hangers and aluminum foil taped on it.
    Edit: Also, great video as always Paul!

  • @tigertiger1699
    @tigertiger1699 Před 2 lety

    What a fantastic photo of the three..🌹
    Wow.., first human to walk in space.. to be outside our atmosphere and spacecraft….. to have seen in it in it all

  • @mr88cet
    @mr88cet Před 2 lety

    Another great topic and video!
    Minor nit though at 7:55, the original Apollo design used a high-pressure (16PSI) pure-oxygen atmosphere. That was subsequently changed to a low-pressure still-pure-oxygen system.

  • @ghost307
    @ghost307 Před 2 lety +2

    I disagree that the fire ended the plans for the followup programs.
    What willed it was that congress didn't have the backbone to fund it when they could spend that money instead on things that would help them get reelected.

    • @hankkingsley2976
      @hankkingsley2976 Před 2 lety +1

      and a war nobody wanted.

    • @ghost307
      @ghost307 Před 2 lety

      @@hankkingsley2976 Some people wanted it.
      Lots of the members of Nancy Pelosi's extended family made millions.

  • @markbellinger
    @markbellinger Před 2 lety +10

    Nearly 50 years on we are celebrating flights to 62 miles and back.

    • @aeroflopper
      @aeroflopper Před 2 lety +2

      explain the height of the ISS

    • @markbellinger
      @markbellinger Před 2 lety

      @@aeroflopper Tourist Flights 62 miles - ISS 220 Miles - The Moon 220,000+ miles

    • @aeroflopper
      @aeroflopper Před 2 lety

      @@markbellinger apologies i though you was saying man had only made it up the the carmen line, i miss read your reply.

  • @20thcenturyboy85
    @20thcenturyboy85 Před 2 lety

    Awesome Video!

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman Před 2 lety +1

    Great vid, Paul...👍👍

  • @arturkarpinski164
    @arturkarpinski164 Před 2 lety +3

    In the movie Apollo 13 Tom Hanks's character was asked by a reporter why should we go back to the moon since we already have been there. He replied "imagine if Columbus discovered the new world but nobody ever went back." Well the truth is we never did go back!!!