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originally posted by: onebigmonkey
The new technology is for a different type of mission as you well know.
originally posted by: onebigmonkey
Erm..hang on, I thought we didn't have the technology?
originally posted by: onebigmonkey
Again, different mission profiles needs new equipment, which means money.
originally posted by: onebigmonkey
Now, did NASA have the technology to land there or not?
originally posted by: onebigmonkey
Specifically which technology wasn't available?
originally posted by: onebigmonkey
Let's be more specific to help Turbonium out.
- Did the technology to launch a rocket exist?
- Did the technology to launch something to the moon from orbit exist?
- Did the technology to orbit the moon exist?
- Did the technology to land something on the moon exist?
- Did the technology to return back to Earth exist?
- Did the technology to keep someone alive in space exist?
Which answer is no?
originally posted by: onebigmonkey
The LM radio comms, as well as the TV transmissions, weren't relayed via the CSM, as the CSM was in orbit and was only overhead for a short while in any one orbit. The astronaut suits relayed their radio to the LM, which then broadcast back to Earth. The Apollo 11 surface transmissions were picked up by radio hams on Earth...
originally posted by: Flyingclaydisk
Keep in mind though, the Earth is rotating so there were communication black outs.
originally posted by: onebigmonkey
a reply to: turbonium1
You've shown me nothing but ignorance of what NASA has said, what it means, and what technology is required for what type of mission.
Once again, specifically, which technology was not available?
Rocket, Spaceships? What?
Out of all the questions I listed which things could not be done, given that the USSR did everything on it at the same time as Apollo - including sending a biological payload to the moon and back?
originally posted by: turbonium1
If the USSR sent biological life-forms out to the moon and back, as you say, your whole argument looks even worse than it did before..
How do you know that the USSR sent biological life-forms to the moon and back? Because the USSR said so?
You don't have any proof for this claim, right?
And if you could somehow really prove such a claim, so what?
What is your point, then?
As for technology, we only need to see what they can't resolve now, as what things are still 'not done'.
originally posted by: choos
a reply to: turbonium1
from your own link:
"The initial sortie missions will last up to seven
days, performing science investigations,
resource utilization experiments and technology
demonstrations on the surface, before safely
returning the crew to Earth."
upto 7 days on the lunar surface..
NASA has never put 3 men on the lunar surface at a time and never more than 75 hours.. if constellation was planning to put 3/4 astronauts on the lunar surface at a time for upto 7 days.. straight away they dont have that capability... from 2 men to 4, its not just an extra 75kg/150kg of mass of the astronaut its not that simple..
you have all the mass of the consumables to support the two extra astronauts (food, air, water etc), the extra mass from the added living space, the extra fuel required to support the extra mass to return everyone to lunar orbit, proper waste management for 4 astronauts (not adult diapers for two astronauts)..
but anyway your article is more or less talking about lunar surface operations and you are using that as explaination of the missing technology..
so im guessing that you are trying to tell everyone that the missing technology is the lunar module or capability to soft land on the moon??
originally posted by: turbonium1
originally posted by: choos
a reply to: turbonium1
from your own link:
"The initial sortie missions will last up to seven
days, performing science investigations,
resource utilization experiments and technology
demonstrations on the surface, before safely
returning the crew to Earth."
upto 7 days on the lunar surface..
NASA has never put 3 men on the lunar surface at a time and never more than 75 hours.. if constellation was planning to put 3/4 astronauts on the lunar surface at a time for upto 7 days.. straight away they dont have that capability... from 2 men to 4, its not just an extra 75kg/150kg of mass of the astronaut its not that simple..
you have all the mass of the consumables to support the two extra astronauts (food, air, water etc), the extra mass from the added living space, the extra fuel required to support the extra mass to return everyone to lunar orbit, proper waste management for 4 astronauts (not adult diapers for two astronauts)..
but anyway your article is more or less talking about lunar surface operations and you are using that as explaination of the missing technology..
so im guessing that you are trying to tell everyone that the missing technology is the lunar module or capability to soft land on the moon??
The main purpose was - to land humans on the moon, and return them safely to Earth.
You think at least 4 people are required for any of their moon missions, so that's why they needed to develop all-new technologies.
A crew of 3, well, that is simply not enough..anymore! They must now have crews of 4, at the very least!
Nice try...
originally posted by: onebigmonkey
originally posted by: turbonium1
originally posted by: choos
a reply to: turbonium1
from your own link:
"The initial sortie missions will last up to seven
days, performing science investigations,
resource utilization experiments and technology
demonstrations on the surface, before safely
returning the crew to Earth."
upto 7 days on the lunar surface..
NASA has never put 3 men on the lunar surface at a time and never more than 75 hours.. if constellation was planning to put 3/4 astronauts on the lunar surface at a time for upto 7 days.. straight away they dont have that capability... from 2 men to 4, its not just an extra 75kg/150kg of mass of the astronaut its not that simple..
you have all the mass of the consumables to support the two extra astronauts (food, air, water etc), the extra mass from the added living space, the extra fuel required to support the extra mass to return everyone to lunar orbit, proper waste management for 4 astronauts (not adult diapers for two astronauts)..
but anyway your article is more or less talking about lunar surface operations and you are using that as explaination of the missing technology..
so im guessing that you are trying to tell everyone that the missing technology is the lunar module or capability to soft land on the moon??
The main purpose was - to land humans on the moon, and return them safely to Earth.
You think at least 4 people are required for any of their moon missions, so that's why they needed to develop all-new technologies.
A crew of 3, well, that is simply not enough..anymore! They must now have crews of 4, at the very least!
Nice try...
Feeble.
There is a difference between "required" and "wanted", just like there is a difference between a couple of days and a week.
Your bluster,posturing and deliberate blind eye will not hide the fact that the Apollo and Constellation missions have completely different objectives.
originally posted by: turbonium1
No differences can excuse their complete, utter failure!
The first objective was (supposedly) to return man to the moon, with stays of up to a week, at most.
Apollo-ites won't ever admit it was the primary objective, no way, no how.
You say it was "completely different objective". It's just another excuse.
Technology to get a man on the moon, is immediately dumped like so much trash, preferring to spend nearly 40 years circling the Earth over and over, ad nauseum.
What a crock.
originally posted by: turbonium1
What a crock.
originally posted by: onebigmonkey
Perfectly describes every post you have ever made.