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General Discussion / Re: Apollo 11 video feed delay?
« Last post by Obviousman on March 27, 2024, 04:53:05 PM »Dwight will have all the answers you need.
Sorta. He replies as if open to admitting to being wrong about fakery, remains civil, and at least partly admits when debunked.
I am defending the impossibility of faking artificial lighting in the Apollo visual record. He is mostly arguing how all photographic evidence can be faked one way or another.
He finds the video and 16mm footage more compelling to argue with, than any still images, since the camera and things move around, conceding that they cannot be post-composited. For the moment, he is ignoring what I consider the most compelling visual recording- 16mm Apollo 15 footage of EVA 2 (also EVA 3), between Station 6 and 6a- It cannot be miniature since uncut footage has astronauts walk in front of camera, and shows miles of evenly lit terrain with sharp, unidirectional shadows, where it is impossible to use or hide lights. I will return to that.
But after days of debate on this frame-rate point (among others), he has retreated to claiming NASA is at least lying about a live feed, but not that it proves anything one way or the other. But I know that if you dont debunk a particular detail they gather all wagons around that last hill. So I was looking for a bit more definitive info on the A11 feed delay.
Is there a website which literally adds up the bits within the Third stage that shows it does all fit
Phase 3 of the Saturn 5 rocket is 61.6 feet tall and 21.7 feet in diameter.
If it was a cylinder (which it's not the top has a lander attached to it and it's much smaller and the diameter slowly decreases at the top)
I used a cylinder calculator and came up with 22,781 cubic feet.
Remember it's already more than ½ full even if you just literally poured the fuel in the rocket.
We still need room for Insulation so now your available space is even smaller.
Next subtract the cubic feet needed for the rocket's engines.
Don't forget the Lander itself.
We still need an oxygen supply, batteries, computers, and room for 3 Astronauts.