Apollo 12 - 16-mm magazine 1165-N
4:43
Apollo 12 - 16-mm magazine 1164-M
4:50
Apollo 12 - 16-mm magazine 1144-L
4:15
Apollo 12 - 16-mm magazine 1171-K
4:40
Apollo 12 - 16-mm magazine 1111-H
4:10
Apollo 12 - 16-mm magazine 1133-F
3:27
Apollo 12 - 16-mm magazine 1132-E
3:21
Apollo 12 - 16-mm magazine 1131-D
4:41
Apollo 12 - 16-mm magazine 1130-C
4:40
Apollo 12 - 16-mm magazine 1129-B
4:26
Apollo 12 - 16-mm magazine 1128-A
4:43
Apollo 12: The Complete Descent
17:50
Apollo 12 - 16-mm magazine 1134-G
4:25
Пікірлер
@tuttt99
@tuttt99 22 күн бұрын
I love how relaxed and confident they were. Neil and Buzz paved the way so well, that when Pete and Al landed it was like a weekend road trip. Great job!
@rickreid8572
@rickreid8572 23 күн бұрын
Never happened.
@Dolores5000
@Dolores5000 Ай бұрын
Fantastic
@vmizzell
@vmizzell Ай бұрын
I wish you had included the go - nogo commands. It builds the drama.
@olasek7972
@olasek7972 Ай бұрын
I am glad it wasn’t included, this is just earth-LM transmission, go-nogo is purely ground loop transmission, that ground loop transmission would totally overpower it
@theeraphatsunthornwit6266
@theeraphatsunthornwit6266 2 ай бұрын
Fun fact: retroreflector placement mission 50 percent failure rate. Lauching man from moon surface 100% success rate..... they didnt dare to murder astronaut to make realistic success rate.
@cavestoryking8761
@cavestoryking8761 12 күн бұрын
Are you forgetting Apollo 13?
@theeraphatsunthornwit6266
@theeraphatsunthornwit6266 12 күн бұрын
@@cavestoryking8761 that ship failed in the rocket stsge... that is real failure but none fail during moon operation
@gisall8205
@gisall8205 2 ай бұрын
AAAAHH. All brought to the world by Stanley Kubrick.
@Hobbes746
@Hobbes746 2 ай бұрын
Kubrick was busy filming 2001: A Space Odyssey. This was heralded as the most accurate portrayal of space yet. But the 0 g and lunar scenes in that movie are faked, and it’s immediately obvious they are on Earth. The Apollo videos show the astronauts moving in perfect 1/6 g gravity, which is only possible if those videos were recorded on the moon.
@maxfan1591
@maxfan1591 Ай бұрын
And I suppose Kubrick knew how to create fake Moon rocks too? Was he good enough at his faking to fool the Soviets? Come on, be sensible.
@gisall8205
@gisall8205 Ай бұрын
@@maxfan1591 You're a Good boy. Make sure to VOTE and pay your TAXES. You're just what THEY'RE looking for.
@maxfan1591
@maxfan1591 Ай бұрын
@@gisall8205 "You're a Good boy. Make sure to VOTE and pay your TAXES. You're just what THEY'RE looking for." So are you going to explain how Kubrick faked Moon rocks or tricked the Soviets?
@DCresident123
@DCresident123 2 ай бұрын
Wasnt the original footage lost or written over?
@apollo12-apolloflightjourn11
@apollo12-apolloflightjourn11 2 ай бұрын
This is 16mm film footage. By using the phrase "written over", it implies an assumption that this was video recorded on magnetic tape. Two entirely separate things are being mixed up here, but that is the way of modern information exchange. It doesn't have to be correct to be spread far and wide. What is likely being referred to as "written over" is referring to the tapes that had a recording of the slow-scan video signal that was transmitted during the moonwalk of Apollo 11. That signal was converted, live, to commercial TV format for live broadcast. The source signal was recorded on tape but it was not required again - until decades later when it was realised that the rather poor conversion process could be bypassed if those tapes with the slow-scan recording could be located. They never were. Meanwhile the story was passed around and distorted. The original Ektachrome film of this 16mm footage still exists, kept in a freezer in Houston. This is a high definition scan of that footage. Film and video are very different technologies.
@jscotty349
@jscotty349 2 ай бұрын
13:26 I swear I heard him said "plenty of gas, dude" instead of "babe", bro is chill af
@geraldo209
@geraldo209 3 ай бұрын
Absolutely amazing!
@allgood6760
@allgood6760 3 ай бұрын
Incredible stuff! but you can't tell that to Bart Sibrel he thinks the astronots are a bunch of liars🚀
@Hobbes746
@Hobbes746 2 ай бұрын
Ironically, Sibrel is the one that has been caught lying over and over again.
@robmyjob8870
@robmyjob8870 3 ай бұрын
What is that shadow-like black line in the window on the right that appears with P64 at 6000 feet and follows them all the way to the surface?
@CC-nx2wh
@CC-nx2wh 3 ай бұрын
thats all the footage they have?
@TurdBoi-tf5lf
@TurdBoi-tf5lf 3 ай бұрын
There is a lot more
@Hobbes746
@Hobbes746 2 ай бұрын
Every landing was filmed with a 16mm film camera. They only had one such camera on each mission, for the landing this was installed on a bracket, looking out the window. The LM could not send a video signal to Earth during the landing: it didn’t have enough bandwidth to send video and high-rate telemetry at the same time. So there is no TV footage of the landings.
@rockethead7
@rockethead7 3 күн бұрын
Are you asking just about the Apollo 12 mission? Yeah, there's a little bit more footage, but, not much. The TV camera burned out a few seconds after being moved to its tripod, which would have been the majority of the Apollo 12 footage (had it worked). But, yeah, as it is, they just have some of those 16mm clips, and photos. Ironically, they even accidentally left one roll of 70mm film inside the camera (still sitting on the lunar surface). So, not only does Apollo 12 not have as much video as was planned, but, even lost a whole bunch of photos also.
@JONESSTI01
@JONESSTI01 3 ай бұрын
What a navigator to fly with. He was clear, precise, confident, gave confidence and optimistic with a positive result. Man these were the days! I wish we had things like this nowadays.
@ynp1978
@ynp1978 4 ай бұрын
This is some really good stuff!
@beanlegume9965
@beanlegume9965 4 ай бұрын
This is certainly an activity that humans engaged in.
@brandaoz
@brandaoz 4 ай бұрын
It's like in 1900,some dude.."you can't fly man!"..in 1915 were having dogfights in WW1...now, how the fuck you're gonna lift a plane who's about 1500 kg from the floor and explain aerodynmics to someone that doesn't want to ear about it??
@danshearer7627
@danshearer7627 4 ай бұрын
And we did this with the computing power of a calculator. Amazing!
@qclod
@qclod 4 ай бұрын
"Pro." "Yeah, pro." I'd say so!
@80sbeginner
@80sbeginner 5 ай бұрын
14🆕03🆕2024 Madonna - Papa Don't Preach (my cover version 😁) Nasa I know you're going to be upset 😁 'Cause you were always a little rat 🐀 You've been brainwashing me 😠 Since I was a baby 👶 You always taught me things that wrong ❌ I hate you devil for so long 😡 Your judgment day is coming ⏳ And I know what I'm saying 😎 Why you lied to me all the time? 🙁 Why you committed the biggest crime? ☹ You put my brain in mess 🤯 Since I was a baby, bitch 🤬 Chorus: Nasa old bitch, you're in trouble deep 👿 Nasa old bitch, I'm your nightmare sleep 😱 Yeah you killed my mind, since I was a baby 😤 Yeah since I was a baby, mmm...😒 I say you should be afraid of me ⚠ I'll fuck you bitch and your family 👊 You won't be alright 👆 You'll pay the price ☝ All my friends keep telling me to fuck you up 🤛 When I was young you fucked me up 😾 What you need right now is to pay the price, bitch 🤬 Chorus Devil, devil you'll just wait and see 🤌 I'll treat you worse than you treated me ✊ I'll give you "my blessing" somehow 🎁 I remember the lie 😼 I remember the lie, old bitch 🤬 Chorus
@maxfan1591
@maxfan1591 Ай бұрын
What did NASA teach you wrong?
@80sbeginner
@80sbeginner Ай бұрын
@@maxfan1591 you're not really asking, are you? 😑
@maxfan1591
@maxfan1591 Ай бұрын
@@80sbeginner "you're not really asking, are you?" Yes I actually am. I'd like you to tell people what you think NASA taught you wrong, and how you think you found them out. It'll be an education of one sort or another...
@80sbeginner
@80sbeginner Ай бұрын
@@maxfan1591 *I'd like you to tell people what you think NASA taught you wrong* you answer me condescendingly 😾 if you want to get an answer, replace this sentence with the following sentence: I'd like you to tell people what you *know with absolute certainty* that NASA taught you wrong 😺 you don't have to emphasize the words like I did.
@maxfan1591
@maxfan1591 Ай бұрын
@@80sbeginner I'd like you to tell people what you know with absolute certainty that NASA taught you wrong
@igvc1876
@igvc1876 5 ай бұрын
At 13:37 - when he says "contact light" and hears a response back "Roger. Copy contact" from Earth - how can it be so fast? Isn't there 3 second delay time?
@franknorthcuttmusic
@franknorthcuttmusic 4 ай бұрын
Yes, about 3 seconds round trip. But keep in mind, we are listening to it from the perspective of Mission Control in Houston. We hear "contact light" at the same time Houston does. Houston doesn't have to wait 3 seconds to reply. When Houston speaks first, you will hear at least a 3 second delay before the astronauts reply, as the signal has to go to the moon and the reply returns, before we hear it.
@randyjohnson6845
@randyjohnson6845 5 ай бұрын
That blowing high speed dust at touchdown didn't look even close to real..more like a black and white cartoon
@adoof4814
@adoof4814 5 ай бұрын
I've seen sand move like that in high winds. Those thrusters are damn powerful. No wonder they're kicking up heaps of fine dust. Anything else?
@randyjohnson6845
@randyjohnson6845 5 ай бұрын
@adoof4814 where's the crater under the thruster...they forgot to put any sign of a thruster on the surface..your a lyer..when have you seen sand blow that fast and then the wind stops and everything looks like it did before the wind started to blow...your a lying..thus is animation cartoon ...your lying you have never seen this before
@geraldo209
@geraldo209 3 ай бұрын
Looser
@adoof4814
@adoof4814 2 ай бұрын
​@@randyjohnson6845 Why would there be a crater?? Craters form from solid impacts, not from gas pushing it around 😂 Also dust settles fast on the moon because there's no wind to keep it floating when you switch off the thrusters. Use your brain.
@rockethead7
@rockethead7 3 күн бұрын
You make a million postings in a million videos with no interest in the responses. Why? What's your point? You don't understand any of this. There isn't an aerospace engineer on the planet who would expect craters to be dug by 2500 pounds of thrust out of a 20 sq. foot engine bell. Oh, but YOU do. And, of course, had there been a crater dug by the rocket exhaust, you'd simply say the exact opposite, and insist that a crater shouldn't have happened. No matter what happens, you're going to pretend to know things you don't, and insist the opposite should happen. Why? What possible motivation could you have to keep doing this over and over and over?
@randyjohnson6845
@randyjohnson6845 5 ай бұрын
I thought I heard Kubricks voice
@randyjohnson6845
@randyjohnson6845 5 ай бұрын
At the beginning before the 12 second mark it shows a diagram that indicates that Apollo went straight thru the van allen belts..the lying on everyone's part is just unbelievable
@adoof4814
@adoof4814 5 ай бұрын
Radiation shielding. Next.
@randyjohnson6845
@randyjohnson6845 2 ай бұрын
@adoof4814 there's no shielding...just liars
@maxfan1591
@maxfan1591 Ай бұрын
@@randyjohnson6845 "there's no shielding" And the aerospace engineers who built the Command Module disagree with you. What's your evidence you're right?
@randyjohnson6845
@randyjohnson6845 Ай бұрын
@maxfan1591 Jane's van allen sent two different rockets threw the belts and then he went to Russia and said no way to go threw ...and then out of no where he said it's perfectly safe
@maxfan1591
@maxfan1591 Ай бұрын
@@randyjohnson6845 "Jane's van allen sent two different rockets threw the belts" Assuming you mean James Van Allen, yes, he gets the credit for the spacecraft. "and then he went to Russia and said no way to go threw ..." Funny, I can't find any reference to him either going to the USSR or saying there was no way through the belts. So it would be great if you could provide a source for this. I do see how he kept working for NASA in the 1960s and 1970s, helping them with preparing for Apollo and then a bunch of unmanned missions. "and then out of no where he said it's perfectly safe" Yeah, if we leave out your (currently) evidence-free claim that he said there was no way through the belts, there's nothing "out of nowhere" about him saying it was perfectly safe. Then there's the simple fact that the Soviets sent spacecraft through the belts themselves, so they had their own data to compare with Van Allen's. Should we be surprised that the Soviets had no problem with the idea of people passing through the belts?
@GalileoScientist
@GalileoScientist 5 ай бұрын
Strangely devoid of moon landing deniers.
@gisall8205
@gisall8205 2 ай бұрын
That’s because all the comments are Planted FAKE’S.
@Seamonkey555
@Seamonkey555 5 ай бұрын
Does anyone know who FDO was during lightning strike?
@kendo4242
@kendo4242 5 ай бұрын
There are some people living in the Northern and Western U.S. states who hear a southern accent and immediately think " slow country hick". Well guess what? These "slow country hick" astronauts with their southern accents were some of the bravest and most intelligent Americans who ever lived.
@jameshampton9809
@jameshampton9809 5 ай бұрын
@Firebrand55
@Firebrand55 5 ай бұрын
10.19...LEM pitchover....and there is Snowman. This sums up the whole Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programmes that led to this spot-on accuracy...and....adjacent to Surveyor already!. Unfortunately the mobile camera caught the sun and was burnt out, so no film of this flight...but...they brought the camera on Surveyor back with them.
@tremsls
@tremsls 5 ай бұрын
The great descent into bullshit. Grade 1 level hoax.
@adoof4814
@adoof4814 5 ай бұрын
And just like that, you're gone. Another dump-and-run conspiracy sponge.
@KPL400
@KPL400 4 ай бұрын
@@adoof4814 he's talking about his job as a toilet cleaner and his annual appraisal at Walmarts...
@mrorangepeel659
@mrorangepeel659 5 ай бұрын
Wake up sheeple… this is all staged. No human has been higher than the Hubble Space Telescope…
@adoof4814
@adoof4814 5 ай бұрын
Why don't you go there and find out?
@Jaska8000
@Jaska8000 5 ай бұрын
Only the second landing on moon. They did it with no incidents. Wait for Apollo 13...
@thewildcellist
@thewildcellist 2 ай бұрын
Both 11 & 12 had incidents, just not as catastrophic as 13's. Gene Kranz' excellent book, _Failure Is Not An Option_ puts it well: "What appeared as nearly flawless missions to the Moon were, in fact, a series of hair-raising near misses."
@Chatta-Ortega
@Chatta-Ortega 5 ай бұрын
Those guys had a blast up there. RIP crew of Apollo 12.
@ovalhunter488
@ovalhunter488 4 ай бұрын
I met Conrad about a year before he was killed. He was shorter than I expected, but his intensity was incredible.
@771jlp
@771jlp 5 ай бұрын
Amazing! Amazing!
@TheGarywolfbarron8
@TheGarywolfbarron8 5 ай бұрын
Love the joy in their voices!
@eilidh771
@eilidh771 5 ай бұрын
If the comments are real and not just science bots , then there are some stupid and trusting idiots out there.
@adoof4814
@adoof4814 5 ай бұрын
Beep boop beep boop You're wrong 🤖 Beep boop ligma
@eilidh771
@eilidh771 5 ай бұрын
This really happened didn't it . We all live on a spinning ball spiralling through the universe at 447,000 MPH don't we ? we randomly evolved along with all life from a pile of dirt ? The gods of science tell us it is so.
@KevinVenturePhilippines
@KevinVenturePhilippines 5 ай бұрын
Not sure how the gravity of their massive balls didn't disturb the landing! Holy moley! That was a heck of a ride! All that dust they couldn't see jack! IFR, wow. Legends. Thank you so much for this!!
@mattc.310
@mattc.310 5 ай бұрын
Outstanding. Thanks for the upload.
@mtlassen1992
@mtlassen1992 5 ай бұрын
Who woulda thunk flat Earthers would be born 10 years later and dream up conspiracies of a Hollywood movie set?
@outlander2967
@outlander2967 5 ай бұрын
do anyone know the weight of de landing module after landing on moon?
@dansv1
@dansv1 2 ай бұрын
Probably about 10,000 lbs (4,536 kg).
@jawoody9745
@jawoody9745 5 ай бұрын
Two of the best, most intelligent Commanders and Pilots we had! Pete Conrad cracked EVERYBODY up. He was meticulous, and humorous as hell.
@barryispuzzled
@barryispuzzled 5 ай бұрын
I think part of the excitement is having some ground to stand on, any kind of ground, after floating around in space in a tin can for several days!
@garywiseman5080
@garywiseman5080 5 ай бұрын
The all Navy crew endured two lightning strikes, were saved by 27 year old John Aaron with set SCE to Aux, tolerated excessive RCS firing due to sloshing fuel tanks, and made a pinpoint landing next to surveyor 3. What a flight! Go Navy!
@Rocketman5442
@Rocketman5442 5 ай бұрын
Loved those guys. If I could have flown on any mission it would’ve been with these 2.
@wayneschenk5512
@wayneschenk5512 5 ай бұрын
Some nervous release on the way down knowing they were in peril if things didn’t work out.
@cha7664
@cha7664 5 ай бұрын
Great! Will you add the other 16mm magazines to this channel as well? Especially the one with footage of the eclipse.
@apollo12-apolloflightjourn11
@apollo12-apolloflightjourn11 5 ай бұрын
All 12 16mm magazines have just been added. Enjoy. Mag F has the eclipse at the end.
@cha7664
@cha7664 5 ай бұрын
@@apollo12-apolloflightjourn11 Amazing, thanks so much for your work! I just want to ask, do you also plan to add all 16mm mags to the Apollo 16 flight journal channel?
@badlands555
@badlands555 5 ай бұрын
Is the surveyor ever visible in the film of their descent?
@mickobrien3156
@mickobrien3156 5 ай бұрын
It's funny.... 90% of the world knows Buzz and Neil.... Round up 10,000 random people.... Not one will know the names of any other of the guys that walked on the moon. Crazy.
@KPL400
@KPL400 5 ай бұрын
to help those people here goes ..Neil Armstrong, Edwin Aldrin (11) Charles Conrad, Alan Bean (12) Alan Shepard, Edgar Mitchell (14) David Scott, James Irwin (15) John Young, Charles Duke (16) Gene Cernan, Harrison Schmitt (17)
@mickobrien3156
@mickobrien3156 5 ай бұрын
@@KPL400 Nice summary. I remember the name Gene Cernan and Alan Shepard... But nobody and I mean nobody really can list off the others... off the top of their head.
@KPL400
@KPL400 5 ай бұрын
@@mickobrien3156 your right ..neither can I..
@rockethead7
@rockethead7 3 күн бұрын
Yeah, Armstrong and Aldrin could barely leave their houses without being mobbed. Armstrong could barely go out in public without security people for the rest of his life. Cernan and Schmitt could lead normal lives, go to the movies, go to the grocery store, etc.
@mickobrien3156
@mickobrien3156 Күн бұрын
@@rockethead7 haha exactly
@JorgeRzezak
@JorgeRzezak 5 ай бұрын
Absolutely amazing! Thanks a lot for the video I remember being a little kid at this times. As a non American I am so proud of America!
@greatsilentwatcher
@greatsilentwatcher 5 ай бұрын
Grew up during all this. The Gemini missions were my favorites.