Post Whores II

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ripmf666

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Sep 20, 2006
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Larry I will back down to my elder and teacher :hug: and i really dont want to go up agaist you know who alone atleast we can do it tied maybe :spit:
 

MadMaxx61

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Oct 13, 2008
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This month marks the 40th anniversary of humankind's first steps on the moon. Auspiciously timed is Craig Nelson's new book, Rocket Men--one of the most detailed accounts of the period leading up to the first manned moon mission. Here, we have ten little-known Apollo 11 facts unearthed by Nelson during his research.
 

MadMaxx61

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1. The Apollo’s Saturn rockets were packed with enough fuel to throw 100-pound shrapnel three miles, and NASA couldn’t rule out the possibility that they might explode on takeoff. NASA seated its VIP spectators three and a half miles from the launchpad.
 

MadMaxx61

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Oct 13, 2008
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3. Drinking water was a fuel-cell by-product, but Apollo 11’s hydrogen-gas filters didn’t work, making every drink bubbly. Urinating and defecating in zero gravity, meanwhile, had not been figured out; the latter was so troublesome that at least one astronaut spent his entire mission on an anti-diarrhea drug to avoid it.
 

MadMaxx61

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Oct 13, 2008
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4. When Apollo 11’s lunar lander, the Eagle, separated from the orbiter, the cabin wasn’t fully depressurized, resulting in a burst of gas equivalent to popping a champagne cork. It threw the module’s landing four miles off-target.
 

MadMaxx61

Devilmaxx
Oct 13, 2008
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5. Pilot Neil Armstrong nearly ran out of fuel landing the Eagle, and many at mission control worried he might crash. Apollo engineer Milton Silveira, however, was relieved: His tests had shown that there was a small chance the exhaust could shoot back into the rocket as it landed and ignite the remaining propellant.
 

LarryJewell

Back with his honey :)
Jan 21, 2007
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Larry I will back down to my elder and teacher :hug: and i really dont want to go up agaist you know who alone atleast we can do it tied maybe :spit:
there ain't no way either one of us could sneak up on the # 1 spot, just wont ever happen...................;)

I was surprised we got ahead of Simon so easy :D
 

MadMaxx61

Devilmaxx
Oct 13, 2008
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6. The "one small step for man" wasn’t actually that small. Armstrong set the ship down so gently that its shock absorbers didn’t compress. He had to hop 3.5 feet from the Eagle’s ladder to the surface.
 

MadMaxx61

Devilmaxx
Oct 13, 2008
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8. The toughest moonwalk task? Planting the flag. NASA’s studies suggested that the lunar soil was soft, but Armstrong and Aldrin found the surface to be a thin wisp of dust over hard rock. They managed to drive the flagpole a few inches into the ground and film it for broadcast, and then took care not to accidentally knock it over.
 

MadMaxx61

Devilmaxx
Oct 13, 2008
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10. The inner bladder of the space suits—the airtight liner that keeps the astronaut’s body under Earth-like pressure—and the ship’s computer’s ROM chips were handmade by teams of “little old ladies.”

Craig Nelson uncovered these facts in various NASA archives while researching his new book, Rocket Men (Viking; $28).
 
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