Alsj Mp3s, Apollo audio |
Alsj Mp3s, Apollo audio |
May 5 2005, 08:02 AM
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#1
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 3419 Joined: 9-February 04 From: Minneapolis, MN, USA Member No.: 15 |
I discovered a while back that Eric Jones' excellent NASA website. the Apollo Lunar Surface Journals, has been incorporating links to MP3 files of the air-to-ground audio. So far, it's complete for Apollos 15 and 16, and I believe is complete through EVA-1 for Apollo 17.
Now, I grew up with Apollo -- I was born 10/17/55, so I was 13 in the summer of 1969. And, just the way the dates lined up, I was 15 years old when Apollo 15 flew, 16 y.o. during Apollo 16, and 17 y.o. during Apollo 17. I took pictures off the TV screen of the moonwalks, and I set up a microphone from my little tape recorder in front of the TV set's speaker and recorded audio of the (progressively more scarce) TV coverage of the moonwalks. For several years I fell asleep at night listening to the moonwalks, memorizing details and allowing my subconscious to fly me to the moon in my dreams... So, when I discovered the MP3s, it occurred to me that I could download them from their source and burn CDs from them... hehehehe... I finished Apollo 16 -- every bit of air-to-ground from the beginning of Rev 16 (PDI Rev) until ascent and injection into lunar orbit three days later. A total of 32 CDs. And I can listen to them in my car as I drive to work... *big grin*... I guess this is just a heads-up for any other Apollo junkies out there who might want to do something similar. -the other Doug -------------------- “The trouble ain't that there is too many fools, but that the lightning ain't distributed right.” -Mark Twain
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May 10 2005, 03:25 AM
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#2
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Member Group: Members Posts: 123 Joined: 21-February 05 Member No.: 175 |
So, the capsule lands in the deep blue south pacific sea. The air is fragrant. You are the frogman. You and your frogman buddies get the float collar on, and dingy inflated. You climb on the collar, knock on the hatch. The door opens, you stick your head in, and take a deep breath.....
Sometimes spaceflight isn't so glamourous! I once read that it was real bad on the long duration Gemini flights. Lots of sweating, no cleaning up, no getting out of your seat, living in your suit for half of the time, don't even imagine going to the bathroom (it's that horrible) - all in the free space of a phone booth. Major Matt Mason - Space Ranger, never talked about this |
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May 10 2005, 04:22 PM
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#3
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 1281 Joined: 18-December 04 From: San Diego, CA Member No.: 124 |
QUOTE (GregM @ May 9 2005, 07:25 PM) So, the capsule lands in the deep blue south pacific sea. The air is fragrant. You are the frogman. You and your frogman buddies get the float collar on, and dingy inflated. You climb on the collar, knock on the hatch. The door opens, you stick your head in, and take a deep breath..... Sometimes spaceflight isn't so glamourous! I once read that it was real bad on the long duration Gemini flights. Lots of sweating, no cleaning up, no getting out of your seat, living in your suit for half of the time, don't even imagine going to the bathroom (it's that horrible) - all in the free space of a phone booth. Major Matt Mason - Space Ranger, never talked about this Yes, and I understand at times Mir could be worse than a gym locker room filled with old sweaty socks.... Imagine slipping the surly bonds of Earth and docking in orbit - the hatch opens - PHEW - and thinking "I got 3 more months of this air?????" Though, according to Shannon Lucid, this reputation is undeserved. On MIR 17, NASA ran its own tests on air quality, and did find some formaldehyde and ethanol levels high... not sure how this relates to "human contributions" to air quality. And don't get me started on the fungus! Somehow, you never hear about this stuff when pundits discuss the manned mission to Mars... -------------------- Lyford Rome
"Zis is not nuts, zis is super-nuts!" Mathematician Richard Courant on viewing an Orion test |
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May 10 2005, 05:58 PM
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#4
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 3419 Joined: 9-February 04 From: Minneapolis, MN, USA Member No.: 15 |
QUOTE (lyford @ May 10 2005, 11:22 AM) QUOTE (GregM @ May 9 2005, 07:25 PM) So, the capsule lands in the deep blue south pacific sea. The air is fragrant. You are the frogman. You and your frogman buddies get the float collar on, and dingy inflated. You climb on the collar, knock on the hatch. The door opens, you stick your head in, and take a deep breath..... Sometimes spaceflight isn't so glamourous! I once read that it was real bad on the long duration Gemini flights. Lots of sweating, no cleaning up, no getting out of your seat, living in your suit for half of the time, don't even imagine going to the bathroom (it's that horrible) - all in the free space of a phone booth. Major Matt Mason - Space Ranger, never talked about this Yes, and I understand at times Mir could be worse than a gym locker room filled with old sweaty socks.... Imagine slipping the surly bonds of Earth and docking in orbit - the hatch opens - PHEW - and thinking "I got 3 more months of this air?????" Though, according to Shannon Lucid, this reputation is undeserved. On MIR 17, NASA ran its own tests on air quality, and did find some formaldehyde and ethanol levels high... not sure how this relates to "human contributions" to air quality. And don't get me started on the fungus! Somehow, you never hear about this stuff when pundits discuss the manned mission to Mars... Yeah -- when they speak of the glories of exploring the Moon, they never talk about things like space adaptation syndrome, which made at least one guy on most every flight queasy enough to vomit. They never talk about the indignities of bowel movements in a capsule no larger than the inside of a Volkswagen Beetle, for which, according to Wally Schirra, the only way to proceed was to get entirely naked and leave yourself a good hour for preparation and clean-up. They never talk about less-than-palatable food, total lack of warm water and food while on the Moon, or struggling into pressure suits that are designed to fit so snugly that, until you actually pressurized them, the neck ring would bite into your shoulders. Even on the ISS, they never talk about how the only drinking water temperature choices are lukewarm and sort-of-hot, or how the noise level in some parts of the station is such that it could cause permanent hearing degradation if endured for as long as six months at a time. I always thought SkyLab was on the right track. Hot showers, a refrigerator and freezer for food, an oven and table-top heaters with which to cook their food (making available such meals as lobster thermidor and prime rib), and a nice, big open space to just plain have fun floating around in. Now that was flying in style! -the other Doug -------------------- “The trouble ain't that there is too many fools, but that the lightning ain't distributed right.” -Mark Twain
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