I don't know if this has ever been discussed here before but he does bring up something I never seen before. I did do a bit of a search and nothing really came up here. Anyway, instead of linking the youtube site since I know a lot of people don't care for it, I thought I'd just post the comments between us. His first post I dealt with pretty effectively and I didn't back from him till today.
***["Comparing the photos from Russian probes that actually landed on moon, we can see one big difference: Russian photos have many little spots on the dark sky. They are not stars, but the effects of radiation from solar wind. What is missing from Apollo photos are not stars, but the radiation effect on the films. The camera they used had no protection from radiation or extreme heat and cold, so they shouldn't have worked, or at least not having those high quality photos. You cannot just bring an untested camera to the moon and get such great results. There are many experienced photographers baffled by the super sharp and perfectly framed photos taken by Apollo astronauts. Ask their opinion and you might get a better understanding why the photos are still very controversial."]***
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Russian probes that landed on the moon did not use film. They had optical-mechanical cycloramic cameras and the pictures taken with them were transmitted back to Earth. The only Soviet probes that actually returned film to Earth via soft-landings were the Zond-5,6,7 & 8 fly-by missions. I just had a look at the pictures developed from the film of those probes and there's nothing wrong with the quality of them that could be attributed to radiation. Obviously, the Russians had no such issue that hoaxheads like to claim would have affected the Apollo missions.<---
["You cannot just bring an untested camera to the moon and get such great results. There are many experienced photographers baffled by the super sharp and perfectly framed photos taken by Apollo astronauts. Ask their opinion and you might get a better understanding why the photos are still very controversial."]
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Like you supposed radiation damaged film photo's, you obviously did zero research about this. Google "Hasselblad in Space - Hasselblad" and you'll see the camera was far from untested prior to Apollo 11. Make sure you read all 5 pages of it.
As for your second point, they had months of training on how to use the camera mounted at chest height. The first time they used them, they had lousy results but they got better after a few months went by. Google "The Apollo 11 Hasselblad Cameras The Sterile Eye" to read all about it. Seriously, you think they wouldn't take the time to train the astronauts for something like this? The only controversy is amongst people like you who believe everything hoax sites say without checking into the details and getting the facts straight.
While you're at it, google "Clavius: Environment - radiation and photographic film" so you can see how someone deliberately exposed the film to much higher levels of radiation than any Apollo mission ever experienced.<---
This was all from back on August 11. Today I got this from him:
***["Since you edited the post, I can see you are a better person than most other youtubers, though not glad to see words like "Zero Research" or "Hoaxhead". I also agree with you that the photos from Luna-9 and Luna-13, which landed on the moon, are not good examples because they used phototelevision cameras, not films.
I am here to debate that there should be radiation damage on the films, for the simple truth that space is full of radiation. It might not be lethal, but it does exist. When you use a camera with thin aluminum cover on the moon surface for hours you should get fake stars in the dark area, not because of the sky, but because of radiation and particles.
First let me be clear that Soviet Zond spacecrafts are heavily protected, USSR style. You can see the pictures here:
Zone 5:
http://www.planet4589.org/space/misc/moscow/p0266.JPGZone L1S:
http://space.skyrocket.de/img_sat/l1s__1.jpgSo the image from those cameras should be free of radiation, given how heavy the shield was. Zond-6 is bad example because it crashed and film canister was broken. However, Zond 7 gave us some interesting pictures:
http://mentallandscape.com/C_Zond07_1.jpghttp://mentallandscape.com/C_Zond07_9.jpgZoom in and see the bright dots in the shadow of moon and space:
http://mentallandscape.com/C_Zond07_B.jpgZond 8 had the same problem:
Many stars in the sky:
http://mentallandscape.com/C_Zond08_01.jpgAnd many other pictures show the same thing. First time I saw those photos, I thought Soviet union was doing a bad job or film quality was bad. Then these came along.
http://mentallandscape.com/C_Zond08_10.jpghttp://mentallandscape.com/C_Zond08_15.jpgThere were few stars in the sky, some spots in the moon area and that's it.
The explanation is obvious. Those bright spots are caused by particles in space. They are randomly occurring like wind blowing. Some pictures have a lot but some have few. The common thing is they all have it. It's just a matter of few or a lot.
Now look back at Apollo program. The Hasselblad cameras were exposed on the moon surface for many hours with only thin aluminum shell, not lead. No protection in the ring area and lens. Shutter leaves are very thin. So overall there should be much more bright spots in films, aka fake stars. Remember films are rolled up tight in a cartridge. If just one particle went through. It could leave a mark on tens of films at one time. However, we don't see those bright spots. Why? It only make sense if those photos were taken on the ground.
I don't care about the Clavius guy and his experiment. It doesn't change the fact that while Zond photos show us all the effects of radiation and space particle, Apollo show us none, which should show us a lot more fake stars for its weak camera protection.
Go to this website and see all the photos from Zond program:
http://mentallandscape.com/C_CatalogMoon.htmThen take a look at these pictures:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d6/Apollo_11_lunar_module.jpghttp://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/images/610213main_S73-22871_full.jpgDo you still think there is nothing wrong with it? There is no radiation in the space or the cameras can really deflect all particle in the space, better than the heavy steel shell of Zond?
The 2nd point is also obvious for all the pro or semi pro photographer. It's discussed in detail in other youtube videos by Marcus Allen. Don't want to extend it too much here. You can google them yourself."]***
I guess the one thing that I've been able to kinda figure out is that those white spots he refers to are not caused by any sort of radiation damage. However, I'm not positive about this so anybody else who might know better, it would be great to hear from. As for the images with the moon and Earth and what he claims to be stars, I'm sure somebody has an explanation. I'm assuming an astronomy program would be able to prove one way or the other but I'm not too handy with them. Anyway, be interesting to hear what you guys/gals think?