@Data Cable.`Footage of the lunar rover shows lunar regolith kicked up by the wheels with absolutely no sign of fine particles billowing in a persistent cloud, indicating that this footage was filmed in a vacuum. There is no vacuum chamber on Earth anywhere near large enough to construct such a set. One hoax proponent claimed that the "sand" used on the lunar set could have been "washed and sifted" to remove all particles fine enough to arisolize. However, he could not provide examples of this process ever being performed, declined to demonstrate such a process himself, and could not explain how to prevent new fine particles from being formed by mutual abrasion of larger particles from simple handling the processed material (transporting, pouring, etc.) In fact, he was completely incredulous that the latter would even occur. `
There are no high quality videos of lunar dust closeup being kicked up by astronauts. If you go to a beach and start kicking around sand, you won`t see any clouds either. I don`t see what could have stopped NASA from either using wet sand or adding coagulants. What we need to do is to check more videos if the sand doesn`t manage to fall faster down to the ground than the astronaut hanging on wires. I will try to check some videos. Are you going to demand and parrot again about proof? Ok, I will give you a blue-ray dvd where an astronaut is hosing with water the studio sand while holding a card of social securty right in front of him. That is what you need, right?