I wouldn't be writing this if I didn't need a big distraction after burying my most favorite dog ever this morning. I've never been on a discussion site before.
I came to this site looking for an intelligent conversation. Let me beat a couple of you in saying that if you want an intelligent conversation, first you have to be intelligent yourself. There, I beat you to it. Only about 20% of Americans believe the moon landing was hoaxed, but I believe that there are intelligent people on both sides of the debate.
I watched several videos that tried to prove we went to the moon and several that tried to prove the moon hoax true. I personally don't like to make decisions based on what people say, but I try to prove them for myself. My education, work experience, hobbies and interests are all mechanical or mechanically related. After watching all the video several times I picked out 3 points to do experiments on to prove for myself who was lying. Of the three experiments I did, all said that NASA, the news media and the government were lying.
I use information from the NASA site that I printed out in 1969 but I don't know if it's still there.
Let me explain a little about the spacesuit. It had 11 layers including a water cooling garment and a layer of aluminized mylar or BoPET which is known for its high tensile strength and thermal stability. The spacesuit was 3/16 inch thick and pressurized to 8.3 psi or 16.9 in. of Hg.
It's all about the pressure differential from the inside of the suit to the outside of the suit.
This is the experiment that influenced me the most. I wanted to know what it felt like to be in space inside of a spacesuit. I built a vacuum chamber out of six-inch PVC tube, 2 end caps and on one of the end caps I machined it flat and added a bolting device to clamp a long armed plastic with cloth reinforcement glove. I also added piping to connect a in. of Hg. vacuum gauge, a shutoff valve and a fitting to connect my vacuum pump to.
I started drawing a vacuum inside the chamber and felt I had to stop at 6 in. of Hg or blow the glove up. I stuck my hand and arm inside the glove and I could move my fingers easily but with the inside of the wall less than 2 inches from my hand it was impossible to touch the wall no matter how hard I tried. That's only about 35% of what they experienced in a spacesuit. NASA claims they put bearings in several places in the suit to make it easier to move but I know a lot about bearings and I know the one piece mylar layer still had to be dealt with and that wouldn't be very easy to do.
In comparing what I learned about being in a vacuum compared to the hammering on the moon that I seen, it makes it MORE than ridiculous to believe that they were on the moon. Go to
I couldn't find a video of the one I wanted to but that one will do. If that doesn't create a shortcut do a search for "hammering on the moon"at YouTube. Or better yet – build your own vacuum chamber to prove that I'm a liar.
Maybe you'll see that I did do my homework prior or maybe not.