A while ago I was thinking about the whole "spacesuit/zipper" thing. From Jay's website, I remember reading (years ago) (for entertainment, mostly, I find nutters amusing) that the actual pressure seal was a pair of overlapping "flexible rubber/plastic/polymer type material" which I might remember as being Neoprene. It occurred to me that the suit would still leak, and that said seal wouldn't be particularly high quality, compared to a mechanical seal such as on the helmet or gloves. Father thinking went to that the suit (and the rest of the Apollo equipment) was pressurized to 4 psi pure oxygen. (Apparently I was off a little.) As such, any "air" lost would also be the breathing gas, which as a necessity would have been carried in their backpacks (now I know called the PLSS) to replace what the astronaut breathed, and so of course NASA (who I recently re-learned didn't actually design it) included extra to replace what was expected to leak and keep the EVA duration the same. It then occurred to me that the leak rate could vary depending on how exactly the astronaut moved; so then you would simply take the highest likely rate and use that, to maintain a margin of safety. An example of how NOT to think like a CT.
A few weeks ago, while reading Hufschmid's site (and enjoying plenty of pointing a laughing at his expense) (I posted a thread on it, which apparently is the most recent one in this subforum), I came across a black and white photograph of the rover (posted in said thread) that looked, well, too "perfect," but in an artistic sort of way. Frankly, it looked like somebody (in last two decades) took what was likely a much more mundane picture and used the levels (or related) tool in photoshop on it (which I actually HAVE done, and have (although non-photographic) experience with the program), simply for artistic reasons to make a pretty picture. Nothing wrong with that. Many of the "anomalies" looked like the result of heavy use of said tool. (Which I am all too familiar with, as an unwanted side effect.)
Then I learn that they actually did take a roll of B & W film to the moon, and that actually is the original. And now I know what a HB feels on first encounter. "That can't be right." "They couldn't have planned the picture that way." "But how..."
Then about 20 minutes ago I realized something. I've never actually used a film camera other than a cheep disposable Kodak one when I was a kid. (Too young, otherwise.) I'm used to digital pictures, where you get an "absolute" original from the camera, which normally doesn't get any editing, other than perhaps cropping. But back then, the film had to be developed. And I recalled from quite some time ago that the levels tool is essentially the same thing that used to be done in the darkroom. And in developing film, every picture had choices made, by the person developing the film, to produce a good result. Essentially, every picture was, what today would be, starting in the levels tool, and then choosing the best result. A choice had to be made, and no one was more "right" than any other. There was no "unedited raw original," like a modern digital camera puts out. (Other than a negative, I suppose.) So the reason the picture looks so good is simple - some clever guy in the darkroom had to chose how to develop it to make the best possible picture, and did a pretty good job. Other than what he called "anomalies," which were the side effect of making the rest of the picture look good. (Same as in photoshop, really.)
Come to think of it, as I'm writing this sentence, apparently I suffer from some of the same generation gap he does. (Although without the stupidity.) I feel we should cut people who just had their first encounter with the theory, having say, watched the Fox program, and honestly want to know, a little more slack. (Which we don't seem to get all that often.) Now I understand what they feel like.
**Could a good job in the darkroom explain, at least in part, some of the "the photos were too good" claim, making up for a less than perfect job on the moon?
**By the way, why 'did' they take a B&W roll of film to the moon?