Hi VQ,
I think you need perspective to understand the size of the crater. The strut supporting the LM leg is 4 feet 10 inches off the ground. Are you suggesting the main descent engine nozzle coming down on the raised crater edge would not have created a significant, if not, catastrophic outcome?
I did not say the A17 mission was a fabrication because they would not have landed that close to the crater. What I did say however is the pictures I attached if examined with the other A17 photos (particularly EVA1) you will come to some unsettling conclusions.
As others have noted, the LM leg is a poor yardstick because by design it collapsed on landing as a single-use shock absorber. One of the photos you posted showed the crater covered in footprints, which
does provide a decent yardstick. Based on the footprints it's clearly a lot less than 3-4 feet deep, more of a gently sloped pothole. By inspection, I would say that it would have caused no life safety risk whatsoever: the LM was designed to land on quite alarming slopes without overturning, and
even if it overturned, it would have done so slowly enough to allow an abort to orbit. And as others have also noted, contact of the engine bell to surface features at landing was minimally concerning - neither significant nor catastrophic. Remember, the engine was near minimum throttle at this point in the landing, and by design would have been shut off just above the surface to allow a short free fall.
You'll find that many posters here have minimal patience for wordplay regarding "I didn't say it was faked" or your innuendo regarding "unsettling conclusions".
Personally, I'd like to close out this particular line of discussion (including hearing a real reply to my question in reply #52) before we gallop on to some other concern you have.