Author Topic: Linus on the Saturn V IU  (Read 5653 times)

Offline Glom

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Linus on the Saturn V IU
« on: January 13, 2022, 01:43:12 PM »


Don't know if people have seen this video by Linus on the Saturn V IU. Interesting to see someone who normally talks about the latest gaming hardware talk about something of such a different generation.

Offline smartcooky

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Re: Linus on the Saturn V IU
« Reply #1 on: January 13, 2022, 07:53:34 PM »
I've seen Destin's companion video which goes into more detail about the woven memory cores. Its a lot longer (about 45 minutes) but if this stuff really does interest you, its worth every minute.

I started a thread about it about a year ago

https://www.apollohoax.net/forum/index.php?topic=1828.msg55055#msg55055

If you're not a scientist but you think you've destroyed the foundation of a vast scientific edifice with 10 minutes of Googling, you might want to consider the possibility that you're wrong.

Offline Glom

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Re: Linus on the Saturn V IU
« Reply #2 on: January 15, 2022, 03:36:13 PM »
Interesting.

Offline jfb

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Re: Linus on the Saturn V IU
« Reply #3 on: January 17, 2022, 09:35:23 AM »
There’s one bit (I think its on the SED2 channel video) where Luke gets to abuse Linus a little:

Linus: Are those fiber optic cables or something?

Luke: Boy, those are wires.

Luke also describes their postflight troubleshooting technique of printing out an octal dump of the telemetry, cutting some holes in a cardboard template, and going frame by frame, writing down the values for whatever sensor they were interested in, converting that to the actual measurement (temperature, voltage, whatever), plotting those values on a graph (by hand), and after a couple of weeks of effort, realizing that wasn’t the problem after all.

Having scrubbed through hex dumps as a larval programmer, that bit spoke to me deeply.

What I love most about these videos (but especially Destin’s) is how they quietly refute the whole "we didn’t have the technology to go to the Moon".  While these videos specifically cover the Saturn V computers, the apply just as well to the Apollo flight computers.  The hardware was primitive by today’s standards, but it was sufficient to do the job.