True. I should not have used the word 'float', as of course dust would only 'fall' on the moon.
Concession noted. Since you concede that things will not float, will you also concede that there is no way for the dust to be billowing up and settling down on the footpads, which was your original question?
Jason Thompson refers to the 'rather large and powerful rocket engine' blowing dust away from the lander's footpads.
On the scale of dust grains, the LM engine is rather large and powerful. It's nearly five feet across at the nozzle end, and generates 3-10,000 lb of thrust when it is on, depending on the throttle. In the whole scheme of rocketry it's not that powerful, especially when put next to something like an F-1 engine, but it's still a force to be reckoned with.
Yet it is often mentioned that the reason for no crater (or even indentation) having being created below the lander, was due to the exhaust not being powerful enough on descent to blow any dust away - thus not leaving even the slightest crater.
It is
never stated that the LM engine is not powerful enough to blow away any dust. This is where hoax believers and the rest of us differ: we know how ridiculous it would be to claim that no dust was blown away because it is evident from the film of all the landings and from the pictures that dust was indeed blown away. There is, however, a world of difference between blowing away surface dust and carving a crater in compacted regolith. It's much the same as the difference between a Hawker Harrier landing in desert terrain and blowing up a large cloud of sand and dust and not carving out a huge crater as it lands. (The Harrier, incidentally, generates more thrust than the LM during vertical take off and landing, and yet it doesn't carve craters out of the ground.)
Too weak on descent to form even an indentation in the dust below the lander - yet 'large and powerful' enough to blow the dust away from the footpads. Which is it?
That's a false dilemma, as I have just explained. It doesn't have to be large and powerful to blow dust away from footpads, does it?