Jason, that is a good point that the LM's engine may have been shut down before the contact probes touched the surface...etc.
You have apparently studied Apollo, but how much time have you spent on JayUtah's website
Clavius, where he deals with most of the well-worn hoax claims?
And you don't appear to have spent much time at the online Apollo Lunar Surface Journals and the Apollo Flight Journals, with their stunning abundance of reference materials and links.
If you had read just the first section of the Apollo 11 and Apollo 12 Lunar Surface Journals you would probably have noticed that Eagle touched down with the engine still running (which you can also see in the 16mm landing film), and Intrepid landed with enough of a thump to almost cause Pete Conrad to let out just one more of his umpzillion expletives, as he relates in the journal here:
110:32:28 Carr: 30 seconds (of fuel remaining).
110:32:29 Bean: 18 feet, coming down at 2. He's got it made! Come on in there. 24 feet.
110:32:35 Bean: Contact Light.
110:32:36 Carr: Roger. Copy Contact.
[Jones - "I gather from the tech debrief that you actually dropped the last two or three feet."]
[Conrad - "You're supposed to."]
[Jones - "And the theory on that was?"]
[Conrad - "Lunar contact light came on and the probes were six feet below the gear. We were supposed to shut the engine off right then because they did worry about the bell mouth too close to the ground."]
[Bean - "Or hitting a rock and denting the bell mouth."]
[Conrad - "And I said, always, 'I'll never do that; who wants to shut off a good engine when you're still in the air?' But we had to train to shut it off. Neil landed with his (engine still) on. And, so, I was going to do the same thing. And, whoever said 'lunar contact light', I went 'bamm' and shut it down. (Laugh) Somewhere in there, I think there's an 'Oh shit'. Or there almost was. But about that time we were on (the Moon), and I didn't have to get it (the 'oh shit') the rest of the way out. I remember that."]
You might have also seen in the Apollo 11 Lunar Surface Journal, among the plentiful details about Eagle's powered descent and landing, Eric Jones's comment about the astronaut's use of "air":
102:45:43 Armstrong (on-board): Shutdown.
102:45:44 Aldrin: Okay. Engine Stop.
[Neil had planned to shut the engine down when the contact light came on, but didn't manage to do it.]
[Armstrong, from the 1969 Technical Debrief - "I heard Buzz say something about contact, and I was spring-loaded to the stop engine position, but I really don't know...whether the engine-off signal was before (footpad) contact. In any event, the engine shutdown was not very high above the surface."]
[Armstrong - "We actually had the engine running until touchdown. Not that that was intended, necessarily. It was a very gentle touchdown. It was hard to tell when we were on."]
[Aldrin - "You wouldn't describe it as 'rock' (as in, 'dropping like a rock'). It was a sensation of settling."]
[Some of the other crews shut down 'in the air' (meaning 'prior to touchdown') and had a noticeable bump when they hit.]
[Aldrin - (Joking) "Well, they didn't want to jump so far to the ladder."]
[Readers should note that, although the Moon has no atmosphere, many of the astronauts used expression like 'in the air' to mean 'off the ground' and, after some thought, I have decided to follow their usage.]
[Armstrong, from the 1969 Technical Debrief - "The touchdown itself was relatively smooth; there was no tendency toward tipping over that I could feel. It just settled down like a helicopter on the ground, and landed."]
[On a final note about engine shutdown, Ken Glover calls attention to the following from an interview done with Neil on 19 September 2001 by historians Stephen Ambrose and Douglas Brinkley at NASA Johnson.]
[Brinkley: "Was there anything about your Moon walk and collecting of rocks and the like that surprised you at that time when you were on the Moon, like, 'I did not expect to encounter this,' or, 'I did not expect it to look like this'? Or included in that, the view of the rest of space from the Moon must have been quite an awesome thing to experience."]
[Armstrong: "I was surprised by a number of things, and I'm not sure (I can) recall them all now. I was surprised by the apparent closeness of the horizon. I was surprised by the trajectory of dust that you kicked up with your boot, and I was surprised that even though logic would have told me that there shouldn't be any, there was no dust when you kicked. You never had a cloud of dust there. That's a product of having an atmosphere, and when you don't have an atmosphere, you don't have any clouds of dust."]
["I was absolutely dumbfounded when I shut the rocket engine off and the particles that were going out radially from the bottom of the engine fell all the way out over the horizon, and when I shut the engine off, they just raced out over the horizon and instantaneously disappeared, you know, just like it had been shut off for a week. That was remarkable. I'd never seen that. I'd never seen anything like that. And logic says, yes, that's the way it ought to be there, but I hadn't thought about it and I was surprised."]
I'm pasting from the DVD-ROM version, which may differ a little from the more-up-to-date online version.
My response which WAS rather unkind (perhaps even obnoxious) was however my own response to a member saying "I have a few problems" - which I found rather irritating. Perhaps it wasn't meant as an insult.
The quote, "I have a few problems" very clearly means that the person writing it is admitting to having problems, but I cannot find such a quote in this thread. If the quote was "
You have problems" then the writer is clearly referring to the reader(s), but that quote doesn't appear here either.
By my estimation, the words "problem" or "problems" have been used in this thread the following number of times:
Trebor, post 24, 2x
JayUtah, post 41, 1x
Abbadon, post 46, 2x
Edwardwb1001, posts 47 and 64, 3x
Cos, post 49, 1x
Total, nine times.
I certainly wouldn't bother myself over words like, "You have a couple of problems" and I cannot imagine why anyone else would want to. If that were true I'd want to fix them because getting rid of problems is a very good thing. Could you have perhaps been oversensitive and overemotional and imagined slights where there are none? It has happened here many times before.