Yes, it has in several reports that I use as reference - see link in post #1. I evidently do not believe these reports and therefore we have this friendly discussion. Let's keep it that way.
That you "evidently do not believe those reports" is your problem, not ours. You have to show good cause for not "believing" them. That does
not include "I don't want to believe them simply because I'd have to concede that I'm wrong".
See, e.g. my post #786. Can you really show by engineering calculations that you can slow down a 43.5 ton space ship from 2 400 to 1 500 m/s speed in space by burning 10.8 ton fuel at 30 kg/s producing a 97 400 N force?
Yes, as several people have already shown.
I note, however, that your figures do not match the actual Apollo 11 mission. The SPS thrust is only 91 kN, not 97.4 kN. The figures you provide, specifically 97.4 kN of thrust and 30 kg/s mass flow rate implies an exhaust velocity of 3247 m/s and an I
sp of 331 seconds, greater than the actual performance of the Apollo SPS engine (314 sec). Yet that engine was perfectly capable of placing the Apollo stack into lunar orbit, just as I showed several days ago. Why have you ignored it?