Eternidad195,
didn't I tell you to do a little research before coming on here waving your hands about "Scotch tape"? You didn't take my advice, did you?
You should have - it would have saved you some embarrassment. At least, you
should be embarassed: You came on to a board frequented by space flight experts and well-informed laymen and made a demonstrably false claim, based on your plagiarization of a conspiracy nut so famously incompetent
he literally couldn't tell which side of the Lunar Module he was looking at.
This picture of the lunar lander by NASA is made up of paper, and cardboard, stuck up with Scotch tape.
Wrong, wrong, and wrong. In fact, you're not only wrong, you're wrong about what you're looking at; that's not the LM
structure you're looking at, it's the thermal and micrometeoroid protective layers.
The LM primary structure was made of aluminum. The thermal and micrometeoroid shielding, attached to the
outside of the LM structure, was made of things like Inconel and Kapton (the tape is a form of Kapton with adhesive). These are standard materials used in aerospace.
If you had done a little research as I had advised you,
you would already know this and would not have made such a silly mistake.
The question is: Why do they have this picture of the lander, if it is a faked one?
http://history.nasa.gov/alsj/a11/AS11-40-5922HR.jpg
Your question debunks itself. If any random, uninformed layman like you could immediately spot a fake, NASA certainly would
not use such an arrangement and publish such images in the service of attempting a fake mission. Doesn't that tell you something?
I did get permission to publish Mr. White’s pictures
From where? Even supposing you did, using them without attribution is plagiarism. And you plagiarized a
raving incompetent.
If they publish a faked lander as the real one, how many more things are they faking?
Begging the question. They
didn't publish a faked lander.
Having a lunar lander made up of cardboard and Scotch tape...
Repeating your mistaken claim does not make it any less wrong.
...is not an idiotic thing, is a funny thing. Can you drive a car made up of cardboard and stuck together with Scotch paper?
The answer is no.
What's funny is that you came on here, having literally no idea what you're talking about, and simply regurgtated someone else's easily- and often-debunked claims, and expect that we should grant any weight to your uninformed opinion. Well, if it comes to opinions, I
work in this field. To me, the LM looks
exactly what a purpose-built spacecraft designed for operation in a low-G, vacuum environment should look like.
But your opinions - or I should say, someone else's opinions that you are merely parroting - mean that you should have some idea of what a "real" lunar lander should look like. So why don't you tell us?
So do not try to convince me that that thing landed on the moon.
Here's your choice: You can either cling to your opinion, based on no knowledge of the subject and informed only by often-debunked codswallop; or you can listen to people who actually know something about the subject and
learn.
Which do you want to do? Dig in your heels and cling to your opinion, or learn?