anywho, let's recap:
So you went to The rover wasn't strong enough to support two astronauts' weight in 1G.
You failed to support that assumption (they made a 1G rover for training.... and photos).
For the 100th time, it was not me who said that the rover could not support the rovers weight in 1g, it is NASA, all I am saying is that it makes no sense for them them to say that the lunar rovers were too weak to support the astronauts weight but then they can take it to the moon and slam it into craters at 10kph.
No, they didn't say that, you did.
anywho, let's recap:
So you went to The Moon is slippery as ice so the rover wouldn't have worked.
You failed to support that assumption (you admit no knowledge of lunar surface conditions).
So you went to The rover had to pull over 5 times it's weight, which it couldn't do.
You failed to support that assumption (a = F/m).
I admit I was wrong about the drawbar pull coefficient needing to be 5 to accelerate (longer post coming when I have time, which will show that traction on the moon is indeed comparable to ice on earth), but it is still true that the rovers need power and traction to pull the entire mass of the vehicle, which on the moon is 6 times the weight. That is irrefutable.
Once again, with feeling, what evidence will you be using to demonstrate that the lunar surface exhibits the qualities you so desperately want it to have? How on Earth (no pun intended) do you draw the conclusion that a surface composed of jagged particles and rocks has absolutely no friction? Sources pelase, links, whatever.
Secondly, the mass may be 6 times the weight, but can you please remind us again by how much, proportionately, the resistance to moving that mass provided by gravity is compared with Earth?
So you now have gone to The tire chevrons were chosen to look cool instead of assisting operation.
You have yet to support that assumption (and how would that help prove fakery?).
I didn't just say the were a triumph of style over substance, I gave my reasons, the chevrons cover 50% of the fictive surface, they recess the remaining 50%, they are smooth and they are thin so provide very little by way of tread.
They're just plain dumb, an elegant solution might have been to put the chevrons on the inside of the mesh but when it's all a farce, why bother?
Do please provide us with a manufacturing method that would allow the chevrons to be placed inside the mesh.
e2a: Let's be honest here. it wouldn't matter which tyre they'd chosen, it wouldn't matter what tractive capabilities the LRV possessed, you'd still be arguing that it was incapable of doing it. If they'd gone for the straight mesh, you'd be saying that the LRV would have sunk in to the ground.
You just plain old don't believe it, and this is the thing you've latched on to as your big 'a-haa' moment.