Hunchbacked just put up a video supposedly exposing all the 'incoherences' in the Lunar Module's electrical power system.
He devoted a whole section to his computation of the lifetimes of the ascent and descent stage batteries. He took the stated ascent energy capacity (17.8 kWh for two batteries), voltage (28V) and typical load current (50A/battery) of an ascent battery and computed:
Power drain = 28 V * (50A)2 = 70 kW * 2 batteries = 140 kW [sic]
17.8 kWh / 140 kW = 7.62 minutes
and then triumphantly concluded that the batteries could not possibly handle the requirements of an LM ascent, thus proving Apollo was faked. Wow.
Hunchbacked's videos always provide a "target-rich environment" but I didn't even know where to begin with this one. For the non-EEs out there, power is volts times amps, not volts times amps squared. A load of 100A at 28V is therefore 2.8 kW, not 140 kW. At this rate, the ascent batteries would last over 6 hours, not 7 minutes.
I gleefully pointed out that not only should a genius like him know Ohm's Law, but that most normal engineers would at least recheck their own work after getting such an absurd result.
To my utter amazement, within minutes he pulled the video down and sent me a message saying "I acknowledge my error, but it remains absurd".
I would like to read this as saying that his error remains absurd, with which I certainly agree, but I don't think that's what he meant.