I forsee a flounce in your immediate future, tarkus. I'm just not sure whether you will implode in a spittle-flecked tantrum or just quietly disappear once you realise that the beliefs that you are clinging to have been debunked time and time again. Again, this behaviour has been observed many times on here.Then again, I might be completely incorrect. You might realise that this place is a place where you can actually learn a lot of stuff- stuff that is a million times more intellectually satisfying than watching ridiculous YouTube hoax videos and going "hur-hur-hur. Stupid NASA astro-nots". I bet that the former is more likely to happen than the latter though....
Ahh...so tarkus has decided to log back in. Welcome back tarkus. Care to address any of the questions that have been directed to you?
Quote from: Zakalwe on July 04, 2015, 07:03:06 AMAhh...so tarkus has decided to log back in. Welcome back tarkus. Care to address any of the questions that have been directed to you?Don't hold your breath!!!!
The descent engine died during trans-earth coast. The helium burst disk blew, rendering the engine inoperative. Perhaps the ascent engine still worked? Using that would require them to jettison the descent module - and the big batteries in it.
It is actually referred to in the Apollo 13 movie, where they don't make a big fuss about it. It was expected to happen, because the helium tank used to pressurize the fuel tanks had heat leaking into it. The burst disk is designed as the weakest point in the system, and the helium was vented through (I believe it was 2) ports in a non-propulsive way.
JIM LOVELL (on TV pre-flight)- Oh, well, I'll tell you, I remember this one time. I'm... I'm in a (McDonnell F2H) Banshee at night in combat conditions, so there's no running lights on the carrier. It was the Shangri-La and we were in the Sea of Japan, and my... my radar had jammed, and my homing signal was gone because somebody in Japan was actually using the same frequency and so it was... was leading me away from where I was supposed to be. And I'm looking down at that big black ocean. So... I flip on my map light. And then suddenly zap everything shorts out right there in my cockpit, all my instruments are gone, my lights are gone, I can't even tell now what my altitude is. I know I'm running out of fuel, so I'm thinking about... about ditching in the ocean and I... I look down there and then... in... in the darkness there's this... there's this green trail, it's like a long carpet that just laid out right beneath me, and it was the algae, right. It was that phosphorescent stuff that gets churned up in the wake of a big ship and it was... it was... it was just leading me home. And... if my cockpit lights hadn't shorted out, there's no way I had ever been able to see that. So a... you a... you never know what... what events are gonna transpire to get you home.JULES BERGMAN (on TV)- Okay. Spacecraft Commander Jim Lovell, no stranger to emergency is he.JACK SWIGERT- How's it going, Fred.FRED HAISE- I'm okay.[EXPLOSION]JACK SWIGERT- What the hell was that?JIM LOVELL- Let's hope it was just the (helium) burst disk.JIM LOVELL- Houston, can you confirm a burst helium disk?ANDY (CAPCOM - WHITE)- We confirm that, Jim.JIM LOVELL- Houston, is that gonna affect our entry angle at all?ANDY (CAPCOM - WHITE)- Negative. Your entry angle is holding at 6.24, Aquarius.
I believe it's in his book, almost word for word.
Quote from: Sus_pilot on July 15, 2015, 07:25:45 PMI believe it's in his book, almost word for word.I can confirm this. One detail the film omits is that the instrument lights cutting out was his fault, as a little light he made attached to his knee board overloaded the circuits.
OK, the story is true, but was the interview in the movie a remake of a real interview, or was it just some journalistic licence. I know that Jules Bergman was the real deal, a science reporter for ABC at the time.
Quote from: raven on July 16, 2015, 02:53:59 AMI can confirm this. One detail the film omits is that the instrument lights cutting out was his fault, as a little light he made attached to his knee board overloaded the circuits.I can't believe I forgot that part! That's what make the story amusing, the way he set it up.
I can confirm this. One detail the film omits is that the instrument lights cutting out was his fault, as a little light he made attached to his knee board overloaded the circuits.