Anyone who has never seen "From Earth to the Moon" should at least make an effort to see the episode called "Spider"...
The whole series was excellent when compared with some Hollywood-type productions. So good, I took heaps of notes.
One excellent thing about Part 5,
"Spider" is that they even gave John Houlbolt and his theories on Lunar Orbit Rendezvous a well-deserved turn.
Some of the notes from the DVD:
0:08:53 John Houbolt0:09:26 Houbolt critics 1 & 2
0:09:56 Late 1961 — Houbolt's letter to Dr Seamans
0:10:08 Dr Robert Seamans and assistant
0:11:04 2 — Tom Kelly
0:11:05 July 1962 — Lunar orbit rendezvous accepted
0:11:19 November 1962 — Tom Kelly, Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, Bethpage, New York
0:11:30 Bob Carbee
0:11:42 "Yeah, Frank. We got the contract. We're all just observing a moment of silence for the companies that didn't."0:12:59 Tom Kelly: I'm afraid you're gonna have to go tell your wives and kids the bad news, fellas. Looks like you won't be seeing much of them for the next couple of years because we got the contract!
0:13:57 January 1963 — Grumman Engineering Bullpen
0:14:18 Tom Kelly: Seven years. Well, let's get started.
0:14:26 Four legs
0:14:42 February 1963 — Octagonal descent stage
0:14:55 March 1963 — Windows
0:15:36 What if they don't need seats?
0:17:00 May 1963 — Thermal shields
0:17:15 Mylar Engineer
0:17:40 August 1963 — Mylar film between layers of Kapton with an outer layer of nickel foil
0:18:06 Hatches
0:18:39 Arnold Whitaker
0:18:56 October 1963 — Square hatch
0:19:12 December 1963 — Ladder
0:19:32 Tom Kelly: Okay, one more thing. It's no longer the Lunar Excursion Module any more. Everybody feels that excursion sounds like it's gonna go out on a school trip. From now on it's just the Lunar Module.
0:20:02 March 1964 — Let's make sure we film everything we do
0:20:36 Every LM would have to be handmade
0:20:47 Thruster test
0:20:49 Engine test
0:20:53 Landing gear test
0:20:57 Sunlight and dust test
0:21:03 Landing gear on a slope
0:21:09 Thousands of tests, day after day, for years0:21:32 Young engineer
0:23:12 Tom Kelly: This is bad, but as long as people speak up about their mistakes, we've got a shot. Okay? They try to sweep it under the rug and we're not going to go to New Jersey, let alone to the moon.
0:23:46 Original film of LM assembly
0:24:48 3 — Lunar Module 3
0:24:59 Jim McDivitt
0:25:04 Dave Scott
0:25:10 Rusty Schweickart
0:27:09 August 1967 — Grumman Engineering Bullpen
0:27:24 Original film of LM assembly
0:27:41 Systems Integration Test No. 1
0:28:00 Systems Integration Test No. 2
0:28:57 Systems Integration Test No. 3
0:29:21 4 — At the Cape
0:29:40 Tom Kelly: I need to know if we can make the date
0:30:48 Original film of LM assembly
0:32:13 Operations and Checkout Building, Kennedy Space Center
0:33:07 Deke Slayton and Jim McDivitt
0:35:14 5 — "First in space" — 11 October 1968 — Apollo 7
0:35:27 Apollo 8
0:35:48 LM 3 was ready
0:36:30 Call signs Spider and Gumdrop
0:37:53 3 March 1969 — Apollo 9
0:37:02 Jim McDivitt: She's a beautiful machine, Tom!
0:37:03 Tom Kelly: Isn't she?
0:37:05 Rusty Schweickart: You really think it's beautiful?
0:37:06 Jim McDivitt: God no, it looks like a toaster oven with legs, but I'm not gonna tell him that.And even a little bit of Hollywood, but forgivable:
0:48:14 Error: LM above the North Island of New Zealand, which is reversed left to right. Coromandel Peninsula bottom left, Bay of Plenty bottom centre, Mahia Peninsula bottom right, Mount Egmont/Taranaki top left, Wellington top centre.
0:48:45 Descent stage above the lower North Island of New Zealand, which is reversed left to right. Wellington centre left.
0:51:34 Error: Ascent stage flying almost due south, above the Indus River and the Gulf of Kutch
Anyone's welcome to a copy of the notes -- for research purposes only. 31 pages of Arial Narrow 9-point, Open Document Format, covering all five DVDs. PM me if wanted.