...I know there's contention about the photograph of an ice sublimator with some claiming it was available since 1997 and my saying I couldn't find it in 2007. I'm sure there are tricks I don't know for bringing buried stuff to the surface of the Internet. Please indulge with instruction on how to find a second photograph of a spacesuit ice sublimator. Currently only one shows when you do the Google Image search. Please educate me in how to bring the others to the surface.
Sigh!
Neil Baker, just like many other hoax-believers have done, you really are putting an immense effort into proving to us just how stupid you can be, aren't you? Whatever for? It just makes you look foolish.
However, I must congratulate you because you have had such resounding success that you have convinced me. But having done that, isn't it a good idea that you start using your brains just a little bit? Obviously, I'm assuming that you have some to use but for reasons of your own have hardly done so.
Try this: Go back to pages one and two and study the posts sufficiently to understand them. Note that in reply No. 8 Gazpar gave you the link to what you ask for above, but instead of following it properly you had the audacity to insult him and other members of this forum with the following remark in your second post:
If you're satisfied to continue accepting your faith-based space program, then you either do nothing or continue jabbering with lame links and empty opinions.
In another post you stated:
Only until recently after my agitation could a photograph of a spacesuit ice sublimator be seen on the Internet. And despite representing one of the most interesting and exotic heat transfer devices ever contrived, no spacesuit ice sublimator is mentioned in any academic-level heat transfer or thermodynamics book.
You have been shown with copious examples what nonsense those two statements are, starting with links on pages one and two. And even after having been given some of them a second time, still you are foolish enough to not accept most of the information. All you have done is shift the goalposts.
In reply 27 on page 2, Raven gave you the link that shows the PLSS data was on the internet in 1997, which you later acknowledged in post 115, page 8:
http://www.apollohoax.net/forum/index.php?topic=945.msg31217#msg31217But you also added, like a true intellectual giant, "I imagine it was buried in cyberspace somewhere. But it didn't appear to me and others until much later."
The Apollo Lunar Surface Journals (
ALSJ) have
never been buried anywhere in cyberspace since they were first put on the internet, so the article and its photos never appeared to you and others much later. They have always been there.
I have both the CD-ROM version of the ALSJ of 1 May 1999, and the DVD-ROM version of 10 August 2006, and the articles and photos are in both versions. The photo you claimed responsibility for getting on the internet, was created (probably scanned from a print or slide) on 30 March 1999 for the CD-ROM version, but had obviously been on the internet earlier than that.
Had you done your homework properly and examined the information given to you, you would have read that the original editor of the Apollo Lunar Surface Journals, Eric Jones, took the photo plss04.jpg.
Here, allow me to spoon-feed you the information that you didn't seem to find from Raven's link:
These photos are cutaway views of a full-scale, engineering model of the Portable Life Support System (PLSS). The colors of the internal components are used to enhance the identification of critical components only. Production models were not color coded.
...All these photographs were taken the Journal Editor, Eric Jones, and were scanned by Frank O'Brien. Our thanks to Joe Kosmo at the NASA Johnson Space Center for providing access to the PLSS model.
See that? Unlike production models of the PLSS, that one was colour-coded for your viewing ease, and the photo was taken by Eric Jones.
One thing you should know about the ALSJ, is that a direct link like Gazpar's is okay for looking at a specific document or photo, but is not the best way to access the entire journals. You need the frames for that, by starting with (and recording), this link:
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/alsj/frame.htmlTo navigate to the PLSS article from there, click on the link
Introductory Materialthen page down to
Flight Hardware
Suits and Life Support Equipmentand click on
Portable Life Support System (PLSS)
Easy, huh? You could spend many years studying the information at the ALSJ. Quite a few of us here have contributed to the journals.
Then there are also the Apollo Flight Journals:
http://history.nasa.gov/afj/One little hint about what you call "stonewalling" in your own empty opinions: Nasa and aerospace companies don't suffer fools gladly. As you have amply shown in this thread, it's a waste of time. Even here, many of us are not really posting for your benefit, we are instead posting for other members and the more intelligent onlookers who will understand and appreciate the things that you don't.
Some time back one HB claimed that the lurkers would all be on his side, so we persuaded them to de-lurk and say whose side they were on. A few did, and not one of them was on his side.