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Reading Ray Villard's article "Did NASA fake the Moon landing?" in the
July "Astronomy" I was interested to read that although the experiments were turned off in the 1970s for budgetary reasons (I understand they were also simply not returning useful data), the transmitters are still working and still being used. That's very impressive for 1960s technology, given how hostile the environment is there. But I think there's a horrible mistake or typo. "Ancient anthracites, lava basalts, and breccias". Unless anthracite means something other than coal? -- Remove spam and invalid from address to reply. |
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July "Astronomy" I was interested to read that although the experiments
were turned off in the 1970s for budgetary reasons (I understand they were also simply not returning useful data), the transmitters are still working and still being used. That's very impressive for 1960s I seriously doubt that. the nuclear fuel depleted and the experiments were turned ff to prevent interference. I think your info is wrong, and without experiments what would the transmitters be sending? HAVE A GREAT DAY! |
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In article ,
Jonathan Silverlight wrote: Reading Ray Villard's article "Did NASA fake the Moon landing?" in the July "Astronomy" I was interested to read that although the experiments were turned off in the 1970s for budgetary reasons (I understand they were also simply not returning useful data), the transmitters are still working and still being used... I think somebody has goofed. The ALSEP laser retroreflectors are still in use -- they are non-electronic -- but as far as I know, nobody has heard from the transmitters since they were turned off along with the experiments on 30 Sept 1977. -- "Think outside the box -- the box isn't our friend." | Henry Spencer -- George Herbert | |
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![]() "Henry Spencer" wrote in message ... but as far as I know, nobody has heard from the transmitters since they were turned off along with the experiments on 30 Sept 1977. Besides- 35+ years of thermal cycling should have done a number on the electronics. |
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On Sun, 13 Jun 2004 13:51:00 -0400, "Scott Hedrick"
wrote: "Henry Spencer" wrote in message ... but as far as I know, nobody has heard from the transmitters since they were turned off along with the experiments on 30 Sept 1977. Besides- 35+ years of thermal cycling should have done a number on the electronics. ....Possibly. On the other hand, I've seen equipment that's survived 25 years of environmental exposure that, once you tossed the dead batteries, replaced the contacts and popped in fresh ones, the damn things worked. OTOH, I don't believe either EASEP or ALSEP were equipped with any sort of "re-on" switch. Once they were turned off, that was it. OM -- "No ******* ever won a war by dying for | http://www.io.com/~o_m his country. He won it by making the other | Sergeant-At-Arms poor dumb ******* die for his country." | Human O-Ring Society - General George S. Patton, Jr |
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In message , Henry Spencer
writes In article , Jonathan Silverlight wrote: Reading Ray Villard's article "Did NASA fake the Moon landing?" in the July "Astronomy" I was interested to read that although the experiments were turned off in the 1970s for budgetary reasons (I understand they were also simply not returning useful data), the transmitters are still working and still being used... I think somebody has goofed. The ALSEP laser retroreflectors are still in use -- they are non-electronic -- but as far as I know, nobody has heard from the transmitters since they were turned off along with the experiments on 30 Sept 1977. Great. The moon-hoax proponents will love an article that makes mistakes. Doing a bit of searching, I found he makes more mistakes, like saying solar activity was at minimum when it was near maximum, and even getting the number of missions wrong. Not that it matters. The TV documentary I saw a few weeks ago said a fairly high proportion of people in a poll believed the missions were faked, but according to Villard only 5% of a Gallup poll in 1999 said it was. (The number may have gone up since, of course). That may be the percentage estimated to be intoxicated at any given time, but IIRC it's also the number in a poll who will answer "yes" to _any_ question. |
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Henry Spencer wrote:
In article , Jonathan Silverlight wrote: Reading Ray Villard's article "Did NASA fake the Moon landing?" in the July "Astronomy" I was interested to read that although the experiments were turned off in the 1970s for budgetary reasons (I understand they were also simply not returning useful data), the transmitters are still working and still being used... I think somebody has goofed. The ALSEP laser retroreflectors are still in use -- they are non-electronic -- but as far as I know, nobody has heard from the transmitters since they were turned off along with the experiments on 30 Sept 1977. I've heard from the Tidbinbilla guys that they used ALSEP transmitters for tracking training purposes after that date, until the late 80's, IIRC. Harald |
#8
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![]() I've heard from the Tidbinbilla guys that they used ALSEP transmitters for tracking training purposes after that date, until the late 80's, IIRC. Harald so they turned off the experiments but left the carrier. now how dumb was that HAVE A GREAT DAY! |
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In article ,
Harald Kucharek wrote: ...but as far as I know, nobody has heard from the transmitters since they were turned off along with the experiments on 30 Sept 1977. I've heard from the Tidbinbilla guys that they used ALSEP transmitters for tracking training purposes after that date, until the late 80's, IIRC. Hmm, could well be. There's no good history of the ALSEPs, and it's not uncommon for officially-defunct spacecraft to live on for a while as engineering testbeds and such. -- "Think outside the box -- the box isn't our friend." | Henry Spencer -- George Herbert | |
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![]() As the ALSEP power packs degraded, they eventually dropped below the point that they could run the radio and any other instrument. This was about 1977-8. The radio beacons were left on for any possible Earth-based tracking experiments, until they too faded -- last date of reception from any of them, I have no clue, but 1980's-ish sounds reasonable. The critical factor was that the ALSEP control room in the Bldg 30 MCC, on the second floor, was shut down in early 1978 and converted to the 'Skylab Rescue' control room, which soon re-established contact with the abandoned station and kept contact through July 1979 when it attacked Australia. |
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