Friday, 21 December 2018

The Apollo Detectives

A film edited by Neil Geddes Ward. Neil and his fellow presenter Andrew Chaplin host a conversation between Marcus Allen, Scott Henderson and myself. We discuss the Apollo moon landings. Have NASA told us the truth about man's first steps on the moon?
See here for Marcus' website: https://nexusmagazine.com/?v=79cba1185463. See here for details of Scott's work: http://www.aulis.com/photo_studies.htm.
I have been featured on Neil's channel before, see: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2016/01/ufos-abductions-and-911_20.html.

2 comments:

  1. PP: I like these conversationals, getting 4 hrs spare to listen mite be an issue tho, it'd help if it was split into 30min segments!

    I think the 'oxygen system' speculation could have been better researched, I was a RN Diver in the 80's our rebreathing system was based on a WWII design, 3 hours duration was the norm on a 1.5 liter per min at 10M depth (twin cylinders about 3" dia x 10") slightly more modern systems with larger cylinders (twin 5" dia x 14") and a larger soda lime canister (Co2 absorbant) used by sneaky beaky types could last 9 hrs. I've not looked at the Apollo suit breathing systems (any links?) but I can see how a similar design could work for 7 hours.

    Lots of interesting stuff besides that tho! One question I like to put to skeptics is about the famous pictures of the lander on the moons surface (because everyone has seen it and it's easy to recall in the mind), a surface made of very fine dust, so fine the footprints look like they could be made in fine powder similar to cement dust, or flour even.... pristine pictures, gold sparkling, super detailed, excellent focus pictures... see that big rocket sticking out the bottom? That was to slow it down on landing right? How much thrust must that thing have to put out to stop it crashing into the moon? Why is there no blast crater under it, and why is there no dust on anything? ;)

    Andrew Johnson did some good research, watching him discussing on RH show led me to the footage of the practice runs they did, the models of the moon they had etc. very very interesting, it's quite easy to see how they did the filming to make it so believable.

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  2. Thanks, Anon. I'll ask around about the ventilation system of the spacecraft.

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