25.12.2014 Views

Rene-NASA-Mooned-America

Rene-NASA-Mooned-America

Rene-NASA-Mooned-America

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

The Conclusion / Chap. 18 p. 162<br />

this was also an expensive course to follow did not worry me a bit. One nice thing about<br />

Apollo was that no one ever told us we were running the price up too high." 14<br />

From Glenn's brief 3 orbit ride in a Mercury capsule through the Gemini missions that<br />

orbited for as long as 14 days, only the Gemini 7 capsule reported a cabin temperature of 29°<br />

C (83° F) despite air-conditioning. 15 Not one of the Apollo missions report such heat<br />

problems during the 8 days each one spent in unremitting sunlight on their way to, and back<br />

from, the Moon And neither did the Apollo 17's LEM. It sat on the Moon's hot surface in<br />

the blazing Sun for 75 hours (3 days) without a sunshade. This would have required all kinds<br />

of refrigeration, plus the electrical power to drive it. The only way you can refrigerate in<br />

space is to use the explosive cooling of ejected water. Many tons of water would have been<br />

required, and the spout of each ejection would have been readily visible.<br />

Even the geo-synchronous satellites which spend 12 hours in the Sun and 12 hours in the<br />

shade report no overheating per se. However, I would bet that they were designed to function<br />

with internal temperatures high enough to kill astronauts.<br />

How then could Skylab alone have this problem In fact, <strong>NASA</strong> went out of its way to<br />

make us believe the opposite with its "Space is cold!" nonsense campaign. The only answer<br />

to this dilemma is that... Skylab was basically another ten billion dollar hoax. Skylab was<br />

supposed to weigh 34.4 tonnes (35.4 million grams), which made it 10 times heavier than the<br />

Gemini capsules. This mass (weight) has to approach the combined mass (weight) of the<br />

Apollo command and service capsules, which needed Saturn V engines to get them in orbit.<br />

(Both the Gemini capsules and the Skylab were orbited with the old Saturn 1B engines<br />

which had only 1/10 of the power of the humongus Saturn V engines).<br />

This raises an interesting question about those Saturn Vs. Did each Apollo shot consist<br />

of lifting stripped-down and empty Apollo shells into the Florida skies using Saturn 1B<br />

engines Bill Kaysing believes that the Saturn V engines never worked, and now it seems<br />

very likely that Skylab's heating problem was just another <strong>NASA</strong> lie in order to evade doing<br />

some of the more difficult scientific experiments whose results couldn't easily be faked.<br />

New information seems to indicate that the <strong>NASA</strong> lies started with the Gemini 5<br />

capsule. This mission was launched on August 21, 1965. The crew consisted of Gordon<br />

Cooper and Pete Conrad who reported that the oxygen pressure had dropped from 800-psi to<br />

120 in their fuel cells during the first two hours because they powered down and had to shut<br />

down the air-conditioning so the capsule got cold.<br />

Buzz Aldrin, in RETURN TO EARTH, never got around to explaining why Roy Neal's<br />

simple, no-tricks question was such anathema. What exactly is so bothersome about, "Now<br />

that almost two years have gone by, why not tell us how it really felt to be on the moon"<br />

Well, it has been almost 24 years, and he still hasn't answered that question other than<br />

to talk about depression. I believe his depression is certainly real, but what caused the<br />

depression Why did that question make his throat dry, make him dizzy; even make<br />

<strong>NASA</strong> MOONED AMERICA! / <strong>Rene</strong>

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!