Added: 4 years ago
From: Skytroop
Views: 7,234
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  • They always sound so out of breath... reminds you of how heavy those suits are, even though they're in 1/6 Earth's gravity.

  • i'm sorry, but i spilled my orange crush last time i was up there

  • so the moon is like basicly a vaccum right? what would happen to a human just talking around in normal clothes? would their body just like start to expand and fall apart?

  • So this is the suit they walked on the Moon in ? they wouldn't have survived for ten seconds on the Moon, They wouldn't even survived the trip in the Moon lander, or the command module for that matter. It's a scam, a crime.

  • @johnsenkenn

    Oh hell if you say so then that settles it. Like you'd know.

  • Looks like this vid attracted some t00ls. One of these days con theorists - boom, zoom straight to schmitt's footprints on the m00n.

  • You Have tasted the flavor of the twin planets surrounding the tall tower of the spitter of the gooey goo! you cannot be fooled! H A Ha GHA HAHAH AHAHHAHA

  • the fabric thye used must be amazing...flexible but still airtight...WoW mix that with cavilar and cops would be indestructable! Anything moving(cloth) creates structure fractures if coated with another substance even if the other substance can flex....I dont know if I would like to trust my life on an "experimental" space uniform! Maybe thats why the suites cost milions and still look like saggy diapers!

  • these were A-7L pressure suits made by playtex they consist of several layers the outermost of Beta cloth of spun glass fiber. These cost something like $45,000, If I recall correctly, and no where near the millions you site. They were rigid and uncomfortable but not as dangerous as you think.

  • A very good demonstration of the technology may be found at youtube video 0nYPm05cBvQ , "James Burke demonstrates the Luna EVA suit"

    These are A7-L suits and the one Burk Demonstrates is an A-7 the L suits cost something like 45,000 dollars.

  • also where are the stars on the horizon ....Walls didnt have fiber optics back then!

  • your not going to see stars dumb shit! look at the shuttle missions you wont' see stars! go to NYC and look up you'll be lucky to see star with all the light in the air!

  • What I just caught is the soil around the mans boots landing very fast for the supposed gravity ratio...seems to me like they might create thier own little dust storm plowing around like they were!

  • that's because it's in a vacuum pinead there's no air resistance to suspend the dust particles god moontards are stupid

  • Yo HOJO or whatever moon expert dodoe!I live right ..next door to yep all the pads and all the Nasa junk and I know peeps who make loads of JACK to do -NOTHING! nand when or if you ever touched a moonrock what did if feel like...? I have and you Know what....welllll willl let you tell me _ Really how long has it has been and now the sudeden spark of interest again..hummmmmm PROPAGANDA! and yur yes your dumb ass tax dollars at work!

  • I have not seen them move like that on other videos, something is pulling them up.

  • Why would they fake the moon landing? They could have just taken the technology from the Roswell UFO to get them there faster. I'm just saying.

  • watch "sun" reflected on visor at

    1:32 to 1:38 that´s a huge spotlight!

  • The sun is pretty big.

  • Forty years of fake!

  • you horrid little wretch,you are a typical thicko

  • Idiot

  • Great video ¡¡¡ Historic moments. Thanks for sharing.

  • It's thoroughly enjoyable watching this. Two dudes running around on the MOON discovering stuff. Not making profound statements or anything. Just working. And there's some excitement.

  • You can see the strings people!

  • What you are seeing is reflection off of antennae on the PLSS's

  • nope, definitely strings, dont beLIEve the lies people.

    (we all know conspiracies are dumb)

  • please become familiar with the concepts of sarcasm and satire

  • Was replying to SPAG22.

  • It's really too easy to hide strings anyway. Strings used for theater don't actually glint. Antennas do.

  • If it were strings they would NOT always remain perpendicular to the top of the backpack like that. What you see is obviously antenna.

  • Something I've always wondered about these NASAS films is, what is that beeping noise on the radio?

  • It's the "opening-closing" signal between intercom units. Each time a comdev (coomunication device) opens or closes a communication between another comdev, there goes the "bleep".

  • Its called a Quindar tone and there are two frequencies to mark the beginning of a transmission and the end thereof. Look it up in your favorite search engine for more information.

  • Regardez a la 44eme seconde, on voit des cables transparents accrochés au sac a dos ...

  • what about a funeral?

  • Can you elaborate? Who's funeral and what are you getting at?

  • Oh! I think you mean "fumarole". This term refers to a volcanic vent which emits gas.

    The orange soil was initially interpreted in the field as being the result of "fumarole alteration" of the regolith.

  • ahh, got it. thx!

  • Oxidized? But, it's a reducing environment. Hmmm, intersting stuff.

  • great video!

  • what r you saying ??that this didn t really happened my god get a life never falling offcouse not when you are standing uphill he would be falling if he wasnt leaning forward

  • Beginning of the clip, looks like the first guy is a puppet being pulled from above when he was hopping, he is way leaning forward and never falling

  • The suits are articulated, they are not solid garments, they have jointed parts that can move regardless of the pressure, particularly around the fingers, and astronauts undergo a little something called "months of intensive training," you might have heard of this concept, which allows them to make optimal use of their suits and to know how to move in them.

  • Cleaning something with an extended brush isnt hard at all. Slight movements is all thats needed.

  • That suit must really be pressurized the way his fingers are so dextrose to pick up a small brush and finely brush the lens

  • Have you checked out the complexity of these spacesuits ? I have not investigated it myself, but i think that they could have had compartments with diffent pressures, like a breathing-chamber around the head, closed off at the neck-shoulder area, and the rest of the body with a suitable pressure, so that they could perform the work they were suppose to do . Is this not possible ?

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