Cartz1337
Cartz1337 t1_ix5uygl wrote
Reply to comment by toodroot in NASA Moon mission 'exceeding' expectations by modrosso
Putting a half ton satellite in orbit of the moon? More than I’ve got.
Cartz1337 t1_iv5xemj wrote
Reply to comment by ye_olde_astronaut in Rockets Falling from Orbit: The Saturn V That Launched NASA’s Skylab by ye_olde_astronaut
‘Accepting the risks’ 50 years later on a far superior modern platform doesn’t seem right to me.
It’s somewhat different then NASA not redesigning a rocket for a one off mission. Seems like everyone could do better here.
Cartz1337 t1_ix5wz7v wrote
Reply to comment by Mystic_L in NASA Moon mission 'exceeding' expectations by modrosso
Not really… almost every Apollo mission had significant problems of one type or another. Apollo 13 is obviously the most memorable one due to it actually exploding. Here are some details on the rest.
Apollo 1, killed its crew in a fire on the launchpad during preflight testing.
Apollo 6 - unmanned, significant POGO, multiple engine failures in 2nd stage. 3rd stage failed to reignite.
Apollo 8 - Frank Borman was puking most of the way to the moon. The spacecraft itself was the ‘best ever made’ with only 8 minor issues.
Apollo 9 - one member crew was space sick, impacting flight plan
Apollo 11 - nearly missed landing site due to improper tunnel venting, incorrect rendezvous radar setting overloaded computer during landing causing a string of alarms that could have caused an abort.
Apollo 12 - struck by lightning during launch. They weren’t sure if the strike blew the parachute pyros so they didn’t know for the entire flight if they were in a flying coffin. Also they pointed their TV camera at the sun and fried it.
Apollo 13 - boom, failure is not an option etc
Apollo 14 - abort switch contaminated with metal shavings, causing the button to appear pressed intermittently. They had to patch the computer manually to disable the switch. Landing radar failed to lock and had to be rebooted during the landing.
Apollo 15 - crew was so exhausted after returning from the lunar lander that they suffered long term damage to their cardiovascular systems. Mostly due to deficiency of potassium.
Apollo 16 - CSM thrust vectoring failed causing a prolonged delay in the landing while they worked around the issue. Astronaut tripped over the heat transfer experiment on the surface and destroyed it.
And this is just from memory. I don’t think it’s unreasonable for a mission to exceed expectations. There is an expectation of some difficulties, if some things not working as planned. To have only minor issues, issues you anticipated and planned contingencies for or no issues at all would most certainly exceed expectations.