Patrick1000
Banned
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- Jul 22, 2011
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Actually SUSpilot, according to Kranz, he guessed the right thing at the right time..
Actually SUSpilot, according to Kranz, he guessed the right thing at the right time..Pretty good guess wouldntcha' say? Again from the April 28 1999 Johnson Space Center Oral History Archive;
http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/history/oral_histories/k-l.htm
KRANZ;
"And we still have no clue what happened
onboard the spacecraft. The other option: we’ve got to go around the Moon; and it’s going to
take about 5 days but I’ve only got 2 days of electrical power. So, we’re now at the point of
making the decision: which path are we going to take? My gut feeling, and that’s all I’ve
got, says, “Don’t use the main engine and don’t jettison this lunar module.” And that’s all
I’ve got is a gut feeling. And it’s based, I don’t know—in the flight control business, the
flight director business, you develop some street smarts. And I think every controller has felt
this at one time or another. And I talked briefly to Lunney, and he’s got the same feeling."
Funny how how Gene's intuition works isn't it SUSpilot? Sure was a good thing for those astronauts. Be a bad thing, stranded out there in pretend cislunar space having just jettisoned a pretend LM. And to think it all was thanks to a good guess on Gene's part. Whew! That was a close one.....
Two problems, maybe three, Patrick:
1) In the quote from the transcript, Kranz is saying the exact right thing, at the right time. It is a reminder to everyone that options are available and to not rush into doing something stupid. A simple equivalent in flight training is this: when the engine fails, even at a sufficient altitude to troubleshoot the problem, the very first thing you do is find a place to put the aircraft. Then you work the problem.
2) I'll grant the quotes don't match perfectly - this is my "maybe". It's only a problem in that an editor or proofreader probably didn't notice a mistake on their part. The "problem" is that it gives people like you an inconsistency on which to build a false premise.
3) This is yet another derail on your part. Back to where we started: does PTFE burn in the presence of cryogenic oxygen?
Actually SUSpilot, according to Kranz, he guessed the right thing at the right time..Pretty good guess wouldntcha' say? Again from the April 28 1999 Johnson Space Center Oral History Archive;
http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/history/oral_histories/k-l.htm
KRANZ;
"And we still have no clue what happened
onboard the spacecraft. The other option: we’ve got to go around the Moon; and it’s going to
take about 5 days but I’ve only got 2 days of electrical power. So, we’re now at the point of
making the decision: which path are we going to take? My gut feeling, and that’s all I’ve
got, says, “Don’t use the main engine and don’t jettison this lunar module.” And that’s all
I’ve got is a gut feeling. And it’s based, I don’t know—in the flight control business, the
flight director business, you develop some street smarts. And I think every controller has felt
this at one time or another. And I talked briefly to Lunney, and he’s got the same feeling."
Funny how how Gene's intuition works isn't it SUSpilot? Sure was a good thing for those astronauts. Be a bad thing, stranded out there in pretend cislunar space having just jettisoned a pretend LM. And to think it all was thanks to a good guess on Gene's part. Whew! That was a close one.....
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