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And may I add what a pleasure it is to see all the pros at work here! =D> Jay et al, it is amazing how much knowledge firepower can be leveled against the woo2 onslaught. I have to hang out more on the Lunar forum, I guess I am spending too much time with the Mars rovers... :wink:
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Lyford Rome "Zis is not nuts, zis is super-nuts!" Mathematician Richard Courant on viewing an Orion test |
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"A mystic is a person who is puzzled before the obvious but who understands the nonexistent." -- Elbert Hubbard |
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Yup. It's a kind of derivative of Mark Twain's comment that "Truth is stranger than Fiction, but it is because fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn't." (Possibly paraphrased.)
My derivative reads like this; "There are certain details that only real life would dare to make up." And, of course, the "out of detent" detail has that verite of something that had actually been tried, not just dreamed about or simulated. It has that reek of versimilatude that comes from most real-world engineering solutions.
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"You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means." |
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It is the little things that make the hoax so convincing. :P
Of course, if the hoax spacecraft was made up in such minute detail and perfection and to be the perfect fraud, then why not actually use it to do it for real?
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Freedom For Fission A breath of fresh Iodine-131 |
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And, of course, the "out of detent" detail has that verite of something that had actually been tried, not just dreamed about or simulated. It has that reek of versimilatude that comes from most real-world engineering solutions.
I can't possibly agree more. This is one thing I have to constantly bring up to management, and to non-engineers acting in engineering roles. The saying goes: "Every project has two stages -- too early to tell, and too late to do anything about it." What it means is that when you sit down to do the paper designs at the beginning of a project, you really only know a very little bit of what you need to do to solve the whole problem. You can even have a 200-page statement of the problem, and you'll still discover things as you go. And so the art of engineering management is knowing how to progressively constrain the design components as you go and allow yourself maximum flexibility to account for these late-stage discoveries while still allowing the design to progress toward completion on schedule. The ACA solution to the DAP problem is exactly the kind of thing that happens when you actually execute a design -- not merely dream it up for public consumption. This really does provide evidence that the LM was a working design, not merely a paper cover story. |
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When did they come up with it?
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Freedom For Fission A breath of fresh Iodine-131 |
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As a writer, those are the details I collect (as a stage technician, most of our "solutions" are jerry-rigs!)
My current treasure is how the V1 crews dealt with interference with the magnetic compass from the metal body of the missile. After the thing was on the launch ramp they'd crawl around whanging at it with wooden mallets.
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"You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means." |
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This guy's another poor researcher who thinks he's the smartest person on the planet. If he can't figure something out in a few minutes with no research, then it is unsolvable for teams of dedicated professionals with advanced, specific training and months (if not years) of focused efforts to address that problem. Right.
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And what does a car's engine have to do with a spaceship? Why does he assume the two should work the same? Quote:
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Okay, I just looked around further at that site. Quote:
Just some teenager trying to feel smarter than he is by "seeing through the lies". |