Comments by "MRA" (@yassassin6425) on "Daily Mail"
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Even in the 1/6th gravity of the moon, the Apollo A7Ls and PLSS combined were bulky, quite cumbersome, rigid top heavy with a awkward centre of gravity. Despite the fact that the combined weight was 14kgs on the moon, this was still cumbersome and they a mass of 81 kilograms / 180 lbs which was quite restrictive.
You are also failing to factor in that in low gravity, none of your muscle memory works. Your sense of balance is completely shot. You essentially have to learn how to walk again, nearly from scratch, and while wearing that constrictive suit, with an unfamiliar top-heavy center of gravity. Such low gravity is deceptive in that while it feels like you are “only” carrying a 14 kg weight if you build up momentum in that, it will still act as an 80+ kg mass when you have to stop it from moving, or change direction. They did jump, and much higher than they would have been able to wearing the same gear on Earth, but they were unable to crouch or properly spring.
What we see in the footage is entirely consistent with the physics of an astronaut on the lunar surface.
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@luis-sophus-8227
"Haha, consume and regurgitate goes for you fellow"
Said the gullible believer in dumb online conspiracy theory.
I am irrelevant to this exchange. The scientific, technical, independent and third party evidence in support of the moon landings is axiomatic, manifest, and has a voice of its own.
You can observe precisely the same effect here on Earth - that's what uneven terrain can do. And yes, this has been addressed, over and over and over and over and over again, most amusingly when David Percy was exposed for dishonestly cropping pictures.
Do you have anything new or perhaps an original thought that you could share? I'm genuinely interested. Something other than diverging shadows, the Apollo 11 astronauts looked glum in the press conference, the flag moves, NASA forgot to add the stars or there should be a crater under the lunar module?
Go ahead, I'm sure you can muster something relating to your own observations.
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