- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Okay, 11. This is Houston. We switched your OMNI antennas as you rolled through the appropriate position. Did you copy the flight plan update item?
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
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Okay. The battery charge is in the process now and the wastewater dump is in work. MCC 3 has been canceled. It would have been 0.8 feet per second. MCC 4 now looks like about 2.4 feet per second. At around 53 hours we'll do a P52 in PTC. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Roger, 11. The magnitudes of the midcourse corrections were just for your information, but midcourse 4 was down around 2.0 feet per second. Again, for your information, on SPS chamber pressure, it looks like your onboard readout of 87 psi corresponds to 92 psi by our telemetry, and your value of 89 on board corresponds to 94. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Apollo 11, Houston. Radio check on a new power amplifier in our transmitter. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Okay. Just for your information again, it appears that your readout of 87 psi corresponds to our corrected TM readout of 92—that's 92 psi, and 89 on board is really 94 psi. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Okay. Consumables update for GET of 46 plus 00: minus 5.5 percent, minus 6.5 percent, minus 2.5 percent, minus 7.5 percent, minus 5.0 percent, minus 2 pounds hydrogen, plus 1 pound oxygen, and that minus 5.5 percent on the RCS total corresponds to minus 66 pounds. Over.
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
-
Okay. I copy those, and I'll give you our percentages now: Alpha 82, Bravo 84, Cocoa 85, Delta 87. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
This is Houston. We copy your percentages, and do you have a crew status report on sleep For us?
- Michael Collins (CMP)
-
Houston, we're getting CRYO pressure warning now in the middle of stirring up the …
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
-
Houston, Apollo 11. We've got the continent of Africa … facing toward us right now, and of course, everything's getting smaller and smaller as time goes on. The Mediterranean is completely clear. The Sun looks like it's about to set around Madagascar. The equatorial belt of Africa stands out quite clearly. We're seeing the dark green or a muddy colored green, compared to the sandier colors in the southern tip of Africa and, of course, the Sahara northern coast of Africa. There's a rather remarkable cloud that appears in the vicinity of the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan. It's just about to go into the sunset now. It is casting quite a large shadow. It's isolated. There don't seem to be any other clouds … the band of clouds near the tropical conversions clouds down around the equator clearly separate the clockwise and the counterclockwise cloud formations. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Roger, 11. We copy your word description on that. I understand you can see a shadow being cast by that cloud over between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Any estimate on how long that shadow would be? Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
We're getting a lot of background noise now, also. If you will stand by a minute or so until we roll a little further in PTC, I think things will get better.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
11, this is Houston. The noise on the COMM seems to have quieted down now. I guess that we've rotated a new antenna into view and probably also the Earth out of view in your window. Over.
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
-
Okay. It looks as though the length of the shadow of that cloud is about the same as the width of the Persian Gulf.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Okay. We copy the width of the Persian Gulf, and I guess that all I can give you firsthand is a single isolated data point, and that is that it was clear here in Houston this morning. That's a pretty localized observation. As a result of your waste water dump, it looks like the PTC mode has been disturbed somewhat. We're showing you about 20 degrees out in pitch right now and about 6 degrees in yaw, which is significantly greater, about twice as much—a little more than twice as much as the deviation you had prior to the waste water dump. We' re watching it down here, though, and we'll let you know if we think any corrective action is required. Over.
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
-
Okay. Maybe we ought to—next time split that in half, and put half of it on one side and half on the other or something like that.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Yes. We could do that. We were actually pretty interested in seeing what the effect on PTC would be of the waste water dump. We don't recall ever having performed a waste water dump during PTC on previous missions. Over.
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
-
Houston, Apollo 11. I am looking at that cloud now around Pakistan through the sextant, and it appears to be one single cell in the latter stages of development. There is a smaller, more isolated one —
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Apollo 11, this is Houston. We lost you down in the noise on the COMM link here about the time you were describing the single cell cloud formation over Afghanistan-Pakistan area through the sextant. Over.
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
-
Roger. It came through a lot clearer through the sextant than with the monocular, and you could definitely tell it was one single cell in the latter stages of development. It must have gone up to over 50,000 feet, though. The eastern Mediterranean is phenomenally clear. You can see all the lakes; the Dead Sea stood out quite well. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Roger. What appears to be the limit of resolution through that sextant from your current position? Over.
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
-
And, I don't know yow you'd really describe the limit of resolution. I will think about that a little.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Okay. I guess the smallest object that you could pick out looking through it would give us a pretty good hack.
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
-
Well, you can see the Nile River going almost up to its source. The lake is obscured by clouds, but you can trace it all the way on up.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Roger. We have been working under the assumption that it would take about an hour for the interference from a waste water dump to dissipate to the point where you could reasonably take star sightings for platform alignment navigation or something of this sort. If you have a spare minute or two, could you comment on the observation condition, now? Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Okay.
Expand selection down Contract selection up - Michael Collins (CMP)
-
My guess would be the telescope's probably pretty useless, but you can differentiate in the sextant between water droplets and stars by the difference in their motions.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Okay, Mike. I guess that we've still got—what you are saying is that we've still got a lot of water droplets visible, but you can pick them out and distinguish them in the sextant, then.
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
-
Houston, Apollo 11. It looks like at this time the sextant would be quite usable for any alignment. There's actually very few … verticals.
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
-
Well, it's not quite as useful; it never seems to be. Depending on the position of the Sun, it's got that band that seems to go across the center. I don't think it's because of the waste water particles that it would lack its effectiveness. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Roger. What—Is this band something that's deposited on the outside of the optics? Over.
- Michael Collins (CMP)
-
The Sun bounces off the LM structure. With the LM attached, that telescope is just about useless. Those star charts that MPAD provided us, I think, would be most useful if we had to use the—if for some reason we had to mark through the telescope. We could use those as a guide for what we're looking at and say, “Well, that bright blob over there has got to be that star because that's the position we're in.” But so far, we've not been able to pick out any decent star patterns while docked with the LM using the telescope.
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
-
Roger. You're coming back a little scratchy. It,looks like our O2 flow transducer's gotten a good bit worse. I just looked at it at the last water accumulator cycling, and it just barely registered—barely crept up above 0.2. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
11, this is Houston. At the time of your cyclic accumulator stroking, we were on low-bit-rate data, and consequently not receiving the O2 flow parameter. We expect that what you're seeing is probably nominal. That is, it's probably what we would expect from a transducer that's malfunctioning probably in this fashion, and it's just going to keep on getting worse like that. Nothing to worry about. We'll monitor things on the ground here. Over.
- Neil Armstrong (CDR)
-
And would you check with FAO and see where that errata sheet is? We haven't been able to locate that.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Roger. I understand it's supposed to be the back page in Buzz's operational checklist.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Roger. And I see you're in P00. If you can give us ACCEPT, we'll uplink a new state vector to you and update the CMC clock. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
11, this is Houston. We're through with the uplink. You can go back to BLOCK.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Apollo 11, this is Houston. We would like to terminate the charge on battery B at GET of 51 30. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Apollo 11, this is Houston. We would like to terminate charging battery Bravo at 51 30 GET. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Roger, 11. We show you terminating battery B charge at about 51 hours 30 minutes. Over.
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
-
Houston, Apollo 11. Would you like to have both oxygen and hydrogen purge on? Over.
Spoken on July 18, 1969, 2:20 p.m. UTC (55 years, 3 months ago). Link to this transcript range is: Tweet