- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Hello, Apollo 11. Houston. Mike, did you notice any transients at ignition on TEI? Over.
- Michael Collins (CMP)
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Yes. The transients were more noticeable than on the previous burns, Charlie. I just wrote it off on the fact we had a light command module, but there was considerable roll activity which dampened down after the first 20 seconds, I would guess, of the burn; but then there was also some pitch and yaw activity. I don't believe it was abnormal, and it seemed to be deadbanding ratherly crisply in roll plus or minus about 8 degrees either side of the center line; and after the first couple of—oh, after the first 20 seconds or so, the gimbals were quiet, and pitch and yaw were relatively quiet. Before that, there was some oscillation but mostly just in rates. Total attitude hung in there pretty well.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Roger. Thank you much. We were looking at the playback, and we saw some things that—right at start up. We'll be back with you later on that.
- Deke Slayton
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Roger, 11. This is the original CAP COM. Congratulations on an outstanding job. You guys have really put on a great show up there. I think it's about time you powered down and got a little rest, however. You've had a mighty long day here. Hope you're all going to get a good sleep on the way back. I look forward to seeing you when you get back here. Don't fraternize with any of those bugs enroute except for the Hornet.
- Neil Armstrong (CDR)
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Okay. Thank you, boss. We'll—We're looking forward to a little rest and a restful trip back. And see you when we get there.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Hello, Apollo 11. Houston. We'd like you to turn off O2 tank number 1 heaters. Over.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Hello, Apollo 11. Houston. For your information, the LGC in Eagle just went belly up at 7 hours. Over.
- Michael Collins (CMP)
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Charlie, we're going to rotate about pitch 270 degrees on the way home vice 1—or 090 on the way out. Right?
- Neil Armstrong (CDR)
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Houston, crew status report. Radiation: CDR 11017, CMP 10019, LMP 09020. No medication.
- Neil Armstrong (CDR)
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Okay. This is crew status report. Radiation: CDR 11017, CMP 10019, LMP 09020. No medication.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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And we didn't get any crew status report from you this morning. Wondered if you could give us an estimate of sleep last night. Over.
- Neil Armstrong (CDR)
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Okay. We'll take a guess, Charlie, and try to give an equivalent amount. Oh, it's CDR 3, and LMP 4.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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That's affirmative, and we'd like you to disable quads Charlie and Delta. Over.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Apollo 11, Houston. If it's convenient, we'd like to go through your onboard readout. Over.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Apollo 11, Houston. A couple of questions for the Moon walkers, if you got a second. Over.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Roger, Neil. We're seeing some temperature rises on the passive seismic experiment that are a little higher than normal and were wondering if you could verify the deployed position. We understand it's about 40 feet from the LM in the eleven o'clock position. Over.
- Neil Armstrong (CDR)
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No. It's about in the nine or nine thirty position, and I'd say it's about 50 or 60 feet.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Roger. Copy. Also, did you notice—was there any indication of any dust cloud as you lifted off? Over.
- Neil Armstrong (CDR)
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Not very much. There was quite a bit of Kapton and parts of the LM that went out in all directions, usually for great distances, as far as I can tell. But I don't remember seeing anything of a dust cloud to speak of.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Roger. Understand all you could see was parts of the LM going out. What was your—your first—first comment? Over.
- Neil Armstrong (CDR)
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I don't remember. Just that the Kapton and other parts on the LM staging scattering all around the area for great distances, but I didn't see much dust.
- Michael Collins (CMP)
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Houston, Apollo 11. Could you keep me honest on the lithium hydroxide changes? When do you have the next one scheduled for?
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Apollo 11, Houston. Mike, on that canister, we had you due to change one at 133 before TEI, and it's on page 399. The next one we got is at 147. Over.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Hello, Apollo 11, Houston. We'd like to extend our damping period for another 5 minutes; let the rates get way down. Over.
- Michael Collins (CMP)
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Roger, Charlie. Like to bring you up to date on our chlorination status. In compartment B4, we have one, two, three, four, five, six, seven—correction, we have eight pockets for chlorine and buffer ampules, of which—Let me correct that. We have seven pockets, of which one is empty and always has been empty, leaving six remaining. On the other side over there in B7, we have another container with seven pockets, so we have a total of seven plus six, and those are filled with six chlorines and seven buffers. Now, I've been using one chlorine and one buffer per day which, at this point in time, prior to this chlorination I'm about to do, leaves me one chlorine and two buffers. Seems to me I'm one chlorine short, and that being the case, I'd like to ask your advice on postponing this chlorination using the last container until some later date, like maybe tomorrow. Over.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Hello, Apollo 11. Houston. Check in A1, Mike, and see what you can find in there. Over.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Roger, 11. You're breaking up. Mike, please look in compartment A1. We think there might be some more chlorine up there. Over.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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11, Houston. We're having a downlink problem. That's the reason we can't read you. We're switching sites. Stand by.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Roger. You're five by now, too, Mike. Thank you much. Did you copy that about A1 on that chlorine?
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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Apollo 11, Houston. We're having a little trouble getting the yaw rate damped out to the appropriate value. We'd like you all to be quite like mice for a couple of minutes and let's see if that will help it out. Over.
- Charlie Duke (CAPCOM)
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11, Houston. Shift change time, here. White Team bids you good night; we'll see you tomorrow. Over.
- Owen Garriott (CAPCOM)
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Howdy there, Mike. We're ready to go ahead and have you switch to your OMNI positions for your sleep period, and we would like the following high gain switch positions: your high gain antenna in MANUAL, beam width WIDE, pitch is minus 50, and yaw is a plus 270. And just follow the flight plan for remaining COMM configuration. Over.
- Owen Garriott (CAPCOM)
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Apollo 11, Houston. We'd like for you to go ahead and put your S band antenna OMNI to OMNI and OMNI B. Over.
- Owen Garriott (CAPCOM)
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Very good. Reading you better now. And did you copy we'd appreciate going S band OMNI and OMNI B at this time? Over.
Expand selection down Contract selection up - Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
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Roger. 88 and 8.5. When you're ready, we've got a small flight plan update for you.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
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Roger. At about 148 hours, if you've not already done so, a CO2 filter change, and the H2 purge line heater on 20 minutes before the O2 and H2 purge. At 148 hours, we'd like you to initiate a charge on battery Alfa instead of at 151 hours, and leave the charge on until we notify you further. At 150 hours GET, waste water dump to 10 percent. We do plan to burn midcourse correction 5. It will be an RCS burn about 5 feet per second at about the nominal time in the flight plan. Over.
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
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Roger. Understand. We'll be accomplishing the filter change shortly, the purge line heater is on ***, O2 and H2 purge shortly, and at 148 will initiate a charge on battery A until you notify us further. At 150 hours, waste water dump to 10 percent. And we're looking forward to midcourse correction 5 at about 5 feet per second at the nominal time. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Okay. At GET of 147 plus 00, RCS total minus 2.0 percent, which is about minus 14 pounds. Alfa minus 12.0, Bravo plus 10.0, minus 3.0, minus 2.0. Hydrogen total minus 1.5 pounds, O2 total plus 20 pounds. Over.
- Buzz Aldrin (LMP)
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Roger. I copy, and our onboard readouts: Alfa, *** 2 percent, Bravo 54 percent, Cocoa's 64 percent, Delta 61 percent. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
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Roger, 11. Would you read that quad Alfa again, please, Buzz. You're cutting out. It may be—are you operating on VOX? Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
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11, from down here on telemetry, all your systems look to be in good shape.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
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Roger. Would you ask Buzz to check his biomedical TM sensors for a loose or dried out sensor? We're getting an erratic electrocardiogram reading. That would be one of the three sternal leads. Over.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
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Apollo 11, this is Houston. Stand by for a Mark leaving the lunar sphere of influence.
- Michael Collins (CMP)
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That's old Apollo 8 junk, but tell him the spacecraft gave a little jump as it went through the …
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
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Okay. I'll pass it on to him. Thanks a lot, and Dave Reed is sort of burying his head in his arms right now.
- Bruce McCandless (CAPCOM)
-
Apollo 11, this is Houston. If you're not busy now, I can read you up the morning news.
Spoken on July 22, 1969, 6:32 a.m. UTC (55 years, 3 months ago). Link to this transcript range is: Tweet