The camera operator in Houston had to judge the time delay in commanding the camera to zoom back and then track the ascent stage. He’s shown in From the Earth to the Moon, he got it wrong on Apollo’s 15 and 16 but on the last one he nailed it!
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What's even more amazing is the camera on the LRV tracking the ascent stage, under control of someone on Earth 238,900 miles and 1.3 seconds comm delay away. That's how much he had to anticipate the camera to track... and he nailed it!
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Very true, amazing work! Here is the LRV in its final resting place ready to record the action:https://twitter.com/AndySaunders_1/status/1205977825137836033?s=20 …
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What happened to the dude holding the camera? They just left him there and said we’ll be right back lol
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The story of the camera operator and the time delay is excellent
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There have been nine rocket launches from the Moon (Apollo plus the three Luna sample returns). What a treat to have properly captured one of them. Oberth, Von Braun and Clarke all alive to see rocketry’s most glorious moment.
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To answer a common question for those curious- Who filmed this? It was filmed remotely by the lunar rover which was operated remotely by an operator in Houston on a 2 second delay between Earth & the moon. The footage was transmitted as a live broadcast.
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