Due to the hard work of Greg Wiseman of the Houston Audio Control Room at the Johnson Space Center, more Apollo 17 mission audio has been digitized and released on the Internet Archive. I’m now in the process of laying in the missing clips into the mission reconstruction project and have resumed correcting the Air-to-Ground transcripts.
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My ability to do this without disrupting the data that I have already corrected is one of the reasons I approached this project using blank timecode as the definitive data source-of-authority. It works!
New audio segments:
772-AAA
812-AAA
820-AAA
821-AAA
822-AAA
823-AAA
824-AAA
825-AAA
829-AAA
Completed, previously incomplete segments:
765-AAA
Segments still missing or incomplete:
793-AAA
795-AAA
801-AAA
807-AAA
810-AAA
828-AAA
Comments
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Dan Beaumont (February 25, 2015 at 10:51 pm):
Hello, and congratulations for this excellent work you have done.
I have not watched any Apollo 17 your entire project, but I will.I find it amazing that a person decided to make a timeline archive in real-time of a lunar mission. Why Apollo 17? Why not Apollo 15? I know there is one of Apollo 11 mission on the web.
If you want, I will put in “Dan Beaumont Space Museum (main page), a link with a part of one of your videos, to send my visitors to your YouTube/website and your official website.
If you want, I’ll put your first video (AS A TEASER), stating that your credit, your work, a brief explanation with reference to your website (“tuning Force ‘expression of the radio environment’”).
I will use from T-26:00:00 to T+03:07:00 on your timing of this launch as the teaser.
If you agree, I will soon.
I am in standby mode and congratulations.
Fantastic job, Mr. Feist.-
Feist (February 25, 2015 at 10:56 pm):
Hi Dan,
Thanks so much for the kind words. And thank you for the kind offer to help spread the word about my work. I would rather that you please hold off on announcing the project on your channel until the website that I have in progress is ready to be shared. It will link the transcript and the YouTube videos through an interactive experience.Please feel free to drop me an email at [email protected], and I can give you a preview of it.
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Apollo16uvc (March 23, 2017 at 3:39 pm):
This is one of the greatest websites ever made on Apollo.
Thank you so much for your effort, I can’t thank you enough.
Where did you get all the Apollo 17 Television footage? I’d love to look through the archive on my own accord.- Feist (March 23, 2017 at 5:29 pm):
Thanks, I’m really glad you’re liking it!
The TV footage is part of the NASA archives. Sadly, it’s not readily available in its totality. However, Spacecraft Film released a set of DVDs a little over a decade ago that includes most of it. Spacecraft Films
- Feist (March 23, 2017 at 5:29 pm):