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Walter Cunningham was the first to try out the moon suit backpack life support system and certain tools which were to be used by Armstrong and Aldrin on the moon excursion. In the first test over lava rocks, Cunningham lost his balance and sprained his thumb, tearing small holes in the suit glove which caused it to lose pressure.
Evidently a full simulation was attempted, so how could the NASA people rationalize the weight problem?
Can you explain it?
I can't.
There's no way that the condition of one-sixth gravity could be reproduced in this
manner even if the backpack were lightened considerably, the combined weight of a
185-pound astronaut in gear would be far more than three times the required lunar weight.
If anything, the real purpose of the tests must have been to simulate a lunar
gravity which is nearly the same as earth's, or to perform the experiments under the exact same conditions, on the actual planet, where this would be found.
These astronauts being able to maneuver around at all in the Bend Oregon area with their gear on suggests to intelligent people that the gear weighed far less than 185 pounds.
The ridiculousness, the absolute absurdity of the exercise, makes the NASA
cover-up extremely clear. Clear as crystal.
Since the tests began in early 1963 it is apparent that the moon's high gravity was discovered at least as early as 1962.
If that is the explanation and they knew as early as 1962 that they would not ever reach the moon, or if they did the actual moon events would not be filmed, but a play of moon events… It might have been filmed somewhere in the Arizona, Nevada, or eastern Washington state deserts possibly.