In article <
280620172143226558%no...@noway.com>,
A Friend <
no...@noway.com> wrote:
> In article <
f529ba97-6df6-41aa...@googlegroups.com>,
> Michael OConnor <
mpoco...@aol.com> wrote:
>
> > > Just imagine if Elon Musk were to send a spacecraft to the moon, and
> > > salvage all the "junk" left at the Apollo 11 landing site? I wonder how
> > > much the flag and plaque would go for at auction?
> >
> > Not to mention if he salvaged the lower lander portion of the LEM that
> > remained and the Moon Buggy and took them apart and started selling
> > individual nuts and bolts and washers and cut the sheet metal and tubes and
> > hoses and wires into one inch pieces. How much would you pay for a one
> > inch
> > piece of metal or a nut from the LEM lander from Apollo 11? Five Thousand
> > dollars?
>
>
> Apollo 11 didn't carry a moon buggy.
Watching SALVAGE now. TV Announcer says the lunar rover at Serenity
base is worth $1.2m. The map looks to say "Apollo 15" I think we
better assume they're not paying a lot of attention to detail here. :D
Oh dear God. As the Vulture approaches the Moon, the TV anchor says the
ship is within one half hour of Serenity base, the landing site of the
fifth Apollo moon flight. I ... can't imagine how they're counting.
> > If I remember the TV show correctly, the Andy Griffith character didn't see
> > the historical or resale value of the Apollo stuff left on the Moon. He
> > didn't consider auctioning off the stuff he brought back, he was more
> > interested in building the rocket just to prove he could do it, and fly in
> > space like he always wanted to do. He just saw the stuff on the moon as
> > junk
> > metal he could melt down and sell for wholesale.
He's a liar and con man. He's faking antiquities to swindle his
clients. Makes it kind of hard to root for him.
His goal seems to be entirely financial:
"I wanna build a spaceship, go to the moon, salvage all the junk that's
up there, bring it back, sell it."
"I'm in the scrap business, and I want to salvage the moon."
It's the big score, the one that will sweep the industry.
His spaceship uses the same constant 1G acceleration principle that TOM
SWIFT was using in the 1950s, although they claim to have invented it.
:)
They have an expandable fuel tank so they use half the fuel getting to
the moon, use the empty part of the fuel tank to fill with salvage, and
use the other half of the fuel to come home. This of course assumes the
salvage is the same mass as the fuel ...
> Andy just wanted to go to the moon. As things turned out, he couldn't.
He does seem to be awfully bummed he's not going.
> (Any resemblance to the works of Robert Heinlein may have been
> intentional.) The cost of the mission was covered by the salvage fees
> paid by the U.S. to Andy, who'd already decided he was going to sell
> only to the U.S. government.
Lt. Martin Quirk tells his superiors that we should buy the stuff to
keep it out of the hands of the godless Ruskies, because them getting
their hands on lunar rover tech would just be disastrous (rolls eyes)/
> Andy did wind up getting a moon rock from the pilot.
>
> Good movie. The series wasn't up to the concept, unfortunately.
The Moon stuff is obviously shot on a small museum display somewhere.
The Vulture ... can apparently levitate. And fly horizontally. I have
*no* idea how. :)
You used to be able to get model kits of it, but they don't seem to be
available any more.
The Hollywood street where they shoot the scene with Peter Jason as a
jerk actor who insists on doing his own stunts is the same location
where they'd later shoot an AIRWOLF sequence with the exact same plot!
The movie ends with a councilman from upstate asking them to go to the
North Pole and bring back an iceberg to alleviate drought ... I have
absolutely no idea in the world how having a private little spaceship
would possibly facilitate that.