Frank Borman (CDR)

Roger. You might be interested to know the center window is pretty well fogged up, but the other four seem to be in pretty good shape.

Mike Collins (CAPCOM)

Glad to hear you've got four out of five, and your big dump will be coming up in 2 minutes or so.

Frank Borman (CDR)

Roger. We're standing by.

Frank Borman (CDR)

The S-IVB has started dump.

Jim Lovell (CMP)

Roger. Mike, did you say star 14 was good till about 05:30 or something?

Mike Collins (CAPCOM)

Yes. Stand by while I give you that time again. Star number 14 should be good for about another 8 minutes, Jim—7 minutes.

Jim Lovell (CMP)

Okay. Now be advised, the optics calibration is very difficult to do because of all the other little stars floating here. I'm going to …, bypass it and do it at the end of this.

Mike Collins (CAPCOM)

Roger, Apollo 8. Understand.

Jim Lovell (CMP)

Houston, this is 8. I'm looking through the scanning telescope and that LOX dump and just blanked out completely the entire scanning telescope.

Frank Borman (CDR)

It's a fantastic sight, Bill. Looks like the S-IVB, a small attitude excursion while it's dumping.

Frank Borman (CDR)

Go ahead, Houston. Apollo 8.

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Spoken on Dec. 21, 1968, 5:59 p.m. UTC (56 years ago). Link to this transcript range is: Tweet

Mike Collins (CAPCOM)

Roger. I've got a flight plan update for Bill if he's ready to copy.

Mike Collins (CAPCOM)

Okay. We are about 05:10 GET where we will record the BLOCK data TLI plus four and TLI plus 11. The TLI plus four PAD that we gave you before is perfectly all right. We will not require that one, and we will have the TLI plus 11 hour PAD for you shortly, then at 05:45 or 6 hours on that high-gain antenna checkout. Roger. Standing by.

Frank Borman (CDR)

We are on OMNI D, and we heard—we lost you after—TM plus four was okay.

Mike Collins (CAPCOM)

Okay. The TLI plus 4 hour PAD is okay. We will have the TLI plus 11 hour PAD for you shortly, and at 05:50, for your high-gain antenna checkout, we would like you to leave that switch in WIDE BEAM with reference to our conversation the other day; leave it in WIDE.

Frank Borman (CDR)

Roger. Don't want to zap your receivers.

Mike Collins (CAPCOM)

No, it has to do with some loss of tracking data, so it is better to leave it WIDE.

Jim Lovell (CMP)

Houston, Apollo 8. Are you recording what we are getting out of 23?

Mike Collins (CAPCOM)

Stand by one, Jim; I'll check.

Mike Collins (CAPCOM)

That is affirmative, Jim; we are copying your P23.

Jim Lovell (CMP)

Pretty big numbers there.

Mike Collins (CAPCOM)

Well, we think that is because you bypassed the trunnion check.

Jim Lovell (CMP)

Houston, we are getting some really big numbers in DELTA-R and DELTA-V.

Jim Lovell (CMP)

Do you want us to proceed with this, or should we just leave them alone?

Jim Lovell (CMP)

Do you want us to accept these, or should we leave them alone?

Mike Collins (CAPCOM)

Roger. We do not wish you to accept those marks. This is due to the fact that in bypassing the trunnion bias check, you still have big numbers left in those registers, so you go ahead when—after you do the trunnion bias check. Those numbers will become small later, but do not accept them right now.

Mike Collins (CAPCOM)

We have a TLI plus 11 hour update for you when you are ready to copy.

Bill Anders (LMP)

Roger. Ready to copy TLI plus 11.

Mike Collins (CAPCOM)

Roger, Bill. TLI plus 11, and this assumes no midcourse correction number 1: it's an SPS/G&N; 63330 minus 163 plus 129. Are you with me so far?

Mike Collins (CAPCOM)

Okay. 013:56:47.59 minus 00489 plus 00000 plus 47250 177 144 000, not applicable, plus 00197 47253 554 47050 12 1278 256 023, up 265, left 18. Are you with me so far?