- Ken Mattingly (CAPCOM)
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Okay. And in reference to the OMNI versus the high gain, it looks like we can live with the OMNI antennas here for several more hours, if you would like to delete the use of the high gain.
- Ken Mattingly (CAPCOM)
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Okay. Before you pitch your eyeballs there, we'd like to terminate the battery charge.
- Bill Anders (LMP)
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Okay. The battery A charge is terminated at 37.3 volts.
Expand selection up Contract selection down Close - Bill Anders (LMP)
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How are the PU valve and SPS line temps looking?
Expand selection down Contract selection up - Ken Mattingly (CAPCOM)
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Okay, Apollo 8. All the systems—giving a quick look around the room—look real fine. You've got an RCS quad update on the quantity, so you have that information. The SPS oxidizer feed-line temperature and the fuel temperature are both at 73 degrees. The cryo profile is running right on the line: Battery A—our calculations have 39.63 amp hours. Battery B, 37.94, and battery Charlie, 38.46. The COMM continues to be running ahead of predictions in quality and circuit margins. Everything else looks like it's real fine.
- Bill Anders (LMP)
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Roger. Do you expect to have a low bit rate voice on the DSE off the OMNI's at lunar distances?
- Ken Mattingly (CAPCOM)
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That's negative on DSE off the OMNI's. Not looking forward to that much improvement.
- Ken Mattingly (CAPCOM)
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Okay. I know you're trying to be quiet, so I'll just read up some information to you. One of the things that we just turned up that might give you some confidence, if you lose oxygen cryo tank now: you have 80 pounds remaining now at CM/SM SEP. The limiting factor on single tank operation right now is the hydrogen tank which has a positive margin at CM/SM SEP, assuming our standard profile gives you about 143 hours. So it looks like you are over the hill on those. Notice that you're flying in the rate 2 position for you BMAGS which is fine. Only make sure that you still were maintaining a PTC attitude. Looks like you're pretty close to it.
- Frank Borman (CDR)
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Roger. We are flying PTC, and I was wondering why it was going out of the deadband; now I know. Thank you.
- Frank Borman (CDR)
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That's what happens when you let Anders fly. He's asleep so he can't defend himself.
- Frank Borman (CDR)
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Good. They're both conked out; how about just filling me in on some news, and I'll keep quiet just to give me some words on what's going on in the world.
- Ken Mattingly (CAPCOM)
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Apollo 8, Houston. I believe we've lost our uplink. I'm transmitting in the blind. Read you loud and clear.
- Ken Mattingly (CAPCOM)
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Apollo 8, Houston. Read you loud and clear. We may have some uplink problems; transmitting in the blind, at this time. Over.
Spoken on Dec. 22, 1968, 11:11 p.m. UTC (55 years, 10 months ago). Link to this transcript range is: Tweet