ky
Director of Manned Spaceflight
It seems that no one saw my rant lol.
Mitchell cared enough about it to prevent it from being reentered in the LM. NASA didn't.
I bet there are a lot of flown artifacts from the era stuffed away in basements and drawers of former NASA employees. Why does this camera deserve to be in a museum anymore then that stuff?
It's even a good chance the camera would be on public display after it was sold.
Because the negatives and other stuff like Lunar samples were more important in the first place than extra weight like cameras![]()
It was just possible to take it into the Command Module because size and weight of the camera did allow so. Remember that Apollo 14 did not carry the lunar rover for example. Apollo 15 was the first mission to do so which almost doubled the Lunar sample mass. The Lunar sample mass of Apollo 17 even was almost three times as much as that of Apollo 14. I am not too sure if carrying extra stuff back to earth like the cameras was just possible on those missions.
The LM did not "reenter" by the way. I think it crashed on the Lunar surface.
On the other hand: why should this historic piece allowed to also be stuffed away when its location/"owner" is known whilst it actually still belongs to NASA?
Mitchell already was asked to give it back several times since it obviously was never officially transfered. I can't imagine that it is his camera just because he took it back. Maybe he never asked and maybe NASA did not even know it back then. It was certainly not the usual type of souvenir.
That's why I think it belongs to NASA. They can then lend it to museums.
You never know who buys it. And why does Mitchell sell it? Because he obviously does not care anymore. If I were him I would have give it back to NASA even if they would not ask me, than just to sell it to somebody else. I say that he needs money. That's why he also talks that UFO nonsense.
"Be kind to Ed. These things, back in those days, it wasn't important. We were trying to get to the moon and get back alive. The other stuff, it wasn't important."
Very odd, a long time ago I worked with a thing called a Photo-Multiplier Tube. No one uses them these days
- Palm Beach PostHad they not brought them back, they would have been destroyed, he said. After astronauts climbed back into the command module for the roughly 250,000-mile trip home, engineers in Houston blew up the lunar module, he said.
He's selling the stuff because he's short on $, not because he doesn't care.
Do you have transfer documents for every gift you've got?
And suddenly NASA wants it.
Why is Mr Mitchell short on cash, anyway? You'd think NASA would at least give their honoured explorers worthwhile pensions.
I find some of your postings in this thread offensive
What has UFO's got to do with it?
I would kindly ask you to please refrain from your slander and hearsay about his person.
he's short on $
I admit that my postings are offensive. But it's not really an offense of Mitchell
it is likely that Mitchell just took ... the camera.
If NASA kindly asks, you think he would just give it back? I don't think so.
Mitchell said he already was asked several times in the past.
The suit said the government had made repeated requests to Mitchell and his lawyer to return the camera but received no response.
Are you gossiping or do you have some actual knowledge? Google returns nothing on this.
Strapped for cash, Apollo 14 astronaut Edgar Mitchell didn't think twice about auctioning off a camera he brought back from the moon 40 years ago.
But Uncle Sam thought about it - plenty.
You allege he stole NASA property and are unwilling to return it!
Allegations or imputations of criminal activity is Defamation per se.
There's no info on WHEN they made these alleged requests, nor on HOW they were made.
I still wonder why NASA seemingly doesn't pay pensions to their astronauts.
Maybe because most astronauts are retired military, and therefore receive a pension anyway? That's about as far as my thinking takes me. Also, I don't think the taxpayers would be enthusiastic about that sort of thing.
Maybe because most astronauts are retired military, and therefore receive a pension anyway? That's about as far as my thinking takes me. Also, I don't think the taxpayers would be enthusiastic about that sort of thing.