You still believe that during a space race against a cold war rival that we made it to the moon with no more than a hand calculator... And after the usa made it, all other countries abandoned their moon landing missions... And no one has been back to the moon since 1975.
The fact that the USA was racing to the moon to prove they were superior to the ussr should through up red flags. Sounds like they had a very big inventive to cheat.
SpaceX has a rocket the size of a building hovering in the air at the same altitude for 10 minutes at a time. Do you really think it's that much harder to attach a crane to it and lower something while there?
The gravity and atmospheres on Mars are both extremely well known variables. Those things don't change from mission to mission or decade to decade.
The rockets on the drop module are nowhere as complicated as a raptor engine. They're closer to fireworks and rocket engines.
Think about the pace of technology and how we've just "recently" been able to view photos or comments like this on our phones or just "recently" been able to have drones bombing civilians in the Middle East with a pilot stationed in a shipping container in Colorado. 30 years ago, we didn't have those things and 30 years ago, we didn't have building-sized rockets hovering in the air for 10 minutes at a time.
The earlier landers, with those inflated airbag things bouncing all over the place... the times change, friend.
You still believe that during a space race against a cold war rival that we made it to the moon with no more than a hand calculator... And after the usa made it, all other countries abandoned their moon landing missions... And no one has been back to the moon since 1975.
The fact that the USA was racing to the moon to prove they were superior to the ussr should through up red flags. Sounds like they had a very big inventive to cheat.
SpaceX has a rocket the size of a building hovering in the air at the same altitude for 10 minutes at a time. Do you really think it's that much harder to attach a crane to it and lower something while there?
The gravity and atmospheres on Mars are both extremely well known variables. Those things don't change from mission to mission or decade to decade.
The rockets on the drop module are nowhere as complicated as a raptor engine. They're closer to fireworks and rocket engines.
Think about the pace of technology and how we've just "recently" been able to view photos or comments like this on our phones or just "recently" been able to have drones bombing civilians in the Middle East with a pilot stationed in a shipping container in Colorado. 30 years ago, we didn't have those things and 30 years ago, we didn't have building-sized rockets hovering in the air for 10 minutes at a time.
The earlier landers, with those inflated airbag things bouncing all over the place... the times change, friend.