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NASA Apollo 11 Owners' Workshop Manual: 1969 (including Saturn V, CM-107, SM-107, LM-5)

NASA Apollo 11 Owners' Workshop Manual: 1969 (including Saturn V, CM-107, SM-107, LM-5)Authors: Christopher Riley, Philip Dolling
Publisher: Haynes Publishing
Category: Book

List Price: $32.95
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Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 12 reviews
Sales Rank: 167981

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 160
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.8
Dimensions (in): 10.7 x 8.4 x 0.6

ISBN: 1844256839
Dewey Decimal Number: 629
EAN: 9781844256839
ASIN: 1844256839

Publication Date: January 1, 2010
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
On July 20, 1969, US astronaut Neil Armstrong became the first man to walk on the moon. The Apollo 11 mission that carried him and his two fellow astronauts on their epic journey marked the successful culmination of a quest that, ironically, had begun in Nazi Germany thirty years before. This is the story of the Apollo 11 mission and the ‘space hardware’ that made it all possible. Author Chris Riley looks at the evolution and design of the mighty Saturn V rocket, the Command and Service Modules, and the Lunar Module. He also describes the space suits worn by the crew, with their special life support systems. Launch procedures are described, ‘flying’ the Saturn V, navigation, course correction ‘burns’, orbital rendezvous techniques, flying the LEM, moon landing, moon walk, take-off from the moon, and earth re-entry procedure. Includes performance data, fuels, biographies of Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins, Gene Kranz and Werner von Braun. Detailed appendices cover all of the Apollo missions, with full details of crews, spacecraft names and logos, mission priorities, moon landing sites, and the Lunar Rover.


Book Description
On July 20, 1969, US astronaut Neil Armstrong became the first man to walk on the moon. This is the story of the Apollo 11 mission and the ‘space hardware’ that made it all possible. From the evolution and design of the Saturn V rocket, the Command, Service Modules, and the Lunar Module are described. Launch procedures are described, ‘flying’ the Saturn V, navigation, course correction ‘burns’, orbital rendezvous techniques, flying the LEM, moon landing, moon walk, take-off from the moon, and earth re-entry procedure. Includes performance data, fuels, biographies of Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins, Gene Kranz and Werner von Braun. Detailed appendices cover all of the Apollo missions, with full details of crews, spacecraft names and logos, mission priorities, moon landing sites, and the Lunar Rover.



Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 12



5 out of 5 stars This is a great Apollo reference   December 1, 2009
Evil Genius (Pilesgrove, NJ United States)
12 out of 13 found this review helpful

I got my manual and found it very impressive. The pictures are great and it looks at the whole mission, the hardware, and spacecraft. The detailed drawings are detailed but a little blurry at times. They could have used a little digital enhancement, not a turn off for me. Since the original drawings were done by hand they are true depictions of what was available at the time. I have looked at the book casually the last few days and like it a lot. I went to Johnson space center and saw the Saturn V and now know a lot more about what it was that I saw. Neat book, I recommend it. Not overly engineered but not dumbed down either. It's Technician level. It is not a personal narrative but a look at the engineering and design needed to achieve the goal. I recommend this, I liked it, and will put it into my personal collection on "The Shelf".
If you would like to see historical technical drawings go to [...]




5 out of 5 stars 5 stars, no question   December 21, 2009
S. Kosloske (Milwaukee, WI USA)
5 out of 5 found this review helpful

I think this is *THE* book to have if you want the history and technology of the Apollo Space Program. It really does cover it all, from the sci-fi drawings of how a possible space mission would work, to the early planning, all of the versions of the Apollo rockets and missions, etc. etc. etc. etc.

Very well done. You get a ton of diagrams showing how it all fit together, the limits of the technology at the time, and how they amazingly got it all working perfectly.

Worth the price for the pictures of the consoles alone.



5 out of 5 stars Apollo 11--Owners' Workshop Manual   May 2, 2010
Sara Howard (Tallahassee, FL USA)
7 out of 10 found this review helpful

I have read all of your reviews. I hope you find mine. I am laughing at your complaints. I am an engineer and worked on the 1st stage of the Saturn V. Here is why these "plans" are not better: Pres. Nixon ended the Apollo program in 1974. Employees (400,000) of us were told to leave immediately. People were so disheartened that they walked away and left all engineering drawings, blueprints, movie film, testing and engineering records in their offices. You gonna love this: The British and Canadians came and took anything they could. There was no law against this.

So anything left is not of the best quality. I have become friends with engineers from England, Scotland, Australia, Japan, Russia and Argentina. Many of them have better records than we do. During Apollo, NASA was very small. Most of us worked for the Contractors.
Did you know that there are hundreds of unmarked boxes about Apollo in the National Archives in Atlanta?

Check out Inside the Apollo Project.

Something Funny Happened on the Way to the Moon

Sara Howard, Author of "Something Funny Happened on the Way to The Moon" and "The Greatest Explosions in the Universe."



5 out of 5 stars A good review of the of the Apollo program   March 5, 2010
J. M. Hughes (Tucson)
Although not really a workshop manual (at least not in the sense that the Haynes manual for my old Triumph Spitfire really was a shop manual), this book is a solid and well assembled collection of facts, drawings and photos from the Apollo era in general, and the Apollo 11 mission in particular. The clever packaging is sure to draw a "What the..." from people who know what a Haynes manual is. The text is informative and well written, without getting too deep into the jargon and technical details. I found it quite enjoyable to page through it, and if I was going to give a someone a first book to read about the Apollo program, it would probably be this one.


5 out of 5 stars Great Information, but NOT Based on Complete Teardown/Rebuild!   April 26, 2010
G. Weaver (East Berlin, PA USA)
A very comprehensive *technical* look at the space race through the lunar landings. Plenty of color photos, diagrams that a layman can make sense of, and reveals a lot of the "secrets" behind what was presented to the public. I thoroughly enjoyed it, and my coworkers keep borrowing it, as well. Overall, it's a fascinating read.

However, it still doesn't tell me how to disassemble this damned RCS Thruster, and the ECS code list is incomplete, too. Haynes dropped the ball on this one, I'm starting to think they didn't even do a full teardown on it.


Showing reviews 1-5 of 12