This Apollo 9 TV screen grab shows a roll of grey
duct tape to the left of center in the Apollo 9
Command Module in Earth orbit. |
Detail from AS13-62-8929
showing some of the duct tape used in construction of
the adapter made during Apollo 13 so that square CM
LiOH canisters could be used in the LM. |
Mission |
Activity or Topic |
Time, Image, or Source |
Notes |
Apollo 9 | Duct tape in CM | TV frame grab | Jim McDivitt and a piece of duct tape on an EVA guard |
Apollo 9 | Duct Tape in CM | Apollo 9 Duct Tape in
2007 ( small and large versions) |
The EVA guard seen in
the Apollo 9 TV frame grab is now in a private
collection. A 2007 photo shows the piece of duct
tape still in place. |
Apollo 11 | TV/Monitor Assembly | Technical Debriefing, Sect. 6.18 | They used tape to attach the TV monitor to the camera to cut down on the number of cables floating around. |
Apollo 11 | TV/Monitor Assembly | AS11-36-5385 | View from the Command Module of Neil in the tunnel, with his upper body in the LM, using the TV to document the LM inspection on the way out to the Moon. Photo shows the duct tape used to attach the monitor to the camera. |
Apollo 11 |
Comm headset
modification |
Technical Debriefing, Sect. 20.7 | Mike uses adhesive tape
to tape the long-eared comm tube to his ear, because
the headset "drives me crazy after a couple of hours,
not to mention falling off all the time." |
Apollo 11 |
Waste Control |
Technical Debriefing, Sect. 25.2 | Complaint about the
amount of waste volume resulting from the food
packaging. By plan or otherwise, they used tape
to compress the waste into as small a volume as
possible, but that was time consuming. |
Apollo 13 |
Canister Adaptor |
AS13-62-8929 |
Photograph of the
adaptor made from duct tape and other materials so
that square, Command Module lithium lydroxide
canisters could be used in the LM. |
Apollo 13 |
Canister Adaptor | Apollo
13 Mission Report, Sect. 6.7 |
Discussion of the
adaptor and its use |
Apollo 14 |
Dim-Light Photography |
Apollo
14 Mission Report, Sect. 9.12.6 |
Various light sources
that would have interferred with the dim-light
photography were taped. |
Mission |
Activity or Topic |
Time, Image, or Source |
Notes |
Apollo 11 |
Data Acquisition
Camera (DAC) focus control |
Technical Debriefing, Sect. 20.19 | During a discussion
about photography aspects of the flight plan showing
up late and not being well thought out, Buzz
mentions that he had to use tape the keep the DAC
focus at infinity. |
Apollo 15 |
EVA-1 Prep, tape used
to help prevent PLSS from catching on protrusions in
the cabin |
119:16:30 |
Scott, from the 1971
Technical Debrief - "We started having some problems
hanging up in the cabin. I think that they
were magnified by the one-sixth-g environment
because we didn't compress the suits as much as in
one g, and I think we were both riding a little bit
higher, and a little lighter. Turn-arounds
within the cabin were very difficult, and my hang-up
problems were on the mounting lever, or shaft, that
holds the PLSS in the recharge station. Jim
finally figured that I was hanging up on that
handle, and we put some tape on it, across the
handle (opening) on subsequent EVAs, which did
help. It was also hanging up on the corner of
the Flight Data File, which is a sharp corner, and
also on the DSEA (Data Storage and Electronics
Assembly) guard, the wire cover. It's very
crowded in there, and it takes a lot of time in
moving about the cabin to prevent hang-ups. And I
think we lost, overall, quite a bit of time." |
Apollo 15 |
EVA-1 Prep, OPS
antenna, initial repair |
118:13:17 |
Irwin, from the 1971
Technical Debrief - "I might make one note.
When I unstowed my PLSS, I noticed that there was a
large chunk chewed out of the antenna. About
half the width of the antenna was gone (over a
one-inch length). Like somebody had taken a pair of
snippers and snipped a piece out of it, right at the
base, about a couple of inches from the base of the
connection. We put a piece of tape around it
at that weak point and, on EVA-1, we pressed
ahead." They did not mention the flaw to
Houston until 141:39:51,
during EVA-2 preparations |
Apollo 15 |
OPS antenna repair,
late in EVA-1 |
AS15-86-11603 |
A detail shows
Jim's upright antenna with a piece of tape wrapped
around the base. |
Apollo 15 | OPS antenna repair, EVA-2 preparations | 141:39:51 | Dave discovers that
Jim's OPS antenna has sheared off just below the
nick they discovered and taped prior to EVA-1.
Dave tries to devise a way of securing the antenna
in an upright condition but, at 141:44:01,
CapCom Joe Allen passes along a suggestion that Dave
lay the antenna horizontally on top of the OPS, in
contact with the remaining stub, and tape it into
position. At 141:47:19,
Dave tells Joe that taping the antenna in a
horizontal position is going to work best. |
Apollo 15 |
EVA-2, Jim's OPS
antenna repair |
AS15-92-12424 |
A detail
shows the tape job Dave did during EVA-2 preps to
secure Jim's broken antenna to the top of his OPS. |
Apollo 15 |
OPS antenna repair |
11603-12424
comparison |
A comparison of photo
details |
Apollo 15 |
EVA-2 Prep, cleaning up water leak | 140:38:47 | Houston asked them to put the water in a cans that had contained the LiOH canisters. Now, as a follow-up to the discussion at 139:06:20, Houston asks that they confirm that they haven't taped the cans closed so securely that they won't depressurize at cabin depress. Dave and Jim tell Hosuton that they did not need to use tape. |
Apollo 15 |
Tape used to cover suit rips has come off, EVA-2 Close-out | 149:03:02 | Jim notices "that tape came off (the back of) your PLSS, Dave ... it's ripped on both sides now." Evidently, Dave caught his PLSS on something and they repaired the rip with tape. A detail from EVA-2 photo AS15-90-12219 shows what may be a small tear on the righthand edge of the back of Dave's PLSS. The tape may have come off because it was rubbed off by the same object that made the original tear or because the tape hadn't been strongly bonded to the dust-impregnated fabric. |
Apollo 15 |
Stowing rock box in the cabin after EVA-2 | 148:39:34 | They are unable to properly stow the EVA-2 rock box. "We couldn't get the rod and pins engaged in the side of the bulkhead to stow that box. So we eventually lifted off with that box sort of loose, although I put a piece of tape across the thing. But we never could get that box stowed." They stowed two rock boxes on this bulkhead; this one was above the other. |
Apollo 15 |
Taping the caps on
the core stems |
After 168:22:06 |
CapCom asks them to
tape the caps 'on the long core stem' before the
depress for final jettison. When they brought
to cores into the cabin, they had no internal
pressure. After cabin repressurization, cabin
pressure would presumably kept the caps sealed and
prevented any cabin oxygen from leaking in.
However, by taping the caps, they are reducing the
chances of the caps coming loose at depress if any
cabin oxygen had leaked into the stems. |
Apollo 16 |
EVA-1 Prep, taping
jettison bag closed |
118:58:42 |
As planned, used BSLSS bag for jettison after first rest period. Because of the delayed landing, bag much fuller than expected. "To tie the bag up, we finally ended up wrapping tape around it. It was really a marginal operation." |
Apollo 16 |
EVA-2 Post, OPS
antenna repair |
154:14:38 |
CDR antenna cracked
at the tip. Houston has them trim the antenna
and then use tape to reinforce the top. |
Apollo 17 |
Making a replacement
fender after EVA-1 |
126:15:46 | CapCom tells the
crew, "We've been doing some thinking down here
about how to fix the fender. We'll work on it
while you guys are getting some rest, (but we think)
it's going to involve using utility clamps, from
inside your LM there, instead of tape, to fasten
some sort of stiff material onto the Rover in place
of the missing fender." Gene replies that they have
been thinking along the same line because tape "just
won't hack it up here," because of the dust.
During the rest period, Support Team Engineer Terry
Neal devised the way to make and install a
replacment fender and John Young tested the
procedures wearing a presure suit in a vacuum
chamber. John describes the procedures to Gene
and Jack at 137:19:09
and, in more detail, at 138:32:00,
after the rest period. The replacment fender
was made in the cabin by taping together four
unneded, contingency maps and later attaching the
new fender to the Rover with clamps taken out from
the cabin. At 137:24:45,
John mentions that experience had been gained,
earlier in Apollo, with the use of duct tape in the
thermal vacuum chamber and stresses the need to
press out any air bubbles while taping the maps
together. Once out on the surface at the start
of EVA-2, Gene and Jack start installation of the
new fender about 141:07:19
and complete it in about five minutes. |
Apollo 17 |
Repair of sample bag
holder, after EVA-2 in the cabin |
161:24:03 | Jack reports that, in repairing the sample-bag holder on his camera, he used some of the tape that had bundled food packages together. Jack commented that it worked better for this repair job because it was thinner. |
This view from
the back of the Apollo 17 SEP transmitter shows
the two pieces of tape that were applied to keep
the outer two solar panels flat and in alignment
with the fixed, center panel. The ends of the
tape pieces wouldn't stick to the back of the
panels because of dust picked up from the
gloves. |
Mission |
Activity or Topic |
Time, Image, or Source |
Notes |
|
Apollo 12 |
Flag deployment |
116:16:17 and 116:17:45 | The mechanism that
holds the flag out straight was broken, causing
the flag to droop. During the mission, Pete
wished he had a piece of tape to make a
repair. In 1991, he explained, "We didn't
have any rolls of tape (outside the LM
cabin). The tape that I'm referring to, I
think, is things like (a piece of tape that) held
the lid on the canister of the S-Band antenna. And
I'm sure that stuff was either trampled on or
gone. I don't really remember this, but I
was trying to fix the flag." |
|
Apollo 12 |
Scratches on the
hatch, EVA-1 Closout Ingress |
118:51:38 | While on the porch
preparing to crawl into the cabin, Al wonders if
they should put some tape over some scratches they
made in the hatch at the start of the EVA.
He then decides that it won't be necessary and
Houston concurs. |
|
Apollo 15 |
Tape used to secure
rock box in cabin for liftoff |
148:39:34 |
During the EVA-2
close-out, Jim mentions that, at the end of EVA-1,
he had trouble getting the rock box to shut and
had to bang it closed with his fist. During
the Technical Debrief, he said "we couldn't get
the rod and pins engaged in the side of the
bulkhead in the LM to stow that box. So we
eventually lifted off with that box sort of loose,
although I put a piece of tape across the
thing. But we never could get that box
stowed." In hindsight, the problem was that
part of a sample bag was caught in the rear hinge. |
|
Apollo 15 |
Decision to take some tape outside, EVA-2 wake-up and preps | 138:51:57, 141:44:46, and 142:21:32 |
While Dave and Jim
pack the Equipment Transfer Bag (ETB) pack for
EVA-2, CapCom Gordon Fullerton requests that they
wrap a 1-foot (0.3) meter piece of tape around the
CDR's camera so they can use the tape outside to
secure the TV cable to the high-gain mast to keep
it from interfering with the camera. Later,
CapCom Joe Allen suggests that Dave "put some
(tape) in your pocket for later", in case they
need to make any repairs outside. About a
half hour later, Dave decides to put a couple of
pieces of tape on his cuff checklist, the only
reasonably clean surface he has. The Apollo
16 and 17 crews will keep a roll of tape in the
Equipment Transfer Bag so they will always have
tape available. |
|
Apollo 15 |
TV cable taped, EVA-2 | 142:32:52 |
Joe asks Dave to
tape the TV cable to the high-gain mast. As
per Fullerton's earlier request, Dave has already
done that with one of the pieces he brought out on
his checklist. |
|
Apollo 15 |
TV cable taped,
EVA-2 |
Before and after of
cable taping to the high-gain mast ( large or small ) |
A detail from AS15-86-11602
(left) shows the configuration at the end of EVA-1
of the cables connecting the TV camera to the
Television Control Unit (TCU) and the High-Gain
antenna to the Lunar Communications RElay Unit
(LCRU). A detail from AS15-88-11866
shows the configuration of those two cable early
in EVA-3. A cable connecting the Low-Gain
antenna to the LCRU is also labelled.
Finally, a detail from AS15-87-11780,
taken from Dave's seat late in EVA-2, shows where
Dave taped the cable to the mast. |
|
Apollo 15 |
Rock box closure, EVA-2 close-out |
148:41:33 and 149:05:10 |
|
|
Apollo 16 |
Sample bag holder, EVA-1 traverse preps |
122:50:55 | After the
sample-bag dispenser mechanism on John's camera
failed, they tried taping the bags in place.
"I had them taped on both cameras, but
the tape came up. The gray tape doesn't hold
too good on that (dust-coated) metal
surface." The tape comes loose at 148:11:25
and John has more trouble with his bags at 148:26:20. |
|
Apollo 17 |
Fender torn off
and taped back on, EVA-1 at the LM |
118:51:20 |
While working
around the Rover before joing Jack out at the
ALSEP site, Gene accidentally catches his hammer
under the right-rear fender extension and tore it
off. If they are to avoid getting covered
with dust while riding on the Rover, Gene will
have to replace the fender. At 118:52:35,
he asks Jack if their roll of duct tape in under
the CDR seat. At 118:54:51,
Gene mentions using tape during training and then
starts to tape the fender back into place.
His main problem is that the tape doesn't stick
well to dust-coated surfaces. He uses one
piece of tape to clean the dust off before
securing the fender at that particular spot.
Good television coverage. He has
surprisingly little difficulty tearing pieces of
tape off the roll with his gloves. He
finishes the taping job at 119:02:59. |
|
Apollo 17 |
Loss of repaired
fender, EVA-1 traverse, return to the LM |
122:47:48 |
Jack tells Gene, "I
think you have lost a fender. I keep getting
rained on here (with lunar dust)." At 122:55:39 they confirm to Houston that it was the fender Gene had taped back in place that came off. At 123:12:04, Gene says, "My tape didn't hold; it was too dusty." |
|
Apollo 17 |
SEP transmitter deployment, EVA-1 | 123:07:44 |
The SEP transmitter
is powered by three solar panels. The center
panel is fixed to the body of the transmitter and
the two side panels are connected to the center
panel by hinges. The side panels won't
deploy fully and Jack has to use duct tape to get
them to lie in the same plane as the central
panel. Gene tears strips off the roll and
gives them to Jack who applies them to the back of
the panels. |
|
Apollo 17 |
SEP transmitter |
126:39:31 |
In response to a
question, Jack tells CapCom that he taped the back
of the SEP transmitter solar panels to keep them
open and, therefore, didn't cover any of the solar
cells. |
|
Apollo 17 |
SEP transmitter | 141:20:03 |
CapCom requests
that, when Jack runs out to the SEP transmitter,
he check to see how the tape he put on the solar
panels have survived 18 hours out in the
Sun. At 141:21:05,
Jack reports that the tape has "survived".
Photo AS17-141-21510
shows the transmitter from the back early in
EVA-3. A magnified detail (above) shows the
two pieces of tape Jack used on the back of the
solar panels to keep them open. Jack put a
piece of tape where each of the side panels joined
the center panel. Note that the ends of each
piece haven't stuck to the panels because of the
dust they picked up from Gene's and Jack's
gloves. The center of each piece has stuck
because they were able to keep it sufficiently
dust free. |
|
Apollo 17 |
Replacement fender
at start of EVA-2 traverse |
AS17-135-20542 |
Down-Sun photo to
document LRV location - forthe SEP experimenters -
at the start of the traverse. The replacment
fender is on the right rear. |
|
Apollo 17 |
Photo documenting replacement fender, EVA-2 Station 2 | AS17-137-20979 | Just before leaving
Station 2, Gene takes a picture of the replacement
fender. It has survived a 9.1-km drive out
from the LM. When they arrive at Station 9,
late in EVA-3, Gene says "(The) fender's almost
worn out." Becaue of persistent abrasion by
material thrown up by the wheel, the aft end of
the replacement fender had lost enough stiffness
that the back end was folding under and allowing
some dust to be thrown up and forward onto the
Rover and the crew. Gene brought the
replacement fender back to Earth and, as of the
mid-1990s, it was on public display at the
National Air and Space Museum. See a discussion
of the replacement fender, including a photo
of the underside taken at Air and Space. |
|
Apollo 17 | SEP receiver thermal bag, EVA-2 at the LM | 140:47:54 | Jack reports that
the Velcro tabs on the SEP receiver bag have
unbonded and suggests taping the cover shut.
The covers won't actually be taped shut until 164:00:57,
just before they start the EVA-3 drive to Station
6. Handling the tape, Gene says, "I feel like a
kid stuck in taffy". Jack checks the seal
after turing the receiver on at 164:19:32.
|
|
Apollo 17 |
SEP receiver
thermal bag, EVA-3 at Station 6 |
165:55:13 |
Before they leave
Station 6, CapCom asks Gene to close the thermal
blankets on the SEP receiver and tape them
shut. Gene says, "Oh, the tape's not going
to stick anymore, I'm afraid." CapCom asks him to
try, anyway but, after a few minutes, Houston is
more interested in getting them on the way to the
next station and tells them to defer taping till
they get to Station 7. |
Mission |
Activity or Topic |
Time, Image, or Source |
Notes |
Apollo 14 |
EVA-1, MET offload |
113:57:02 |
Al was suprised that some clear tape on thermal blanket covering the MET was difficult to remove. |
Apollo 15 |
EVA-1, MESA
blankets |
120:05:10 |
Similar comment to
Shepard's. Dave says, "When I
opened the blankets, I found that they had been
taped together - in addition to being Velcroed -
and that took a fair amount of time to get them
open." Additional comment at 120:51:13. |
Mission |
Activity or Topic |
Time, Image, or Source |
Notes |
Apollo 14 |
Tape securing LM
insulation blankets, EVA-1 Initial Panoramas |
AS14-66-9254 |
Shows extensive use
of gold-colored tape to secure the dark-grey
insulation blankets covering Quad III (northeast
face when landed) of the Descent Stage. |
Apollo 15 | DAC film magazine failures | 120:36:40 and Mission Report Section 14.5.3 |
Faulty alignment of DAC magazines in the camera may, in part, have been due to a protective piece of tape not being removed prior to magazine installation. |
Apollo 15 |
EVA-2 Prep
discussion of the quality of the data from the
biomed sensors |
141:00:09 |
Crew gets
pre-flight permission - and training - to remove
and re-attach their biomets sensors as
appropriate. |
Apollo 15 |
Biomed sensors, In
cabin after EVA-2 |
152:35:44 |
Surgeon will want
crew to change "sponges and tapes" on the medical
sensors after the rest period. Probably want
to check data because of the arhythmias seen up to
this time. Dave discusses the overhead added
when "we're hurting on time." |
Apollo 15 |
Broken Range/Range
Rate Meter Window |
Mission
Report, Section 14.2.8 |
Broken window
discovered at LM ingress. Tape to be added
to future LMs |
Apollo 16 |
Food packaging |
106:49:33 |
All the packages
for one meal were taped together. |