EVA-1 |
||
Time |
Traverse segment |
Notes and Comments |
120:31:57 |
Dave's first time in his Rover seat |
Scott: Oh, you sit
up a lot higher than in one g, but that makes sense,
does it? Discussion of seatbelt mechanism |
120:33:03 |
First readout of Rover gauges. |
The
battery charge meters are both showing 105
amp-hours. Both should read 121. See a
discussion following 167:35:58.,
including material from the Mission
Report. The voltage and amp indicators for battery 2 both showed zero. This was determined to be an indicator failure. |
120:35:22 |
Initial drive to MESA No front steering |
Discussion of contingency
traverse plans in case the Rover didn't work.
Discussion of the 1-g training version of the Rover
used during some pre-flight field exercises. While Dave drove to the MESA, Jim walked behind trying, unsuccessfully, to take 16mm movie footage and confirming that Dave had rear steering. Dave didn't have front steering. Discussion of using rear-only steering at 120:36:57. |
121:15:49 |
Preparation for the first traverse |
Houston
asks Dave to try to move the front wheels
manually. At 121:24:13,
they ask him to change some switch settings. Neither
of these restore front steering. At 121:27:32,
Houston tells Dave that they are conficent that both
batteries are working but that they don't have a
solution for the front steering. Joe says, "We'd
like the Forward Steering switch to Off. We still have
good rear steering." At 142:45:19, in preparation for the EVA-2 traverse, Joe gives Dave some additional procedures to try. Dave tries the procedures at 1430355 and, for whatever reason, discovers he has front steering. Scott: You know what I bet you did last night, Joe? You let some of those Marshall guys come up here and fix it, didn't you?" |
121:44:35 |
Start traverse to Station 1 |
Scott: Going to
miss that double Ackerman (front and rear steering), I
can see that now. |
121:45:28 |
Driving to Station 1 |
Scott: Hang on. Get
a feel for this thing. Nine kilometers an hour, Joe.
(To Jim) Hold the geology; let's get the Rover squared
away first. (Pause) Okay; 8 kilometers (per hour) up a
little rise. Okay, turning back. (Pause) 203, huh?
Okay. During the Apollo 15 review for the ALSJ, Dave commented "On the Moon, perhaps the measure should be hummocks per minute or craters per minute, rather than km/hr. Eight km/hr may have seemed to be fast because of the many features going by each minute. It certainly did appear that we were going quite rapidly across the surface features." Dean Eppler at NASA Johnson noted that his experiences snowmobiling in Antarctica was similar. "I guess it doesn't matter what planet you're on, if you don't have roads, the going is slow." |
121:46:39 |
Comments on speed going uphill Comments about the fenders |
Irwin: Okay, we're
doing 10 kilometers (per hour), now. Now we're heading uphill; when we head uphill, it drops down to about 8. Scott: No dust, Joe, no dust at all. |
121:48:21 |
Extensive comments about handling,
steering, and speed |
Scott: Okay, Joe,
the Rover handles quite well. We're moving at, I
guess, an average of about 8 kilometers an hour. It's
got very low damping compared to the one-g Rover, but
the stability is about the same. It negotiates small
craters quite well, although there's a lot of roll. It
feels like we need the seat belts, doesn't it, Jim? Irwin: Yeah, really do. (Pause) Scott: The steering is quite responsive even with only the rear steering. It does quite well. There doesn't seem to be too much slip. I can maneuver pretty well with the thing. If I need to make a turn sharply, why, it responds quite well. There's no accumulation of dirt in the wire wheels. (Pause)<p> Allen: Just like in the owner's manual, Dave. Scott: Okay, I've got it on the wall here (that is, at full throttle) for a minute, and we're up to 12 (km/hr). Irwin: As soon we head upslope, it drops off. Scott: Yeah. Irwin: Or, are you deliberately slowing down? Scott: Yeah, I slowed down in order to get my feeling before we start sprinting. |
121:50:39 |
Need to concentrate on the terrain
immediately ahead. |
Scott: Okay, how we
doing on the heading, Jimmer? (Pause) [Scott - "I had to keep my eyes on the road. I couldn't look at the instrument panel. I had to be focused on where we were going, and that's why I asked Jim about the heading. Even though I can cross-check very quickly - from airplane experience, out the window and back - I remember that you had to focus, consciously, so much on where you were going, because it was so irregular and things happened so quick at eight kilometers per hour (or '60 features per minute!', as Dave commented in 1996) that I couldn't take my eyes off of where we were going - even for a second - to look at the instrument panel and make an interpretation of the direction. I relied on Jim to do that for me, and that's why he's giving the distances and I'm asking him for the heading. Which is a reason why you want another guy along with you."] |
121:51:34 |
Difficulty seeing down-Sun |
Scott: Whoa. Hang
on. Irwin: Bucking bronco. Scott: Yeah, man. (Pause) You back off on the power, it keeps right on going. (Pause) The zero-phase lighting is pretty tough, Joe. [When looking directly away from the Sun (the zero-phase direction), they can see virtually no shadows and that, combined with the lack of strong color and, most importantly, a general brightening due to a process called Coherent Backscatter, completely washes out the zero-phase view. Jones - "You're talking about zero-phase here but your average heading is about 210 (roughly southwest). So you must be going west to get around something." Scott - "The washed out area around) zero-phase is not (just) due west, it's probably plus or minus 20 degrees (that is, from roughly 250 to 290)." Jones - "But you're doing a significant turn to get around something." Scott - "Apparently."] Scott: We're going to have to make sure we keep at an angle (to downSun). Once I look into zero-phase, it all looks flat. |
121:53:50 |
Back end loses traction on turns at
higher speeds |
Scott: Well, I
think there's sort of a...The rear end breaks out at
about 10 to 12 clicks. [That is, the back end tends to swing around if he tries even moderately sharp turns at such speeds.] Allen: Roger, Dave. It sounds like it's like steering a boat, with the rear steering and the rolling motion. Scott: (Responding to Joe) Yeah, that's right. It sure is. |
121:54:25 |
Jim sees millimeter-sized particles
thrown up by the front wheels, but not fine dust. |
|
121:55:44 |
Rocking-rolling ride |
Scott: (Laughing)
Man, this is really a rocking-rolling ride, isn't
it?<p> Irwin: Never been on a ride like this before.<p> Scott: Boy, oh, boy! I'm glad they've got this great suspension system on this thing. Boy. Extensive discussion from Dave and from Jim about the ride and the suspension. See the Apollo 16 Grandprix film of the Rover in action. Note that the Rover bounces higher than it would with two astronauts aboard. |
1215721 |
Driving on thin regolith close to the
rille. |
To this point, Dave and Jim have been
driving on the normal mare surface. Close to the
edge of the rille, some of the ejecta from impacts
falls into the rille, thinning the regolith and
exposing rocks and, very close to the edge,
bedrock. As discussed on pages 5-23 and 24 in
the Apollo
15 Preliminary Science Report, the normal
regolith thickness in the area visited by the crew is
about 5 meters. Starting roughly 200 meters from
the edge of the rille, the thickness of the regolith
gradually decreases until, in the last 25 meters or so
before the edge, "(fine) regolith is essentially
absent, so that numerous boulders and bedrock
protuberances 1 to 3 m across are exposed ...
Rock fragments are more abundant in the vicinity of
the rille rim than they are on the mare surface to the
east. The increase becomes noticeable approximately
200 to 300 m east of the lip of the rille. Most of the
fragments at a distance of 200 to 300 m are a few
centimeters across. The size of the fragments
increases markedly as the surface begins to slope
gently down toward the rille; bedrock is reached the
lip." Irwin: Hey, you can see the rille! There's the rille. Scott: There's the rille. Irwin: Yeah. We're looking down and across the rille, we can see craters on the far side of the rille.<p> Allen: Roger. Like advertised. Irwin: A lot of blocks. (Garbled) to turn the camera on. Scott: Yeah. (Pause) Now we're getting into the blocky stuff, about 1 foot, quite angular, irregular surface. Irwin: We're right at the edge of the rille, I bet you. Scott: Yes, sir. We're on the edge of the rille, you'd better believe it. I think we're heading right... Irwin: I don't see Elbow though. Oh, yeah, I see Elbow. Dave, we have to stay up on the high part of the rille, here. Then, at 121:58:43 Scott: Let me get us back up on the ridge, it's smoother. Irwin: Yeah, I think that heading was...We were on a heading that was a little too far west. We're getting back up on the higher part of the rille rim. At this point, I'd estimate the slope is probably - what? - About 3 degrees? Scott: Yeah, there's a definite ridge or rim that runs along the rille, maybe 70 (or) 80 meters from the inflection point that drops down into the rille, don't you think, Jim? |
Location | Ground Elapsed Time (hhh:mm:ss) | Odometer (km) | Battery (amp-hrs) | Travel Time (mm:ss) | Odometer: Dist.(km) Vel.(km/hr) |
Map: Dist.(km) Vel.(km/hr) |
Notes |
EVA-1 |
|||||||
LM |
121:44:35 | 0.0 |
110, 115* |
26:11 |
4.5 10.3 |
*The batteries had been charged with 121 amp-hrs each. No discussion in the mission report for an initial readout of 105, 105 or of 110, 115 an hour later, shortly before leaving the LM. | |
Station 1 Arrive |
122:10:46 |
4.5 |
105, 112 |
||||
Station 1 Depart |
122:28:35 |
6:41 |
1.0 9.0 |
Beginning at
about 122:31:19,
they started driving on the lower slopes of Mt. Hadley
Delta. At 122:32:46,
Dave mentions that "We're going uphill pretty
good." A minute later, Jim mentions that their
"speed's dropped down to 7 clicks (km/hr)." |
|||
Station 2 Arrive |
122:35:16 |
5.5 |
105, 110 |
||||
Station 2 Depart |
123:26:02 |
33:19 |
4.8 8.6 |
Going downhill,
they had to be careful or their speed. At 123:28:42,
the rear wheels lost traction and the Rover spun 180
degrees, leaving them pointed uphill. Once they reached Elbow Crater, Dave decided to follow the Nav system back to the LM. At that time, 123:33:04, the indicated bearing and range to the LM was 11 degrees east of north and 3.3 km. |
|||
LM arrive |
123:59:21 |
10.3 |
100, 107 |
||||
EVA-2 |
|||||||
Location | Ground Elapsed Time (hhh:mm:ss) | Odometer (km) | Battery (amp-hrs) | Travel Time (mm:ss) | Odometer: Dist.(km) Vel.(km/hr) |
Map: Dist.(km) Vel.(km/hr) |
Notes |
LM Depart | 143:11:13 |
0.0 |
100, 108 |
42:43 |
6.5 9.1 |
They leave
the mare surface and start up onto the lower slopes of
Mt. Hadley Delta at 143:45:20. |
|
Station 6 arrive |
143:53:56 |
6.5 |
92, 100 |
||||
Station 6 Depart |
144:58:18 |
2:53 |
0.4 8.3 |
They drove
this segment roughly parallel to the contour, neither
climbing nor descending. |
|||
Station 6a Arrive |
145:01:11 |
6.9 |
97, 100 |
||||
Station 6a depart |
145:22:40 |
3:53 |
0.4 6.2 |
They drove
this segment going diagonally downhill and after their
experience driving downhill from Station 2, went
slowly. |
|||
Station 7 Arrive |
145:26:33 |
7.3 |
95, 100 |
||||
Station 7 Depart |
146:16:04 |
12:55 |
1.6 7.4 |
After
driving downhill from Station 7, they reached the mare
surface at about 146:21:02 |
|||
Station 4 Arrive |
146:28:59 |
8.9 |
94, 100 |
||||
EVA-1 |
||
Time | Traverse Segment | Notes and Comments |
119:34:02 |
John's first time in the Rover seat |
Mentions that he seems to be
sitting higher than he did in the rover mock-up
they used in the KC-135 aircraft flying 1/6th-g
parabolas so they could adjust the seat belt
lengths. Discussion of the seat-belt
problems the A15 crew had and the need for
adjustment. John doesn't comment on the seatbelt
fit, but neither of them has any problems on the
Moon. |
119:36:42 |
Driving to the MESA |
Charlie confirms that John has
steering with all four wheel. At 119:38:21,
Charlie comments on how slowly John driving. Young: Yeah, the wheels are skidding, Charlie.<p> Duke: Okay, your rear steering's off. Young: Huh? Duke: You don't have any rear steering. Young: Is that what the problem is? Duke: Yeah. They decide not to do any troubleshooting until John is ready to drive to the ALSEP site. At 120:45:21, when John is preparing to drive, he moves the handcontroller and Charlie sees the rear wheels moving in responds to steering commands. John suggests that, "Maybe it just needs to sit around and heat up." On Apollo 15, the rear steering did not work during the first EVA but did on the second and third. A discussion from the Apollo 16 Mission report suggests that the problem was a lubricant used in the handcontroller that was viscous at low temperatures. |
Location |
Ground Elapsed Time (hhh:mm:ss) |
Odometer (km) |
Range (km) |
Battery (amp-hrs) |
Travel Time (mm:ss) |
Odom. Diff. Odom. Diff / Trvl.Time |
MapDist. MapDist. / Trvl.Time |
Notes |
EVA-1 |
||||||||
LRV Offload |
119:34:58 |
0 |
0 |
125, no reading |
John reports that the battery-2 amp-hour
indicator is off-scale low. |
|||
ALSEP Depart | 122:59:06 | 0.1 |
0.1 |
118, 118 |
24:48 |
1.9 km 4.8 km/hr |
1.6 km 3.9 km/hr |
Caution driving down-Sun. LM map location uncertain till they get to Plum. Brief, unplanned stop at Halfway Crater because of nav. undertainty. |
Station 1 Arrive | 123:23:54 | 2.0 |
1.4 |
nr = not reported |
||||
Station 1 Depart | 124:14:32 | 6:15 |
0.8 km 7.7 km/hr |
0.7 km 6.7 km/hr |
Followed outbound tracks so
less caution despite poor up-Sun visibility. John
mentions in the mission report that he did some tacking
to improve visibility. |
|||
Station 2 Arrive |
124:20:47 | 2.8 |
0.8 |
nr |
||||
Station 2 Depart |
124:48:20 | 5:47 |
1.0 km 10.4 km/hr |
0.9 km 9.3 km/hr |
On the return to the LM, they
stopped near the ALSEP so that Charlie could film John
doing the Grand
Prix, which involved John driving the LRV toward
the LM and back. John drove for about 25 seconds
toward the LM, reporting a max speed of 10 km/hr along
the way. He then turned and drove back in about 25
seconds. The distance driven was no more than 140
meters. He then did a second run. In total,
each of the runs took about 1 min 05 seconds. *The odometer value used at the ALSEP when they get back is the value given later at the LM minus 0.4 km, total, for the two Grand Prix runs and the 0.1 km return to the LM. |
|||
ALSEP Arrive |
124:54:07 |
3.8* |
0.1 |
nr |
||||
LM Arrive |
125:09:43 |
4.2 |
0 |
108, 105 |
- |
- |
- |
|
EVA-1
Totals Driving Time: 40:00 (est.) Odometer distance and speed: 4.2 km, 6.3 km/hr Map distance and speed: 3.2 km, 4.8 km/hr |
||||||||
EVA-2 |
||||||||
Ground Elapsed Time (hhh:mm:ss) | Odometer (km) | Range (km) | Battery (amp-hrs) | Travel Time (mm:ss) |
Odom.Diff Odom.Diff / Trvl.Time |
MapDist. MapDist. / Trvl.Time |
Notes | |
LM Depart |
143:31:40 | 0 |
0 |
108, 105 from EVA-1 Close-out | 23:56 |
5.2 km 8.7 km/hr |
3.1 km 7.8 km/hr |
Figure 6-6 from the Apollo 16 Preliminary Science Report shows the various station locations and approximate locations from which Charlie took various traverse photos. John and Charlie drove SSE from the LM, climbed up onto Survey Ridge and drove SSW along it before heading to a point at the base of Stone Mountain directly north of Station 4. The started climbing at about the indicated place whereCharlie took photo 17918. Their average speed along their actual path is necessarily greater than the 7.5 km/hr range rate. |
Base of Stone Mountain |
143:55:36 | nr |
3.0 |
nr |
||||
Base of Stone Mountain |
143:55:36 | nr |
3.0 |
nr |
11:53 |
1.2 km 6.1 km/hr |
Station 4 and the approximate spot where Charlie took 17918 are shown in a labeled detail from topographic map LTO78D2S1(50) (5.7 Mb) indicates that they were driving cross-slope and climbed about 145 meters in 1.1 km. The slope they experience is about 7.5 degrees. | |
Station 4 Arrive |
144:07:29 | 5.2 |
4.1 |
100, 100 |
||||
Station 4 Depart |
145:04:22 |
5:08 |
0.7 km 8.2 km/hr |
0.7 km 8.2 km/hr |
Followed their outbound tracks
partway downhill. Young: Ya-ho-ho-ho-ho. (Pause) Look at this baby (meaning the Rover). I'm really getting confidence in it now. It's really humming like a kitten. Duke: Oh, this machine is super. CapCom Tony England: Probably a good idea you couldn't see how steep it was going up. Young: Darn right it was. (Pause) Okay. I've got the power off, and we're making 10 kilometers an hour. Just falling down our own tracks. (Pause) Uh-oh. Duke: Almost spun out. |
|||
Station 5 Arrive |
145:09:30 |
5.9 |
3.5 |
100, 100 |
||||
Station 5 Depart |
145:58:40 |
6:39 |
0.8 km 7.2 km/hr |
0.5 km 4.5 km/hr |
Young: Okay, we're riding at idle
(meaning that he is not applying any power to the
wheels), and she's picking up speed ... I'm just glad
that we don't have that watch-the-Rover-go TV.
(Laughing) Because I don't think we'd be
going. (Pause) John is probably saying that, if Houston had real-time TV of this drive, the NASA managers would be having heart-failure and would make the crew stop and walk down the mountain. At 146:03:32, they turn left and drive west along a bench to find a suitable crater for sampling. |
|||
Station 6 Arrive |
146:05:19 |
6.7 |
3.1 |
100, 95 |
||||
Station 6 Depart |
146:29:22 |
10:46 |
1.2 km 6.7km/hr |
0.8 km 4.5 km/hr |
They drive west for most of
this segment, then turn south to climb a ridge.
This probably slows them somewhat, but an
incorrectly-set Rover circuit breaker also
contributes. Houston helps them correct the
problem before they leave Station 8 |
|||
Station 8 Arrive |
146:40:08 |
7.9 |
2.9 |
95, 95 |
||||
Station 8 Depart |
147:48:15 |
3:09 |
* |
0.5 km 9.5 km/hr |
*The nav system is not working
properly, probably because of the various changes in
switch and circuit breaker setting made while diagnosing
the drive power problem. |
|||
Station 9 Arrive |
147:51:24 |
* |
* |
90, 90 |
||||
Station 9 Depart |
148:29:45 |
24:28 |
* |
2.6 km 6.4 km/hr |
*They notice the nav system
errors during this segment. They do the Station 10
activities near the ALSEP. |
|||
Station 10 Arrive |
148:54:13 |
* |
* |
65, 110 |
||||
EVA-2
Totals Driving Time: 86:00 (est.) Odometer distance and speed: 11.3 km, 7.9 km/hr (map distance plus 10% for the last two segments) Map distance and speed: 9.4 km, 6.6 km/hr |
||||||||
EVA-3 outbound |
||||||||
Location | Ground Elapsed Time (hhh:mm:ss) | Odometer (km) | Range (km) Bearing (degrees east of north) |
Battery (amp-hrs) | Travel Time (mm:ss) |
Odom.Diff. Odom.Diff. / Trvl.Time |
MapDist. MapDist. / Trvl.Time |
Notes |
LM Depart |
166:09:13 |
0 |
0 0 |
60, 115 |
13:02 |
nr |
1.7 km* 7.8 km/hr |
They climb a ridge immediately
north of the LM, then back down into a "big, sag-type
area", and continue north to the elevated rim of
Palmetto Crater and along the rim toward End Crater. *Map location directly from LRV nav. readout of range and bearing to the LM. On Figure 3.6.2-8a in Final Lunar Surface Procedures, the LM is at CB.1/80.6 and their location on the Palmetto rim is CK.4/82.5 |
Palmetto rim |
166:22:15 |
nr |
1.7 193 |
nr |
||||
Palmetto rim |
166:22:15 | nr |
1.7 193 |
nr |
14:13 |
nr |
2.0 km* 8.4 km/hr |
England: Y'all are making some
outstanding time there. Duke: It's really easy going, Tony. (Hears Tony) Well, he's got it full blower at 11 clicks, and we're just going over an undulating terrain. *Map location directly from LRV nav. readout of range and bearing to the LM. Their map location at the end of this segment is CV.5/82.5. |
Base of North Ray ridge |
166:36:28 |
nr |
3.7 186 |
nr |
||||
Base of North Ray ridge |
166:36:28 | nr |
3.7 186 |
nr |
2:09 |
nr |
0.2 km 5.6 km/hr |
At the start of this interval,
they are just east of Station 13. As can be seen
in the contour map
from the North
Ray
chapter of the A16 Professional Paper, they climb
about 25 meters over the next 200 meters, a slope of
about 7 degrees. |
Top of the 1st rise |
166:38:37 |
nr |
nr |
nr |
||||
Top of the 1st rise |
166:38:37 | nr |
nr |
nr |
5:46 |
nr |
0.6 km 6.2 km/hr |
Young: Okay. (Pause) We're
on a relatively flat surface now Over the next 450 meters, they climb about 10 meters, on a slope of 1.3 degrees, and then finish with a climb of about 15 meters over the final 150 meter to Station 11, a slope of about 6 degrees. As discussed in the ALSJ after 166:45:15, the bearing and range puts them well inside the rim, about 250 meters north of their actuall location. This unusualy-large difference may be due to wheel slippage during the climb up North Ray Ridge. |
Station 11 Arrive |
166:44:23 |
5.5 km |
4.5 km 179 |
60, 115 |
||||
EVA-3 Outbound Totals Driving time: 35:10 Odometer distance(less 0.2 km) and speed: 5.3 km, 9.0 km/hr Map Distance and Speed: 4.5 km, 7.7 km/hr |
||||||||
EVA-3 Return |
||||||||
Station 11 Depart |
168:09:46 |
5.5 km |
4.5 km 179 |
60, 115 |
7:53 |
1.0 km 7.6 km/hr |
0.9 km 6.8 km/hr |
They follow they outbound
tracks downhill toward Station 13. Duke: We can't see old (LM) Orion from here. (Laughing) This is going to be something going down this hill ... Look at that slope! Be sure that you got the brakes on. Tony, this is at least a 15-degree slope we're going down, and that Rover came right up it and you never even knew it. (Pause) Brake that beauty, John. (Laughs) Man, are we accelerating. Super. Young: (To Tony) We've just set a new world's speed record, Houston; 17 kilometers an hour on the Moon. At 168:14:31, they reach the top of the 1st rise. They've done 0.6 km in 4:45, giving a speed of 7.6 km/hr. On arrival at Station 13, the location error has reduced to 180 meters, perhaps because of John's use of the LRv brakes coming downhill. |
Station 13 Arrive |
168:17:39 |
6.5 km |
3.8 184 |
50, 110 |
||||
Station 13 Depart |
168:46:33 |
6.5 km |
3.8 184 |
50, 110 |
13:35 |
nr |
2.0 km 8.8 km/hr |
Nearing the rim of Palmetto,
Charlie gives a range and bearing about a minute after
he mentions that they are "passing End Crater".
That suggests that the nav system still thinks the LRV
is north of its actual location, now by roughly 150
meters. They are near CK.6/82.5 |
Palmetto |
169:00:08 |
nr |
1.9 192 |
nr |
||||
Palmetto |
169:00:08 | nr | 1.9 192 |
nr | 15:18 |
nr |
1.9 km 7.5 km/hr |
Station 10' is due north of
the ALSEP The segment from Station 13 to Station 10' covered sn odometer distance of 3.8 km, done in 28:53, at an average speed of 7.9 km/hr. |
Station 10' Arrive |
169:15:26 |
11.1 km |
0.1 188 |
30, 120 |
||||
EVA-3
Return
Totals Driving Time: 36:46 Odometer distance and speed: 5.6 km, 9.1 km/hr Map distance and speed: 4.8 km, 7.8 km/hr |