Apollo lunar module
3,094 thespicedanger
8.7 years ago
I tried to make it as accurate as possible but I had to add an extra antenna to the other side in order to keep it on balance.
Specifications
Spotlights
- This craft has been featured
General Characteristics
- Successors 1 airplane(s) +7 bonus
- Created On Windows
- Wingspan 27.1ft (8.3m)
- Length 27.1ft (8.3m)
- Height 21.7ft (6.6m)
- Empty Weight 13,458lbs (6,104kg)
- Loaded Weight 18,969lbs (8,604kg)
Performance
- Power/Weight Ratio 2.487
- Wing Loading 96.4lbs/ft2 (470.9kg/m2)
- Wing Area 196.7ft2 (18.3m2)
- Drag Points 19434
Parts
- Number of Parts 432
- Control Surfaces 0
- Performance Cost 1,047
@AndrewGarrison
I agree
Amazing
its a hoex
@DeezNuts52 Thanks
@CommunistDoodlebob 2 things. 1, love the name lol, 2, yeah, the Apollo missions landed on the moon with a computer less powerful than your phone
All of our devices have more technology than the whole of that, an IPhone 6 has more
Wow
@oOHexaCube7Oo lol
@hellcatz *51 ;)
i had fun screwing around in the air but it was hard to actually fly, but awsome i gave you a 50th upvote
Apollo service module?
Very nice work.
Oh.
@Aerobako Yes. But it needs to be handled carefully. Joystick would be a hughe advantage but i would assume that flying the real deal would be difficult as well.
Pretty accurate if you ask me
Can you land this?
"In the Clear Vaccum sky, Blue as a pretty pea, is the earth."
"That's one small step for man, one, giant leap for mankind".
@TheLatentImage sorry to leave ya hangin. :] I freaking love space!!!!!
But since time slows down aboard the starship, according to Einstein's special theory of relativity, the crew could reach the Pleiades star-cluster (M45), which is 400 light-years away, in as little as eleven years, by the clocks aboard the starship. After 25 shipboard years, such a ship could even reach the Great Andromeda Galaxy - although over 2 million years would have passed on the earth.
Wormholes were first introduced to the public over a century ago in a book written by an Oxford mathematician. Perhaps realizing that adults might frown on the idea of multiply connected spaces, he wrote the book under a pseudonym and wrote it for children. His name was Charles Dodgson, his pseudonym was Lewis Carroll, and the book was Through The Looking Glass----Michio Kaku
Come, my friends,
'Tis not too late to seek a newer world… .
To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths
Of all the western stars, until I die.
— Alfred Lord Tennyson, Ulysses, 1842
@DethFromAbove you forgot to dash that quote. Don't leave hanging man... put a dash, and then who said the quote. The suspense is killing me! I know I could Google... but I'm not gonna.
Amazing! Also very original because I haven't seen amyone build this.
speechless