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Apollo 11 Technical air-to-ground voice transcription (GOSS NET 1) - 1969 copy
$ 10560
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Description
RARE: Apollo 11 Technical air-to-ground voice transcription (GOSS NET 1) - 1969 copy bound in 2 separate volumes from Communications Engineer that was at HQTRS in 1969. See included photos for details of the Apollo 11 mission: "THE EAGLE HAS LANDED", " ONE SMALL STEP...', and finally "SPLASH DOWN"NOTE: Neil Armstrong's copy sold July 2019 for ,500 from Heritage Auction Galleries.
More > Bound, in 2 volumes (single-sided) of 8" x 10.5", an early copy of the entire mission voice transcript, as prepared by the Data Logistics Office of the Manned Spacecraft Center. The introduction states: "This is the transcription of the Technical Air-To-Ground Voice Transcription (GOSS NET 1) from the Apollo 11 mission." Then it identifies all the abbreviations for the various voices heard in the transcript. We note in photo some words familiar to us all: "That's One Small Step For Man, One Giant Leap For Mankind" (CDR). A desirable document overall very good.
Condition is Used. Shipped with USPS Priority Mail.
More information:
Copy of NASA Apollo 11 Technical Air-to-ground voice transcription
(GOSS NET 1)
Volume I and II
NASA
Manned Spacecraft Center,
Houston TX
July 1969
INTRODUCTION
This is the transcription of the Technical Air-to-Ground Voice Transmission (GOSS NET 1) from the Apollo 11 mission.
Communicators in the text may be identified according to the following list.
Spacecraft:
CDR
Commander
Neil A. Armstrong
CMP
Command module pilot
Michael Collins
LMP
Lunar module pilot
Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr.
SC
Unidentifiable crew member
MS
Multiple (simultaneous) speakers
LCC
Launch Control Center
Mission Control Center:
CC
Capsule Communicator (CAP COMM)
F
Flight Director
Remote Sites:
CT
Communications Technician (COMM TECH)
Recovery Forces:
HORNET
USS Hornet
R
Recovery helicopter
AB
Air Boss
A series of three dots (...) is used to designate those portions of the communications that could not be transcribed because of garbling. One dash (-)is used to indicate a speaker's pause or a self-interruption and subsequent completion of a thought. Two dashes (- -) are used to indicate an interruption by another speaker or a point at which a recording was terminated abruptly.