ggalfi
Well-known member
Hi All,
I went through the full Apollo 15 mission with the goal to stick to the Flight Data File (that means 90% of cases the flight plan, but the individual checklists as well) as much as possible. Actually I did this with the missions 12 and 13 as well, but meanwhile I improved my technique as much as I think my notes, calculations and pad loads are worth to share. To go through the whole mission it took me 10 months, between January and October. During that period I made a few version upgrade (including a commit with the overhaul of ECS). Even with running the update script on the saved scenarios, I had some minor glitches in the ECS:
My primary goal was to fly the mission as close to the nominal trajectory as possible. RTCC gave a great help in it, however I had to do a lot of calculation on my own (even it isn't trivial to answer the question, what is the nominal trajectory). I made a Libreoffice Calc workbook with all the necessary historical values, my own calculations, RTCC settings, and also filled PAD sheets. You may download it from here: www.absimp.org/orbitersim/apollo15/apollo_15_pad_sheets.ods . I've written it originally only for myself, so it could be difficult to decipher it sometimes, and I don't have time to fully document it. However I'm happy to answer questions about it, and here I give you some hints, what you'll find in it:
Also I want to share the actual mission scenario files, here: absimp.org/orbitersim/apollo15/Apollo%2015%20mission%20scenarios.zip. All of the scenario files has the Ground Ellapsed Time in their names, and sometimes I added some other info as well. However, as I managed to remain within only a +-2 minutes of the original flight plan, what you see in the FP likely you will get when you start up the corresponding scenario file. What was really amazing for me, when the Flight Plan said that at X hours, crater Y is visible in, say, CM5 window, then it was exactly there in the simulation
I went through the full Apollo 15 mission with the goal to stick to the Flight Data File (that means 90% of cases the flight plan, but the individual checklists as well) as much as possible. Actually I did this with the missions 12 and 13 as well, but meanwhile I improved my technique as much as I think my notes, calculations and pad loads are worth to share. To go through the whole mission it took me 10 months, between January and October. During that period I made a few version upgrade (including a commit with the overhaul of ECS). Even with running the update script on the saved scenarios, I had some minor glitches in the ECS:
- continuous need stir up H2 tanks in every 10 minutes to avoid CRYO PRESS warning.
- H2 was consumed significantly faster than O2, even latter was expended also by LM pressurization and with the deep space EVA. At 295 hours, when SM Sep happened, H2 was down to 2%.
- After a while I wasn't able to refill/pressurize neither the surge tank nor the emergency O2 tank more than 200 PSI.
My primary goal was to fly the mission as close to the nominal trajectory as possible. RTCC gave a great help in it, however I had to do a lot of calculation on my own (even it isn't trivial to answer the question, what is the nominal trajectory). I made a Libreoffice Calc workbook with all the necessary historical values, my own calculations, RTCC settings, and also filled PAD sheets. You may download it from here: www.absimp.org/orbitersim/apollo15/apollo_15_pad_sheets.ods . I've written it originally only for myself, so it could be difficult to decipher it sometimes, and I don't have time to fully document it. However I'm happy to answer questions about it, and here I give you some hints, what you'll find in it:
- The first sheet (Planning) is the most important one. It contains most of the trajectory calculations and parameters for RTCC. To be able to see how much I diverged from the real life values, I organized the numbers into three columns:
- FP, which are mostly the values I found in the Flight Plan or occasionally in the Operational Trajectory document (these two are not 100% consistent with each other!)
- PAD/MR which are the historical values either in the mission transcripts (available here and here) or in the Mission Report.
- NASSP as you may guess is the column with the number relevant for the actual simulation.
- Also on this sheet you may see some side calculations. One is related to the different selenographical coordinate system used in Apollo Era than today. I tried different methods to determine the transformation between the two, but finally I simply looked at the preflight images/maps of the planned landing location and I searched the crater formation in LROC imagery - I used that coordinates in targeting. Additionally I put some effort to determine the accurate parameters for the descent orbit. For that I used nominal PDI conditions given in LM padloads.
- The "Pad Loads" sheet are containing some selected subset of values from the LM padloads. As mentioned above, I used them to get the accurate descent trajectory, and also to calculate PDI time. Latter was only 1.34 sec earlier than the nominal PDI point, so I was able to hit the planned descent orbit pretty accurately.
- GDC align: I made this sheet for the Apollo 13 mission which used a star pair for backup GDC aligment unsupported by RTCC. So this sheet allows you to copy their any pair of stars' coordinates, and also a REFSMMAT and it provides the angles for alignment. On Apollo 15 I rather used it for managing my REFSMMATs and remind myself where they were stored (don't forget, PTC REFSMMAT is reutilized after 6 days in lunar orbit!)
- RTGO: again something needed for earlier versions of RTCC, I calculated the RTGO on my own. However in this simulation I more relied on RTCC's Entry PADs.
Also I want to share the actual mission scenario files, here: absimp.org/orbitersim/apollo15/Apollo%2015%20mission%20scenarios.zip. All of the scenario files has the Ground Ellapsed Time in their names, and sometimes I added some other info as well. However, as I managed to remain within only a +-2 minutes of the original flight plan, what you see in the FP likely you will get when you start up the corresponding scenario file. What was really amazing for me, when the Flight Plan said that at X hours, crater Y is visible in, say, CM5 window, then it was exactly there in the simulation