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Designed by Grumman's brilliant Tom Kelly, the Apollo Lunar
Excursion Module (or "LEM" for short) was a triumph of
purpose-built engineering. In the six years 1962-1968 between
drawing board and first flight, a myriad of challenges were
overcome related to weight, reliability and safety. The final
design, designated the Lunar Module or "LM," boasted tiny windows
instead of large portholes, four legs instead of five and most
famously had no seats instead relying on the astronauts' legs to
cushion a lunar landing. Ten LMs made it into space including three
flown in development and test missions, and six which landed on the
Moon. A seventh famously saved the crew of Apollo 13 when that
mission's Command Module suffered a catastrophic malfunction.
Originally created for NASA by Grumman in 1964, this LEM
Familiarization Manual provides an operational description of all
subsystems and major components of the lunar lander. It includes
sections about the LEM mission, spacecraft structure, operational
subsystems, prelaunch operations, and ground support equipment.
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