A short compilation of astronauts falling over on the Moon during the Apollo missions, showcasing their challenges with balance and movement caused by the Moon's low gravity, bulky spacesuits, and navigating the loose, dry lunar regolith.
@wonderofscience The tiniest pinhole and they would be dead.

@JackEnrod
The Apollo space suits were actually very cleverly designed with the inner pressure vessel being covered by many layers of various protective fabrics (including fiberglass cloth IIRC).

Even if the suit did somehow get a tear, they were only pressurized to 3–5 PSI (the partial pressure of oxygen in air) so if the astronaut found the leak they could probably just cover it with their hand and seal it until they got back to the capsule and could either abort the mission or permanently reseal it (dunno if they had a method of repairing suits in Apollo yet, I'd assume so). They could connect to the other astronaut's space suit as well if their air supply started running out.

@wonderofscience

Partial pressure - Wikipedia

@nytpu @JackEnrod @wonderofscience
I just realized that engineers are mostly nerds who watch alot horror or disaster movies who can think of any horror scenario imaginable and find a solution to those scenarios.
@ashiisbest @nytpu @JackEnrod @wonderofscience
Apparently, that superpower didn’t transfer from atoms to bits.
@ashiisbest @nytpu @JackEnrod @wonderofscience Well, yes and no. If they had fallen onto their back they would have been in big trouble. The reason these "falls" look so easy is because they practised against falling. A lot.