Hi Gulliver, these drawings are not blueprints. The level of technical detail is reminiscent of Gundamn Anime technical manuals. For me, these drawings confirm my skepticism that objects described therein could have achieved the outcomes that have been posited. How, for example, did the lunar buggy get stowed and how did they get it out? Where is the film evidence of that task being undertaken? How did the craft protect the personnel from the heat and the cold? How did they even open the door of the lunar lander inwards when the air pressure inside the module would have made such a feat practically impossible? I remain skeptical until I have convinced myself that such feats are possible.
I quote from NASA ...
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a15/a15.lrvdep.htmlFigure 1-39 is a cartoon of the deployment sequence. Section 1.9.3 of the document contains a complete description of the deployment. See, also, a set of Grumman LRV Deployment Cartoons.]
and here
http://www.moonlandinghoax.org/25.html"Plans for the Lunar Module and Lunar Rover have been destroyed and no longer exist."
Much paperwork relating to the Lunar Module and Rover has been discarded, however this is to be expected. No company is going to keep in storage millions of documents for an obsolete project that has no chance of being resurrected. But it is not true to say the documents no longer exist. The National Archives microfilmed everything they thought was historically significant and those films are currently in storage. It is not uncommon for space enthusiasts and modelers to find many obscure facts and details about the LM, Rover, and other Apollo hardware from this archive.
A complete set of blueprints of the world's first Particle Accelerator don't survive to this day nor does the very first aircraft, HMS Victory or even the Titanic. Does it mean that they didn't exist or were not built? It's another ridiculous claim.
[A film clip (8.6Mb) shows Charlie Duke and Bob Parker participating in a shirtsleeve demonstration of Rover deployment. Digitization by Gary Neff.]
[Don McMillan has provided an animation ( 0.7 Mb ) of his Virtual Rover unfolding during deployment. A second animation shows the hinges in action.]