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#1
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The recent crash of the Genesis spacecraft should serve as a clear
warning to NASA administrators who favor allowing Hubble to fall to Earth while only promising to replace the existing orbital observatory with a larger, better one which has yet to see first light. Murphy, who coined the phrase, "If something can go wrong, it will", should be adopted as the patron saint of engineers and planners everywhere. There should be a shrine to him in every hallway of NASA, lest they forget their recent failures - Galileo, numerous Mars craft, and now Genesis. Cheers, Larry G. |
#2
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![]() Larry G wrote: The recent crash of the Genesis spacecraft should serve as a clear warning to NASA administrators who favor allowing Hubble to fall to Earth while only promising to replace the existing orbital observatory with a larger, better one which has yet to see first light. Poor logic. You could equally well conclude we should never fly any mission which depends on deployment of a parachute. Plus I think the plan is to not "allow Hubble to fall to Earth": Major budget for safe disposal. Phil |
#3
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![]() Larry G wrote: The recent crash of the Genesis spacecraft should serve as a clear warning to NASA administrators who favor allowing Hubble to fall to Earth while only promising to replace the existing orbital observatory with a larger, better one which has yet to see first light. Poor logic. You could equally well conclude we should never fly any mission which depends on deployment of a parachute. Plus I think the plan is to not "allow Hubble to fall to Earth": Major budget for safe disposal. I think it is a clear warning to MAKE THE **** SURE ALL CRITICAL SYSTEMS LIKE A GODAMN BATTERY WON'T FAIL...it just keeps going and going and going.... |
#4
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While reading in the bathroom on Sat, 11 Sep 2004 06:35:16 GMT, I saw
that "US and them" had written: I think it is a clear warning to MAKE THE **** SURE ALL CRITICAL SYSTEMS LIKE A GODAMN BATTERY WON'T FAIL...it just keeps going and going and going.... And precisely how are you going to guarantee 100% reliability? Every space-faring organization has utilized reentry parachutes for decades, and even mid-air retrieval is a proven technique. Batteries fail. New batteries, fresh out of the box, fail. Batteries subjected to space for two years fail. Please describe how it can be predicted whether a particular battery, indistinguishable from all the others in all respects, will fail when the others from the same batch will not. -------------- Beady's Corollary to Occam's Razor: "The likeliest explanation of any phenomenon is almost always the most boring one imaginable." -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#5
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![]() "Larry G" wrote The recent crash of the Genesis spacecraft should serve as a clear warning to NASA administrators who favor allowing Hubble to fall to Earth while only promising to replace the existing orbital observatory with a larger, better one which has yet to see first light. Murphy, who coined the phrase, "If something can go wrong, it will", should be adopted as the patron saint of engineers and planners everywhere. There should be a shrine to him in every hallway of NASA, lest they forget their recent failures - Galileo, numerous Mars craft, and now Genesis. Cheers, Larry G. "Cheers?" What's so "cheery" about that?? -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#6
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![]() US and them wrote: I think it is a clear warning to MAKE THE **** SURE ALL CRITICAL SYSTEMS LIKE A GODAMN BATTERY WON'T FAIL...it just keeps going and going and going.... You've been watching too many bunny commercials: Nothing keeps "going and going and going ...." OTOH -- it would be nice to have it start "going", which the parachute did not. |
#7
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It's exploration, and in exploration things go wrong.
That's never changed. It's in every history book you pick up, those at the front of the line usually pay the price of trying something for the first time, if the toll keeper happens to be collecting that day. That battery system will go through a complete redesign, and the next one won't fail. Genesis and it's accomplishments aren't about the last minute of the flight exclusively, look at what it did, and that it made it home, a battery failing to detonate a charge to deploy the drogue is hardly a failure of a program. Oh, and Spirit and Opportunity are, in and of themselves, enough to justify every systems failure it took to get them there. IMHO, NASA has never looked better than they do now......simply amazing people, with some incredible opportunities for exploration, failure, and success in the coming years. Fantastic! |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Genesis Crash - Problem uncovered in '01??? | Ted A. Nichols II | Amateur Astronomy | 0 | September 8th 04 10:30 PM |
NASA Is Not Giving Up On Hubble! (Forwarded) | Andrew Yee | Astronomy Misc | 2 | May 2nd 04 01:46 PM |
Congressional Resolutions on Hubble Space Telescope | EFLASPO | Amateur Astronomy | 0 | April 1st 04 03:26 PM |
Don't Desert Hubble | Scott M. Kozel | Policy | 46 | February 17th 04 05:33 PM |