![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
So will they be one offs yours to keep after your vacation or the
expensive EMUs and Orlans of space agencies? For sure they will be less complicated and hopefully tamper proof. --Chris Vancil |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote in message
oups.com... So will they be one offs yours to keep after your vacation or the expensive EMUs and Orlans of space agencies? For sure they will be less complicated and hopefully tamper proof. --Chris Vancil Tourists don't need to do work in space, so the suits may have no fingers. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Mike Rhino" :
wrote in message oups.com... So will they be one offs yours to keep after your vacation or the expensive EMUs and Orlans of space agencies? For sure they will be less complicated and hopefully tamper proof. --Chris Vancil Tourists don't need to do work in space, so the suits may have no fingers. Or if they insist in being able to pickup and move things have a simple set of waldos or claws that are electrical controlled by the tourist hands slipping into control gloves built in the suit. They would not have the fine control but do they need it? Even a simple eletromagnet at the end of each arm. The tourist can use it to drag themselves along a metal frame or pick (up/down/?) a metal object and let it go but not much else. Earl Colby Pottinger -- I make public email sent to me! Hydrogen Peroxide Rockets, OpenBeos, SerialTransfer 3.0, RAMDISK, BoatBuilding, DIY TabletPC. What happened to the time? http://webhome.idirect.com/~earlcp |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I don't think space tourists should be allowed to spacewalk anyway.
On a tourist ship, the opening of the external hatch should ONLY be done as an emergency measure or else when docking with an orbital hotel or a Lunar cycler. It's not DisneyLand, it's outer space. If space-walking is allowed, the suit will have to be economical and simple and cleaned and re-used after each tourist. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Mike Rhino" wrote in message ... wrote in message oups.com... So will they be one offs yours to keep after your vacation or the expensive EMUs and Orlans of space agencies? For sure they will be less complicated and hopefully tamper proof. --Chris Vancil Tourists don't need to do work in space, so the suits may have no fingers. So what happens if there is a habitat breach and you have to keep your space suit on for a week. How do you **** and crap not to mention eat. Are there tubes for all these things? I know some of them have a water tube for drinking. I don't know about the rest. Somebody doesn't need to tell me oxygen won't last a week or more. I know they will have to replenish each other from a bulk supply. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Rodney Kelp" wrote in message
... "Mike Rhino" wrote in message ... wrote in message oups.com... So will they be one offs yours to keep after your vacation or the expensive EMUs and Orlans of space agencies? For sure they will be less complicated and hopefully tamper proof. --Chris Vancil Tourists don't need to do work in space, so the suits may have no fingers. So what happens if there is a habitat breach and you have to keep your space suit on for a week. How do you **** and crap not to mention eat. Are there tubes for all these things? I know some of them have a water tube for drinking. I don't know about the rest. Somebody doesn't need to tell me oxygen won't last a week or more. I know they will have to replenish each other from a bulk supply. In thinking about it later, it occurred to me that there are two types of space suits -- flight suits and space walk suits. Given that tourists will be flying home with their flight suits, they could keep them if they wanted. For space walk suits, not only are they expensive to make but it is also expensive to ship them to space. I think that they'll be re-used. Space suits without gloves may last longer than standard space suits. If a tourist is hooked to 3 tethers coming from different directions, the flight crew can control his position. You might have two long metal arms with tethers coming off of them and a third tether coming from the air-lock. Tourists could go out one at a time. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Joe Strout wrote:
In article .com, wrote: I don't think space tourists should be allowed to spacewalk anyway. On a tourist ship, the opening of the external hatch should ONLY be done as an emergency measure or else when docking with an orbital hotel or a Lunar cycler. It's not DisneyLand, it's outer space. If space-walking is allowed, the suit will have to be economical and simple and cleaned and re-used after each tourist. I don't think that's a given. Bigelow is projecting a rate of $1M/night in his orbital hotel; at those prices, I can reasonably expect to take home not just the towels, but the spacesuit too. If so, it would help bring economies of scale into spacesuit production... -- You know what to remove, to reply.... |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Rodney Kelp wrote:
"Mike Rhino" wrote in message ... wrote in message oups.com... So will they be one offs yours to keep after your vacation or the expensive EMUs and Orlans of space agencies? For sure they will be less complicated and hopefully tamper proof. --Chris Vancil Tourists don't need to do work in space, so the suits may have no fingers. So what happens if there is a habitat breach and you have to keep your space suit on for a week. How do you **** and crap not to mention eat. Are there tubes for all these things? I know some of them have a water tube for drinking. I don't know about the rest. Somebody doesn't need to tell me oxygen won't last a week or more. I know they will have to replenish each other from a bulk supply. If we have enough commercial spacecraft commonly operating to make this possible to begin with, then it's unlikely that one would have to wait as much as a week for rescue. Even without a dedicated equivalent of a Coast Guard S&R service, someone(s) will always happen to be preparing for launch, and be able to meet the launch window constraints. And a well-designed habitat, like a well designed ship, will be able to close off sections, and keep them habitable, if one of them experiences a major pressurization failure. (This has already been demonstrated on Mir, after all.) Rescue may well come from still functioning portions of this habitat, before it comes from the ground or other locations in space. And there's the matter of evacuation 'lifeboats' as covered in other threads... -- You know what to remove, to reply.... |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Space Access Update #108 1/31/05 | Henry Vanderbilt | Policy | 0 | February 1st 05 05:56 PM |
[Fwd: Top Secret Earth Station Message-Five Star-*****] | Bill Sheppard | Misc | 169 | January 7th 05 09:08 PM |
Lunar base and space manufacturing books for sale | Martin Bayer | Policy | 0 | May 1st 04 04:57 PM |
First Moonwalk? A Russian Perspective | Jason Donahue | Amateur Astronomy | 3 | February 1st 04 03:33 AM |
International Space Station Science - One of NASA's rising stars | Jacques van Oene | Space Station | 0 | December 27th 03 01:32 PM |