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In sci.space.history Pat Flannery wrote:
No, this is not an article from The Onion; this is for real: http://images.spaceref.com/news/2011...-2011-0045.pdf NASA does a in-depth failure analysis of why a 17-year-old office chair broke, including lots of photos of the failed areas and a photomicrograph of the interior crystalline structure of the tack welds, showing how substandard they were. Conclusion: Bad welding style choices combined with metal fatigue from the repeated stresses of people sitting in it finally broke the chair. Luckily, this was caught before any astronauts died, but these failure modes should be addressed in any post-Shuttle-program office chairs purchased by NASA. :-D Well, if you aren't going to be flying anything for a while, it is at least a way to keep one's analysis skills from dulling completely. Or perhaps it was a task given to a new guy as part of training. rick jones -- I don't interest myself in "why". I think more often in terms of "when", sometimes "where"; always "how much." - Joubert these opinions are mine, all mine; HP might not want them anyway... ![]() feel free to post, OR email to rick.jones2 in hp.com but NOT BOTH... |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
NASA Chair Accident Investigation Board (CAIB) | Sylvia Else[_2_] | History | 7 | July 16th 11 03:51 AM |