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#11
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![]() "Jeff Findley" wrote in message ... An even better example might be in air refueling. The human workload there is pretty high. You've got at least two pilots and a boom operator who all have to be "on their toes" during the entire operation. That's a really hard task to automate. I'm not sure if it's ever been done in an automated or teleoperated fashion. I wonder if the USAF has experimented with in air refueling of UAV's... Looks like this has been done as a research program: http://www.air-attack.com/news/news_...apability.html Makes me wonder how much work is left before this sort of capability could be deployed in the field. Imagine UAV's that only have to land for maintenance. Cool. Jeff -- "Many things that were acceptable in 1958 are no longer acceptable today. My own standards have changed too." -- Freeman Dyson |
#12
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Jorge R. Frank wrote:
HTV was never baselined for Node 3. It will be berthed at Node 2 nadir - just like it has always been planned to be. Would Shuttle be allowed to dock on node2 while HTV is at node2 nadir ? I take it that if "yes", it would however prevent the shuttle from delivering an MPLM or any other module since HTV would not provide any clearance to get stuff out of the cargo bay ? (I realise that this is now moot since it is ulikely the shuttle will be flying by the time HTV materialises) |
#13
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On Dec 8, 4:43*pm, "Jeff Findley" wrote:
Lost, but perhaps not for long. *Space-X's Dragon plans to use CBM's and should provide something like 7 to 10 cubic meters of cargo return capability. Notice that I mentioned ATV and Dragon in the same sentence and then connected them both to the ability to move large cargo via the CBMs. While Dragon can return cargo, it's not on the same level as STS/ MPLM. -Mike |
#14
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On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 23:01:44 -0600, "Jorge R. Frank"
wrote: Probably Node 1 nadir now that Node 3 won't be there (Node 3 is now baselined for Node 1 port, opposite Quest). HTV was never baselined for Node 3. It will be berthed at Node 2 nadir - just like it has always been planned to be. Has that been reconsidered and reapproved since 107? I'd think NASA would have a bit of the butterflies letting HTV loiter that close to an Orion parked at Node 2, which will always be the case once Orion starts flying. Brian |
#15
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Brian Thorn wrote in
news ![]() On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 23:01:44 -0600, "Jorge R. Frank" wrote: Probably Node 1 nadir now that Node 3 won't be there (Node 3 is now baselined for Node 1 port, opposite Quest). HTV was never baselined for Node 3. It will be berthed at Node 2 nadir - just like it has always been planned to be. Has that been reconsidered and reapproved since 107? I'd think NASA would have a bit of the butterflies letting HTV loiter that close to an Orion parked at Node 2, which will always be the case once Orion starts flying. Regardless of where the HTV gets berthed, the capture box is in the same location - under the JEM PM, because that's where the retroreflectors are. Then the SSRMS captures the HTV and maneuvers it from the capture box to the berthing location. Berthing HTV to Node 2 nadir therefore incurs no higher risk to the Orion than any other location, since HTV wouldn't be "hovering" near the Orion, but rather would be under control of the SSRMS by then. |
#16
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Jorge R. Frank wrote:
Regardless of where the HTV gets berthed, the capture box is in the same location - under the JEM PM, because that's where the retroreflectors are. Then the SSRMS captures the HTV and maneuvers it from the capture box to the berthing location. Is it physically possible for the arm to capture HTV under node2, and move it under the truss to node-1 ? Which PDGF on the station would allow such a movemenbt with adequate reach without the truss impeding the movement ? |
#17
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![]() wrote in message ... On Dec 8, 4:43 pm, "Jeff Findley" wrote: Lost, but perhaps not for long. Space-X's Dragon plans to use CBM's and should provide something like 7 to 10 cubic meters of cargo return capability. Notice that I mentioned ATV and Dragon in the same sentence and then connected them both to the ability to move large cargo via the CBMs. While Dragon can return cargo, it's not on the same level as STS/ MPLM. True, but my argument is that it is a desire to return an entire experiment rack to the earth more so than a hard requiremnet. What scientists on the ground want is their results back. Sometimes results can be sent back as digital data via radio wave, which costs zero downmass. Other times results can be sent back as material/biological/whatever samples which are the true end result of the experiment. While Dragon will not fill the desire to return all used experiment racks to earth, it will do a much better job at the requirement of returning experimental results to earth. ATV, HTV, and Progress can be used to remove garbage from ISS, and HTV does have a CBM on it, so it can be used to dispose of entire experiment racks. The US side of ISS need not suffer the same problems that Mir had with large amounts of broken equipment sitting around in modules simply because of hatch size limitations, Progress limitations, and the like. Jeff -- "Many things that were acceptable in 1958 are no longer acceptable today. My own standards have changed too." -- Freeman Dyson |
#18
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Jeff Findley wrote:
True, but my argument is that it is a desire to return an entire experiment rack to the earth more so than a hard requiremnet. The whole point of developping the ability to return racks was to enable experiments that would have required the rack be returned. Just because they haven't yet scheduled such experiments doesn't mean that the need wouldn't have become "hard requirement" later on. And remember that some experiments may have devices that are too big to fit through the russian hatches, so they couldn't be disposed of. Remember that while so far, "experiment" has been a term associated with watching crystals grow in a test tube, the real experiments in the station are getting systems to work reliably. Didn't the russians hitch a ride on a shuttle to return a failed Elektron unit after a replacement had been sent by Progress ? If you have a failed unit, and you are required to disassemble it to fit in a return vehicle, then the act of disassembling it might disrupt the conditions and skew any analysis done on earth when the unit is examined . BTW, JAXA has a few pages in english for HTV: http://iss.jaxa.jp/en/htv/operation/ It mentions first launch in 2009. But the rocked is still under development. Anyone hae some background on the readyness of that rocket ? Often, such web sites were built many years ago and not really updated with new schedules. |
#19
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![]() "John Doe" wrote in message ... Jeff Findley wrote: True, but my argument is that it is a desire to return an entire experiment rack to the earth more so than a hard requiremnet. The whole point of developping the ability to return racks was to enable experiments that would have required the rack be returned. Just because they haven't yet scheduled such experiments doesn't mean that the need wouldn't have become "hard requirement" later on. In other words, this was a capability in search of a requirement. Because the shuttle and MPLM's (or something like them) were assumed to be available until the end of the life of ISS, the ability to return entire ISS racks to earth was a no brainer to implement. However, this assumption has changed, so it's time to re-evaluate whether this was really a hard requirement or just a desire. I have this sort of argument with our "product marketing" people all the time when I'm told to implment some bit of functionality. If I don't know of any customer who needs this functionality, I'll tell them, show me a real customer/user workflow that requires this functionality. I'm not going to spend weeks, months, or even years developing new functionality without a real customer workflow. In years past when we've implemented such capability without a real user workflow, all we've ended up with is unused functionality which doesn't make the company money. And remember that some experiments may have devices that are too big to fit through the russian hatches, so they couldn't be disposed of. Again, HTV will take care of disposal. Disposal of hardware is a requirement which is separate from returning mass to earth. Shuttle/MPLM is a solution to both problems, but that does NOT mean that the same vehicle has to do both requirements simultaneously. Remember that while so far, "experiment" has been a term associated with watching crystals grow in a test tube, the real experiments in the station are getting systems to work reliably. Didn't the russians hitch a ride on a shuttle to return a failed Elektron unit after a replacement had been sent by Progress ? True, because they wanted it back on earth for failure analysis and repair since Elektron's are rare hardware. Such a requirement could be fulfilled by Space-X's Dragon. But not every bit of failed hardware has to be returned to earth. A failed laptop on ISS is arguably far cheaper to replace with a new one than it is to return the failed one and refurbish it. It would also be foolish to require that every failed light bulb be returned to earth. You might want a couple returned for failure analysis, but that's about it. If you have a failed unit, and you are required to disassemble it to fit in a return vehicle, then the act of disassembling it might disrupt the conditions and skew any analysis done on earth when the unit is examined . Then NASA had better hope that Dragon works and is available soon, hadn't they? BTW, JAXA has a few pages in english for HTV: http://iss.jaxa.jp/en/htv/operation/ It mentions first launch in 2009. But the rocked is still under development. Anyone hae some background on the readyness of that rocket ? Often, such web sites were built many years ago and not really updated with new schedules. I'm not sure what the current schedule is. Even NASA websites are sometimes bad about updating such information. The Mitsubishi website says first launch in 2008. :-P That said, you'd think that JAXA would want to get it flying sometime soon, considering that the JEM is now in orbit. When ISS is expanded to a six person crew, I'd think that they'd want HTV flying a.s.a.p. :-) Jeff -- "Many things that were acceptable in 1958 are no longer acceptable today. My own standards have changed too." -- Freeman Dyson |
#20
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hello,
somebody have news from HTV or HIIB ? link or blog ? i have nothing news since 08/2008, from jaxa http://fr.youtube.com/watch?v=wqAWYKMA9R8 Thanks |
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