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#71
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![]() "JHNichols" wrote in message ... There's a South Park episode lurking in there somewhere. (Cut to image of Kenny impaled on a solar array.) :-D Pat There is an episode were the children are standing at the bus stop before school and MIR falls on Kenny. "Oh, my God, MIR killed Kenny! You *******s!" Found a link to a picture. http://images.southparkstudios.com/d...7_mirkenny.gif |
#72
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#73
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![]() "OM" om@our_blessed_lady_mary_of_the_holy_NASA_researc h_facility.org wrote in message ... On Wed, 19 Oct 2005 16:16:47 -0400, "Jeff Findley" wrote: NASA does appear to be at a decision point here. If we go ahead with the CEV, stick, and SDHLV, it's insuring that NASA will continue with its business as usual approach to manned spaceflight. ...You are, as usual, ignoring the *real* reason that we should build our own boosters instead of depending on ones built by foreign powers and/or corporations: what guarantee is there that they'll always be there and/or will be cooperative when some other geopolitical fiasco occurs? I'm referring to Atlas V and Delta IV. If they're good enough to launch multi billion dollar US spysats, they're good enough for the CEV. I'm not suggesting we buy launches from Europe or the Russians. As Henry likes to point out, NASA typically doesn't like its buget to be spent overseas. It prefers to get everything "international" it can by barter. Jeff -- Remove icky phrase from email address to get a valid address. |
#74
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![]() Damon Hill wrote: It's already been done; the thermal efficiency is terrible. It'd have niche applications and should work pretty well in hot climates, having it's own AC built-in. Wouldn't want to fool with it in a typical North Dakota winter, though. Having a bunch of such cars on the road would have a bit of an exhaust problem: imagine the stream of condensed water they'd leave on a hot, humid day. The low efficiency means the heat exchanger would have to pull a lot of ambient air, and that moisture can't be allowed to freeze on the heat exhanger. It has possibilities, but the motor efficiency needs a lot of improvement and the thermodynamics are inherantly lousy. Okay....but other than those slight problems.... :-) Now, when I do build my vehicle powered by this system, I intend to put the heat exchangers inside of flapping wings that will fold up along the sides of the vehicle's body when not in use. Since this propulsion system is independent of outside air this vehicle will also be able to operate underwater as a submarine, powered by propellors at the stern. Once it flaps itself skyward like an immense bird from my secret mountain lair, these propellors shall also drive it forward in flight. And what shall I do with such a combination car/boat/submarine/aircraft terror? First, I shall revenge myself upon the members of the Weldon Club of Philadelphia for their treacherous destruction of the "Albatross". Then I shall challenge Supercar to an aerial/surface/underwater duel to determine who shall be The Master Of The World, and who shall be the mere puppets of The Master Of The World. :-D Patrick the Conqueror |
#75
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![]() JHNichols wrote: There is an episode were the children are standing at the bus stop before school and MIR falls on Kenny. "Oh, my God, MIR killed Kenny! You *******s!" http://www.cloudbait.com/observatory/kennymir.jpg Pat |
#76
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![]() Neil Gerace wrote: In Dead Like Me's first episode the main character gets killed by a toilet seat falling from Mir. Then she got herself a new career. I still picture that mirror out of Hubble coming out of the sky like a Frisbee from Hell. Pat |
#77
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OM om@our_blessed_lady_mary_of_the_holy_NASA_researc h_facility.org wrote
in : On Wed, 19 Oct 2005 03:17:26 -0500, Damon Hill wrote: Don't anyone _dare_ mention this idea to William Mook! :-) It's already been done; the thermal efficiency is terrible. ...What? The energy transfer, or Mook himself? :-P Yes. ![]() --Damon |
#78
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Pat Flannery wrote in
: Damon Hill wrote: It's already been done; the thermal efficiency is terrible. It'd have niche applications and should work pretty well in hot climates, having it's own AC built-in. Wouldn't want to fool with it in a typical North Dakota winter, though. Having a bunch of such cars on the road would have a bit of an exhaust problem: imagine the stream of condensed water they'd leave on a hot, humid day. The low efficiency means the heat exchanger would have to pull a lot of ambient air, and that moisture can't be allowed to freeze on the heat exhanger. It has possibilities, but the motor efficiency needs a lot of improvement and the thermodynamics are inherantly lousy. Okay....but other than those slight problems.... :-) Now, when I do build my vehicle powered by this system, I intend to put the heat exchangers inside of flapping wings that will fold up along the sides of the vehicle's body when not in use. Since this propulsion system is independent of outside air this vehicle will also be able to operate underwater as a submarine, powered by propellors at the stern. Once it flaps itself skyward like an immense bird from my secret mountain lair, these propellors shall also drive it forward in flight. And what shall I do with such a combination car/boat/submarine/aircraft terror? First, I shall revenge myself upon the members of the Weldon Club of Philadelphia for their treacherous destruction of the "Albatross". Then I shall challenge Supercar to an aerial/surface/underwater duel to determine who shall be The Master Of The World, and who shall be the mere puppets of The Master Of The World. :-D Patrick the Conqueror And his dreaded Cold Duck superweapon. --Damon |
#79
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In article . com,
wrote: Returned how? The CEV isn't big enough to return an SSME. And whoever said use the CEV for that role? Again, *think.* Try to come up with an approach. Think about it from the standpoint of the entepreneur. An entrepreneur? Where is there any place for entrepreneurs in the glorious new Vision of Socialist Exploration? NASA refused to even buy its launches commercially -- something it is *required by law* to do whenever possible -- so what makes you think unqualified scum like entrepreneurs will be allowed anywhere near this precious hardware? There are, say, a dozen SSME's on orbit... No, there are, say, a dozen SSME's in fragments on the Pacific floor. NASA isn't going to leave them in orbit until there is definitely something that can be done with them. There's no justification for the effort of cutting them loose from the stage unless salvage is going to happen, and just storing the stages has most of the problems of storing External Tanks -- you have to get them up to somewhere like the station (whereas they're normally abandoned at lower altitude), you have to make them compatible with long-term storage, you have to worry about drag issues -- and there's no way NASA is going to make the effort without a reason. If they couldn't be bothered doing it for the ET, they won't do it for this hardware either. ...How would *you* go about getting 'em? Not possible. (Technologically, yes. Politically, no.) It has to be a billion-dollar BoeLock project or it won't happen. No reason for me to bother even considering it. ...But here's the difference: the Stick Stage 2 will end up in some sort of orbit. And will then be de-orbited, probably the same way the S-IVB stages of the Skylab crews were de-orbited -- by propellant dump through the engine. NASA is terrified of leaving things in orbit that might fall on somebody and result in lawsuits, or even just increase the debris problem. They already set the precedent with the ET: no spent hardware left in orbit unless someone has specific, credible, NASA-endorsed plans to do something with it, including triple-redundant precautions against unintended reentry. (I'm not kidding about the triple redundancy.) Also, almost certainly the second stage's orbit is going to be very low, because you want to shed its dry mass as soon as you don't need all that thrust. NASA will quite legitimately refuse to accept the payload penalty of putting it in a higher orbit just to facilitate hypothetical future salvage operations. ...talk (calmly) to your Congresscritters and get them to order NASA to either use the stages on orbit, or have them transfer ownership to the highest bidder... NASA's answer will be: "we have no plans to use them in orbit, and there is no *qualified* bidder who we recognize as competent to take them over, so we regretfully must continue to de-orbit them; we'll be delighted to start transferring ownership as soon as there's a qualified user for them, hee hee". People have been through this before, Scott, and there is no reason to expect that the results would be better this time. "Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me." Under (early) Goldin, odd though it might sound, there actually was some small chance that such a radical proposal might get somewhere. Under Griffin, looks like there's no way -- reform is not on his agenda. -- spsystems.net is temporarily off the air; | Henry Spencer mail to henry at zoo.utoronto.ca instead. | |
#80
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In article ,
Pat Flannery wrote: ...And here Dubya wants us to move to a H-cell economy! Somebody should look into vehicles powered by compressed gas boiled off of liquid air. People have looked at LN2-powered vehicles. (You don't want to use liquid air -- it turns itself into LOX as it boils, roughly speaking, and then you've got a nasty fire hazard.) They're not competitive with gasoline vehicles. They probably *could* be competitive with current electric designs, and maybe even with current hydrogen designs, but they're out of fashion politically and there is little funding to be had. If LOX is that cheap, simple liquefied air should be dirt cheap, and the emissions would be non-polluting. It is (cheaper, in fact), and it is (LN2 is only slightly more expensive), and they are. -- spsystems.net is temporarily off the air; | Henry Spencer mail to henry at zoo.utoronto.ca instead. | |
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