![]() |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
For the first time in years, I watched a launch live last night. In the
last six months or so, DirecTV added NASA TV to the CONUS transponders at 101W so you can watch it without access to a second dish pointed at 119W or an elliptical multi-sat dish. It was also the first time I've ever seen a Soyuz launch live and certainly longer than a 10 second new snippet. It was an interesting thing to watch, especially as compared to watching a Shuttle launch. First, I have to say that it was great to see live, in-cabin video all the way through the sequence. How cool is that? I don't know if NASA had been doing that prior to the post-Columbia stand-down. DirecTV didn't give me easy access to NASA TV and I haven't seen a live launch broadcast since probably 1993. Certainly, the in-cabin video (with two camera angles, no less) gives a much better feel for how cramped everything is in there and a better idea of what the experience feels like: you can see the vibrations as the crew shakes and jitters in their restraints, you can see the lighting change in the cabin as the craft climbs and you can see the sudden jolt at engine cutoff and staging. Second, I was fascinated to see the typically Russian, typically pragmatic solution to human factors issues regarding use of controls during acceleration. Rather than cramping the crew up against the displays and controls, or creating some Rube Goldberg-esque contraption to move the panel forward and backwards as necessary, or requiring the crew to lift g-heavy arms up, they furnish the crew with aluminum pointers fitted with handles at one end and what looks like little rubber no-slip caps at the other end and the crew use those to manipulate switches and buttons during powered flight. Hilarious and effective, simultaneously. Third, I was interested to see a little plastic figure of Felix the Cat dangling from a string off the control panel. Apparently it's the favorite of the child of Soyuz Commander Somthingorother Whatsisnamov. I can't imagine NASA allowing Eileen Collins to do the same, for instance, although I have an amused mental image of one of the Original Seven hanging a set of fuzzy dice off the dash of a Mercury or Gemini capsule, or of Pete Conrad sticking a Hula Girl on the LM controls for landing. :-) Fourth, when the camera cut back to Russian Mission Control in Korolev, I was amused to see nascent Russian capitalism at work - all along the floor below the big wall of display screen were fairly large, rectangular pieces of posterboard with advertising all on them. I recognized a big HP logo on one and another for Omega watches and timepieces. Again, I can't imagine NASA ever doing the same. Anyway, the whole thing was very interesting and informative. I'm very much looking forward to seeing the next STS launch (someday) and looking for the contrasts. -- Herb Schaltegger, B.S., J.D. "Never underestimate the power of human stupidity." ~ Robert A. Heinlein http://www.angryherb.net |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message ,
Herb Schaltegger writes Second, I was fascinated to see the typically Russian, typically pragmatic solution to human factors issues regarding use of controls during acceleration. Rather than cramping the crew up against the displays and controls, or creating some Rube Goldberg-esque contraption to move the panel forward and backwards as necessary, or requiring the crew to lift g-heavy arms up, they furnish the crew with aluminum pointers fitted with handles at one end and what looks like little rubber no-slip caps at the other end and the crew use those to manipulate switches and buttons during powered flight. Hilarious and effective, simultaneously. "Typically Russian"? That sounds like the "swizzle stick" the Mercury astronauts used http://www2.primushost.com/~dskern/spacetrivia.txt http://library.osu.edu/sites/archives/glenn/flight/summary.htm In the chapter "Seven Miles of Wire - and a Swizzle Stick" in "Into Orbit" John Glenn writes 'It is about ten inches long, has a hook on the end of it for pulling at levers and a stub for pushing at buttons. You grasp it in your glove if you know you are not going to be able to reach something with your fingers. We call it, naturally, a swizzle stick". Apparently Gemini also used one so one pilot could reach all the controls. http://wikisource.org/wiki/NASA_Project_Gemini_Familiarization_Manual Have any of them survived, and if not, are there any pictures? -- What have they got to hide? Release the ESA Beagle 2 report. Remove spam and invalid from address to reply. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Jonathan Silverlight wrote: "Typically Russian"? That sounds like the "swizzle stick" the Mercury astronauts used http://www2.primushost.com/~dskern/spacetrivia.txt http://library.osu.edu/sites/archives/glenn/flight/summary.htm In the chapter "Seven Miles of Wire - and a Swizzle Stick" in "Into Orbit" John Glenn writes 'It is about ten inches long, has a hook on the end of it for pulling at levers and a stub for pushing at buttons. You grasp it in your glove if you know you are not going to be able to reach something with your fingers. We call it, naturally, a swizzle stick". Now that you mention it, I do seem to recall reading something about that once long ago. Apparently Gemini also used one so one pilot could reach all the controls. http://wikisource.org/wiki/NASA_Project_Gemini_Familiarization_Manual That I did not know, never having studied the tech docs on Gemini at any length. Have any of them survived, and if not, are there any pictures? That would be interesting, wouldn't it? To clarify my comment, my perspective is as a designer who's had to design to NASA's somewhat more modern (note: I didn't say "better") NASA-STD-3000 human factors design requirements. We'd never have gotten away with that when I was a working engineer. But hey, the stick works and it was interesting to see it used - several times - during the launch. I just wonder what current NASA folks think about it, too? -- Herb Schaltegger, B.S., J.D. "Never underestimate the power of human stupidity." ~ Robert A. Heinlein http://www.angryherb.net |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Herb Schaltegger wrote: To clarify my comment, my perspective is as a designer who's had to design to NASA's somewhat more modern (note: I didn't say "better") NASA-STD-3000 human factors design requirements. We'd never have gotten away with that when I was a working engineer. But hey, the stick works and it was interesting to see it used - several times - during the launch. I just wonder what current NASA folks think about it, too? That wasn't the only time the Soviets/Russians used a stick to perform an important function; on the BMP-1 Infantry Combat Vehicle, a "Sagger" antitank missile could be slid out of a hatch on the turret roof onto a launcher rail that was mounted over the vehicle's 73 mm gun; then the crew would use a stick to unfold the missile's tail fins by reaching up through the hatch....handsome is as handsome does, I guess. I think this was done the same way on the BMD-1 Airborne Combat Vehicle also. Pat |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Herb Schaltegger wrote in message ...
Third, I was interested to see a little plastic figure of Felix the Cat dangling from a string off the control panel. Apparently it's the favorite of the child of Soyuz Commander Somthingorother Whatsisnamov. The toys are a longstanding tradition AFAIK, giving the crew a low tech zero-g indicator, and a nice memento at the same time. I recall one of the ISS taxi crews had fuzzy dice, which seemed particularly appropriate. Surely the R7 is the ultimate early 60s hotrod... For those who missed the live broadcast, a fairly low quality stream, without english commentary can be found he http://www.energia.ru:8080/ramgen/iss/14-10-04/launch.rm |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 In article , Kevin Willoughby wrote: Find a theater playing the 3-D IMAX Space Station movie. The two high points are the Shuttle launch and the Soyuz launch. Lots of interesting contrasts, including the (by NASA standards) casual attitude about having visitors on the launch pad shortly before liftoff. I saw it at the NASM about two years ago. The high point for me was watching one of the assembly crews (can't remember which mission) install the ECLSS ARS rack . . . It's full of stuff I helped design and/or procure and qualify. :-) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.4 (Darwin) iD8DBQFBcIWZhyAAKqvGGXwRAgCNAKCOSNmWM/jpDeR9leAfW0NZZGtP7ACfa+gC 5SJ4dDfBSvSZp2L4kfoZq84= =YF4A -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- Herb Schaltegger, B.S., J.D. "Never underestimate the power of human stupidity." ~ Robert A. Heinlein http://www.angryherb.net |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , Kevin Willoughby
wrote: In article , lid says... Anyway, the whole thing was very interesting and informative. I'm very much looking forward to seeing the next STS launch (someday) and looking for the contrasts. Find a theater playing the 3-D IMAX Space Station movie. The two high points are the Shuttle launch and the Soyuz launch. Lots of interesting contrasts, including the (by NASA standards) casual attitude about having visitors on the launch pad shortly before liftoff. Y'know what's always fascinated _me_ about the Soyuz launches is the almost total lack of any kind of nearby free-standing gantry or service tower at liftoff. It looks like pretty much everything related to that job/s is lowered away from the booster, leaving it pretty much standing alone on the steppes with just the hold-down arms and that one long arm whose function I still can't quite figure out (emergency crew egress?). So, at liftoff, the visual effect is almost like watching an old Redstone launch; I kept asking, what the hell's holding the thing up? As a comparison, here's a couple of launches of boosters which are, iirc, _roughly_ equivalent to the Soyuz booster: Mercury/Atlas (Friendship 7) http://images.jsc.nasa.gov/lores/S62-00337.jpg Gemini/Titan (Gemini VII) http://images.jsc.nasa.gov/lores/S65-61628.jpg -- "All over, people changing their votes, along with their overcoats; if Adolf Hitler flew in today, they'd send a limousine anyway!" --the clash. __________________________________________________ _________________ Mike Flugennock, flugennock at sinkers dot org Mike Flugennock's Mikey'zine, dubya dubya dubya dot sinkers dot org |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Derek Lyons wrote: The same thing that has held up virtually *every* booster to date. The sit on their tails. Not the R-7 or its derivatives. Pat |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Space Calendar - December 23, 2004 | [email protected] | Misc | 0 | December 23rd 04 04:03 PM |
Space Calendar - August 27, 2004 | Ron | Astronomy Misc | 14 | August 30th 04 11:09 PM |
Space Calendar - November 26, 2003 | Ron Baalke | History | 2 | November 28th 03 09:21 AM |
Space Calendar - November 26, 2003 | Ron Baalke | Misc | 1 | November 28th 03 09:21 AM |
Space Calendar - October 24, 2003 | Ron Baalke | History | 0 | October 24th 03 04:38 PM |