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![]() "Bruce Palmer" wrote in message . net... Exeter wrote: "WASHINGTON NASA said Monday that two pieces of hardware were installed incorrectly on the space shuttle Discovery and that such a mistake could have resulted in the loss of the spacecraft and its crew during a landing." http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/...le-probs_x.htm "Welcome home Discovery! First Shuttle landing in over two years! Oh ****!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!" |
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Exeter wrote:
mistake could have resulted in the loss of the spacecraft and its crew during a landing." http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/...le-probs_x.htm Fro what I read, it was some sort of a cogged wheel that could be inserted either way in the mechanism, which allowed the actuators to switch from being port or starboard mounted, and they found one unit with that cogged wheel inserted the wrong way. While this is definitely a "mistake", I have to wonder: Wouldn't the actuator have broken/failed the first time the speed btake was tested/used ? If it lasted 30 flights (and I woudl assume lots of testing during orbiter maintenance) without anyone noticing any performance problem, wouldn't this mean that an inverted gear didn't really make such a big difference ? Secondly, lets say that one side of the speed brake failed and didn't deploy, but the other did. (isn't that worse case scenario ?) At the time the speed brakes are deployed, is the nosewheel already on the ground ? Would an asymetric speed brake veer the shuttle into an aligator swamp, or could it maintain its course on the runway ? Would the decreased braking result in the shuttle overshooting the runway, or would it just have to rely on the parachute and wheel brakes more ? |
#3
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Bruce Palmer wrote:
Exeter wrote: Disturbing on many levels. I have an idea how to expand the "Civilians In Space" program. Screw the teachers, when the CEV is built I propose that the first manned flights include one crewmember from the design and engineering teams. Hell, if they decide to include auto-land functionality in the CEV then the initial manned test flights should be crewed entirely by contractor personnel. -- bp Proud Member of the Human O-Ring Society Since 2003 Igor Sikorski was quoted something like, "There are good designers with good designs, good designers with bad designs, bad designers with good designers and bad designers with bad designs. If designers flew their own designs, there would soon be only good designers with good designs." Pretty cocky, huh? As an experienced amateur aircraft designer, given to occasional fits of introspection, and one who flies his own design, I often wonder where I fit in that list. Richard Lamb http://www.flash.net/~lamb01 For the gory details of the Trials and Tribulations of designing and building a super simple little airplane. |
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Richard Lamb writes:
Igor Sikorski was quoted something like, "There are good designers with good designs, good designers with bad designs, bad designers with good designers and bad designers with bad designs. If designers flew their own designs, there would soon be only good designers with good designs." Pretty cocky, huh? As an experienced amateur aircraft designer, given to occasional fits of introspection, and one who flies his own design, I often wonder where I fit in that list. Since you're still alive, Igor would say your design is good. It says little about whether or not you're a good designer, because bad designers can have good designs. Build and fly a few more experimental aircraft and Igor might say that you're a good designer, if you live through all the test flights. ;-) Jeff -- Remove "no" and "spam" from email address to reply. If it says "This is not spam!", it's surely a lie. |
#5
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![]() I have an idea how to expand the "Civilians In Space" program. Screw the teachers, when the CEV is built I propose that the first manned flights include one crewmember from the design and engineering teams. Hell, if they decide to include auto-land functionality in the CEV then the initial manned test flights should be crewed entirely by contractor personnel. -- bp Proud Member of the Human O-Ring Society Since 2003 You're pretty callus to think that the contractors don't care about the lives of the astronauts. I don't think making a contractor fly first would have any impact into the design and build of the new craft. |
#6
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![]() "John Doe" wrote in message: At the time the speed brakes are deployed, is the nosewheel already on the ground ? Would an asymetric speed brake veer the shuttle into an aligator swamp, or could it maintain its course on the runway ? The speed brakes are used long before landing, with control being provided between Mach 10 to 5. The rudder is still functional when the speedbrake is deployed. -- Sent to you by Ken at Replace "who?" with "b2" to reply by e-mail. |
#7
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jeff findley wrote:
Richard Lamb writes: Igor Sikorski was quoted something like, "There are good designers with good designs, good designers with bad designs, bad designers with good designers and bad designers with bad designs. If designers flew their own designs, there would soon be only good designers with good designs." Pretty cocky, huh? As an experienced amateur aircraft designer, given to occasional fits of introspection, and one who flies his own design, I often wonder where I fit in that list. Since you're still alive, Igor would say your design is good. It says little about whether or not you're a good designer, because bad designers can have good designs. Build and fly a few more experimental aircraft and Igor might say that you're a good designer, if you live through all the test flights. ;-) Jeff -- Remove "no" and "spam" from email address to reply. If it says "This is not spam!", it's surely a lie. I've done eight of 'em in 15 years. Faulty hardware is something we deal with all the time. Most often from service wear. Especially in hard use. Sometimes for maintenance errors. Occassionally from design faults, metal fatugue, overstress, etc. It just comes along for free when you mave to make complez machinery that is light enough to fly. But even a Boeing 7^7 is only a pale glimmer of the complexity involved in designing and building something on the level of the Orbiter. As much as I know about airplanes, I _know_ I'm not qualified to question whether some system may or may not have been needed. Especially on the first design - ever. Forgive me if you can, but this whole thread reads like a Monday morning criticism by someone with too much detailed knowledge about one tiny piece of a huge 3D puzzle. But that's just me. I could be wrong. Richard |
#8
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![]() "Bruce Palmer" How many other situations exist that nobody knows about? A few hundred. Why can't anyone pinpoint the reason no inspection was previously done? Was it a requirement that was overlooked? The thing was assembled wrong. It was not obvious to casual observation. One day a guy was looking at the tech manual and the assembly and said "Hey, wait a minute....." I propose that the first manned flights include one crewmember from the design and engineering teams. If this scheme were implemented, you'd still have a few parts put in backwards. |
#9
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Bruce Palmer wrote in
. net: If this was the case with Columbia would it have made a difference? "... in unusual situations such as an emergency landing, an actuator in a crucial position could fail if it had upside-down gears." In Columbia's case it probably wouldn't have made a difference given the severity of damange to the left wing, but nobody really knows. Nope, it can be said for sure it would not have made a difference. Columbia broke up at Mach 18, long before the RSBs become active. Last but not least... since "... the No. 4 actuator doesn't bear a particularly heavy load", and Discovery has flown many times without incident, it makes you wonder if the #4 actuator was necessary at all from a design standpoint. It is, if you want a design that has *margin* in it. -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
#10
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Richard Lamb wrote in
: But even a Boeing 7^7 is only a pale glimmer of the complexity involved in designing and building something on the level of the Orbiter. Actually, Boeing's modern 7*7 designs are comparable in complexity to the orbiter. The biggest difference is that modern airliners have several design generations behind them, so their designers have a pretty good idea what works and what doesn't. The orbiter is still essentially a first-generation design. If it's balky and temperamental, it's mainly because its designers did *not* have a prior experience base for reusable spacecraft. -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
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