![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Space station benefits from a wide opening
As Discovery's crew delivers cargo, big doorways make the job easier http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13755857/ By James Oberg, NBC News space analyst // Special to MSNBC July 7, 2006 HOUSTON - Anybody on Earth who's ever moved into a new apartment and jammed a sofa into a too-narrow doorway appreciates the value of having a passageway that's big enough for your stuff. And that goes double in space, where the option of going outside and looking for another entrance isn't practical. Aboard the international space station, astronauts are now unloading several tons of supplies and equipment from the Leonardo cargo module, which was brought up on the space shuttle Discovery. They're also transferring a year's worth of trash and recyclable equipment into the module's vacated slots. In the process, they're using a particular element of the space station that usually gets overlooked amid all the attention to more sexy features such as solar panels, air locks and oxygen generators. It's called the "hatch," and it just doesn't get any respect - despite the fact that its 4-foot-plus width gives the international space station capabilities that are unprecedented in 30 years of orbital operations, going back to NASA's Skylab and Russia's earliest outposts. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jim Oberg wrote:
Space station benefits from a wide opening As Discovery's crew delivers cargo, big doorways make the job easier http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13755857/ By James Oberg, NBC News space analyst // Special to MSNBC July 7, 2006 HOUSTON - Anybody on Earth who's ever moved into a new apartment and jammed a sofa into a too-narrow doorway appreciates the value of having a passageway that's big enough for your stuff. And that goes double in space, where the option of going outside and looking for another entrance isn't practical. Aboard the international space station, astronauts are now unloading several tons of supplies and equipment from the Leonardo cargo module, which was brought up on the space shuttle Discovery. They're also transferring a year's worth of trash and recyclable equipment into the module's vacated slots. In the process, they're using a particular element of the space station that usually gets overlooked amid all the attention to more sexy features such as solar panels, air locks and oxygen generators. It's called the "hatch," and it just doesn't get any respect - despite the fact that its 4-foot-plus width gives the international space station capabilities that are unprecedented in 30 years of orbital operations, going back to NASA's Skylab and Russia's earliest outposts. What was the width of the hatch then? Did running into a problem with it cause them to enlarge it? |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Vandar wrote: Jim Oberg wrote: Space station benefits from a wide opening What was the width of the hatch then? Did running into a problem with it cause them to enlarge it? Should make it easier when the large, plasma HDTV arrives. ;-) Rusty |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Vandar" wrote in message ... Jim Oberg wrote: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13755857/ In the process, they're using a particular element of the space station that usually gets overlooked amid all the attention to more sexy features such as solar panels, air locks and oxygen generators. It's called the "hatch," and it just doesn't get any respect - despite the fact that its 4-foot-plus width gives the international space station capabilities that are unprecedented in 30 years of orbital operations, going back to NASA's Skylab and Russia's earliest outposts. What was the width of the hatch then? Did running into a problem with it cause them to enlarge it? 29 inches on Skylab (the size of the Apollo docking tunnel). Didn't really give problems back then since Skylab was launched with everything aboard. But they knew for ISS they'd need to move bigger things in and out. Note the above is only an excerpt. Read the entire URL for details. Btw, nice little article Jim. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Btw, nice little article Jim.
True. Although as I understand it, the main reason why the 80 cm and 107 cm docking tunnels have been so slow to die is that the larger hatches add to the mass (well, the 130 cm CBM hatch doesn't do docking but even as for 80 vs 107, the latter has not replaced the former). |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
thanks -- i'm getting some good feedback off-line too,
all helpful if (when) it becomes a book chapter!! |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Vandar wrote:
What was the width of the hatch then? Did running into a problem with it cause them to enlarge it? The CBM was designed from the experience on MIR where the smaller russian hatches made it very hard to load and unload large components. The CBM hatch was designed to be wide enough to allow transfer of whole racks. This means that when an experiemnt has concluded, they can now return the whole rack to earth and not clutter the station. Once shuttle is retired, this will no longer be possible and many items currently loaded onto the ISS via the CBM hatches will have no way to be unloaded from the station without some serious disassenbly/breaking up into smaller parts. So I guess they will have to send some acétylene torches to the ISS so they can break up components so they can fit through the smaller russian hatches. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 07 Jul 2006 22:19:15 -0400, John Doe wrote:
Once shuttle is retired, this will no longer be possible and many items currently loaded onto the ISS via the CBM hatches will have no way to be unloaded from the station without some serious disassenbly/breaking up into smaller parts. So I guess they will have to send some acétylene torches to the ISS so they can break up components so they can fit through the smaller russian hatches. Not so. CxV... "http://www.transformspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=projects.view&workid=CCD3097A-96B6-175C-97F15F270F2B83AA" Note the square CBM hatch in the illustration. Apex... http://www.spacehab.com/sfs/apex.htm Note the square CBM hatch in the illustration. HTV... http://www.nasda.go.jp/projects/rock...#configuration Note the square CBM hatch in the illustration. SpaceX Dragon... http://images.spaceref.com/news/2006...ISS.Asm6.m.jpg Note where it's berthed. Brian |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Brian Thorn wrote: CxV... "http://www.transformspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=projects.view&workid=CCD3097A-96B6-175C-97F15F270F2B83AA" Note the square CBM hatch in the illustration. What exactly are those two spacecraft in the background supposed to be? They look like vastly scaled-up Atlas ICBM warheads with hatches on the back. Pat |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 08 Jul 2006 06:58:44 -0500, Pat Flannery
wrote: "http://www.transformspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=projects.view&workid=CCD3097A-96B6-175C-97F15F270F2B83AA" What exactly are those two spacecraft in the background supposed to be? They look like vastly scaled-up Atlas ICBM warheads with hatches on the back. I think those are the cargo version. Crew version is the one with the solar panels. Brian |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
MSNBC (JimO) on value of 'big door' on ISS | Jim Oberg | Space Shuttle | 51 | July 28th 06 04:50 PM |
MSNBC (JimO) - Hubble debate -- a lot of sound and fury | JimO | Space Shuttle | 148 | April 28th 04 06:39 PM |
MSNBC (JimO) - Hubble debate -- a lot of sound and fury | JimO | Policy | 139 | April 28th 04 06:39 PM |
MSNBC (JimO) - Hubble debate -- a lot of sound and fury | JimO | Misc | 83 | April 17th 04 04:34 AM |
MSNBC (JimO) Scoops more Inside-NASA Shuttle Documents | James Oberg | Space Station | 114 | October 24th 03 12:42 AM |