Actually, there are restrictions when it comes to filming someone putting on a spacesuit. You can't actually film them putting it on because of international laws, so most likely it was not worth the effort.
I dnno I was on the ksp subreddit about 3 months ago, initially this thread we were discussing was about the hypersonic runway plane someone built, somewhere along the line, this one particular comment train went from that to kerbal blood iron content to horseshoe crabs to orcs from warhammer 40k...im still not sure how that happened..
Frost Chain I dnno I was on the ksp subreddit about 3 months ago, initially this thread we were discussing was about the hypersonic runway plane someone built, somewhere along the line, this one particular comment train went from that to kerbal blood iron content to horseshoe crabs to orcs from warhammer 40k...im still not sure how that happened.. Read more
Just watching this is amazing. We get to see all of the technology astronauts use in space ( even if it totally looks 60’s ). I love these types of videos
the Movie 2021 was more real looking then the bullshit they just sold you...but hey 95% of American's think one guy shot Kennedy so Guess they'll buy any bullshit story after that...and don't even get me started on all the video of that shame election in 2020 little red wagons and Box Trucks and blocking windows so no one could see..yeah Vote in 2024 shure they won't steal that one eather...
I'd like to know more about the kind of insulation they use to shield the astronauts from the space around them. The way the gloves and the lower torso attach, are things that I would have liked to see.
If you laugh you sub! Bud, you have no idea what you’re talking about. Low earth orbit is still space. Also what does the ISS being in earths gravitational pull have to do with anything? All the planets in the solar system is under the gravitational pull by the sun.
It's clear by reading some of the posts, that some "smart" people making comments about the vacuum of space, and a vacuum on earth don't understand the significant difference between the two.
@@michealvillegas1766 yea man it was Alfred Hitchcock but the thing is that he insisted on filming on the actual location. And they would've gotten away with it if it wasn't for those meddling loonies on the internet who fall for one of the dumbest conspiracy theories of them all.
Much worse than just babies. Frauds and parasites is more accurate. The ISS is located (they say) in the thermosphere, which means these suits are subject to blast furnace temperatures. Unfortunately for NASA, there is no known material that thin anywhere near capable of that kind of insulation and protection.
best looking space suit ever, its my favorite, the EVA's should of been replaced when the space shuttle program ended and moved on to something less bulky now, but I still like these type of suits, they seem very futuristic to me.
Tory Knotts That is why they got such a good shot of the first footprint on the Moon......the Sun was too bright to look anywhere else but your feet, without the visor blast shield down! I did not notice the Sun going less bright....so they must have had the blast shield visor down all the time? But I did not see them use it at all! Strange that. The storage of all their stuff...must have been a nightmare......can you imagine the amount of extra stuff that was blown away when they crashed the space vehicle into the Moons surface......How many millions of $s ....Oh I suppose about a hundred or so millions of $s.....money well spent there then!
Keep in mind that the astronaut is also travelling around that speed. So it really would only be travelling at the difference in velocity between the astronaut and the object. Still, getting hit would be extremely dangerous and probably fatal.
Sorry to reply to you 1 month later but here: The suit we see here is a space walk suit. The one of SpaceX is NOT a space walk suit, it is only used when in the spacecraft to get basic protection (fire, smoke, debris, depressurization).
Actually, no. The gold visor is basically tinting to cut the glare of unfiltered sunlight. The hard visor is simply a shade, and it doesn't come all the way down to block the eyes.
Well, i remember seeing in one of the Hadfield videos that their "camelpack" (basically very large bottle of water to keep them hydrated) was put inside of a Kevlar bag, i wouldn't be surprised if the suit itself has something similar in it.
+gpgpgpgp1000 I don´t think she had a liquid cooling garment either... but the aesthetics of Sandy floating in zero-g in panties makes up for the lack of reality :-)
Depends on how big debris is and what is it speed..But for really small fragments like graind of sand in orbital speed of 8 km/sec it would protect you..anything larger-you will have bad day..
watched this because I wanted to know if an astronaut can get into a spacesuit with out help like they do in many movies. I guess one could get into it solo but would take a lot more time with less certainty they've put it on correctly and without leaks. They mention an assistant will help join the two halves of the suit once the astronaut/specialist is in both pieces. But spacesuits will continue to evolve.
Geoffrey Harford I've since done a little research and the pressure needed to inflate these suits is only a very little apparently! From all the movies it seems people would explode but apparently it's more like a slow seep of bodily fluids! They were even working on some sort of fabric that just creates a pressure on your body without the need for a pressurised suit but upon further investigation I don't think it was from a credible source but interesting to look into.
Not exactly puddle more like clump together until it becomes a large distraction for the person when it randomly floats around the suit while also keeping the person comfortable
because of surface tension...and because of the air flow of the suit. The water would basically stick to them and then be moved around the suit until it got towards their feet where the air does not reach I would imagine.
I think the biggest danger would be micrometeorites, basically space dust and space gravel traveling at fast orbital velocities, that smack into you like a bullet, so the question is will the suit protect you then?
the silent farmer they have food energy bars inside their helmets that you pull out from a pouch with your teeth, they also have a water pack in there with a straw that you drink with
I don't believe SpaceX suits are for spacewalking (EVA). Those would be comparable to the orange LES (Launch Escape Suit) or ACES (Advanced Crew Escape Suit).
Actually, given the needs of the environment, it's probably aircraft-grade lexan rated for bird-strikes. Remember that the space suit is a pressure suit and has to withstand a certain amount of pressure in order to keep the wearer alive.
@@gearycloward9613Not entirely certain of the actual amount. Air pressure at sea level is 14 lbs/square inch, but I think a pressure suit for space use is 6-8 psi? I might be off a bit.
He knows he is lying about everything that comes out of his mouth. Space is fake. We never went to the moon. Earth is flat. Do some research if you don't believe me.
AKA SURFSTYLEY lmao you’re so stupid. The retards make you think the earth is flat which is so wrong. Do you research before spreading false lies. The earth is square
Don't understand why it needs to be a secret. It's not like if someone steals the design they're going to piss off to Mars to stick their own flag down.
Also, if you are in the buoyancy lab practicing, gravity is still there, so it will puddle. But in space, sweat from your legs would be in your lower legs, because it is hard for the water to float anywhere else in the suit.
Ask yourself why they don't demonstrate what happens to a real human in a suit when inside a vacuum chamber. That MUST be one major phase for the testing. So why do they not even mention such a chamber, such an acid test? Not just here but ANYWHERE. You can't find such a video, despite the fact that the need for such a test is beyond obvious.
Why no MENTION of a test? Nobody so much as says, "They're tested too". Why not? Because these ridiculous "space suits" are a joke. The pressurization issues in any absolute vacuum would be ASTRONOMICAL. And the temperatures would be higher than a blast furnace. But hey, no need to see what happens to a real human in a suit when inside a vacuum, let alone a super-heated vacuum chamber? Absolute hogwash. For a look at the incredible power of a vacuum, search youtube for a video of the pipe-lifting tool able to grip and hold 30,000 pounds. The ability of a suit to withstand such an IMMENSELY powerful vacuum MUST be one major phase for the testing. A vacuum would pull with the force of an explosion on every square inch of that suit. Not to mention the non-existent insulation and cooling system supposedly capable of keeping the inside of a suit at room temperature despite surrounding ISS thermosphere temperatures of a BLAST FURNACE
Bob Margossian: Think. Surrounded by an absolute vacuum, the force pulling at every square inch of a space suit would have more pulling power than the force of a street pipe lifting tool. And those tools are capable of lifting 30,000 pounds, ie. 15 US Tons. Search youtube for such pipe lifting rigs.
Then search for the videos of a little vacuum jar with a balloon inside. What happens to that balloon is just a miniature, low-power example of what would happen to a space suit the instant it was immersed in the massive power of an absolute vacuum. Again: THINK.
This shows up one of the many impossibilities in the Apollo missions, two astronauts getting suited up in the Lander, the space of a phone box each, with all those controls and cables around. Shame that so much of this space stuff is for gullible children, while the real stuff is cool
There can be smoke but obviously it wouldn't be floating upward, it would float in a spheroid kind of distribution - and since fire is extremely rare in vacuum it would be escaping from somewhere and tend to go in a cone shape away from the source.
Mike Cammiso The ventilation system works by blowing fresh air into the helmet and sucking spent air out the wrists and ankles. Any loose liquid would be blown by the resulting wind toward the outlets, probably in the legs since it's a straighter shot than the arms.
The suit has many layers for controlling heat and providing protection, but because the velocity of anything that might hit you is so high , not for anything more than really small stuff, , something bigger than the size of a grain of sand might punch a hole in the suit
An astronaut on a space walk is also moving at 17,000 mph. The astronaut and the space debris are both orbiting in the same direction, meaning the speed is a bit cancelled out. The suit still is by no means armor, but you are making him think the astronaut is stationary, and the debris is going to hit him while he is stationary, which isnt at all what would happen.
Yes and no. If the object is in the same orbit as you, it would just bounce off since you are both moving at nearly the same speed. If that object was not in your orbit, say falling to earth for example, it would pass right through you without even flinching. That piece of debris would be moving at 17,000mph at least. Nothing can protect you from that. Space debris is very well documented, and they know how to watch out for it.
Actually, they're not really secret. The guy and Norm are bantering and I don't think he meant to imply that. You can, for instance, buy solarweave & aquaweave. And nylon, tricot & dacron. The hard materials used in suits are stainless steels, ceramics and composites that, while custom-made, are generally things like graphite, thermoplastics, carbon fiber, etc. Chinaalready makes a good suit. They have Russian friends, after all, and base theirs on Russian Orlan-M and Sokol suits.
That is true for equatorial orbit (inclination 0°), but not for all orbits in general. The orbit of iss is at 51.65° inclination. In KSP (and in real world as well) you can launch rockets into orbits different than equatorial if you start pointing somewhere else than eastwards during gravity turn. You can even have 2 satellites orbiting in the opposite way, it would just be more fuel consuming since you would loose the boost that planet's spin gives you.
Tested at NASA: How Astronauts Put on Space Suits bit.ly/1aCRoGq
+ThamesOrIsis you know the full suit weights like 250 pounds
***** they do but they train and prepare for it
***** I actually listen to michael jackson and prince but I'm open minded to any kind of music
+ThamesOrIsis "Todays youth"? With the language and attitude you put forth I would have guessed you to be about 12.
That diaper is da bomb
I was waiting the whole video for the guy to let him try on the fully assembled suit..
Ethan its way too heavy for him!
Actually, there are restrictions when it comes to filming someone putting on a spacesuit. You can't actually film them putting it on because of international laws, so most likely it was not worth the effort.
ITAR
international laws? lol it's a US based youtube channel in a US based space firm.. international laws have no power here.
@@bologna3048 They do actually, they can probably fine someone somehow
This suit mans voice is incredible. I just want him to narrate all the books ever
I thought the same thing lol! He sounds like Tony Robbins a little bit.
John Brocious I was about to type that.
Are u all deaf
I know right
That's a weird fetish
It is not a diaper, it is a high absorbency garment.
*Maximum
WhyDo I EvenTry
Also known as a H.A.G
😜
Yes let’s tell our kids that they were in those ‘high absorbency garments’...
Exactly.
Mrburrittos 57 ...for babies and the elderly.
the diaper is missing in sandra bullock's gravity movie
I would take realism over sexiness and cheesiness any day.
dBolotok i would love to see her in a diaper full of her own shit any day, just name it
This comment chain got really weird, really fast...
I dnno I was on the ksp subreddit about 3 months ago, initially this thread we were discussing was about the hypersonic runway plane someone built, somewhere along the line, this one particular comment train went from that to kerbal blood iron content to horseshoe crabs to orcs from warhammer 40k...im still not sure how that happened..
Frost Chain
I dnno I was on the ksp subreddit about 3 months ago, initially this thread we were discussing was about the hypersonic runway plane someone built, somewhere along the line, this one particular comment train went from that to kerbal blood iron content to horseshoe crabs to orcs from warhammer 40k...im still not sure how that happened..
Read more
I like the interview guy. He is so awkward lol. Also, you can tell he is really interested in the subject. It made me excited too 😊
4:14 BODY REPORTED
Just watching this is amazing. We get to see all of the technology astronauts use in space ( even if it totally looks 60’s ). I love these types of videos
the Movie 2021 was more real looking then the bullshit they just sold you...but hey 95% of American's think one guy shot Kennedy so Guess they'll buy any bullshit story after that...and don't even get me started on all the video of that shame election in 2020 little red wagons and Box Trucks and blocking windows so no one could see..yeah Vote in 2024 shure they won't steal that one eather...
We get to see how fully indoctrinated most of society has become 🤦
astroNots & you can't prove the existence of space
I'd like to know more about the kind of insulation they use to shield the astronauts from the space around them. The way the gloves and the lower torso attach, are things that I would have liked to see.
I LOVE SPACE!!!!
@If you laugh you sub! except it is real
If you laugh you sub! Bud, you have no idea what you’re talking about. Low earth orbit is still space. Also what does the ISS being in earths gravitational pull have to do with anything? All the planets in the solar system is under the gravitational pull by the sun.
@If you laugh you sub! What about the Apollo missions?
The NASA guy looks like he's been out all night at some kind of space dance party. I look more sprightly when I've been awake for 3 days.
Darn, those spacesuits on 0:12 still has old NASA worm logo. Lol
i was watching this in class and the teacher never finished the video
What a dick
haha
Whaaaat u got to watch it in class wowww 😕
In space wrench turn you! Love the series on space technology and life. Keep up the good work
Norm, that was the best interview you have done. Great job.
The helmet is so freaking sweet. I kinda want one.
The little key for changing the sockets is my new favorite thing.
Thank you for sharing. And thanks NASA for the information. Very interesting.
It's clear by reading some of the posts, that some "smart" people making comments about the vacuum of space, and a vacuum on earth don't understand the significant difference between the two.
+1 for the Half Life reference!
When
Very cool! Love to see these behind the scenes videos. Thank you for sharing.
10:38 HALF LIFE 3 IN SPACE CONFIRMED
Ramix09 Aw I Wanna play Half Life 3 In space too :(
@@MystPlaysGamesMPG In My hazardous environment suit
So informative....
Thanks to the team
Pretty crazy how the space suit hasn’t changed much in 40 years.
Because we never went to the moon! Filmed in the desert by Hollywoods best
@@michealvillegas1766 yea man it was Alfred Hitchcock but the thing is that he insisted on filming on the actual location.
And they would've gotten away with it if it wasn't for those meddling loonies on the internet who fall for one of the dumbest conspiracy theories of them all.
Daiper > Making astronauts the highest paying babies on the planet :D
"planet"? ;)
technically not on the planet but ok
BlackEpyon you mean the solar system
Well, the most payed persons on the orbit
Much worse than just babies. Frauds and parasites is more accurate. The ISS is located (they say) in the thermosphere, which means these suits are subject to blast furnace temperatures. Unfortunately for NASA, there is no known material that thin anywhere near capable of that kind of insulation and protection.
best looking space suit ever, its my favorite, the EVA's should of been replaced when the space shuttle program ended and moved on to something less bulky now, but I still like these type of suits, they seem very futuristic to me.
This channel deserves waaaay more subscribers
Pretty cool, would like to try this one day!
sometimes i like to wear an adult diaper so i can pretend i'm in space
Me too
Have always wondered what the view is from inside the helmet with the visor down
Tory Knotts That is why they got such a good shot of the first footprint on the Moon......the Sun was too bright to look anywhere else but your feet, without the visor blast shield down! I did not notice the Sun going less bright....so they must have had the blast shield visor down all the time? But I did not see them use it at all! Strange that. The storage of all their stuff...must have been a nightmare......can you imagine the amount of extra stuff that was blown away when they crashed the space vehicle into the Moons surface......How many millions of $s ....Oh I suppose about a hundred or so millions of $s.....money well spent there then!
Keep in mind that the astronaut is also travelling around that speed. So it really would only be travelling at the difference in velocity between the astronaut and the object. Still, getting hit would be extremely dangerous and probably fatal.
aw you dident put the full thing on
Excellent presentation. Thank you.
They actually made a half life reference. Heh.
where?? haven't noticed
It’s mental to see what these spacesuits are like compared to the space x suits
Sorry to reply to you 1 month later but here:
The suit we see here is a space walk suit.
The one of SpaceX is NOT a space walk suit,
it is only used when in the spacecraft to get basic protection
(fire, smoke, debris, depressurization).
very interesting and thankyou for this thanks TH-cam peace
NASA has a free ebook named "Dressing for Altitude" if anyone is interested in learning more about pressure suites :)
Oh wow, space helmets actually do have blast shields you can't see out of. I thought that one from Star Wars was just made up.
DaaaahWhoosh
You hit the nail on the head.
It’s all made up.
@@jackpotsearlytapes Go ride the short bus to school.
Andrew G
School? Again? After all these years... more brainwashing in the indoctrination camp?? No thanks.
Actually, no. The gold visor is basically tinting to cut the glare of unfiltered sunlight. The hard visor is simply a shade, and it doesn't come all the way down to block the eyes.
@@jackpotsearlytapes STFU, you simple minded imbecile!
What do people being executed, astronauts, and toddlers all have in common?
They all pee and poop in diapers.
looks a lot like scuba gear for the NASA pool
Well, i remember seeing in one of the Hadfield videos that their "camelpack" (basically very large bottle of water to keep them hydrated) was put inside of a Kevlar bag, i wouldn't be surprised if the suit itself has something similar in it.
Nuh uh! I've seen "Gravity", and space babes wear black panties, not diapers.
yeah right. you're trusting Hollywood.
+Minnie Halfswinger Naw, I would just rather see Sandra Bullock in black panties than realistic diapers.
gpgpgpgp1000 ok fine, i get it. xD
+gpgpgpgp1000 I don´t think she had a liquid cooling garment either... but the aesthetics of Sandy floating in zero-g in panties makes up for the lack of reality :-)
gpgpgpgp1000 oh yea i just realised blooper
Depends on how big debris is and what is it speed..But for really small fragments like graind of sand in orbital speed of 8 km/sec it would protect you..anything larger-you will have bad day..
watched this because I wanted to know if an astronaut can get into a spacesuit with out help like they do in many movies. I guess one could get into it solo but would take a lot more time with less certainty they've put it on correctly and without leaks. They mention an assistant will help join the two halves of the suit once the astronaut/specialist is in both pieces. But spacesuits will continue to evolve.
I want to know how you've proven space exists in order to believe this
SO COOL - I really liked seeing this after reading more and more about space recently. The tool belt was not something I knew about.
I really wanted to know how they connect and seal each part of the suit?
Geoffrey Harford I've since done a little research and the pressure needed to inflate these suits is only a very little apparently! From all the movies it seems people would explode but apparently it's more like a slow seep of bodily fluids! They were even working on some sort of fabric that just creates a pressure on your body without the need for a pressurised suit but upon further investigation I don't think it was from a credible source but interesting to look into.
what they need is cooperation,not competition
i would probably go insane having to tether everything i try using
That’s Why they training every moment in the water pool, before going to space.
Hold on, why would you get a puddle at the bottom of your space suit... when there is no gravitational effects (relatively)?
Not exactly puddle more like clump together until it becomes a large distraction for the person when it randomly floats around the suit while also keeping the person comfortable
also i think that its tight so the sweat "puddles" have to stay at the bottom
because of surface tension...and because of the air flow of the suit. The water would basically stick to them and then be moved around the suit until it got towards their feet where the air does not reach I would imagine.
They are at the neutral buoyancy lab where gravity still applies, so that's probably what he meant.
When your in space the sweat wouldn't form a puddle at the bottom of the suit it would float and stick to your skin
When you get up in the morning the first thing you do is sh*t in your pants then you get ready for work.
I can imagine. AH! I JUST NEED T-... Oh wait... (Starts pissing himself) xD
Very good explanations. Thank you!!!
"puddle sweat at the bottom of the suit". i dont think this guy knows how space works
You probably know more about space than him.
He works in the Neutral Buoyancy Lab where astronauts practice EVA in the pool, so I'm assuming that's what he meant.
Yup
You assume there is no prep time and the trip from earth to the ISS is instantainious.
Your faith makes you an expert on everything, no worries.
"they will waddle to the torso section"
*recalls Kerbals waddling*
I have a really important question.
How do they itch in a suit?
Of course, they have been trained to endure the itch.
little velcro area that they nudge their nose against, only a personal preference.
I think the biggest danger would be micrometeorites, basically space dust and space gravel traveling at fast orbital velocities, that smack into you like a bullet, so the question is will the suit protect you then?
wath if they get hungry while space walking ?
Pretty sure that is the least of their problems
the silent farmer they have food energy bars inside their helmets that you pull out from a pouch with your teeth, they also have a water pack in there with a straw that you drink with
They have drinks
More interesting how is the tightness of the rotating joints of the spacesuit maintained? I mean about new suits for Artemis program.
SpaceX's spacesuits are much more sleek.
I don't believe SpaceX suits are for spacewalking (EVA). Those would be comparable to the orange LES (Launch Escape Suit) or ACES (Advanced Crew Escape Suit).
@@m3arvin But SpaceX’s EVA suits for Polaris Dawn will still be sleek even though they will be used for space walks.
Dudes been working out his biceps. Looks good man
The polycarbonate is the same stuff that rc car body's are made out of
Bodies**
Actually, given the needs of the environment, it's probably aircraft-grade lexan rated for bird-strikes. Remember that the space suit is a pressure suit and has to withstand a certain amount of pressure in order to keep the wearer alive.
@@samsignorelli, how much pressure is that?
@@samsignorelli it is still polycarbonate though
@@gearycloward9613Not entirely certain of the actual amount. Air pressure at sea level is 14 lbs/square inch, but I think a pressure suit for space use is 6-8 psi? I might be off a bit.
Space walks are a lot like mountain climbing with all those safety-tethers.
No it's a space shirt!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This was such an awkward interview, I don't like the guy in the red shirt. Such bad body language and fake laughs.
He knows he is lying about everything that comes out of his mouth. Space is fake. We never went to the moon. Earth is flat. Do some research if you don't believe me.
AKA SURFSTYLEY lmao you’re so stupid. The retards make you think the earth is flat which is so wrong. Do you research before spreading false lies. The earth is square
He is just excited.. Not fake laughs
Shadow nice profile pic oh how about you do that.
@@rosiew4260 so criticism is automatically negativity?
Very interesting. Never thought about the need to tether all the tools and pieces that go with them.
The ending reminds me of Half-Life 2.
Don't understand why it needs to be a secret. It's not like if someone steals the design they're going to piss off to Mars to stick their own flag down.
how is it possible for there to be a puddle of sweat on the bottom of your suit, when you're in microgravity?
capillarity, I think, of course it could occur everywhere in your suit.
Weta but it exlains a puddle at least
Yea I think if you don't have absorbing clothes they would be little puddles on joints: armpits, under the knees etc...
Also, if you are in the buoyancy lab practicing, gravity is still there, so it will puddle.
But in space, sweat from your legs would be in your lower legs, because it is hard for the water to float anywhere else in the suit.
cuz it's all a lie
Now that was an interesting video.
Amazing!
Thank you guys
sus
Was hoping they’d talk about the seals between the legs and torso and the gloves
Astro Nots!
paid actors, under threat.
Look, a Russian space denier bot!
Prove it
Very, cool, suit! I love this video!
Ask yourself why they don't demonstrate what happens to a real human in a suit when inside a vacuum chamber. That MUST be one major phase for the testing. So why do they not even mention such a chamber, such an acid test? Not just here but ANYWHERE. You can't find such a video, despite the fact that the need for such a test is beyond obvious.
International regulations have a lot of restrictions of what can be said/filmed when it comes to suits and testing
Why no MENTION of a test? Nobody so much as says, "They're tested too". Why not? Because these ridiculous "space suits" are a joke. The pressurization issues in any absolute vacuum would be ASTRONOMICAL. And the temperatures would be higher than a blast furnace. But hey, no need to see what happens to a real human in a suit when inside a vacuum, let alone a super-heated vacuum chamber? Absolute hogwash.
For a look at the incredible power of a vacuum, search youtube for a video of the pipe-lifting tool able to grip and hold 30,000 pounds. The ability of a suit to withstand such an IMMENSELY powerful vacuum MUST be one major phase for the testing. A vacuum would pull with the force of an explosion on every square inch of that suit. Not to mention the non-existent insulation and cooling system supposedly capable of keeping the inside of a suit at room temperature despite surrounding ISS thermosphere temperatures of a BLAST FURNACE
Stephan Drake the suit is only pressured to about 6 PSI. It's not really that big of a deal. Space 0 PSI, Suit 6 PSI.
Bob Margossian: Think. Surrounded by an absolute vacuum, the force pulling at every square inch of a space suit would have more pulling power than the force of a street pipe lifting tool. And those tools are capable of lifting 30,000 pounds, ie. 15 US Tons. Search youtube for such pipe lifting rigs.
Then search for the videos of a little vacuum jar with a balloon inside. What happens to that balloon is just a miniature, low-power example of what would happen to a space suit the instant it was immersed in the massive power of an absolute vacuum. Again: THINK.
One of Norms better interviews.
The guy explaining the space suit looks like he got called in on his day off lol
This shows up one of the many impossibilities in the Apollo missions, two astronauts getting suited up in the Lander, the space of a phone box each, with all those controls and cables around. Shame that so much of this space stuff is for gullible children, while the real stuff is cool
did you watch them put the suits on?
the only thing i don t get is why they keep the materials a secret? who s gonna build a spacesuit anyway?
There can be smoke but obviously it wouldn't be floating upward, it would float in a spheroid kind of distribution - and since fire is extremely rare in vacuum it would be escaping from somewhere and tend to go in a cone shape away from the source.
I looooove space I am obsessed but astronaut suits make me feel wicked anxious when i look at them. it's really cool!!
1:44
hehe "puddle at the bottom of the suit"
righttttttttttttttttttt
Mike Cammiso The ventilation system works by blowing fresh air into the helmet and sucking spent air out the wrists and ankles. Any loose liquid would be blown by the resulting wind toward the outlets, probably in the legs since it's a straighter shot than the arms.
Nasa: just regular plastic, just a diaper, just garments. also Nasa> $20M each
"sir explain, why did we spend 150K USD in "High absorbency garments" again?"
I’m writing a sifi book where my protagonist is getting dressed in a space suit. The diaper part will be fun.
Imagine having to scratch an itch
Awesome video, very informative!
SPACE DIAPER
fascinating video, Norm. with the sun shield down you can't see. how are you supposed to fight?
Very Interesting! Next, how to make it, different sewing process!
Really interesting, but what would happen during a spacewalk if you get hit by spacerocks or floating debris. Would the suit protect you?
The suit has many layers for controlling heat and providing protection, but because the velocity of anything that might hit you is so high , not for anything more than really small stuff, , something bigger than the size of a grain of sand might punch a hole in the suit
An astronaut on a space walk is also moving at 17,000 mph. The astronaut and the space debris are both orbiting in the same direction, meaning the speed is a bit cancelled out. The suit still is by no means armor, but you are making him think the astronaut is stationary, and the debris is going to hit him while he is stationary, which isnt at all what would happen.
Terry Dunn said "right" 22 times
The horror of having an itchy nose while wearing a space suit.
Wow! Glad to see shaggy got himself a great job after he grew up.
Wonder how Scoobs doing
Yes and no. If the object is in the same orbit as you, it would just bounce off since you are both moving at nearly the same speed.
If that object was not in your orbit, say falling to earth for example, it would pass right through you without even flinching. That piece of debris would be moving at 17,000mph at least. Nothing can protect you from that.
Space debris is very well documented, and they know how to watch out for it.
Wow, very cool, thanks for that video!
Actually, they're not really secret. The guy and Norm are bantering and I don't think he meant to imply that. You can, for instance, buy solarweave & aquaweave. And nylon, tricot & dacron. The hard materials used in suits are stainless steels, ceramics and composites that, while custom-made, are generally things like graphite, thermoplastics, carbon fiber, etc. Chinaalready makes a good suit. They have Russian friends, after all, and base theirs on Russian Orlan-M and Sokol suits.
That is true for equatorial orbit (inclination 0°), but not for all orbits in general. The orbit of iss is at 51.65° inclination. In KSP (and in real world as well) you can launch rockets into orbits different than equatorial if you start pointing somewhere else than eastwards during gravity turn. You can even have 2 satellites orbiting in the opposite way, it would just be more fuel consuming since you would loose the boost that planet's spin gives you.
Bylo to moc zajímavé děkuji :-)
Pretty cool stuff, great video.
Aliens watching this video:
Well thats pretty primitive design