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The first Mercury capsule sent to suborbital space really didn't accomplish much either, in and of itself. Yet, it was a stepping stone on the path to much bigger and better things.LR25 said:It is awsome.
But outside of just sending a spacecraft to where they did in the 60's, what does it conclude?
Spaceship One does not have the capability to do much more than that. I am definetely not knocking it, but just wondering where does it go from here.
With that being said, it is important to continue space flight private or governmental, but I just wish it was with a vehicle that could actually resemble something they could put to work.
The space ship is pressurized, you don't need a pressure suit.EUT said:I was watching that Discovery Channel Special, and found myself wondering at what point they need a pressure suit, and life support systems in space? These guys were just wearing a nomex flight suit.
Anyone Know?
The pilots are well beyond the point where they would need a pressure suit for extended exposure. Pilots that fly the U-2 (TR-1) and SR-71 wear pressure suits even though their cockpits are pressurized, but they fly much longer flights. The SS1 pilots are simply accepting a single layer of protection and hoping that they don't lose pressurization.EUT said:I was watching that Discovery Channel Special, and found myself wondering at what point they need a pressure suit, and life support systems in space? These guys were just wearing a nomex flight suit.
Anyone Know?
I thought that above a certain altitude (50,000? 100,000?) the pressure was so low that it would allow for the expansion of gasses in your blood. Dying because the nitrogen in your blood boiled would probably suck pretty bad IMO.EagleRJ said:The pilots are well beyond the point where they would need a pressure suit for extended exposure. Pilots that fly the U-2 (TR-1) and SR-71 wear pressure suits even though their cockpits are pressurized, but they fly much longer flights. The SS1 pilots are simply accepting a single layer of protection and hoping that they don't lose pressurization.
If SS1 were to lose pressurization, the occupants could still make it back to Earth using only their 02 masks (which they wear throughout the flight anyway). Their primary danger would be extreme cold, not altitude effects, because the flight is not that long!
You're right that one of the main risks of sudden exposure to low pressures is nitrogen in your blood coming out of solution (embolism). That can be prevented if the pilot breathes pure oxygen for a couple of hours before the flight to purge nitrogen from the blood. High altitude pilots and divers already do this, and I'm sure the SS1 pilots do too.NookyBooky said:I thought that above a certain altitude (50,000? 100,000?) the pressure was so low that it would allow for the expansion of gasses in your blood. Dying because the nitrogen in your blood boiled would probably suck pretty bad IMO.
From Scaled's webpage in the FAQ's for SS1:EUT said:I was watching that Discovery Channel Special, and found myself wondering at what point they need a pressure suit, and life support systems in space? These guys were just wearing a nomex flight suit.
Anyone Know?
Out of curiosity, how much did Lindburg spend to win the prize? $10K? Did the prize cover all cost?jarhead said:On a humorous side note to the accomplishment, Jay Leno did a bit about the $10 million dollar prize being won by this effort. Leno said, and I’m paraphrasing here, “Hmmm, they spent $20 million in order to win $10 million dollars. (short pause)…”Obviously these guys aren’t rocket scientists” (rim shot!)
Rez O. Lewshun said:Out of curiosity, how much did Lindburg spend to win the prize? $10K? Did the prize cover all cost?