Soyuz Damage May Delay Space Station Trip 120
SeaDour writes "As if the failed oxygen generator on the International Space Station wasn't bad enough, rumor has it that the planned launch of a Russian Soyuz capsule to change crews onboard the station may be delayed due to a mishap during ground testing. Apparently one of the small explosive bolts, used to separate sections of the capsule during landing, prematurely exploded, which means the bolts may all have to be inspected for defects. Russian space officals haven't officially confirmed any delay of the October 9 launch date, but I'm sure it's something the two astronauts on the station are thinking about as they repressurize the station with reserve air supplies."
They need to replenish their air supply......... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:They need to replenish their air supply........ (Score:4, Funny)
I don't know who those guys are, but I am interested in sending Lance Bass up there right about now.
Re:They need to replenish their air supply........ (Score:1)
--RJ
Re:They need to replenish their air supply........ (Score:2)
well... (Score:3, Insightful)
Until we're willing to fund not only the station but its support structure, and fund it enough to insure that there's some redundancy in systems, I think it might be time to start thinking about abandoning it in orbit for a while. What spaceflight does NOT need right now is the two sitting ducks..er, I meant crew, dying because we can't keep the structure/support up to snuff.
Re:well... (Score:5, Insightful)
and really...
"A NASA official told MSNBC.com on condition of anonymity that rumors of a possible delay were "heard in the halls" on Tuesday, but by the end of the day the gossip was that no schedule impact was expected." so that's one 'official' relaying a fucking rumour, too.
Don't you mean...? (Score:1)
...in EverQuest.
Just to complete the stereotype. I agree, Slashdot is well into its own "September that never ended."
Re:well... (Score:5, Informative)
They have lots of redundancy... (Score:5, Informative)
There has to be some limit to the amount of redundancy they have in any one system, as they only have so much weight and volume available, but they don't seem to have cut any corners in the area of O2.
Re:well... (Score:3, Insightful)
The mistake is to think in terms of "funding" (Score:2)
How do you socialist spacers grow your budget? The tax take can't go up much (because you'll wreck the economy and shr
Reliability? (Score:2, Funny)
I realize that space flight is incredibly complex, but is it really that much more complex than regular flight? Why does it seem that space flight is constantly plagued with problems?
Is it simply that space flight isn't mature enough yet? If commercial space flight ever takes off, is that what will make it more reliable? How can it take off until it is more reliable?
Re:Reliability? (Score:4, Funny)
(/endrollingoftheeyes)
Re:Reliability? (Score:2)
Re:Reliability? (Score:1)
Now I understand why I am such a perfect being...
Re:Reliability? (Score:2)
Re:Reliability? (Score:5, Insightful)
Probably, slightly, you have to deal with more problems that you don't have to deal with in aircraft- vacuum, heating, radiation etc. etc.
Why does it seem that space flight is constantly plagued with problems?
Mainly because there are bugs in the vehicles, or the production line that produces the vehicles, or bugs in the way that the vehicles are being used.
The reason that the bugs are there is because every vehicle in service right now has only been launched a hundred or so times at most. Most aircraft have seen many times more launches than that during testing; and the bugs would have been removed. In addition there's more experience on how to avoid some of the bugs in the first place in aircraft- this experience has not been directly applied to launch vehicles.
If commercial space flight ever takes off, is that what will make it more reliable?
Pretty much yes, launch any vehicle enough; uncover the bugs and remove them, and you have a safe vehicle at the end of it.
How can it take off until it is more reliable?
You have to have brave people.
Re:Reliability? (Score:4, Insightful)
Or unmanned/automated flights.
Re:Reliability? (Score:2)
Then you have to have brave investors.
Re:Reliability? (Score:4, Interesting)
They're doing OK - don't knock them. Some things go spectacularly well, and some pretty badly, but most go acceptably.
Re:Reliability? (Score:1)
One huge example I can think of is the rovers. It seemed like everyone knew about when they had problems, and it was a big deal. I wonder how many people know that the rovers preformed better than expected, and that their missions have been extended.
Re:Reliability? (Score:2)
Re:Reliability? (Score:5, Interesting)
The problem isn't (necessarily, though i'm not sure of it) that spaceflight is that much more complex. The problem is that there is a much smaller margin of error.
Airplanes can have roofs peel back, engines fall off, and all other of pretty bad things happen, and yet the planes often manage to come in for a safe landing anyways. A spacecraft has a (comparitively) small hole poked in it by some foam and the entire thing disintegrates during reentry.
Spacecraft deal with more extreme conditions and are much farther away from help, so even when something small goes wrong it can go _really_ wrong.
Re:Reliability? (Score:1)
Re:Reliability? (Score:1)
Redundant equipment (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Redundant equipment (Score:2)
Re:Redundant equipment (Score:1)
exploding bolts (Score:2, Funny)
Re:exploding bolts (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:exploding bolts (Score:3, Informative)
*They do not explode violently. They are hollow and have a weak zone. When the propellant burns, the pressure breaks the weak zone. The propellant is a lot like the stuff that inflates air bags
Frangible Bolts (Score:2)
Okay, come clean mechE's (Score:2, Funny)
Re:exploding bolts (Score:2)
It is such an uncommon occurance that some engineers suspected that Grissom paniced and blew the hatch himself.
Re:exploding bolts (Score:1)
http://www.astronautix.com/flights/merrymr4.htm
The mystery of Grissom's hatch was never solved to everyone's satisfaction. Among the favorite hypotheses were that the exterior lanyard might have become entangled with the landing bag straps; that the ring seal might have been omitted on the detonation plunger, reducing the pressure necessary to actuate it; or that static electricity generated by the helicopter had fired the hatch cover. But with the spacecraft
Back-up supplies (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Back-up supplies (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Back-up supplies (Score:2)
Re:Back-up supplies (Score:2)
Also, they're not in immediate danger because they have a Soyuz return capsule currently docked at the station. They'll abandon the station if the next flight up gets delayed dangerously long.
Two problems: simple explanation (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Two problems: simple explanation (Score:2, Funny)
Oblig (Score:5, Funny)
zosX
Re:Oblig (Score:3, Funny)
In Soviet Russia, bolts prematurely explode you.
Further, I for one welcome our new Soviet exploding bolt overlords.
Re:Oblig (Score:1)
Of course (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Of course (Score:1)
Re:Of course (Score:2)
A bit of a sensationalist item by Slashdot. (Score:5, Insightful)
"I'm sure it's something the two astronauts on the station are thinking about as they repressurize the station with reserve air supplies."
Of course, if the 'worst' comes to the 'worst' the 2 astronauts use the Soyuz module which is attached to the ISS to return to Earth; they don't depend on another launch just to get back if there is a problem.
If they use the 'lifeboat' Soyuz, there are no explosive bolts to worry about there because they have already been fired.
Of course, it would put the module/lifeboat situation out of sync but that can be made up by launching a second time after the next crew goes up.
Re:A bit of a sensationalist item by Slashdot. (Score:5, Informative)
the bolts are exploded when coming back down, so there is some worry there.
Mod parent up! (Score:2)
You are absolutely right and I stand corrected; I totally misread the article.
Re:A bit of a sensationalist item by Slashdot. (Score:2)
I know that if I were NASA, I wouldn't tell the astronauts about something like this. You don't need them any more nervous than usual during a landing.
Keep the astronauts ignorant (Score:2)
How nervous do you think astronauts are, as a breed?
Re:A bit of a sensationalist item by Slashdot. (Score:1)
No. The Soyuz docked to the ISS still consists of three parts: The orbital module (airlock, docking systems), the descent module (the actual capsule) and the service module (propulsion etc.). The bolt that has fired in ground testing was one of those connecting these three modules.
safe flight and explosive bolts dont mix (Score:1, Insightful)
the concept of explosive bo
Re:safe flight and explosive bolts dont mix (Score:2, Interesting)
If it only has to work once, then it is a lot simpler and a lot cheaper to build.
If they keep them up there any longer... (Score:1, Funny)
Intercepted message from earth... (Score:5, Funny)
"Huston, we are bingo air. Repeat, we are bingo air. send some up on a redbird, over"
"ISS, that is a negative. Soyuz has dents in the fenders. Recomend you try that Jedi shit from episode one where they hold their breath, over."
"Huston, episode 1 sucked, over."
Wow, here's hoping everything turns out ok, the planet has had enough stuff go bad for manned space flight recently.
Russian Mission Control (Score:1)
Re:Asumption (Score:2)
'This is not the article you are looking for'
They have an escape capsule (Score:2, Informative)
As usual, it's the Russians bailing us out...
Re:They have an escape capsule (Score:1)
Of course, ISS is an international clusterfuck that should be mothballed YESTERDAY, but that's a different kettle of fish.
Clarification, they don't really 'explode' (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, in response to the post that asked why there were so many problems w/ spaceflight, there's one thing the responders failed to mention: assembly line quality.
If you build 30 soyuz capsules over a 30 year period, each one is still very much like a craftsman assembled item. If, on the other hand, you build 100 devices of similar complexity in a year, then you can have real assembly lines with better inherent quality. The defects/flight and cost would drop dramatically if there were more spacecraft being built. Check the quality of the pre-Ford cars against the Model T, and the difference is immediately apparent.
I don't agree (Score:2)
A better car analogy would be a Rolls Royce vs. a Cadillac. Granted, a Caddy is a good car, but a Rolls is far and away a better car. Another analogy that might be more familiar to readers here would be comparing a vanilla Dell with a machine custom engineered for a specific purpose. I would put my money on the custom job.
I also submit that the Model T wasn't better than it's ancestors because of an assembly
Re:I don't agree (Score:2)
Not to detract from your point, but this is an erroneous statement. To further support this: The old adage "Don't ever buy a first year GM" is an old adage for a reason. Every Caddilac is a first year GM.
Back on topic, though. I feel that spacecraft are actually of better quality than most assembly line produced machines. Consider the constant high load under extreme conditions. They benefit from the pros of both custom jobs and assembly line jobs. Many of the parts
What's with all the problems with manned flights? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What's with all the problems with manned flight (Score:1)
Shuttle flights almost always spash on the front of CNN.com or the top of the news on CNN/Foxnews.
Maybe someone can enlighten me.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Maybe someone can enlighten me.... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Maybe someone can enlighten me.... (Score:1)
Gus Grissom Vindicated "It just blew!" (Score:1, Interesting)
Apparently one of the small explosive bolts, used to separate sections of the capsule during landing, prematurely exploded, which means the bolts may all have to be inspected for defects.
Now it has happened again.
what a mess (Score:1, Redundant)
CB
Alpha testing space flight (Score:3, Interesting)
The Wright Brothers crashed several times before their first powered flight, and they crashed on their third flight, and they crashed several times more in the years following that. It was part of starting out. Compare that with now. Every part in an airplane is rigorously tested, at least in the prototype. Most parts are "off-the-shelf," which not only makes them cheaper, but means the engineers can become familiar with their failure history and plan ahead. Even the newest designs are based on one that worked well before.
In the space program, however, everything is new. The oxygen generator was built specifically for the space station. It was tested in the lab where it was built. At best, it was designed and built by applying lessons learned from a handful of similar devices before it.
Remember, NASA is about developing technology. In a way, the space program now is sort of like a software program in its alpha test stage. A lot of lessons will be learned and a lot of bugs will be identified. In the next few decades, companies like Scaled Composites will produce vehicles that better fit the description of Beta releases. Maybe it won't be too long before we're asking if interstellar travel is really that much more difficult than flying to Mars.
Re:Alpha testing space flight (Score:2, Insightful)
ummm. i don't think we'll ever ask that. developing a faster than light spacecraft, OR a method to suspended biological process in humans for tens, hundreds, or thousands of years will be many orders of magnitude more complex than spending a few months in an intra stellar spacecraft destined for mars. not that we are in the ballpark in on that one either. "simply" going to the moon
Re:Alpha testing space flight (Score:2)
The generator may have been built specifically for the ISS, but it's a design that served many years aboard MIR. It's not new, it's not untested, and it is a field proven system, but, even aboard mir, it was one of the more problematic devices.
Exploding Bolts (Score:3, Interesting)
Engineer A: "Lets see...we have these two parts that need to be held together really tightly and then released very quickly"
Engineer B: "I have an idea, let's just build the whole damn thing out of plastique or some shit, that'll work great"
A: "Good show ol' chap. That will work fine and dandy indeed."
jokes aside, what are the compelling (practical?) reasons that exploding bolts seem to be so common in spacecraft?
Re:Exploding Bolts (Score:1)
Nor are most of them "bolts" as we would think of them...as in, they're not (usually) threaded steel rods with hex heads. They're probably actually closer to what we'd think of as rivits.
Given the forces involved during various portions of ascent or descent, SOMETHING has to hold "parts" (2 stages, the hatch covering a chute, an external fuel tank, whatever) together quite
Re:Exploding Bolts (Score:1)
Re:Exploding Bolts (Score:2)
From a simplicity stand point, the exploding bolts make sense. You only have the wire(?) (and control method to send the signal) to the explosive charge in the bolt; that's all that can fail. As opposed to a mechanical moving mechanism that would pull a bolt out of it's hole while under the heavy stresses of ascent. Now factor that mu
Re:Exploding Bolts (Score:1)
Re:Exploding Bolts (Score:1)
Re:Exploding Bolts (Score:1)
Obligatory quote (Score:1)
They should have used (Score:1)
Soyuz (Score:1)
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Y'all please pardon the spelling; I'm an old Southern hillbilly turner of wrenches.