Home Improvement 155
Matthew Moyle-Croft writes "On the ISS the Astronauts have been hard at work building
a kitchen table away from the prying eyes of mission control."
It's hard to think of you as the end result of millions of years of evolution.
No pic? (Score:1)
Picture (Score:1)
Re:There is use for a table in zero-gravity ? (Score:1)
These are the same units... Study harder
Violation of EULA (Score:5)
Quote from the article.... (Score:5)
"I spend most of my day with a tool in my hand..."
You just don't say that at an interview, do you?
Heinlein said it best! (Score:1)
Let's hear it for us Generalists!
ttyl
Farrell
BBS SysOp, Novell Admin, OS/2 pro, Linux Guru, Unix Adept, Practicing Druid (ADF), Calligrapher, Home Music Studio owner, Musician, SF Faan, SF Convention organizer, etc.
Re:Picture (Score:1)
;-]
Handy Man (Score:1)
Hehehe... He said Tool.
The real Threed's
--Threed
Re:As a humanitarian I'm outraged by the waste of (Score:1)
NASA Budget
ftp://ftp.hq.nasa.gov/pub/pao/budget/2002/budge
Census figures
http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/2000/cb
Re:This is an obvious hoax (Score:2)
and then
If the table was made from a more conductive metal for magnets, or covered in some velcro-friendly fluff, fine.
Ever considered that maybe the duct tape was sticky side out?
Does this really make sense? (Score:2)
Does a table in a zero G environment really make sense? It says "kitchen" table, so I assume they want to eat off of it. I don't know, I've never been in space, but it just doesn't seem to make sense to me.
Re:As a humanitarian I'm outraged by the waste of (Score:3)
So you're a troll, but I'll bite anyway. The future of humanity depends on our ability to leave this planet (we'll have to do it sooner or later, and leaving it to the last minute is a plan that's doomed from the start). Our ability to leave the planet is solely dependent on how much we spend on space research (barring intervention from alien races, of course :-)
Thus, it's
better to sacrifice a few starving people now to
save humanity in general. Or at least, that's the
theory. I'm personally not convinced that the
survival of humanity would be a good thing for
our galaxy. I'm sure other lifeforms would do a
better job of preventing galactic pollution, and
not overtaxing available resources...
This is an obvious hoax (Score:2)
--
Re:What else can these guys hack? (Score:2)
Better tell the Russians - _Dragonfly_ made it pretty clear that the Russian cosmonauts on Mir had both cigarettes and vodka available.
sPh
Re:This is an obvious hoax (Score:2)
Need for table: (a) to sit around while eating a meal, meals being as much of a social event as a fueling stop, particularly on long journeys in close company (b) to provide a common plane of spatial reference for social activities and for looking at stuff.
Can't put things "down": Velcro(r) is I believe banned due to flammability, but they use clips and other devices developed for ships to hold things in place.
Can't mix or chop: why not? These aren't gravity-dependent actions. A mixing bowl might have to be closed to prevent the contents from splashing away, but you would still want to put it against something to give your mixing arm leverage.
Question: for simple tricks, how does a yo-yo behave differently in zero-g* ? Answer: it doesn't. Not everything we do depends on gravity.
sPh
* yes, yes, I know: "microgravity". As Harry Stine once said, only NASA could make space travel boring to the general public.
Re:And the russians up there? (Score:2)
Re:Their future is set then (Score:1)
Hey, it won't matter -- in 0G, if the bottom falls out, you'll just float there...
Re:What else can these guys hack? (Score:2)
If you want something done (Score:1)
Re:Space Station ALPHA? (Score:2)
Because that's the name of the ISS. "International Space Station" is really just a description.
Seeing as how MIR was the first space station, wouldn't this be Space Station Beta?
Bullshit. Mir wasn't anywhere near the first space station. Besides, Alpha is a name, not a counting scheme. Mir is only one in a line of Russian space stations (Salyut 1, launched in 1971, to Salyut 7, launched 1982, abandoned 1986) and NASA had Skylab (launched 1973, abandoned 1974). That makes Alpha space station 10.
None of the earlier stations lasted as long as Mir however. We'll see how long Alpha will keep running.
$10k/lb trash? (Score:3)
Re:What else can these guys hack? (Score:2)
--
Re:This is an obvious hoax (Score:2)
Ditto for the big 50 cm diameter porthole next to the table. Remember that, originally, Von Braun didn't want portholes in the Mercury space capsule, and the astro-nuts had to go on strike to have the window put on the spam-can...
--
Re:American ingenuity vs Russian "combattivness" (Score:3)
Bill Shepherd is a US Navy SEAL, which are our most highly trained special operations forces. Military people are very mission oriented, and do whatever it takes to accomplish the mission.
There was a good article [cnn.com] on CNN why military veterans make good IT workers that explains this.
I'm biased though, as I was in the US Air Force. My personal motto is "adapt, improvise, & overcome."
Re:Umm, "spare parts"? (Score:2)
Re:The term "Hackers" (Score:1)
I kind of have the opposite impression - NASA seems to prefer pre-planning everything and running under strict ground control where possible, whereas the Russians (thanks to their experiences on Mir) seem to have more of a can-do, fix-it attitude. Remember how NASA went on and on about how dangerous Mir was, but the Russians just shrugged and kept it together with chewing gum and determination?
Now, if NASA would really let its astronauts be hackers, that would be great. And it sounds from the article that they will be training more of the station crew for similar tasks, so maybe that will become the norm rather than the exception on the ISS.
Caution: contents may be quarrelsome and meticulous!
Forthcoming ISS Crew members.... (Score:1)
MacGuyver
The entire cast of Blue Peter (UK joke!)
Re:Source of spare parts (Score:1)
If it came to practicalities, I suppose it would be possible to use Shuttle/ Soyuz to have boosted Mir somewhere close to the orbit of ISS as I understand has been done to ISS.
Source of spare parts (Score:2)
Re:And the russians up there? (Score:1)
Re:Blessed, blessed duct tape! (Score:2)
--
I'm Impressed (Score:5)
LEGO in space (Score:3)
Home repairs (Score:1)
ISS meets Junk yard Wars/Scrap Heap Challenge (Score:2)
of the week. Although that hovercraft episode was pretty awesome, you have to admit.
Sheppard could have justified the time and labor required to build the table as a way to save the expense of carting the junk back to earth. They should build a whole extra addition on-to the space station with scrap metal and empty gas tanks.
Re:There is use for a table in zero-gravity ? (Score:1)
Think about it.
Re:I'm Impressed (Score:2)
--
Gonzo Granzeau
The two elementary particles of the universe (Score:2)
-russ
Re:American ingenuity vs Russian "combattivness" (Score:1)
Re:American ingenuity vs Russian "combattivness" (Score:1)
See http://www.snopes2.com/business/genius/spacepen.h
Obviously not an Engineer (Score:3)
And nobody likes bong water.
-ben.c
Hands on guys (Score:5)
NASA and the astronauts both said that they need more "Hands On" folks.
This, in the era where we are removing things like shop classes in our schools, because we don't need them to get into college. The "I'm not going to work with my hands" mentality
Most school systems in the US no long teach any shop. It's a shame.
Joke is, some of the BEST academic schools out there still require you to take drafting or CAD classes. Maybe you can figure out HOW to build something
Re:Source of spare parts (Score:2)
Except that Mir was in a totally different orbit.
he/she could've just uses the shuttle as a space bus to go from one to the other.
With the fuel comming from where? You'd need to refill the external tank and use the main engines.
little bit enthusiastic? (Score:1)
> because he built the thing," Curry said.
I know americans really like to overplay things, but this is just awkward. First, it's not "he built the thing" but rather "THEY built the thing" and second, what's that crap of a "fully functional" table?
This reminds me of those great products sold on TV: "I can't believe it, it's a fully functional table! I can put things on it! Wooooohoooooo!"
But at least our hero - the table - won't collapse under heavy weight.
CMBurns
Re:Hands on guys (Score:1)
At least I'm free, now.
Re:And the russians up there? (Score:2)
Re:And the russians up there? (Score:3)
Re:What am I missing here? (Score:1)
If there were no gravity there it would not be in oribit! it remains in orbit because of its forward momentium, the forward speed counter acts the amount the ISS has fallen towards the earth.
How the deorbit things is to just slow them up, The gravitational effect of the earth then wins.
James
Re:There is use for a table in zero-gravity ? (Score:2)
And do they also duct tape their food to their lunch trays?
They /said/ the top was covered in duct tape... (Score:2)
...they just didn't say which side of the tape was facing outwards.
If It Was Me, I'd probably put most of the tape sticky-side-down, with the occasional strip reversed. Most of the table would be smooth, with occasional places of stickiness built-in. Definitely sounds like a useful workbench, when a 2mm screw floating loose could wedge in some panel and kill you.
Re:What am I missing here? (Score:2)
you're sure? (Score:2)
We're probably, on the whole, no more or less concerned with pollution than other races. You have zero information about them, so why would you say something like this?
Or did it just sound like a nice PC thing to throw in at the end?
Re:Umm, "spare parts"? (Score:5)
You would not believe how involved the process is to get something certified to fly. The people who work on projects tend to work on their own piece of the project, and how it will fit into a mission. However, 99% of the flight certification process revolves around safety - AS IT SHOULD.
If that means that people aren't reusing materials optimally, that may be disappointing, but it's much better than creating an unsafe environment. Space, without our help, is one of the most inhospitable environments for humans. Huge amounts of time and effort go into safety precautions.
Personally, I can see why the ground crews would have balked at the table making enterprise. Those "spare parts" that they used were there serving a purpose, most of which was safety related. Simply removing them w/out consulting the people who built them and determining their purpose may have the unintended effect of making something unsafe.
Right now NASA seems to be applauding the ingenuity of the american who created fashioned the table. I wonder how they'll react if the things used end up creating some sort of safety hazard. Remember how critical NASA was of MIR with all of its safety problems.
Re:And the russians up there? (Score:1)
Maybe that was the case, but I don't know how CNN would have known. It was built in secret, after all.
Inhale (Score:1)
Not if you inhale vigorously :)
Re:Blessed, blessed duct tape! (Score:1)
it's a revelation to me, that this even holds on the mighty ISS.
Re:Umm, "spare parts"? (Score:1)
Spare Parts (Score:2)
everything but... (Score:2)
The term "Hackers" (Score:1)
The Deep Space 1 mission, and the piloting fix applied mid-mission, is another great hack job.
Re:There is use for a table in zero-gravity ? (Score:1)
Let's see why the correlary is so important. I challenge you to set a coffee cup down on a table without imparting any "bounce" to it. (In other words, try to set it down without making any sound - the clearest indicator that the thing would bounce in space.) Not easy, is it?
Now try it again, but this time also make sure that you don't impart any angular momentum to the cup. (Or, as a better illustration of what I'm talking about here, try to set the puck down on a air hockey table so that it doesn't move after you let go.)
So, Newton was right (down to a scale where relativistic forces take over), but it doesn't help make this table any more useful.
Re:What I want to know is... (Score:1)
Re:There is use for a table in zero-gravity ? (Score:2)
Re:And the russians up there? (Score:2)
Yeah, and without removing those brackets the O2 generators would be unavailable and people really would die. Though the article did not specifically mention it, I gathered that these bracket were shipping restraints that were removed when the O2 generators were delivered.
In order to survive the launch to orbit everything that goes into orbit is somehow secured to the spacecraft. People are strapped into their seats, small items are stowed in compartments, large items are bolted to the frame. This is as much for the benefit of the spacecraft as anything else; loose cargo flying about during multi-g acceleration can really ruin an astronaut's day.
I figure the brackets used for the table were shipping brackets from the launch of the O2 generators, and the foam used for the muffler was packing material from some other shipment.
(Side note: when the fire broke out on Mir, one of the many problems in fighting it was that the restraining brackets had never been removed from the fire extinguishers. They had to waste crucial seconds finding a wrench and freeing the fire extinguishers.)
Re:What else can these guys hack? (Score:2)
Re:Spare Parts (Score:2)
Good Ol' Shep! (Score:2)
Bah humbug. I'm beginning to see why they changed the station's name from the iss..
Linus has,in fact,grown,and explosively-JonKatz
And next week.... (Score:5)
Re:What else can these guys hack? (Score:2)
Use a vaporiser to light the weed
breath it all in in one go and blow the excess smoke out of the window or in this case - into an airlock.
shouldn't be too hard
I wonder if they send the sniffer dogs in before take-off?
What I want to know is... (Score:2)
Careful.... (Score:2)
Let's just hope they don't progress to the spice rack or bookshelves, as nailing them to the wall may prove a bit of a liability....
M.
Re:What else can these guys hack? (Score:3)
Mind you, it just reminded me of the Rastafarian space station in Neuromancer (you know, the one where hash smoke is piped through the air conditioning, and dub music is on all the speaker systems.)
Re:As a humanitarian I'm outraged by the waste of (Score:3)
I think all you Americans ought to come back home right now !!
Re:And the russians up there? (Score:2)
There was me thinking that chauvanism was being condescending towards women, but fortunately I took a second to check with m-w to find the first definition is:
excessive or blind patriotism compare JINGOISM.
That'll learn me.
Backdoor / Table (Score:3)
ISS, IIS... who can see the difference?
ISS Big Brother/Survivor (Score:5)
rr
Re:And the russians up there? (Score:4)
That makes me wonder if the Russian news coverage is something like:
Following the corrupting influence of American astronaut Bill Shepherd, our two cosmonauts aboard the ISS, Sergei Krikalev and Yuri Gidzenko, have been dupped into helping in a plot to sabotage the station's safety systems.
The trio, who surely wouldn't have partaken on this foolhardy venture if they were under the command of a Russian commander, have disassembled the important aluminum frames that hold the solid oxygen generators in place. Without these generators, people on the space station could certainly die. Why were these unnecessary risks undertaken? In order to build a kitchen table. This represents the true extremity of American commercialized excess.
It was only through the quick-thinking of cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev that true disaster was averted. When Bill Sherpherd suggested that they use the airlock door as a table, Sergei stepped in and said such an action would be totally unacceptable.
Furthermore, in order to prevent intervention in this dangerous undertaking, the group chose to hide its actions from Russian ground control. It is the belief of the Russian Space Agency that this secretive nature is a direct result of using an American who was once part of the special commando force, the Navy Seals. It is likely that the Russian cosmonauts also feared for their life and thus had to keep quiet about the mission.
(Seriously, though, I got the impression that they actually built the stuff from packing material rather than stuff that was still being used. But I couldn't resist attempting to spin things the other way.)
Re:Blessed, blessed duct tape! (Score:3)
"Next on Bob Villa's Home Again, we'll be travelling to the ISS to visit the first off-planet furniture factory... The technicians here spend hours laboriously arranging spare parts to build a variety of tables, chairs, and barca-loungers..."
Or maybe Junkyard Wars... "Ok teams, you have 10 hours to build... a table."
I think it is definately a good sign for the space program in general, especially since it's generating good publicity. Also, perhaps they could find some new sponsors? "This wing sponsored by Home Depot..."
Re:There is use for a table in zero-gravity ? (Score:2)
Momentum: A body at rest stays at rest.
They probably also use more tape, velcro, etc. But if something is put in place, it stays in place.
-----
D. Fischer
Shhhhhhhhhh... (Score:2)
As we all know, The force of ignorance is capable of overriding the laws of physics.
Re:As a humanitarian I'm outraged by the waste of (Score:3)
Ok, you are clearly trolling but i still want to set the record straight.
From http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/facts/HTML/FS-0
NASA has the smallest budget of the major agencies in the Federal Government. Its budget has represented less than 1 percent of the total Federal budget each year since 1977.
The above link also mentions a total budget of 14,035 million dollars. This amounts to about 56 dollars per US citizen per year. Not quite your quoted number of $742 per year.
There is use for a table in zero-gravity ? (Score:5)
OK, since they have a table on the ISS, how does the stuff stay on the table?
Here on the bottom of the gravity-well, 9.81m/s make sure the cup stays on the table if i put it there. But which force works up in the ISS?
Secret construction in space (Score:4)
This paves the way for Son of Kitchen Table.
American ingenuity vs Russian "combattivness" (Score:5)
This tradition comes from the days of the centrally planned Soviet economy, when aproving and purchasing something might take 1-1.5 years(!), especially in non-military fundamental science area. We had to reuse everything, sometimes in very interesting ways.
How I would do it. (Score:2)
Well it seems that one has a vit of a problem here. If the duct tape is facing down then the top is smooth, while if it is all facing up, then it doesn't sitck to the table (what a mess...). The idea of simply securing it around the sides would probably not hold up to much stress, so I would suggest an alternate strategy-- two layers of duct tape (how I would do it). The lower layer would look like this:
Interspersed bands facing opposite directions...
Where the ones on tip are facing down and the ones on the bottom are sticky-side-up. Then a second layer would be applied above, perpendicular to this layer, sticky side up, and held in place by the bands of of sticky duct tape. It would not need to be very sticky, just enough, so it would probably last for quite a while.
Anyway, just a thought.
What else can these guys hack? (Score:5)
I bet someone on the I.S.S. will fashion a "tobacco water pipe" out of odds & ends before too long.
Ewige Blumenkraft!
As in Space, so on Earth (Score:2)
Blessed, blessed duct tape! (Score:3)
This is pretty funny, and cool. Now they need to get a fourth up there to play euchre.
Duct tape (Score:2)
Re:Space Station ALPHA? (Score:2)
Yes, the table would work in zero-gravity... (Score:4)
Has it occurred to any of you that are questioning the use of a table in space that you might not be thinking "outside the box" when you read this? What is the (probably incorrect) assumption that you made about the tape?
The tape is probably stick-side up. This type of thinking is why they're up there and most of us are just reading an article about them.
Re:Umm, "spare parts"? (Score:3)
One thing is for shure. If the furniture designer had been a Russian we would be in the middle of a regular shitstorm of NASA critiscism.
And the russians up there? (Score:3)
Is it just me or the report more or less forgot to talk about the role of the Russian cosmonauts?
They probably spent as much time as the American guy, and probably had as much initiative... isn't CNN a bit chauvinistic in this?
Their future is set then (Score:2)
Claric
--
Re:I suppose they like to feel at home, but... (Score:2)
I suppose they like to feel at home, but... (Score:3)
Re:What I want to know is... (Score:2)
Please note chances that the bread will end up buttered side down on certain portion of the space station is directly proportional to the cost of the landing site by Murphie's law.
Actually, in real life, if the buttered bread floats off the table unnoticed, it will almost certainly end up in one of the air filters. (probably with equal probability for buttered side towards the filter) If it is ejected from the table with high enough speed to hit space station walls then the previos theory of bouncing/sticking is more likely.
Re:There is use for a table in zero-gravity ? (Score:3)
Umm, "spare parts"? (Score:5)
Considering the enormously high cost per unit mass to send things to space, I would hope that they would be maximizing the materials (plan to have packing materials fold out into other useful items, etc). Enough waste material to do things like building a table that's "too bulky to send up" or a muffler sort of scares me.
Re:Umm, "spare parts"? (Score:2)
Would it have been more expensive to push the thing a into a slightly higher orbit? We've (as in humanity) have already paid the cost to push the thing out of the gravity well. Why not just leave it up there just in case there is an emergency in which it could be useful? I can't tell you what would constitute such an emergency, but that is the point. If I could list all possible contigencies, then I would be a god. But, I'm not and neither is anyone at NASA or any other space agency.
I must just be my upbringing. We always kept junk in the back of the garage for the odd project that you didn't want to spend money on (not that there was ever much of that available). We could always make do with the junk pile when necessary. The worst thing that could have happened with Mir is that it would be converted into a storage bin and eventually a museum piece sometime in the next 100 yrs or so. Now, it is just some rusting metal at the bottom of the ocean.