Foam Shot Causes Damage to Shuttle Mockup 43
DoraLives writes "The New York Times is running a story describing the effects caused by a piece of foam fired at a fiberglass mock up of the Space Shuttle's wing. Although fiberglass is stronger than the RCC material on Columbia's wing, "The impact produced a 22-inch-long gap." Not good."
Summary (Score:5, Informative)
Terrorists next tool: (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Terrorists next tool: (Score:1, Troll)
Now that's quite a nerf gun (Score:3, Funny)
"Researchers shot a 1.67-pound chunk of foam from a gas cannon
at about 530 miles per hour (Score:2)
You got karma for being funny, but the truth is that this figure is extremely telling - they had to shoot the foam at a completely unrealistic number to get the results they "forced". The foam wasn't falling from very high, and as foam would have an extremely low terminal velocity even if it did. The rocket was just taking off and so wasn't moving very fast, and the foam was moving up at the same speed until it fell.
So why do an experiment with such an insanely high speed for t
Re:at about 530 miles per hour (Score:2)
Huh?
Am I missing something here?
Foam broke loose and hit left wing eighty some odd seconds into the mission.
Shuttle going like a bat out of hell by that time.
Foam in slipstream
Re:at about 530 miles per hour (Score:2)
Sure, this test with the mockup isn't 100% true to reality, but it's not at all an unreasonable simulation to get a rough idea of what could happen.
"Not Good"? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:"Not Good"? (Score:3, Insightful)
If this discovery means there is a risk of destruction of the remaining shuttles that cannot be mitigated, then that is very very "not good"
Re:"Not Good"? (Score:2)
Why does everyone give links to NYT? (Score:5, Informative)
Use Google News [google.com] to find it elsewhere, and reported better as often as not.
Shuttle Wing Foam Collision Tests [google.com]
And a direct Reuters link [reuters.com] which is pretty much what all the other articles say for those who are too lazy to click twice.
-Adam
Re:Why does everyone give links to NYT? (Score:1)
That lost 3 points _very_ quickly...
Re:Why does everyone give links to NYT? (Score:1)
You're replying to yourself with a useless post. Are you trying to see how fast you can lose more points? LOL.
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Re:Why does everyone give links to NYT? (Score:1)
Re:Why does everyone give links to NYT? (Score:1)
You got hit once with Offtopic and once with Overrated. Looks like two seperate hits IMO.
I can't back this up, but from what I've read I think all the admin slaps are Offtopic.
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Related: Why a Space Plane? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Related: Why a Space Plane? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Related: Why a Space Plane? (Score:5, Informative)
Apollo 6 is sitting in a museum I pass every day on my way to work. I'm not aware of any shuttles that are sitting in a museum.
Re:Related: Why a Space Plane? (Score:1)
Interesting reading: http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/lunar/apollo
Re:Related: Why a Space Plane? (Score:3, Interesting)
It is a prototype however, a test bed for the technology that went into the "production" shuttles, and as far as I know not capable of being re-fitted for space. So you are correct in that sense.
Then again, I could be wrong. Perhaps the Smithsonian will donate it back to NASA to be used. I just doubt that will happen.
-Rusty
Re:Related: Why a Space Plane? (Score:2)
Which really makes you wonder.
The damn test data they did have was a 3-cubic-inch chunk of foam, which was nowhere near the size of the chunk they knew had fallen off.
Hindisght's 20/20, but surely someone at NASA could have said "Boeing's test data is wholly inadequate for the regime we're worried about this weekend. Can't we at least ask the Smithsonian janitor's kid to fire his biggest spud gun at the Enterprise so we're at least a couple of miles close
Really no need... (Score:2)
#2 & #3? How did they get in there?
Foreign object impact testing (beyond acknowledgement of that 'rule'),
Re:Related: Why a Space Plane? (Score:2)
The ballistic model has many advantages. The sphereical shape can contain more equipment, it doesn't need a pilot, and it's much more stable during reentry.
Re:Related: Why a Space Plane? (Score:2)
But everyone knows cubes are far more powerful ships than spheres!
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Balistic limits cargo FROM space? (Score:1)
No. you can have a big humungous capsule with the ability to carry as much cargo FROM space as the shuttle. There is nothing in the concept of capsules that makes them inferior to a plane for reentry. And they can be made reusable too.
Even if spaceplanes were an inherently better way to retrieve items from space, the space shittle is not able to reach the vast majority of objects that one might be interested in retrieving. Not only is it limited to Low Earth Orbit, but it is also limited to an eastward
Shuttle Astronauts killed by the EPA (Score:4, Interesting)
DRYDEN F-15B SUPPORTS SHUTTLE EXTERNAL TANK INSULATION TESTS
http://www.dfrc.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewsReleases/19
Published in 1999
fourth paragraph:
The EPA required Nasa to continue using a foam that was not as safe as the older tank foam. The EPA has a direct responsiblity for this disaster.
Re:Shuttle Astronauts killed by the EPA (Score:1, Insightful)
so its really no more epa's fault than yours or mine
go back home, troll.
Re:Shuttle Astronauts killed by the EPA (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah. And they eat babies too.
Nice try at a "EPA Kills Astronauts" causality, but no.
If you want to play the blame game (and I have to say that IMHO, it's a particularly nonproductive game in this case unless you can point at a single individual who personally
Re:Shuttle Astronauts killed by the EPA (Score:2)
Actually by that logic JFK is responsible for saving the lives of 84 astronauts.
If it hadn't been for the over-rapid developement of the space program we never would have essentially abandoned the space program after the initial lunar landing. The slower and sustainable development would have lead to the establishment of a permanent lunar base in 1998, just
Re:Shuttle Astronauts killed by the EPA (Score:2)
Most Cessna-type airplanes still use leaded fuel. Leaded, as in the element Pb, the nerve-damaging metal that they phased out of gasoline in the late 70's? The reason the EPA allows this is that lead's lubrication properties produce a more reliable engine -- something that's of value when you've only got one engine.
You'd think that these small airplanes would pose more of an environmental threat than the rocket tanks.
Re:Shuttle Astronauts killed by the EPA (Score:2)
the design of the external tank (Score:2, Interesting)
What about other rockets that use cryo-fuel? Do they have thermo insulator as an outer layer? I can't be positive, I've never touched a rocket, but they seem to have metal skins...
Re:the design of the external tank (Score:5, Informative)
Money and weight (really the same thing for spacecraft).
What about other rockets that use cryo-fuel? Do they have thermo insulator as an outer layer? I can't be positive, I've never touched a rocket, but they seem to have metal skins...You can often see large chunks of ice falling away from rockets during lauch (check out old footage of Saturn V's).
Re:the design of the external tank (Score:3, Informative)
Bulk storage cryogenic tanks use vacuum space for insulation [cryotrader.com] similar to the "two coaxial metal cylinders" mentioned above.
Chicken Launcher (Score:1)
One anecdote given was that one morning during a standard chicken test the chicken went several feet into the plane body and created a unnervingly loud explosion. It turned out that the operator forgot to unthaw the chicken before launching it.
Re:Chicken Launcher (Score:1)
Yeah, and for an even better effect they strapped a jato unit to the frozen chicken [xnet.com].
T&K.