View Full Version : Today I found out Playtex the bra company made the Apollo space suits
HenryDorsetCase
25th February 2016, 07:37
http://www.wired.com/2011/02/pl_spacesuits_showdown/
Which I found to be very interesting.
I thought I would share. I am a fan of hard science and manned spaceflight.
oldrider
25th February 2016, 08:04
How very uplifting! :eek:
TheDemonLord
25th February 2016, 08:19
Well, it confirms that Astronaughts need a lot of support.
jonbuoy
25th February 2016, 09:20
Love the whole Apollo era. Those guys had some balls. All highly intelligent people who knew the huge risks they were taking and did it anyway. Goes for the engineers and the pilots. Pity we can't stop lobbing bombs at each other and concentrate the entire military budgets of the whole world into space technology. I went to Kennedy space centre a few years ago- seemed geared up to take a lot more tourists than there actually were taking the time to visit it. It almost felt like there was a lack of interest a forgotten era. Hard to believe really.
Tazz
25th February 2016, 09:46
Love the whole Apollo era. Those guys had some balls. All highly intelligent people who knew the huge risks they were taking and did it anyway. Goes for the engineers and the pilots. Pity we can't stop lobbing bombs at each other and concentrate the entire military budgets of the whole world into space technology. I went to Kennedy space centre a few years ago- seemed geared up to take a lot more tourists than there actually were taking the time to visit it. It almost felt like there was a lack of interest a forgotten era. Hard to believe really.
There was a nice little write up on some aspects of the Soviet space program on the BBC website last week. Don't have the link handy but probably something you'd find interesting.
Banditbandit
25th February 2016, 09:50
Well that would stop them flopping about in zero gravity ..
Swoop
25th February 2016, 14:34
Have a look at the generation of development that went into the pressure suits that high-altitude test pilots had to wear, before space suits were thought of.
Made on antique sewing machines, exceptionally tight fitting, tailor made equipment.
Then you had to learn how to breathe in it. Backwards.
On the ground (do it now) you have to suck air into your lungs. Do nothing and it expels all by itself. With the pressure suit, air is forced into your lungs blowing you up like a balloon. You have to contract your muscles to forcibly expel the air.
Whilst attempting to fly the "latest" hotrod of the skies - which was attempting to kill you in many various ways.
:(
Banditbandit
25th February 2016, 14:53
Have a look at the generation of development that went into the pressure suits that high-altitude test pilots had to wear, before space suits were thought of.
Made on antique sewing machines, exceptionally tight fitting, tailor made equipment.
Then you had to learn how to breathe in it. Backwards.
On the ground (do it now) you have to suck air into your lungs. Do nothing and it expels all by itself. With the pressure suit, air is forced into your lungs blowing you up like a balloon. You have to contract your muscles to forcibly expel the air.
Whilst attempting to fly the "latest" hotrod of the skies - which was attempting to kill you in many various ways.
:(
Someone's always going to come along and kll off an amusing idea (space suits built by a lingerie company) with facts and figures ..
gammaguy
25th February 2016, 15:28
Typical internet...
Because there is no body language,when someone comments on a bra company making space suits,we get confused
Is it an opening gambit for scientific gee wizzery and technical one upmanship,or pun based tittery and mammary sniggery?
Maybe a picture of a hot astronaut chick wearing a bra or a picture of some crusty old guy astronaut(fully clothed) digging up a moon rock would have removed any confusion
Just saying...
Banditbandit
25th February 2016, 16:16
How about a compromise ??
http://www.china-defense-mashup.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/female-astronaut.jpg
mashman
25th February 2016, 17:29
Ah, that's why they never go tits up.
Swoop
25th February 2016, 17:52
... facts and figures ..
Well, someone has to put some of those out there, just to counterbalance the tinfoil-hat club's verbal diarrhea.;)
oldrider
25th February 2016, 17:59
Love the whole Apollo era. Those guys had some balls. All highly intelligent people who knew the huge risks they were taking and did it anyway. Goes for the engineers and the pilots. Pity we can't stop lobbing bombs at each other and concentrate the entire military budgets of the whole world into space technology. I went to Kennedy space centre a few years ago- seemed geared up to take a lot more tourists than there actually were taking the time to visit it. It almost felt like there was a lack of interest a forgotten era. Hard to believe really.
The space program was great for injecting new money into the system but it didn't kill enough people so they redirected the money back into war - problem sorted! :blip:
Ocean1
25th February 2016, 18:16
The space program was great for injecting new money into the system but it didn't kill enough people so they redirected the money back into war - problem sorted! :blip:
What system?
Post-Apollo NASA had it's budget dramatically slashed.
A decade later someone cobbled up a budget to put together another manned lunar landing, it amounted to US$14 per American family.
And America hasn't seen $14 as a worthwhile investment since.
Voltaire
25th February 2016, 18:30
The space program was great for injecting new money into the system but it didn't kill enough people so they redirected the money back into war - problem sorted! :blip:
Totally not true, I had one of these.
http://www.led-watch.com/images/TX6/tx6packblimp.jpg
How about the abandoned USSR Shuttle, sitting in a large shed for years and years.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/picture-galleries/11691839/Russias-abandoned-space-shuttles-at-the-Baikonur-Cosmodrome-in-pictures.html?frame=3349898
HenryDorsetCase
25th February 2016, 20:47
The interesting thing about that is the Apollo astronauts used Omega Speedmaster Calibre 361 watches. "The only watch worn on the moon". Mechanical. Perspex dial. Hand wind.
They still make them. It got Jim Lovell and co out of the shit in Apollo 13. That thing with timing the thruster burns? Yeah. That was real. Measuring the speed using the tachymetre outer bezel. Also real.
Next time you velcro yourself into your latex catsuit? Thank the space programme.
F5 Dave
26th February 2016, 06:30
http://www.wired.com/2011/02/pl_spacesuits_showdown/
Which I found to be very interesting.
I thought I would share. I am a fan of hard science and manned spaceflight.
Well they only had to withstand the filming sessions of the Arizona desert at nighttime.
(Didn't do enough research to find out where they were supposedly staged, i dont want that on my search history, but SS or FC will be along soon and I thought I'd do them a solid by standing in. -Actually I was typing that on the bog doing a solid. Spookey).
Tazz
26th February 2016, 09:10
The interesting thing about that is the Apollo astronauts used Omega Speedmaster Calibre 361 watches. "The only watch worn on the moon". Mechanical. Perspex dial. Hand wind.
They still make them. It got Jim Lovell and co out of the shit in Apollo 13. That thing with timing the thruster burns? Yeah. That was real. Measuring the speed using the tachymetre outer bezel. Also real.
Next time you velcro yourself into your latex catsuit? Thank the space programme.
Was a personal watch and not N.A.S.A issued too iirc
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