I bet NASA has a "remove the knob" public hot line.
Some times engineers can't see the forest for the trees.
Have people actually looked read the article and looked as the diagrams and pictures?
I bet NASA has a "remove the knob" public hot line.
Some times engineers can't see the forest for the trees.
I bet NASA has a "remove the knob" public hot line.
Some times engineers can't see the forest for the trees.
Have people actually looked read the article and looked as the diagrams and pictures?
I bet NASA has a "remove the knob" public hot line.
Some times engineers can't see the forest for the trees.
Have people actually looked read the article and looked as the diagrams and pictures?
Too many here thinking "knob" and not "window/airframe" integrity. The window is the real issue.
^stick a balloon in behind it, inflate it and the knob will pop right out...
are we talking fixing the shuttle or erectile disfunction here?![]()
[QUOTE
Atlantis was due to fly 10 missions next year but the question comes down to cost and time to repair. Speculation is that it could lead to Atlantis being grounded earlier than planned.
From the article...Have people actually looked read the article and looked as the diagrams and pictures?
Why can't they just pressurize the inside of the shuttle and recreate the expansion that occurs in space?Crew module skin expands while in orbit due to 14.7 psi internal pressure...
From the article...Have people actually looked read the article and looked as the diagrams and pictures?
Why can't they just pressurize the inside of the shuttle and recreate the expansion that occurs in space?Crew module skin expands while in orbit due to 14.7 psi internal pressure...
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From the article...Have people actually looked read the article and looked as the diagrams and pictures?
Why can't they just pressurize the inside of the shuttle and recreate the expansion that occurs in space?Crew module skin expands while in orbit due to 14.7 psi internal pressure...
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Because 14.7 psi is 1 standard atmosphere, a unit so named because it is the pressure exerted by Earth's atmosphere at sea level. In other words, the shuttle is pressurized to that level already. The reason everything contracted is because the gas outside the shuttle is similarly pressurized.
Causing the shuttle to expand requires pressurizing it to double what it is rated for, which could very well cause even worse damage, or stripping the Earth of its atmosphere, which is inadvisable.
They're going to have to replace the window, anyway. It's already damaged, they can't risk it failing in space. So, just take the whole window out, remove the knob, and then put in a new one. Simple.
It would seem to me then, that the shuttle is 'rated for' a pressure differential of 14.7 psi between the inside and outside of the cabin. On Earth, that difference would normally be zero. Why would increasing the inside pressure by 14.7 psi place any more stress on the shuttle than keeping the inside pressure as is and subjecting the outside to a vacuum?Because 14.7 psi is 1 standard atmosphere, a unit so named because it is the pressure exerted by Earth's atmosphere at sea level. In other words, the shuttle is pressurized to that level already. The reason everything contracted is because the gas outside the shuttle is similarly pressurized.Why can't they just pressurize the inside of the shuttle and recreate the expansion that occurs in space?
Causing the shuttle to expand requires pressurizing it to double what it is rated for, which could very well cause even worse damage
I still say the "biggest flaw" is that the guy who dropped the knob in there in the first place didn't retrieve it.
They're probably lucky the knob isn't a little bigger, the window a little closer to the dash, or any one of hundreds of other things weren't just a bit different or else the window may have failed during re-entry.
I could of made mistake with the number but the article did talk about the workload for the shuttles so it would be easy to check.
Space shuttle Atlantis was pressurized last night and a knob that had been wedged against a window was removed. Next up, window inspections.
Who would have thought...?I just read this Tweet from NASA:Space shuttle Atlantis was pressurized last night and a knob that had been wedged against a window was removed.
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