The crew of Soyuz 11 would beg to differ, if they weren't dead. There's a difference between walking around town in a plastic wrapped EOD suit and reasonably exercising caution.
Quote from: Borklund on 07/02/2014 12:23 amThe crew of Soyuz 11 would beg to differ, if they weren't dead. There's a difference between walking around town in a plastic wrapped EOD suit and reasonably exercising caution.Not at all. Pressure suits are a hack for people who can't build a cabin that pressurizes properly. I dunno how I can make that more clear. The solution to the Soyuz 11 incident was to fix the ventilation valve. Making everyone wear pressure suits was unnecessary, as evidenced by the fact that they've never averted a disaster, ever. Pressure suits in a correctly pressurized cabin are worse than useless.
How do you know if your cabin is a "correctly pressurized cabin" or not? Just saying it is doesn't make it so. After extensive ground testing and several test flights, then you might have the confidence to not use pressure suits. Using pressure suits, at least during testing, is not a hack.
As to pressure suits having never averted a disaster, if they had them on Soyuz 11, the crew would have survived.
Modern airliners are "correctly pressurized cabins" and as Borklund wrote, airliners carry oxygen masks.
In the case of Space Ship Two, I'm sure the Virgin Galactic team has studied their design to great detail and considered the risks.
Pressure suits are a hack for people who can't build a cabin that pressurizes properly.
Quote from: QuantumG on 07/02/2014 12:44 amPressure suits are a hack for people who can't build a cabin that pressurizes properly.Dissimilar redundancy is a tried and true technique for reducing overall risk of system failure in the face of both foreseen and unforeseen challenges.
Quote from: RonM on 07/02/2014 02:21 amHow do you know if your cabin is a "correctly pressurized cabin" or not? Just saying it is doesn't make it so. After extensive ground testing and several test flights, then you might have the confidence to not use pressure suits. Using pressure suits, at least during testing, is not a hack.Yes.Quote from: RonMAs to pressure suits having never averted a disaster, if they had them on Soyuz 11, the crew would have survived.Says you. In all the history of human spaceflight, this is the only example you can come up with? A maybe?Quote from: RonMModern airliners are "correctly pressurized cabins" and as Borklund wrote, airliners carry oxygen masks... and? Aircraft have completely different failure modes to spacecraft.Quote from: RonMIn the case of Space Ship Two, I'm sure the Virgin Galactic team has studied their design to great detail and considered the risks.Borklund clearly thinks otherwise!
Fortunately, Soyuz 11 is the only example. You're dismissal of pressure suits just because there hasn't been another Soyuz 11 style accident is illogical.
While there are major differences between aircraft and spacecraft, the pressurized cabins are very similar.
It wouldn't matter if there had been hundreds of cases where people had died in Soyuz 11 style accidents, implementing pressure suits would still be the wrong reaction if they're completely ineffective, which clearly they are.
Explain to me how pressure suits are "completely ineffective" in preventing loss of life in a loss-of-pressure situation? Bear in mind I used to be a life support systems engineer so don't hand-wave and just keep insisting the same things over and over again to shout down the discussion.
Bill Weaver, on January 25, 1966, while piloting an SR-71 that disintegrated around him at Mach 3.2/78,800 ft, was wearing a pressure suit which saved his life.
Quote from: Herb Schaltegger on 07/02/2014 03:10 amExplain to me how pressure suits are "completely ineffective" in preventing loss of life in a loss-of-pressure situation? Bear in mind I used to be a life support systems engineer so don't hand-wave and just keep insisting the same things over and over again to shout down the discussion.I've already explained it. What do you find incorrect about the assessment?It's pretty clear that wearing a gas mask would save drivers from passing out should a design flaw result in carbon monoxide being pumped through the vents, but we don't require people to wear them either. Why? Don't we care about their safety? Suppose there was a single incident in 1971 by a Russian car manufacturer and, despite the best precautions being taken by car manufacturers, everyone started wearing gas masks. Wouldn't it be reasonable, 40 years later, to ask for a few examples of people being saved as a result of wearing their gas masks? If there was none, wouldn't you start to think that maybe people are being just a tad overcautious? If someone started driving without their gas mask, would you be justified in calling them reckless?Common sense, it's not too much to ask is it?
Quote from: sdsds on 07/02/2014 03:18 amBill Weaver, on January 25, 1966, while piloting an SR-71 that disintegrated around him at Mach 3.2/78,800 ft, was wearing a pressure suit which saved his life.If he hadn't been wearing a pressure suit, he'd be dead before he even got there. That's why he was wearing a pressure suit. The vehicle was designed to require one.
There has only been about 300 manned spaceflights, so comparing it to cars is ridiculous.
The SR-71 cockpit was pressurized. You wouldn't be dead without a pressure suit, but since the chance of failure was high, you would wear one.
Quote from: RonM on 07/02/2014 03:40 amThere has only been about 300 manned spaceflights, so comparing it to cars is ridiculous.I wasn't. I was just trying to make my argument in a way that people could understand, as it appears you still don't.
You've got some good points, but there is some hyperbole in your statement.Yes, the new engine is riskier in some areas (more complicated), but it's safer in others (less stress-inducing vibration).Yes, SS1 had shuttlecock problems. But it was an experimental testbed, not a commercial airframe. One presumes they took a harder look at this known potential failure point when designing SS2.Yes, SS1 had chunks of rubber flying out the back. It was expected even if it was a bit loud. Personally, I think the pre-flight fuel handling and potential helium handling problems are going to add some logistics and schedule adherence headaches versus plugging in a solid fuel module prior to each flight, but they've obviously calculated that it's an expense they can and have to absorb, or they wouldn't have chosen this route.