Quote from: Robotbeat on 11/23/2022 12:31 amQuote from: whitelancer64 on 11/22/2022 10:54 pmQuote from: TheRadicalModerate on 11/22/2022 10:31 pm*snip*I'm pretty sure that whatever NASA winds up with for flight pressure suits, it'll be plug-compatible between Orion and LSS. *snip*I am of the presumption that NASA will bring the Orion's IVA pressure suits into the HLS for use during that vehicle's crewed proximity / docking / lunar descent / ascent operations. It makes sense, since those suits are already on Orion for that purpose. As an aside, IIRC these Orion IVA suits are supposed to be designed for 8 or 10 days of continuous use in the event of an emergency, which is long enough to get Orion from NRHO back to Earth.But suits are usually made in parallel with the spacecraft, made for one another as compatible systems. starship uses, I believe, Dragon-heritage systems, so it’d make a lot more sense to use Dragon IVA suits for that purpose. Seats, interfaces, life support, etc, would all need to be remade if they had to somehow switch to Orion IVA suits and would require interfacing with proprietary Lockheed Martin systems, which sounds like an absolute nightmare for a commercial (as opposed to traditional NASA-run) contract.Nah, gonna say Dragon-heritage IVA suits are much more likely for that purpose. Would be much cheaper for SpaceX overall not to have to redesign everything. And keep in mind the Dragon suits are much more proven and the design more stabilized.I had assumed that the HLS contract specified the use of Orion IVA suits. If not, then crew that is going to descend to the lunar surface during Artemis III will need to change suits when they move from Orion to HLS.
Quote from: whitelancer64 on 11/22/2022 10:54 pmQuote from: TheRadicalModerate on 11/22/2022 10:31 pm*snip*I'm pretty sure that whatever NASA winds up with for flight pressure suits, it'll be plug-compatible between Orion and LSS. *snip*I am of the presumption that NASA will bring the Orion's IVA pressure suits into the HLS for use during that vehicle's crewed proximity / docking / lunar descent / ascent operations. It makes sense, since those suits are already on Orion for that purpose. As an aside, IIRC these Orion IVA suits are supposed to be designed for 8 or 10 days of continuous use in the event of an emergency, which is long enough to get Orion from NRHO back to Earth.But suits are usually made in parallel with the spacecraft, made for one another as compatible systems. starship uses, I believe, Dragon-heritage systems, so it’d make a lot more sense to use Dragon IVA suits for that purpose. Seats, interfaces, life support, etc, would all need to be remade if they had to somehow switch to Orion IVA suits and would require interfacing with proprietary Lockheed Martin systems, which sounds like an absolute nightmare for a commercial (as opposed to traditional NASA-run) contract.Nah, gonna say Dragon-heritage IVA suits are much more likely for that purpose. Would be much cheaper for SpaceX overall not to have to redesign everything. And keep in mind the Dragon suits are much more proven and the design more stabilized.
Quote from: TheRadicalModerate on 11/22/2022 10:31 pm*snip*I'm pretty sure that whatever NASA winds up with for flight pressure suits, it'll be plug-compatible between Orion and LSS. *snip*I am of the presumption that NASA will bring the Orion's IVA pressure suits into the HLS for use during that vehicle's crewed proximity / docking / lunar descent / ascent operations. It makes sense, since those suits are already on Orion for that purpose. As an aside, IIRC these Orion IVA suits are supposed to be designed for 8 or 10 days of continuous use in the event of an emergency, which is long enough to get Orion from NRHO back to Earth.
*snip*I'm pretty sure that whatever NASA winds up with for flight pressure suits, it'll be plug-compatible between Orion and LSS. *snip*
Quote from: DanClemmensen on 11/23/2022 12:38 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 11/23/2022 12:31 amQuote from: whitelancer64 on 11/22/2022 10:54 pmQuote from: TheRadicalModerate on 11/22/2022 10:31 pm*snip*I'm pretty sure that whatever NASA winds up with for flight pressure suits, it'll be plug-compatible between Orion and LSS. *snip*I am of the presumption that NASA will bring the Orion's IVA pressure suits into the HLS for use during that vehicle's crewed proximity / docking / lunar descent / ascent operations. It makes sense, since those suits are already on Orion for that purpose. As an aside, IIRC these Orion IVA suits are supposed to be designed for 8 or 10 days of continuous use in the event of an emergency, which is long enough to get Orion from NRHO back to Earth.But suits are usually made in parallel with the spacecraft, made for one another as compatible systems. starship uses, I believe, Dragon-heritage systems, so it’d make a lot more sense to use Dragon IVA suits for that purpose. Seats, interfaces, life support, etc, would all need to be remade if they had to somehow switch to Orion IVA suits and would require interfacing with proprietary Lockheed Martin systems, which sounds like an absolute nightmare for a commercial (as opposed to traditional NASA-run) contract.Nah, gonna say Dragon-heritage IVA suits are much more likely for that purpose. Would be much cheaper for SpaceX overall not to have to redesign everything. And keep in mind the Dragon suits are much more proven and the design more stabilized.I had assumed that the HLS contract specified the use of Orion IVA suits. If not, then crew that is going to descend to the lunar surface during Artemis III will need to change suits when they move from Orion to HLS.Dont assume. I’m not aware of anything that specifies use of the Orion IVA.
Quote from: DanClemmensen on 11/22/2022 11:51 pmQuote from: whitelancer64 on 11/22/2022 09:48 pmI think yg1968 is saying "No" specifically to F9/Dragon/HLS missions, either private or through NASA, and is saying "Yes" to private SpaceX Starship / HLS missions in general, but only after Artemis 3.That's what I understood yg1968 to say. I do not understand why the Starship flight is politically acceptable but the F9/D2 flight is not politically acceptable. They both pose the same threat to SLS/Orion.They do but I expect that crewed Starship will be ready far enough into the future that it won't matter at that point. Furthermore, crewed Starship would have to get certified and I am not convinced that this will happen until NASA decides that it needs crewed Starship for lunar or Mars crewed missions. Starship is overkill for the commercial LEO destinations program. I suspect that SpaceX will continue to use crewed Dragon for LEO missions.
Quote from: whitelancer64 on 11/22/2022 09:48 pmI think yg1968 is saying "No" specifically to F9/Dragon/HLS missions, either private or through NASA, and is saying "Yes" to private SpaceX Starship / HLS missions in general, but only after Artemis 3.That's what I understood yg1968 to say. I do not understand why the Starship flight is politically acceptable but the F9/D2 flight is not politically acceptable. They both pose the same threat to SLS/Orion.
I think yg1968 is saying "No" specifically to F9/Dragon/HLS missions, either private or through NASA, and is saying "Yes" to private SpaceX Starship / HLS missions in general, but only after Artemis 3.
Quote from: whitelancer64 on 11/22/2022 10:54 pmQuote from: TheRadicalModerate on 11/22/2022 10:31 pm*snip*I'm pretty sure that whatever NASA winds up with for flight pressure suits, it'll be plug-compatible between Orion and LSS. *snip*I am of the presumption that NASA will bring the Orion's IVA pressure suits into the HLS for use during that vehicle's crewed proximity / docking / lunar descent / ascent operations. It makes sense, since those suits are already on Orion for that purpose. As an aside, IIRC these Orion IVA suits are supposed to be designed for 8 or 10 days of continuous use in the event of an emergency, which is long enough to get Orion from NRHO back to Earth.But suits are usually made in parallel with the spacecraft, made for one another as compatible systems. starship uses, I believe, Dragon-heritage systems, so it’d make a lot more sense to use Dragon IVA suits for that purpose. Seats, interfaces, life support, etc, would all need to be remade *snip* lemme stop you right there.
Quote from: Robotbeat on 11/23/2022 12:53 amQuote from: DanClemmensen on 11/23/2022 12:38 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 11/23/2022 12:31 amQuote from: whitelancer64 on 11/22/2022 10:54 pmQuote from: TheRadicalModerate on 11/22/2022 10:31 pm*snip*I'm pretty sure that whatever NASA winds up with for flight pressure suits, it'll be plug-compatible between Orion and LSS. *snip*I am of the presumption that NASA will bring the Orion's IVA pressure suits into the HLS for use during that vehicle's crewed proximity / docking / lunar descent / ascent operations. It makes sense, since those suits are already on Orion for that purpose. As an aside, IIRC these Orion IVA suits are supposed to be designed for 8 or 10 days of continuous use in the event of an emergency, which is long enough to get Orion from NRHO back to Earth.But suits are usually made in parallel with the spacecraft, made for one another as compatible systems. starship uses, I believe, Dragon-heritage systems, so it’d make a lot more sense to use Dragon IVA suits for that purpose. Seats, interfaces, life support, etc, would all need to be remade if they had to somehow switch to Orion IVA suits and would require interfacing with proprietary Lockheed Martin systems, which sounds like an absolute nightmare for a commercial (as opposed to traditional NASA-run) contract.Nah, gonna say Dragon-heritage IVA suits are much more likely for that purpose. Would be much cheaper for SpaceX overall not to have to redesign everything. And keep in mind the Dragon suits are much more proven and the design more stabilized.I had assumed that the HLS contract specified the use of Orion IVA suits. If not, then crew that is going to descend to the lunar surface during Artemis III will need to change suits when they move from Orion to HLS.Dont assume. I’m not aware of anything that specifies use of the Orion IVA.So how does this work? When do they change suits?
Quote from: DanClemmensen on 11/23/2022 01:22 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 11/23/2022 12:53 amQuote from: DanClemmensen on 11/23/2022 12:38 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 11/23/2022 12:31 amQuote from: whitelancer64 on 11/22/2022 10:54 pmQuote from: TheRadicalModerate on 11/22/2022 10:31 pm*snip*I'm pretty sure that whatever NASA winds up with for flight pressure suits, it'll be plug-compatible between Orion and LSS. *snip*I am of the presumption that NASA will bring the Orion's IVA pressure suits into the HLS for use during that vehicle's crewed proximity / docking / lunar descent / ascent operations. It makes sense, since those suits are already on Orion for that purpose. As an aside, IIRC these Orion IVA suits are supposed to be designed for 8 or 10 days of continuous use in the event of an emergency, which is long enough to get Orion from NRHO back to Earth.But suits are usually made in parallel with the spacecraft, made for one another as compatible systems. starship uses, I believe, Dragon-heritage systems, so it’d make a lot more sense to use Dragon IVA suits for that purpose. Seats, interfaces, life support, etc, would all need to be remade if they had to somehow switch to Orion IVA suits and would require interfacing with proprietary Lockheed Martin systems, which sounds like an absolute nightmare for a commercial (as opposed to traditional NASA-run) contract.Nah, gonna say Dragon-heritage IVA suits are much more likely for that purpose. Would be much cheaper for SpaceX overall not to have to redesign everything. And keep in mind the Dragon suits are much more proven and the design more stabilized.I had assumed that the HLS contract specified the use of Orion IVA suits. If not, then crew that is going to descend to the lunar surface during Artemis III will need to change suits when they move from Orion to HLS.Dont assume. I’m not aware of anything that specifies use of the Orion IVA.So how does this work? When do they change suits?If this is the conops, the answer is that they don't. They'd only wear the SpaceX suits in the HLS and the Orion suits in the Orion, and only during RPROD or lunar descent/ascent. The suits would never leave either respective vehicle.
Quote from: DanClemmensen on 11/22/2022 11:51 pmQuote from: whitelancer64 on 11/22/2022 09:48 pmI think yg1968 is saying "No" specifically to F9/Dragon/HLS missions, either private or through NASA, and is saying "Yes" to private SpaceX Starship / HLS missions in general, but only after Artemis 3.That's what I understood yg1968 to say. I do not understand why the Starship flight is politically acceptable but the F9/D2 flight is not politically acceptable. They both pose the same threat to SLS/Orion.I don't think any of it has to do with being politically acceptable, but Falcon 9 / Dragon is much more expensive than Starship will be. It's simple economics for a private mission to not use F9 / Dragon. NASA has priority for lunar landings because they are paying SpaceX a lot to develop the landing system. Same with crew flights to the ISS getting priority over any private astronaut flights.
I don't think any of it has to do with being politically acceptable, but Falcon 9 / Dragon is much more expensive than Starship will be. It's simple economics for a private mission to not use F9 / Dragon. NASA has priority for lunar landings because they are paying SpaceX a lot to develop the landing system. Same with crew flights to the ISS getting priority over any private astronaut flights.
For various reasons, I don't think that F9/Dragon and HLS-Starship will ever be proposed, even if makes sense. SpaceX doesn't want to propose it and NASA doesn't want it proposed because they know that it would upset SLS proponents in Congress which in turn could jeopardize the funding for HLS. SpaceX is also not keen on it because they think that crew Dragon is a dead-end.
The fact that Tito indicated that a trip to the lunar surface wasn't a possibility makes me think that SpaceX isn't offering HLS-Starship to private customers just yet and I don't think that they will for a while. One of the reasons is that they don't know how much HLS-Starship will cost at this point and another reason is that it could jeopardize HLS funding if they did offer it to private astronauts. I think that SpaceX is focusing on the bigger picture which is Mars. Having said that, I expect SpaceX to start selling private lunar surface missions once crewed Starship is ready (which should be after Artemis III).
So after the docking is complete, the crew that is transferring strips out of their Orion IVA suits and traverses through the port into HLS, where they don their HLS IVA suits? Orion and HLS are considered to be "shirtsleeve" environments? I guess I had assumed that crew in a capsule are supposed to be in an IVA suit.
Quote from: DanClemmensen on 11/23/2022 02:35 amSo after the docking is complete, the crew that is transferring strips out of their Orion IVA suits and traverses through the port into HLS, where they don their HLS IVA suits? Orion and HLS are considered to be "shirtsleeve" environments? I guess I had assumed that crew in a capsule are supposed to be in an IVA suit.My understanding is that you use IVAs during potentially hazardous maneuvers. So when they're docking, they're in IVA suit #1. When hard dock is verified and the tunnel is open, they remove IVA #1, go to the other LSS/D2/whatever in shirtsleeves, then put on IVA suit #2 for undocking and the trip home.
It seems that NASA could save some money by standardizing the IVA suits. Since the majority of suits are SpaceX, they would "merely" need to use the SpaceX suits for Orion, and all would be good. The advantages for mission safety and efficiency are more important than the money.
They do but I expect that crewed Starship will be ready far enough into the future that it won't matter at that point. Furthermore, crewed Starship would have to get certified and I am not convinced that this will happen until NASA decides that it needs crewed Starship for lunar or Mars crewed missions. <snip>
Quote from: yg1968 on 11/23/2022 12:44 amThey do but I expect that crewed Starship will be ready far enough into the future that it won't matter at that point. Furthermore, crewed Starship would have to get certified and I am not convinced that this will happen until NASA decides that it needs crewed Starship for lunar or Mars crewed missions. <snip>To take this conversation in a slightly different direction I would like to ask a question about a spacecraft being crew rated. I would assume that as soon as NASA astronauts board the SpaceX HLS for lunar operations (their very lives are committed to the proper functioning of all HLS systems) that at that point, HLS actually becomes a de facto crew rated spacecraft. If that is not true then NASA would be, in fact, committing the lives of the crew to a non-crew rated spacecraft. Would that be a fair assessment?
Quote from: TheRadicalModerate on 11/23/2022 04:29 amQuote from: DanClemmensen on 11/23/2022 02:35 amSo after the docking is complete, the crew that is transferring strips out of their Orion IVA suits and traverses through the port into HLS, where they don their HLS IVA suits? Orion and HLS are considered to be "shirtsleeve" environments? I guess I had assumed that crew in a capsule are supposed to be in an IVA suit.My understanding is that you use IVAs during potentially hazardous maneuvers. So when they're docking, they're in IVA suit #1. When hard dock is verified and the tunnel is open, they remove IVA #1, go to the other LSS/D2/whatever in shirtsleeves, then put on IVA suit #2 for undocking and the trip home.It seems that NASA could save some money by standardizing the IVA suits. Since the majority of suits are SpaceX, they would "merely" need to use the SpaceX suits for Orion, and all would be good. The advantages for mission safety and efficiency are more important than the money.