T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
196.1 | Separable crew cabin | LATOUR::DZIEDZIC | | Wed Jul 30 1986 10:46 | 12 |
| I saw something on the news yesterday which suggested someone was
trying to figure out a way to make the entire crew cabin an escape
module of some sort. They were looking at ways to put parachutes,
etc., on it an allowing the cabin to separate from the shuttle in
an emergency. However, since there is no spare room in the shuttle
it would be a several year redesign effort to work out the system.
I think it was Richard Truly who said such a system might have been
able to save lives in the case of the Challenger explosion. Even
though the crew wouldn't have had time to initiate an escape sequence
if the crew module had parachutes some of them might have lived.
|
196.2 | | MONSTR::HUGHES | Gary Hughes | Wed Jul 30 1986 14:01 | 6 |
| A lot of this talk came up when it was discovered that the crew
cabin may have survived intact until impact with the water. This
led to speculation about allowing the the cabin to seperate in an
emergency.
gary
|
196.3 | | LATOUR::MCCUTCHEON | Charlie McCutcheon | Wed Jul 30 1986 19:41 | 9 |
| I heard something on "the news" that one or more of these ideas
wouldn't work if the explosion was just a little lower or higher
in altitude. Whoever said that didn't seem to be impressed in
making radical changes for an event unlikely to happen with just
those exact conditions again.
(Sorry for being vague, it was a day or two ago I heard this.)
Charlie
|
196.4 | | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Thu Jul 31 1986 07:53 | 15 |
| Since it seems that at least some of the crew were concious long
enough to turn on their O2 and don the mask, a "command ejection"
sequence might have saved the whole crew. A command ejection sequence
in a modern jet fighter is one where no matter which crew member
initiate the ejection the entire crew is ejected in the proper
sequence. Proper sequence is required to avoid injury to the other
members of the crew, ie being burned by the seat rocket.
I saw the somments that these would have only worked for this one
rare type of explosion, of course this explosion could never have
happened either. I don't think that these guys really know for sure
and it seems stupid to gamble the crew's life on an assumption that
is not testable.
dave
|
196.5 | Hah! | GALLO::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Thu Jul 31 1986 18:49 | 26 |
| Re .3:
I've also heard claims in the media that there was only a narrow altitude
window during a launch where the crew could be saved. I'm not impressed
by them in the least. I suspect that they were generated by people trying
to rationalize participation in decisions to omit orbiter escape systems by
claiming that they are ineffective in a few accident scenarios. And/or by
the media trying for emotional leverage by pandering to conjectures
about "what if we only had done this...".
If it means the entire crew has to be wearing oxygen masks and/or
relatively cheap flight suits (unsuitable for EVA in orbit), then so
be it. If it means the commander and pilot have to be in real space suits
to allow them to command after a catastrophic loss of cabin pressure,
then fine, do it. If it means that some accidents would result in possible
anoxia for the back-seat crew members, or potentially non-survivable
decelerations because of low-altitude parachute deployment from the
crew module, so what. The people that don't want the systems can volunteer
to go up with cheap seat belts and no masks once the shuttle flys again
to demonstrate how futile it all is.
The trouble is, if it really takes a long time and a lot of money to
retrofit the remaining orbiters with escape systems, then the program will
be over before they are done. And that may not be because the TAV has
superseded the shuttle, either.
/AHM
|
196.6 | Hit the silk. | JON::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Jul 31 1986 20:55 | 22 |
| The issue of escape systems comes down to one of weight vs
reliability. The narrow window is due to the fact that once you
get above a certain speed you would need a heat shield as well
as a pressure suit or capsule to survive.
If you believe that the shuttle can not be made reliable and you
can afford the weight you could make the entire crew compartment
an escape capsule with heat shield, control system, etc. (i.e.
something like an Apollo command module). This would save the
crew from most situations.
By the way, according to AWST, NASA is considering an escape
system for the space station based on Apollo technology.
If you believe that the shuttle can be made reliable then you
save the weight and try to land if there is a problem. This is
the aproach taken by the airlines. There have been several air
disasters that might not have been as bad if DC-10s, 727s, etc
had escape systems but they are still not put in place and
probably shouldn't be.
George
|
196.7 | See also note 177.* | PYRITE::WEAVER | Dave - Laboratory Data Products | Wed Aug 06 1986 14:25 | 4 |
| Note 177.* contains the earlier discussion on this subject.
Interesting reading in light of the current news.
-Dave
|