Space Shuttle Columbia Explodes
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- Krimson Klaw
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You guys see the supposed fissure on the wing that an israeli news source is showing as a television camera shot from the Israeli onboard? check this out...You have to translate the page, but the picture is clear...
http://www.corriere.it/Primo_Piano/Cron ... repe.shtml
http://www.corriere.it/Primo_Piano/Cron ... repe.shtml
- Dregor Thule
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heh
I find this kind of dumb. I mean comon the ship was over 25 years old FF , what the hell did they think that they could have keep using it to year 3000 ?
You normaly buy a new car after what 5-15(20) years ? Depending of course how much you have been using it, and the car under that life time doesnt even come in close to the force and enviroment that the shuttle has experienced.

You normaly buy a new car after what 5-15(20) years ? Depending of course how much you have been using it, and the car under that life time doesnt even come in close to the force and enviroment that the shuttle has experienced.

- Midnyte_Ragebringer
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Granted, I'm no rocket scientist, but that certianly is a huge fucking crack in the wing. Hard to imagine they didn't notice that. I wonder what recourse they would've had if they knew in advance they wouldn't survive re-entry? Dock with the space station and we'd fly up another shuttle for a rescue? That would've been an interesting situation.
- Sylvus
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Perhaps I'm seeing the picture wrong, but isn't that a picture that was taken from space? If so, it could have been something that wasn't noticeable before takeoff that got much worse on the way up. In which case they may have had few options once they were up there.
I have no idea what it costs to build a shuttle, do you think they have any sort of insurance on them?
I have no idea what it costs to build a shuttle, do you think they have any sort of insurance on them?
"It's like these guys take pride in being ignorant." - Barack Obama
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- Vetiria
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By watching the many professionals (i.e. ex-NASA astronauts and engineers) that have been on TV say there would be no recourse. They wouldn't be able to get to the space station because the shuttle didn't carry enough fuel to change their course 20 degrees. There also wouldn't be another shuttle ready in time to meet up with the one already in space; while one shuttle is in space, the rest are getting refitted, etc... Basically, if something goes wrong, they're fucked.Fairweather Pure wrote:Granted, I'm no rocket scientist, but that certianly is a huge fucking crack in the wing. Hard to imagine they didn't notice that. I wonder what recourse they would've had if they knew in advance they wouldn't survive re-entry? Dock with the space station and we'd fly up another shuttle for a rescue? That would've been an interesting situation.
i seriously doubt any insurance carrier would insure something as risky as a space vehichle.Sylvus wrote:Perhaps I'm seeing the picture wrong, but isn't that a picture that was taken from space? If so, it could have been something that wasn't noticeable before takeoff that got much worse on the way up. In which case they may have had few options once they were up there.
I have no idea what it costs to build a shuttle, do you think they have any sort of insurance on them?
for instance if you go SCUBA diving and get hurt, your health insurance says, 'tough shit', cause it is too risky to insure.
going into space is many orders of magnitude more risky.
i'm wondering the same thing. my first guess is no. Trying to find out for myself though. i haven't seen it on any English/Spanish language site. beyond that i'm sort of fuckered. mostly i think it is fake because the ocean is bleeding into the wing... now maybe the CCD chip on a cheap camera would be saturated from any glow from heat on the wing or from intense sunlight, but we've had cameras in space for 40+ years now, i'd expect the guy would have gone up there with one that was worth a fuck.Sunserae wrote:Is that picture real??
- Kaluian_CT
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Vitirea was right,....
Not only about the fuel issues, but also The Columbia, being the oldest shuttle in the fleet is the only shuttle not equipped to dock with a space station. Also it was the heaviest of the space shuttle and cannot achieve the distance in orbit necessary to reach the ISS. Furthermore, The Columbia is the only shuttle that is without video for the bottom-side of the vehicle and that is were most of the speculation that the damage may have occured to the tiles that absorb the 3500 F heat on re-entry, and as we know NASA realeased the info that the first signs of a problem were dramatic heat increases.
Also I was listening to the news today, and they believe now that the crew probably knew something was wrong around the time they were over California, meaning they knew they're fate for approx. 10 minutes before Columbia broke apart
Not only about the fuel issues, but also The Columbia, being the oldest shuttle in the fleet is the only shuttle not equipped to dock with a space station. Also it was the heaviest of the space shuttle and cannot achieve the distance in orbit necessary to reach the ISS. Furthermore, The Columbia is the only shuttle that is without video for the bottom-side of the vehicle and that is were most of the speculation that the damage may have occured to the tiles that absorb the 3500 F heat on re-entry, and as we know NASA realeased the info that the first signs of a problem were dramatic heat increases.
Also I was listening to the news today, and they believe now that the crew probably knew something was wrong around the time they were over California, meaning they knew they're fate for approx. 10 minutes before Columbia broke apart

- Fallanthas
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The fissure is believed to have been caused by a piece of insulation hitting the ablative panels during liftoff.
If that is the case, they were doomed as soon as they left the atmosphere. Those panels are one of the items that have always seemed weak to me.
But then, I sure as hell don't have a better solution.
If that is the case, they were doomed as soon as they left the atmosphere. Those panels are one of the items that have always seemed weak to me.
But then, I sure as hell don't have a better solution.
- Keverian FireCry
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- Vetiria
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That's happened 9 other times on liftoffs, 6 times in particular on Columbia. They didn't think anything about a tile falling off at the time of liftoff because nothing bad had happened before.Fallanthas wrote:The fissure is believed to have been caused by a piece of insulation hitting the ablative panels during liftoff.
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Bah, thats not the wing of the shuttle. Best I'm aware the shuttle wing does not have a big black pipe thingie sticking out of it in defiance of aerodynamics like this photo does. It does have a visible pattern of tiles on it which this photo doesnt. And that dent is way too tidy and regular to be anything other than a preformed molding in the surface. Its probably the inside of the cargo bay or something. If nothing else the debris hit the underside of the wing. The underside of the wing is black. The surface in that photo just slightly...isnt.... Even if the surface in this cheesy fake *was* the right color you cant actually see the bottom surfaces of the shuttle from inside, which makes having the bottom of the wing in a photo taken from inside the shuttle during an interview just slightly difficult... Someone should be flogged.
*Hugs*
Varia
*Hugs*
Varia
Midnyte_Ragebringer
Midnyte_Ragebringer you fucking retarded reject how good was the shuttel refurbished if there was a huge damn crack in the shuttel?
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Re: Midnyte_Ragebringer
Because it happened on take-off you fucknutz.Bwuza wrote:Midnyte_Ragebringer you fucking retarded reject how good was the shuttel refurbished if there was a huge damn crack in the shuttel?
Read and comprehend before you open your worthless air-sucking piehole.
Sabek
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Article about the wing
They are suspecting the damage to the left wing was greater than originally believed.
They are suspecting the damage to the left wing was greater than originally believed.
Sabek
Just Sabek

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- Fallanthas
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Vetira,
This wasn't a case of tiles falling off. Apparently a piece of insulation about a foot or so square came off of one of the booster rockets and smacked the underside of the left wing during takeoff. Original estimates put the damage at around 20 inches long and 9-12 inches wide.
The NASA techs didn't think that was significant enough to cause a failure. They are rechecking the math right now. They are also searching for the earliest pieces to have come off to see if the deterioration began at the wing or not.
This wasn't a case of tiles falling off. Apparently a piece of insulation about a foot or so square came off of one of the booster rockets and smacked the underside of the left wing during takeoff. Original estimates put the damage at around 20 inches long and 9-12 inches wide.
The NASA techs didn't think that was significant enough to cause a failure. They are rechecking the math right now. They are also searching for the earliest pieces to have come off to see if the deterioration began at the wing or not.
http://shogun.shafted.com.au/temp/cnnsucks.jpg
Now there's some CNN reporting.
18 times the speed of light!
Now there's some CNN reporting.
18 times the speed of light!
- miir
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CNN is making me much laughing.


The root of the problem:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news ... urvey.html


The root of the problem:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news ... urvey.html
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I have a feeling they knew once they assessed the damage they had probably a small chance to live upon reentry, but they had to take the risk or die orbiting the earth from lack of oxygen. What's sad is if the new space station was only completed, they could have stayed there for a few weeks until a rescue shuttle could've taken them home, hopefully the station will be done sometime in the near future.
Rayzelle Arietta
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Cestus Dei
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- Hammerstalker PE
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The ISS is habited. The problem is they weren't in the same orbit. Space is big. Just because two things are spinning around above the Earth doesn't mean they are necessarily close to each other.What's sad is if the new space station was only completed, they could have stayed there for a few weeks until a rescue shuttle could've taken them home, hopefully the station will be done sometime in the near future.
Have You Hugged An Iksar Today?
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Wasent there an X-Project race?Xouqoa wrote:It's an old design, though. If NASA had a proper budget, they could design a new, much safer takeoff/landing system. In fact, they had several prototypes under development, but I believe had to stop working on them because of budget cutbacks.Jesalynn wrote:I do agree in that some of our shuttles are rather old, but to listen to NASA officials, they routinely "upgrade" them and outfit them enough that they are supposedly safe and like new. Unfortunately though, that doesn't really take into effect the structural problems and such you get from heavy use on any vehicle, especially one that goes to space nonetheless.
Where companys entered a competition that had them design the new era of reusable space vehicules?
I thnk i saw some information about that on Discovery some years ago wonder what hapened...
65 Deceiver
Additionally, there was a previous comment that the Columbia was the only shuttle that wasn't equipped to dock with the ISS.Aslanna wrote:The ISS is habited. The problem is they weren't in the same orbit. Space is big. Just because two things are spinning around above the Earth doesn't mean they are necessarily close to each other.What's sad is if the new space station was only completed, they could have stayed there for a few weeks until a rescue shuttle could've taken them home, hopefully the station will be done sometime in the near future.
I always wondered if they could have some form of emergency escape balls like the mars probe was inclosed in that bounced off the martian surface. Guess you'd need to deal with the impact, heatshielding and have a parachute to slow decent as well : )
More realistic escape/safety measures probably were thought of but cost way to much or took too much space.
NASA needs emergency balls!
those were basically designs though, just stuff on paper. my understanding was that they are planning on using the shuttle through about 2015-2020, obviously developing a next generation reusable orbital vehichle in the interim.Lexien wrote:
Wasent there an X-Project race?
Where companys entered a competition that had them design the new era of reusable space vehicules?
I thnk i saw some information about that on Discovery some years ago wonder what hapened...
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- Midnyte_Ragebringer
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I've got some fodder for you anti-republicans out there.
Coincidence that Bush gets in office and we have 9-11 happen, which allows him to rebuild our military?
Coincidence that Bush gets in office and the space shuttle blows up and now NASA will probably get OMGIAMRETARDEDCAUSEALOTISTWOWORDS more funding to re-tool our space program?
hmmm
Coincidence that Bush gets in office and we have 9-11 happen, which allows him to rebuild our military?
Coincidence that Bush gets in office and the space shuttle blows up and now NASA will probably get OMGIAMRETARDEDCAUSEALOTISTWOWORDS more funding to re-tool our space program?
hmmm
There that was one of the project i saw on tv it looks interesting.
Hyper-X program :
http://www.dfrc.nasa.gov/Newsroom/FactS ... -DFRC.html
Hyper-X program :
http://www.dfrc.nasa.gov/Newsroom/FactS ... -DFRC.html
65 Deceiver