AKiss20
Line Up and Wait
*gestures at F-35 program*Speaking as an old Lockheed guy, Boeing seems to be the gift that keeps on giving.....
Those in glass houses…
*gestures at F-35 program*Speaking as an old Lockheed guy, Boeing seems to be the gift that keeps on giving.....
Time for some Apollo 13 shenanigans you know square peg in round circle stuffWell it ain’t getting better up there.
Spacesuits of Boeing-launched astronauts stranded on space station are incompatible with SpaceX craft
https://www.foxnews.com/us/spacesui...anded-space-station-incompatible-spacex-craft
Nothing about these craft is compatible with each other. And that's kind of the point. Should NASA have made SpaceX copy Boeing? Then all the astronauts would be screwed. I find it hard to believe that SpaceX won't come up with some less-custom suit solution. Elon will save them. I just hope Boeing has to pay his asking price.How is it possible that NASA didn’t mandate a single spacesuit design and common interface for the capsule? This seems like systems engineering 101
kind of like a CCS to NACS adapterNothing about these craft is compatible with each other. And that's kind of the point. Should NASA have made SpaceX copy Boeing? Then all the astronauts would be screwed. I find it hard to believe that SpaceX won't come up with some less-custom suit solution. Elon will save them. I just hope Boeing has to pay his asking price.
Bill Boeing's been dead for a while, so he probably won't need a suit.So I guess Elon will have to send up a couple of suits, too. And bill Boeing.
I'm not a be EM fan, but I agree.Nothing about these craft is compatible with each other. And that's kind of the point. Should NASA have made SpaceX copy Boeing? Then all the astronauts would be screwed. I find it hard to believe that SpaceX won't come up with some less-custom suit solution. Elon will save them. I just hope Boeing has to pay his asking price.
I heard people who know taking about this a week ago. The connections aren't in the same place or of the same type.Has anyone seen or heard anything from a real NASA spokesperson confirming "incompatibility" and that this incompatibility absolutely rules out a ride home from SpaceX? I see and hear a lot of people making noise about it, but no one who actually knows.
Nauga,
and his personality cult
I heard people who know taking about this a week ago. The connections aren't in the same place or of the same type.
Which means that on the next SpaceX launch, which was going to send 2 astronauts instead of 4 to allow for the return of our castaways, they need to ship 2 compatible SpaceX suits. I wouldn’t be surprised to learn that will delay the launch.
The word I'm getting is that Boeing specified the helium valves be made from titanium, and the subcontractor substituted aluminum. This is a HUGE failure in the Systems Engineering process, which Boeing pioneered. Either the subcontractor swapped the material and no one caught it on a delivery inspection, or the subcontractor got the go-ahead from someone at Boeing who didn't understand the difference. Likely the latter, with the goal of cost savings.Totally disgusting. Company needs dismantling. Start over.
Helium leak--->failed to understand it. Dispatch anyway. YHGBFSM
It is absolutely not silly. NASA is basically the sole customer of this product, they absolutely can put interoperability requirements on the suit interface if they wanted.I forgot to mention no one ever noticed the Soyuz suits weren't compatible with the American version. Boeing and SpaceX are competitors (not equal by any means), and expecting them to collaborate on such a critical item is silly.
Supposedly the issue with that is that SpaceX suits are super custom fitted based on 3D models. I'm sure that can be overcome.Which means that on the next SpaceX launch, which was going to send 2 astronauts instead of 4 to allow for the return of our castaways, they need to ship 2 compatible SpaceX suits. I wouldn’t be surprised to learn that will delay the launch.
NASA is not remotely the sole customer.It is absolutely not silly. NASA is the sole customer of this product, they absolutely can put interoperability requirements on the suit interface if they wanted.
It’s really no different from Boeing having a common interface for engine electrical systems on the 787. Both the GEnx and the RR Trent are required use that common interface despite being competing products and entirely different designs for the sake of interoperability and flexibility in changing engine types. NASA absolutely could mandate that the suit connection and vital systems be common across the two capsule and suit designs if they wanted.
I should have said they are a primary customer. They are a huge fraction of SpaceX’s launch revenue and just like Southwest can place demands on Boeing designing the 737 as the launch (no pun intended) customer despite not being the sole customer, NASA has enormous power if it chose to use it.NASA is not remotely the sole customer.
Then the problem is the board itself.The REALLY concerning thing is that the board did not Fire CALHOUN immediately.
Boeing and SpaceX are competitors (not equal by any means), and expecting them to collaborate on such a critical item is silly.
But those interoperability requirements don't exist, do they? You're confusing a government standard with a free market competition. Expecting two different companies to corroborate on something when they're going head to head is what's silly.It is absolutely not silly. NASA is basically the sole customer of this product, they absolutely can put interoperability requirements on the suit interface if they wanted.
It’s really no different from Boeing having a common interface for engine electrical systems on the 787. Both the GEnx and the RR Trent are required use that common interface despite being competing products and entirely different designs for the sake of interoperability and flexibility in changing engine types. NASA absolutely could mandate that the suit connection and associated suit vital systems interface be common across the two capsule and suit designs if they wanted.
The thing that is silly is comparing this situation to Soyuz, which was first designed in the 1960s and whose design has nothing to do with NASA. NASA paid Russia to shuttle their astronauts on pre-existing spacecraft. The Boeing and SpaceX crewed capsules were built from the ground up for the NASA CCP with no other real customers.
Doesn't sound like the specs were the problem. The problem was either the inability to monitor spec compliance by the subcontractor, or non-technical people rolling over and granting a variance without understanding the ramifications.Specs were probably written during the time when NASA goal was Muslim Outreach…and nobody blinked an eye…NASA has been wandering for a while…
That's the point, is that they should.But those interoperability requirements don't exist, do they?
Because only Soyuz and Crew Dragon have functioned as emergency rescue vehicles for the ISS. We were never going to leave a "spare" Shuttle up there.My point about Soyuz was that dozens of American astronauts were ferried to the ISS in that craft in those suits, and commonality in the event of rescue operation was never raised as an issue AFAIK.
If true, seems to be a frequent occurrence.The problem was either the inability to monitor spec compliance by the subcontractor
That seems like a total failure on NASA's part.Well it ain’t getting better up there.
Spacesuits of Boeing-launched astronauts stranded on space station are incompatible with SpaceX craft
https://www.foxnews.com/us/spacesui...anded-space-station-incompatible-spacex-craft
The word I'm getting is that Boeing specified the helium valves be made from titanium, and the subcontractor substituted aluminum. This is a HUGE failure in the Systems Engineering process, which Boeing pioneered...As a retired Boeing Space Systems Engineer, I am offended by this past the point of articulation. Jesu Christe, why are these people NOT doing their jobs?