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  1. #3326
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    It's in the air.

  2. #3327
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Branson will be spitting fucking feathers when he finds out most of the audio and video didn't work at critical times.

    Great advert for Virgin Broadband.


  3. #3328
    Custom Title Changer
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    I thought it was cool...a billionaire's play toy at best I think.

  4. #3329
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    The wandering around receiving the plaudits of the adoring crowd is a bit Kim Jong Un innit.

  5. #3330
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    BTW, did you know that the Virgin Galactic vehicle burns rubber for propellant? They tried to change to another propellant, I think, polyethylene, but moved back to rubber.

  6. #3331
    Thailand Expat Saint Willy's Avatar
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    I didnt know that. Is it solid rubber? Is it not quite heavy and dense?

  7. #3332
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    Quote Originally Posted by TheRealKW View Post
    I didnt know that. Is it solid rubber? Is it not quite heavy and dense?

    Yes, solid rubber. Plus liquid oxidizer, nitrous oxide oxidizer.

    I looked it up. It is Hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene, not classic rubber. But it is a solid, with liquid oxidizer.

  8. #3333
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Getting value for money out of this old dear.

    The iconic but elderly Hubble Space Telescope appears to have been resurrected again after a shutdown of more than a month following a computer glitch. Science has learned that following a switch from the operating payload control computer to a backup device over the past 24 hours, Hubble’s operators have re-established communications with all the telescope’s instruments and plan to return them to normal operations today.

    “Hubble is back!” Tom Brown, head of the Hubble mission office, emailed to staff at the Space Telescope Science Institute at 5:56 a.m. “I am excited to watch Hubble get back to exploring the universe.”

    The problems started on 13 June when the payload computer that controls the science instruments and monitors their health spotted an error in communications with the instruments and put them into safe mode. Hubble’s operators initially thought a memory module was at fault but switching to one of three backup modules produced the same error. Various other devices were investigated and ruled out as the problem when the error persisted.

    It was eventually decided that the entire Science Instrument Command and Data Handling (SIC&DH) unit, of which the payload computer is part, should be switched over from the currently operating instrument to the backup. Staff practiced the procedure with hardware on the ground over the past week and a full review was carried out to ensure it could be done without harming the telescope in other ways. Shortly before the switch was started yesterday, NASA announced it had identified the power control unit (PCU), which is part of the SIC&DH, as the source of the problem.

    The PCU supplies a steady voltage supply to the payload computer and it was either supplying voltage outside the normal range or the sensor that detects the voltage was giving an erroneous reading. Because there is a spare PCU as part of the SIC&DH, the switch went ahead.


    Brown told his colleagues this morning that “Hubble was successfully recovered into Normal Mode on Side A of the [SIC&DH]. This marked the first time we were able to progress beyond the problem we were seeing on Side B.” He said that if all continues normally, Hubble will restart science observations this weekend.
    ‘Hubble is back!’ Famed space telescope has new lease on life after computer swap appears to fix glitch | Science | AAAS

  9. #3334
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Billionaire Boys Club II



  10. #3335
    A Cockless Wonder
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    ^I watched the video from inside the capsule.

    I would not waste my 10 minutes arsing around like kids because there is no gravity. You can do a few minutes of zero in a parabolic plane flight any old day if you are minted.

    I would just be glued to the window drinking in the undiluted awe.

    ^In that clip the female commentator removed all the coolness from the event with her woman's bubbly babble. They should just have had a typical houston control centre voice narrating the technical details punctuated with beeping noises like in the classic NASA commentary from the Apollo missons.

    $28 million is a billionaire's ticket price. Would have been a bit awkward if his billionaire ex-wife had won the raffle.

  11. #3336
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    Quote Originally Posted by Looper View Post
    I would not waste my 10 minutes arsing around like kids because there is no gravity. You can do a few minutes of zero in a parabolic plane flight any old day if you are minted.

    I would just be glued to the window drinking in the undiluted awe.
    Great attitude.



    Quote Originally Posted by Looper View Post
    In that clip the female commentator removed all the coolness from the event with her woman's bubbly babble.
    I have not watched. Now that you mention that commentator I probably won't. I have watched a few previous unmanned flights. Assuming it is the same, her fake professional excitement is vomit inducing. In contrast the commentators on SpaceX flights are SpaceX engineers, not media professionals, and their enthusiasm is genuine.
    "don't attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by incompetence"

  12. #3337
    Thailand Expat Saint Willy's Avatar
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    Yep, thanks for the warning Loops. Thanks for the updates takeovers

  13. #3338
    Thailand Expat misskit's Avatar
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    I don’t seem to be the only person who thought Bezos looked like Dr Evil going into space in his penis shaped rocket ship!

    Jeff Bezos' Penis-Shaped Rocket Launches Dr. Evil Comparisons

  14. #3339
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    It's just missing the balls to be exact
    I read that Bezos flight went 15km's higher than Branson's Virgin flight.
    I can't imagine paying that much for a ticket to fly to space for a few minutes. The rich and famous would though. I read 600 people have already booked to go up including Lady Gaga, Justin Bieber etc..

  15. #3340
    Hangin' Around cyrille's Avatar
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    Yeah, and all the other vacuous twats whose videos you put up here, I guess.


  16. #3341
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    Jeff Bezos said the quiet part out loud: 'You guys paid for all this'
    Oh, you didn't realize you'd chipped in?

    Jeff Bezos thanks you for your money.

    The former CEO of Amazon and current Executive Chair of the Amazon Board went to space for a few minutes on Tuesday, and in a post-flight press conference made explicitly clear who footed the bill: You.

    "I want to thank every Amazon employee and every Amazon customer, because you guys paid for all this," he said around the 23:30 mark in the below video.

    Of course, while Amazon customers paid for Bezos' space flight with money, his employees paid in a slightly different way.

    "Throughout this pandemic, Amazon employees have been forced to work in unsafe conditions, all while the company and its CEO made billions off of their backs," alleged New York Attorney General Letitia James in February.

    Indeed, while many Americans hunkered down during the pandemic — ordering from Amazon throughout the ongoing ordeal — Amazon's employees continued to work mandatory overtime, pee in bottles, and test positive for the coronavirus.

    On Tuesday, the same day Bezos flew to space, the Information reported that Amazon will end its on-site coronavirus testing program for warehouse workers after July 30. Meanwhile, the pandemic in the United States remains a threat.

    Jeff Bezos said the quiet part out loud: 'You guys paid for all this'

  17. #3342
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    The launch of the last ISS module, the Russian Nauka module is planned for today. Of course slips are always possible. They will launch with utmost caution to make it a succes. They use the Proton rocket, because it is the biggest heavy launch they have available and it is needed. Proton now rarely flys. No more commercial customers after a number of failures. But mostly with small upper stages.

    liftoff scheduled for 10:58 a.m. EDT (14:58 GMT). NASA will broadcast the launch live on NASA TV beginning at 10:30 a.m. EDT (1430 GMT),
    Nauka is somewhat delayed. Initially launch was planned for 2012.

    Nauka in the process of encapsulation for launch.
    Space News thread-nauka-jpg


    The Proton M rocket preparing for launch.
    Space News thread-nauka-proton-jpg
    Last edited by Takeovers; 21-07-2021 at 01:44 PM.

  18. #3343
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Takeovers View Post
    The launch of the last ISS module
    Will any of the ISS modules or parts be reusable for future "space stations"?

  19. #3344
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    Quote Originally Posted by OhOh View Post
    Will any of the ISS modules or parts be reusable for future "space stations"?
    I don't think so. The modules are all quite old. The only one I think might be worth continued use is the Cupola the outlook module, but I do not know if it is suited to be docked with a future space station.

    Space News thread-1200px-iss-46_cupola_module-jpg

    I should have said, Nauka is the last module planned for the ISS. The private company Axiom is planning to add their own module or modules. These modules would later become core of a new private space station, when the old ISS gets deorbited. NASA would then rent capacity on that station.

  20. #3345
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Space News thread-stah210721-gif

  21. #3346
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Apparently they covered the Blue Origin launch live on Japanese TV...

    Space News thread-1kc6irlzwes_ceweezyvkzrz7dxnsbdmscfysjiggi4-jpg

  22. #3347
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    Nauka has been successfully launched. It will be a week to reach the ISS with Nauka on board propulsion.

  23. #3348
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    ^

    Video here:



    Engines start at 28 minute mark.

  24. #3349
    Thailand Expat Saint Willy's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by OhOh View Post
    Engines start at 28 minute mark.
    Jeepers, must be great watching a video for half an hour before they get to the interesting bits. Do you watch paint dry also?

  25. #3350
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    ^

    There is an ability on youtube to move to the "action".

    How am I not surprised you are ignorant of this.

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