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-   -   Bunch of tools... (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/442129-bunch-tools.html)

Aurel 11-19-2008 10:55 AM

Bunch of tools...
 
...floating in space. :D

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20081119/D94HVGT00.html

Aurel

pwd72s 11-19-2008 10:58 AM

Wonder what they'd sell for on ebay?

gassy 11-19-2008 11:04 AM

Can't wait til the urine conversion unit hits the consumer market.

kstar 11-19-2008 11:13 AM

Such restraint of the first few posters re the sex of the astronaut.

dhoward 11-19-2008 11:22 AM

Thought I was being insulted...

masraum 11-19-2008 11:28 AM

I'm sure those would be neat tools, but what I'd really like is a set of the titanium McLaren F1 tools. Just the little tool kit from the car. Not the big one (well, I guess if it was free or really cheap, I'd take the big kit too).

Aurel 11-19-2008 11:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kstar (Post 4313066)
Such restraint of the first few posters re the sex of the astronaut.

Yeah girls never do too well with tools. She must have been on her cell phone :rolleyes:.

Aurel

cmccuist 11-19-2008 11:33 AM

I've always wondered what would happen if the space shuttle hit some debris. Isn't it travelling at about 17,000 mph?

What if they were circling the earth in the opposite direction as that bag of tools and they slammed into it. Wouldn't that be 'game over, man?"

Aurel 11-19-2008 11:39 AM

A wrench in the windshield at 17,000 mph is gonna make a big hole...

Aurel

legion 11-19-2008 11:46 AM

I'm disappointed.

I was expecting a "I'm taking my ball and going home" thread. ;)

kstar 11-19-2008 11:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cmccuist (Post 4313115)
I've always wondered what would happen if the space shuttle hit some debris. Isn't it travelling at about 17,000 mph?

What if they were circling the earth in the opposite direction as that bag of tools and they slammed into it. Wouldn't that be 'game over, man?"

For now, that tool bag is orbiting with the shuttle.

There's quite a bit of other "game-ending" stuff up there . . .

IIRC, there is some provisioning for small, fast moving debris on the shuttles and the ISS.

dhoward 11-19-2008 11:55 AM

Seems like a 'spacified' version of the "pocket fisherman" with maybe a magnet on the line would good to have around...

M.D. Holloway 11-19-2008 12:20 PM

I bet it ain't any old Lincoln or Plews - bet it's wurf at less 10 thouzund dollas if it wurf fify cent

Quote:

An exploding grease gun triggers tools' lost voyage
Astronauts watch as bag floats away
By MARCIA DUNN
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- A spacewalking astronaut accidentally let go of her tool bag Tuesday after a grease gun inside it exploded, and helplessly watched as the tote and everything inside floated away.

It was one of the largest items ever to be lost by a spacewalker, and occurred during an unprecedented attempt to clean and lube a gummed-up joint at the International Space Station.

Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper was just starting to work on the joint when the mishap occurred.

She said her grease gun exploded, getting the dark gray stuff all over a camera and her gloves. While she was wiping everything off, the white, backpack-size bag slipped out of her grip, and she lost all her tools.

"Oh, great," she mumbled.

She and her fellow spacewalker, Stephen Bowen, then finished their tasks in almost seven hours by sharing tools. Bowen had his own tool bag with another set of grease guns, putty knives and ovenlike terry cloth mitts to wipe away metal grit from the joint.

"Despite my little hiccup, or major hiccup, I think we did a good job out there," Stefanyshyn-Piper said after returning to the space station.

Flight controllers were assessing the impact the lost bag would have on the next three planned spacewalks. The astronauts may be asked to keep sharing tools or use caulking-style guns intended for repairs to the shuttle's thermal shielding.

Earlier, the spacewalkers spotted a screw floating by, but were too far away to catch it. "I have no idea where it came from," Stefanyshyn-Piper told Mission Control.

Flight director Ginger Kerrick said neither the bag nor the screw posed hazards to the spacecraft. By late Tuesday, the bag was already 2 1/2 miles in front of the shuttle-station complex. "It's well on its way away from us," she assured reporters.

NASA was not sure how the bag got loose; it should have been tethered to a larger equipment bag. Another unknown: why the grease gun discharged.

"It is a human endeavor. Mistakes can happen. Equipment can fail," said John Ray, the lead spacewalk officer in Mission Control. He noted that Stefanyshyn-Piper showed "real character and great discipline" by continuing on and doing a fine job for the rest of the spacewalk. She was the first woman to be assigned as lead spacewalker for a shuttle flight.

The lost bag marred what had been a near-flawless mission by Endeavour and its seven-member crew.

For more than a year, the jammed joint has been unable to automatically point the right-side solar wings toward the sun for maximum energy production. The repair work -- expected from the outset to be greasy and hand-intensive -- is supposed to take up much of all four spacewalks.

The joint is located near the extreme reaches of the 220-mile-high outpost. The spacewalkers had 85-foot safety tethers to keep them connected to the mother ship at all times.

As the action unfolded outside, the astronauts inside the shuttle-station complex started unloading gear from a huge trunk brought up by Endeavour.

RWebb 11-19-2008 12:22 PM

debris hits are a major and growing problem for all space vehicles - that includes sats. too

M.D. Holloway 11-19-2008 12:24 PM

NASA astronaut Heidemarie M. Stefanyshyn-Piper (S.B. 1985), the first MIT alumna to fly in space, a Navy captain, Stefanyshyn-Piper rowed for MIT varsity crew while in ROTC.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1227129886.jpg

sammyg2 11-19-2008 12:34 PM

Oh, that explains it. MIT graduate.







(just kidding wayne) ;)

cl8ton 11-19-2008 12:39 PM

She fumbled the grease gun when startled causing her to let go of the tool bag.
In a related story, an Orb spider is missing from a science experiment and presumed to have escaped into a space suite.

M.D. Holloway 11-19-2008 01:13 PM

Just trying to get home - as I have said in the past, they are not of this world...


http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1227132831.jpg

on2wheels52 11-19-2008 02:42 PM

"the bag was already 2 1/2 miles in front of the shuttle-station complex"
I don't understand the physics of it going faster than the shuttle. Did Heidemarie give it a push?
jim

Mo_Gearhead 11-20-2008 05:39 AM

...butter-hook.

(Bond ...James Bond)


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