Hi guys,Look closely at what Thomas Pesquet is about use to cut his favourite French cheese on board ISS...Can you tell ?(Image removed from quote.)I say Wave by the look of the blade ...but not sure.cheersAlex
$150000 for taking that tool into space... Did he pay that weight by himself or did the taxpayers do that?Oh well... they took half ton of football jerseys to space too, it was millions.
Quote from: Padre on March 29, 2017, 05:28:55 PM$150000 for taking that tool into space... Did he pay that weight by himself or did the taxpayers do that?Oh well... they took half ton of football jerseys to space too, it was millions.Each astronaut can take up a kilo of personal effects for free.Besides, its worth it if its useful, right?Why else did NASA keep Victorinox SAKs on the Space Shuttle?Its like the guitar that they brought up in the Shuttle era. Expensive, but if playing the guitar helps keep the astronauts calm, its worth it.Remember the space oddity video that Chris Hadfield made while on the ISS using that guitar? That most likely did more in public outreach than millions spent on educational stuff about space.
Quote from: Pablo O'Brien on March 29, 2017, 05:53:14 PMQuote from: Padre on March 29, 2017, 05:28:55 PM$150000 for taking that tool into space... Did he pay that weight by himself or did the taxpayers do that?Oh well... they took half ton of football jerseys to space too, it was millions.Each astronaut can take up a kilo of personal effects for free.Besides, its worth it if its useful, right?Why else did NASA keep Victorinox SAKs on the Space Shuttle?Its like the guitar that they brought up in the Shuttle era. Expensive, but if playing the guitar helps keep the astronauts calm, its worth it.Remember the space oddity video that Chris Hadfield made while on the ISS using that guitar? That most likely did more in public outreach than millions spent on educational stuff about space. Its just the cost/usefulness ratio that is really bad.You do know that normal tools are useless for actually making "real" repairs in space? If you turn the screw on the ship/station, you actually turn the ship/station or yourself before the screw if it has some friction to it. It is even dangerous to change the ships orbit like this. Everything weights zero see?
Quote from: Padre on March 29, 2017, 06:16:59 PMQuote from: Pablo O'Brien on March 29, 2017, 05:53:14 PMQuote from: Padre on March 29, 2017, 05:28:55 PM$150000 for taking that tool into space... Did he pay that weight by himself or did the taxpayers do that?Oh well... they took half ton of football jerseys to space too, it was millions.Each astronaut can take up a kilo of personal effects for free.Besides, its worth it if its useful, right?Why else did NASA keep Victorinox SAKs on the Space Shuttle?Its like the guitar that they brought up in the Shuttle era. Expensive, but if playing the guitar helps keep the astronauts calm, its worth it.Remember the space oddity video that Chris Hadfield made while on the ISS using that guitar? That most likely did more in public outreach than millions spent on educational stuff about space. Its just the cost/usefulness ratio that is really bad.You do know that normal tools are useless for actually making "real" repairs in space? If you turn the screw on the ship/station, you actually turn the ship/station or yourself before the screw if it has some friction to it. It is even dangerous to change the ships orbit like this. Everything weights zero see? Erm.. Are you joking or not? If you brace yourself against the space station, you will not turn.And since the space station weighs tons and it is the size of a football field, basic Inertia will prevent the space station from turning when you screw.Think of it like this, if the space station does not move when you push hard on a wall and go floating around, why would it move when you turn a little screw?
I don't think they are worried about the effects of tool use in the ISS given to tool kit that is providedhttp://toolguyd.com/iss-toolbox-tools/