My wife doesn't laugh a lot but she LHAO reading the thread names.
My wife doesn't laugh a lot but she LHAO reading the thread names.
Love and Walheim are now in the ISS Airlock. They are breathing pure oxygen, or something and will be in there all night. This purges the nitrogen from their blood stream. Cuz in their space suits, the pressure is brought down to something like 10.4 pounds and the nitrogen would release from their cells at that low pressure and that would be bad.
On a clear day you CAN see the ISS orbiting with the naked eye, especially when the Shuttle is docked.
If you want to know when its over Detroit, let me know.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Balkan
And you are a dumb fuck!
The thread title says what its about. If you don't want to read it, don't fucking open it.
Exactly. Way to tell that Sparty asshole, Tahoe.
Correctoin....The ISS Airlock's pressure will be brought to 10psi, the space suit pressure will be 4.5psi.
EVA1 began a few minutes early, 6:17am central time. They have been out there for almost 2 hours now.
The power to the Columbus module was demated.
Stanley Love(porn star name) was attached to the boom and detached the graple attachment from the shuttle so it can be attached to the module. Obviously they would have liked to attach the graple fixture on earth but the payload bay doors wouldn't have been able to shut.
Rex was running a lil behind taking off the doors of the Columbus module so the graple attachement can be attached. But they are just about to finish attaching the graple fixture to the module. It looks like there will be no major probs there.
Then they will take a nitrogen tank off the shuttle payload and replace the empty on the ISS. The empty tank will be stowed back in the payload bay for a return flight to Earth.
They will also be taking off protective covers on Columbus and the Harmony node where the 2 will be matted.
The Detroit Lion is running the ISS robotic arm that Stanley Love is riding on. Someone is putting a lot of trust in a Detroit Lion, I'd say.
No MVP candidates stepping forward yet. If the Detroit Lion on board's mission had a larger degree of dificulty, he might be my choice. But for now no one is standing out.
The ISS robotic arm is really something. It has like 2 shoulders, 3 elbows and 5 wrists or something.
The ISS robotic arm, controlled by a Detroit Lion, has now grappled the Columbus module. It is being maneuvered to its location on the Harmony node.
The 2 spacewalkers are still out there...almost 7 hours now. They don't have a lot of O2 left(thats oxygen for you layman) but they need to be outside for the actual attaching of the module to the node. So hopefully it will be done here in the next hour.
If Hans would have been out there, it would have been done a long time ago.