ISS damaged and leaking air. Held together by duct tape!

ISS damaged and leaking air. Held together by duct tape!

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Discussion

Ayahuasca

Original Poster:

27,428 posts

286 months

Thursday 30th August 2018
quotequote all
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2018/08/30/int...

If it should move but doesn't, use WD40.

If it shoudn't move but does, use duct tape.

It seems the ISS is well provided for with emergency equipment!

dudleybloke

20,477 posts

193 months

Thursday 30th August 2018
quotequote all
Duct tape doesn't exist.
It's all a CGI based scam by NASA to hide the fact that the earth is rhomboid.
wink

Eric Mc

122,856 posts

272 months

Thursday 30th August 2018
quotequote all
It worked on Apollo so it should work on the ISS.




Moonhawk

10,730 posts

226 months

Thursday 30th August 2018
quotequote all
Ayahuasca said:
It seems the ISS is well provided for with emergency equipment!
One assumes they have a hammer up there too - no matter the job, you always need a hammer.

hairyben

8,516 posts

190 months

Thursday 30th August 2018
quotequote all
Australia could never have a space program then - they stop anyone flying with adhesive tape in hand luggage and confiscate it!

Simpo Two

87,086 posts

272 months

Thursday 30th August 2018
quotequote all
hairyben said:
Australia could never have a space program then - they stop anyone flying with adhesive tape in hand luggage and confiscate it!
NZ won't alloe you to go with any foodstuff, thereby limiting any Kiwi space expedition to about 10 hours. Look out for them to develop lightspeed flight!

Eric Mc

122,856 posts

272 months

Thursday 30th August 2018
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Does the ISS count as "abroad"?

Eric Mc

122,856 posts

272 months

Friday 31st August 2018
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It seems that the leak is in the Soyuz rather than the ISS itself. It was caused by a micrometeorite impact.

https://spaceflightnow.com/2018/08/30/cosmonauts-p...

Beati Dogu

9,193 posts

146 months

Tuesday 4th September 2018
quotequote all
Seems it was caused by a drill. Likely in the factory by some errant worker. Roscosmos is investigating.

It's in the orbital module, which is jettisoned before they reenter the atmosphere anyway, so patching it up like they have shouldn't be an issue.




NASA has since removed this footage from their coverage for some reason........scratchchin


Edited by Beati Dogu on Tuesday 4th September 01:02

Tempest_5

604 posts

204 months

Saturday 8th September 2018
quotequote all
That must be a bit odd, looking at a hole that has the nothingness of space on the outside.

I'm a bit surprised they didn't detect this during manufacture. All Satellites have to undergo a thermal vacuum test in a big chamber after completion of build to test they will work correctly in the extremes of the space environment. I may be wrong but would think it safe to assume they do this on a Soyuz which isn't that much bigger, if at all, than some satellites like Envisat. It's not a massive hole but should have shown up as a drop in cabin pressure or an anomaly with the thermal vacuum chamber failing to keep vacuum. Maybe it did occur earlier and the responsible person bunged up the hole in the hope it would hold and never be found. The temporary bung finally giving out through the continual pressure differential or out gassing of the material in the vacuum.

News reports now saying it's though deliberate. We shall see. Very odd.

Condi

17,960 posts

178 months

Saturday 8th September 2018
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Tempest_5 said:
News reports now saying it's though deliberate. We shall see. Very odd.
Deliberate just means not an impact strike though doesnt it? Would seem very strange for anyone in the space station itself to drill a hole one evening. More likely that Boris drilled in the wrong place on Friday afternoon and rather than being fired just covered the hole with some sealant. All good until the sealant gives way and his vodka inspired mistake is revealed.

V41LEY

2,937 posts

245 months

Sunday 9th September 2018
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It might be someone / something drilling in from the outside !

Eric Mc

122,856 posts

272 months

Sunday 9th September 2018
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Condi said:
Deliberate just means not an impact strike though doesnt it? Would seem very strange for anyone in the space station itself to drill a hole one evening. More likely that Boris drilled in the wrong place on Friday afternoon and rather than being fired just covered the hole with some sealant. All good until the sealant gives way and his vodka inspired mistake is revealed.
Pretty much the correct explanation, I would suspect. The quality control of Russian space technology has been severely lacking on occasions.