On Nov 25, 10:09 pm, Fred J. McCall <
fjmcc...@gmail.com> wrote:
> bob haller <
hall...@aol.com> wrote:
>
> >> Bobbert, are you even capable of pulling your head out of your ass and
> >> actually thinking?
>
> >Freds idiot posts redacted.
>
> Yes, Bobbert snips everything he has no rational answer to.
>
>
>
> >By having the emergency rockets stacked checked and ready to go saves
> >way more than just stacking time....
>
> How's that work, again? What other time does it save? You're still
> going to have to fuel the vehicle (liquid fuel rockets aren't kept
> fueled in silos). You're still going to have to load your specialized
> supplies that you talked about in the part you snipped. You're still
> going to have to do your analysis of the emergency to figure out
> what's needed. You're still going to have to hit an appropriate
> launch window and program the vehicle for it.
>
> So just what time does it save, Bobbert?
>
>
>
> >now picture this a disaster occurs at the station, one soyuz can
> >return with its 3 crew members. the other soyuz is damaged and cant
> >reenter safely, and worse the station isnt really habitible.....
>
> Ok, so let's pretend that a one in many billions chance occurs...
>
>
>
> >now the next regular supply vehicle is due to launch in 4 weeks. it
> >will need stacked, checked out , fueled, cargo loaded etc. even fast
> >tracking means 2 weeks if everything goes flawlessely.. the emergency
> >parts and supplies could keep the crew alive hunkered down till the
> >next soyuz arrival. which do nte still leaves one astronaut stranded.
>
> Note that your silo vehicle needs to be checked out, fueled, cargo
> loaded, etc. All you've saved is stacking time and you've made
> loading cargo more difficult because the thing is in a hole in the
> ground.
>
>
>
> >the next soyus isnt due to launch for months, since a crew rotation
> >had just occured....
>
> >so the crew dies for lack of fast ground support, this could of been
> >avoided if we had just invested a little extra.....
>
> Not by your scheme, it couldn't. Do you think there is something
> magic about putting the rocket in a hole in the ground that suddenly
> makes all the steps magically complete? There isn't.
>
> In an accident such as you postulate, the station cannot be saved (the
> damage is too severe, since you postulate that all existing supplies
> are destroyed).
>
> But, as usual, you will ignore reality and continue to bleat about how
> great your plan is, despite virtually everyone pointing out that
> you're wrong and don't know what you're talking about.
>
> --
> "Ignorance is preferable to error, and he is less remote from the
> truth who believes nothing than he who believes what is wrong."
> -- Thomas Jefferson
All of your statements are similiar to responses of a shuttle stuck at
station...... before columbia.
having some vehicles on standby saves the possible weeks or more that
ignoring the issue cost our country , and the world in case a bad day
occurs, which is growing more likely as the in orbit debris increase,
although the issue could be from other problems, like a soyuz that
cant deorbit or make it to the station. given russias space quality
issues lately thats getting more likely....
when your operating a trillion dollar station its good practice to
think about redundancy.....