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#91
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#92
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Steve Robeson K4CAP wrote:
Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth From: Mike Coslo Date: 6/25/2004 10:11 PM Central Standard Time Message-id: Lessee, when the US is busy doing whatever it is shifting it's economy to, and the rest of the world is *making* things, especially One Real Big part of the rest of the world, (namely China) guess who is gonna be the boss? Countries with service economies aren't the leaders, they are ruled by others. Ironic, eh, that we started this "shift" about the same time our Lunar program wrapped up, isn't it? For whatever reasons the lunar program was serving, I was inspired by it. Not by beating the Russkies - although that leant some competitive excitement - but by the sheer excitement, the adventure, and the prospect of something great and new. I wanted to GO there! I still do. I'm the wierdo. Normal regular people now want to sit at home and watch "The Simple Life". It was the early 70's when Detroit and the others really started slipping. That was the era of the Gremlins, the Mavericks, Pintos and Vegas. Sheeeesh. Hehe, don't forget the AMC Pacer, Steve! - Mike KB3EIA - |
#93
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N2EY wrote:
In article , Mike Coslo writes: What percentage say "Made in China"...?!?! Or go to your local Home Depot or just about any store, and see how many items you can find that aren't manufactured in China. What amazes me is how willingly (and some enthusiastically) we approach this "brave new world". I'm not part of that "we". The shift of the US to a "you want fries with that" economy is perhaps the scariest thing I've ever heard of. Economically, I agree. We will not prosper by taking in each other's washing. Economics doesn't work that way. Lessee, when the US is busy doing whatever it is shifting it's economy to, and the rest of the world is *making* things, especially One Real Big part of the rest of the world, (namely China) guess who is gonna be the boss? Countries with service economies aren't the leaders, they are ruled by others. Economically, anyway. We could be brought to our knees. OTOH, the ideology of *some* socialist countries is being affected by exposure to capitalism and Western-style development. The Soviet Union didn't fall apart because of SDI or steely-eyed glares across the Berlin Wall. It had more to do with rock'n'roll, blue jeans and a McDonald's in Red Square. China is slowly going the same way. Look at Hong Kong. Better hope that change comes before they are the only game in town! Sometimes I think that people equate capitalism with the freedoms we enjoy. My point is tha not too far underneath their glossy "new surface", they are philosophically quite different than us. One does not need to believe in democracy to belive in making money. Remember the student vs. tank episode in Tianamen Square? Look up how long ago that was. I was shocked by how much time has passed. Cheap foreign imports are a short-term coverup of real problems. Domestic industry withers away, and good jobs with it. Then the infrastructure (trained people as well as facilities) are lost. Agreed! - Mike KB3EIA - |
#94
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In article , Mike Coslo
writes: N2EY wrote: In article , Mike Coslo writes: What percentage say "Made in China"...?!?! Or go to your local Home Depot or just about any store, and see how many items you can find that aren't manufactured in China. What amazes me is how willingly (and some enthusiastically) we approach this "brave new world". I'm not part of that "we". The shift of the US to a "you want fries with that" economy is perhaps the scariest thing I've ever heard of. Economically, I agree. We will not prosper by taking in each other's washing. Economics doesn't work that way. Lessee, when the US is busy doing whatever it is shifting it's economy to, and the rest of the world is *making* things, especially One Real Big part of the rest of the world, (namely China) guess who is gonna be the boss? Countries with service economies aren't the leaders, they are ruled by others. Economically, anyway. We could be brought to our knees. It's being done a little at a time. OTOH, the ideology of *some* socialist countries is being affected by exposure to capitalism and Western-style development. The Soviet Union didn't fall apart because of SDI or steely-eyed glares across the Berlin Wall. It had more to do with rock'n'roll, blue jeans and a McDonald's in Red Square. China is slowly going the same way. Look at Hong Kong. Better hope that change comes before they are the only game in town! Sometimes I think that people equate capitalism with the freedoms we enjoy. That's because the freedom to develop capitalism is one of the biggies. My point is tha not too far underneath their glossy "new surface", they are philosophically quite different than us. One does not need to believe in democracy to belive in making money. BINGO! And suppose China does become democratized and completely embraces capitalism. Why should they consider the needs of the USA over their own? We could simply become an *economic* colony of China. We supply them with raw materials and some specialized labor/products, and become dependent on them for most manufactured goods. Wealth flows across the Pacific as it once did across the Atlantic. Why should China *economically* view the USA any differently than England did 250 years ago? Remember the student vs. tank episode in Tianamen Square? Look up how long ago that was. I was shocked by how much time has passed. Cheap foreign imports are a short-term coverup of real problems. Domestic industry withers away, and good jobs with it. Then the infrastructure (trained people as well as facilities) are lost. Agreed! That's how a country becomes economically dependent. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
#95
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Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From: (N2EY) Date: 6/27/2004 8:36 PM Central Standard Time Message-id: (Steve Robeson K4CAP) wrote in message ... So...there's NO technology that exisits today that would allow us to land a man on the moon in say...two years...if we really wanted to...?!?! Probably not. Not in two years, anyway. I bet there is! Like I said..."If we wanted to..." Tomorrow, a lunar orbiter discovers what appears to be deposits of "X". We need "X" really bad, and we know if we don't have a quonset hut sitting on it, it's fair game. Betcha we could have a Shuttle-loadable lander in two years. So we can't configue an auxiliary fuel system? I doubt it can be done in two years. Do you really think a lunar lander that will fit in the Shuttle cargo bay and be compatible with its systems could be designed, built, tested, integrated and ready for launch to the Moon in less than two years? Including all the other facilities that would be needed to support it? I don't. OK...four years. And I would not be surprised if a design isn't setting around in a drawer for just such a project somewhare. They didn't start designing the LEM in 1967. Now about the auxiliary fuel system: It would have to be installed in the cargo bay, reducing the space and weight available for the lander. It would have to carry enough fuel to enable the shuttle and lander to leave earth orbit, enter lunar orbit, leave lunar orbit and then configure for reeentry. That's a lot of fuel and oxidizer. Why? We could use an Arianne to boost the tanks into orbit and the Shuttle could mate with it. Or the extra tanks could be boosted into trans-lunar eliptical orbit as an orbiting tanker. It will take an extra 30 years to figure out how to install the fuel tanks necessary to do it? It may not be possible at all even if the entire cargo bay is used for the tanks. That's only if you think in terms of the dimensions of the Shuttle. Again, there's nothing that says we can't piggyback the extra stuff to orbit. Look at the design of a Saturn V. Note how much of it is fuel tank and how little is CSM and LEM. Note how much it weighs at launch, how much of it goes to the moon, how much comes back from the moon and how much is left for reentry. The Saturn V was designed to be a one-booster-lifts all flight. I am not suggesting we do this all in one lift. Those numbers are determined by the basic physics of how much energy it takes to escape the earth's and the moon's gravity. So we get it to orbit, get "the package" together on orbit, then loft it into TLI from there. For every "but how do we..." there are at least a dozen options...It's just a matter of starting with one and getting the ball rolling. The shuttle's liquid fuel engines are not radically more efficient than those in a Saturn V. Their biggest claim to fame is that they are more controllable and last longer. I'll bet you a nickle to a C-Note that Burt Rutan could rough out a workable method on a napkin in a Mojave restaurant and have itr working in that two years. You would lose. Oh? If it could be done, NASA would have done it already. Oh? Yes. Why only NASA? And what makes you think that NASA may not have already penciled this mission out? You HAVE told me of reasons why you think it won't work one certain way, Jim, but you've NOT shown me or caused me to believe it CAN'T be done under ANY circumstances. Why? Because it would be a great way to push the shuttle program. That's what the "teacher in space" fiasco was about. Also the reason Congresscritters have taken shuttle rides. Well right there's a darn good reason TO "push" the shuttle! Jim, the first Boeing 747's carried under 300 people about 6K to 7K miles. Now almost 40 years later it can carry over 500 in some configurations and fly non-stop over 20 hours (London to Sydney...What's that...12K miles? Other than just "not wanting to", what's holding us back? Just because? The physics of the problem is the key to all of it. I don't think physics is the problem. We just need to start issuing "round to-it's" to the folks who make these programs (pardon the pun) fly. They've had to fight Congress and ignorant laymen for 30 years just to stay in LEO. So has every other program. No bucks, no Buck Rogers. Exactly. And that's the ONLY thing holding us back. And that's only from actually building the things...The engineering could be done now in CAD with a minimum of expense. Go ahead. Show me the numbers. How much does a shuttle weigh? How small and light can a lander be made? How much fuel is needed to do the jobs? The lander can be as small and as light as the mission dictates, or as big as we think we need it to be for the mission. No, I don't have "the numbers"...But I know we (yes, Lennie...The "Royal We") can do it if we wanted to. We can't park "re-supply" ships along the way or in lunar orbit? Do you know what a Lagrange point is? Sure I do. The only practical point would be lunar orbit. Now, how would you get a supply container there? The same way we got RANGER, "Lunar Orbiter", Apollo and who knows how manyn other lunar exploration packages there. We've already proven that on-orbit rendevous, docking and EVA construction is a no-brainer. Not a no-brainer at all. What has been shown is that it can be done. In low earth orbit. CM/LM rendevous was done after TLI and after LM ascension in lunar orbit. Both waaaaaaay outside Earth orbit! So again...WHAT new technology do we ahve to develop to go back to the Moon? - New lunar lander - New heavy lift rockets - New systems to get to lunar orbit and back that's a short list. Or we could just build more Saturn Vs. And I still say we could CAD these things now and have them on orbit in a relatively short time. My two years may be too optimistic, but I bet if we said "do this" today, it wouldn't take another 10 years to do like Apollo. HARDWARE, yes...we need new machines. but so far, Jim, your "arguments" have not swayed me that we could do it if we wanted to... Of course it could be done. We know that; it was done almost 40 years ago using rockets designed with slide rules and controlled with computers that make a pocket calculator look smart. The question is - could it be done in two years? The answer is no. OK...I defer to your suggestion of "not in 2 years"... So what would be your assessment on a reasonable timeline? the mission drops in, and brings at least part of the lander home for re-use itself. Only ways such a system could work is if the Shuttle stayed in earth orbit and the lunar package went from there. Why? Basic physics. The energy required to send the whole shuttle to lunar orbit and back again is simply too great. "Too great"...?!?! Or too expensive...?!?! And the result would be a short-term visit by a few astronauts, like the Apollo missions, not a long term base. As long as you keep thinking that, then that's all we'll do. What's your solution, Steve? How many tons of supplies and equipment are needed to establish a permanent lunar base? How much money to build everything needed, and to get it to the moon? How many years and launches to do it? Well there's the rub. Again, "how much money" as opposed to the logistics of getting it done. (1) Define the mission. How's this...A "permanent" manned base on the Moon with a staff of at least four. (2) Define the human need since that's really the biggest "consumable". That part's not really hard, though, since there are reams of texts on human physiology and what it takes to support a human in terms of nuourishment, hydration, etc. (3) Define short term and long term mission objectives. Again, Not too difficult to do since the first priority is going to be getting the base in place and getting it habitable. My solution (idea?) is to have prefab'ed modules lofted via unmanned missions. They are remotely soft landed within small radius of the intended base site. The modules are fitted with wheels from in the package and a "tow vehicle" is landed. The units are then towed to the site, lowered to a sitting position and mated together. "Instant" base. (Ironic that the fist colony on the Moon would be a trailer park, eh...?!?!) So...NASA doesn't hire drivers, janitors, security personel, health care workers, mechanics, etc? Not nearly so many as they hire highly trained and educated people. It sounds to me like you are trying to justify a larger manned space program by pitching it as a jobs program for Ph.Ds. No...Although I am sure there are a few Ph.D's out there who would gladly relinquish thier janitor's garb for a suit and tie again. But if you get into ANY "aerospace" town, there are legions of businesses not DIRECTLY associated with aerospace, but very important...Groceries, gas stations, spas, markets, etc etc etc. I am in Huntsville at least once a month. "Aerospace" is the "big business", but all those other countless places are needed to support the PEOPLE in "aerospace". (The 99% who get stuff done, and the 1% [ie:Lennie] who go along for the ride and milk it for what they can...But they ALL make money and spend money) If we pump up NASA for a new deep space or lunar program, it means that every company that contracts with it would be able to Sure - at a price. Sheeesh. You're the one complaining about getting ripped off every April 15. But why not solve our problems directly? Sure...Why not. Let's just go ahead and drop a billion dollars into social welfare programs to feed and house the poor. Who said anything about that? I'm talking about solving problems like education, infrastructure, and energy independence. Of course. And how do we "solve" those problems, Jim? With the exception of recreational technologies and the Internet, almost every "advancement" has been in entertainment and recreation. We've not had any "research" technologies to speak of change, and we certainly won't without some sort of impetus to get them going. In the mean time, we "solve" problems by throwing money at them. That's the root reason we decry the space program..."Let's spend the money on Earth!" Well...I never DID see where Mickey D's was on orbit yet, so where ELSE is the money being spent...?!?! The space program of the '60s didn't liberate us from poverty. Nor did it promote our wellness. It created some jobs and some new technologies but at enormous cost. Space HAS promoted our wellness, Jim! I can attest to that! And we will NEVER be free of poverty. The Demoncrats thrive on it! And WHAT problems are NOT being addressed long term BECAUSE of the space program? Surface transportation, for one. Energy efficiency and independence. Education. Uh huh. Yep. Haven't you seen how US education ranks against other countries in the developed world? Or how much of our oil is imported? Or any of a host of other things that need fixing? And not a single one of those has been impeded BY the space program, Jim...If nothing else a lot of that has been IMproved... There's hardly a single aspect of human endeavor outside of Somalia and Ethiopia that ISN'T touched by the space program. Space technology has helped prospect for oil, helps find safer routes for ships at sea and has helped in the development of new processes for medication manufacture. Those "aluminized" ballons that are so popular now are a spin-off of the technology to make polymerized plastics for NASA, as are the discs that make CD's. If you want, we can trash all of that, go back to pencil, paper and slide rules, and "Movietone" newsreels for "audio visuals" at school...?!?! Why can't the USA have the best educational systems in the world? The best surface transportation systems? The best energy systems? Energy independence? Money. We could have done all of those things 30 or more years ago (or at least been positioned to be there by now...) but everything was "fine" then, so why spend the money...?!?! Things are NOT so fine now, but not yet to disaster proportions, but that light at the end of the tunnel is NOT salvation! It's the on-coming train! Here's a quick one...Desalination. Plants were designed in the 60's for SoCal that would have used solar heating to help desalt seawater for LA, SFO and SDG. Now the news on several internet sites is that the LA reserves are down by 5 to 7 million acre-feet of water. This doesn't mean we shouldn't have a space program - we should. But it has to stand on its own merits. Going into space is worth doing for its own sake, not as a jobs program. If we want it to "stand on it's own merits' (I assume you mean 'make a profit') then we might as well just forget anything beyond LEO and sell NASA to the Red Chinese. Unless they find oil on the Moon, I don't ever see space travel as being able to produce it's own direct profit. Fiber optics = interruptable infrastructure. Fiber optics = what makes the modern communications world tick. I understand this. So do those who would like to do us harm. Satellites are interruptible infrastructure too. Heck, it's easy: Just build a high power ground jammer transmitter with a big dish (designed for the right frequencies) and point it at the satellite you wish to interrupt. Jam away. With good design, the jamming signal won't even be detected on earth. Sure it will....Some idiot did it to TBN (not that they didn't NEED jamming.....) and the guy responsible was collared in a day. And I bet with some simple programming we can defeat jamming of our commercial satellites...and I am willing to bet that c-note to the nickle that the military birds are a bit more sophisticated already! All of NASA's manned budget went into the shuttle, which is a marvelous system with a 1 in 75 chance of complete mission failure. The number of shuttles lost compared to the number of missions flown verifies the reliability analysis. Things that are filled with hundreds of tons of volatile combustables are bound to go boom. CNG tankers don't. Railroad tank cars don't. ROTMFFLMMFAO ! ! ! ! ! ! When's the last time a CNG tanker or railroad tank car in the USA exploded and killed people? How many of them do you think are in use in the continental USA in the course of a year? Oh...NOW you add the modifier "and killed people"... ! ! ! Heck, Jim...QST alone carries several articles a year of ARES groups that were active at various derailed tanker cars a year...I bet there were even more than that by a magnitude! Sorry, 1 in 75 is simply not good enough reliability. And we'll improve that reliability by just not doing it anymore...?!?! Not by doing it the same way over and over again. The boosters for the Shuttle exploded once, we fixed that problem. This time it was FOD to the leading edges of the wings. Not the same...certainly not "over and over". There's ALWAYS a need for competition, Jim. Who is there to compete with for space? The Red Chinese for one. They just flew a manned mission a year or so ago, and they certainly have the resources and the wherewithall to exploit it. Right. They orbited one guy. The Soviets did it first - 43 years ago. One today. They DO have a Lunar plan in place, according to TIME, Scientific American and several other folks commenting on the issue. So it was one guy this time. When do you consider it a credible "threat"..?!?! Three? Five? Two dozen? If they land ONE man on the Moon in the next decade, that will be one more than WE have done in the last forty years ! ! ! And considering thier track record for flooding markets with cheap alternatives that have, quite literally, put hundred of thousands if not millions of Americans out of work, I don't doubt they can do it there, too. By that logic, we should let them do it, and then buy the rockets from them. And put MORE Americans out of work? Flying payloads on rockets WE don't have control over? I'd rather not! I'd rather know that bright, fast moving light in the sky was carrying Americans. I'd rather that there were more products I could buy that said "Made in USA". Me too. I'd like to have an all-US Amateur Station... I don't see a whole lot of likelyhood that anything further will be forthcoming from this exchange, Jim. Why not? Do you think I'm joking? I'm not. That's the thing...I DON'T think you're joking, and every suggestion of what we MIGHT do in the space program is met with "we can't because..." I'm about HOW we can do things. If you believe that "all that money" is going to no good use and that it's not a benefit in your daily life today, well then there's just no use doing it. I've not said that. What I have said is that the space and military programs are not the best way to solve our problems here on earth. Those problems need to be addressed directly. You want a better mousetrap, study mouse behavior and trap design. That's not how I've read it. I see the benefits of our space and technology programs every day. And as both an American and as a human with a bit more than average sense of adventure, I'd like to see us reach out beyond our own celestial home and take advantage of the opportunities "out there". So would I. But at the same time, I realize how big space is, and how empty. And the basic physics of the problems inherent in space travel. Unfortunatley GETTING there will be neither cheap or without risk, but I for one think the benefits will ultimately be enormous. How much of *your* money are you willing to spend? Because that's what will fund it. Better funding American space programs than leasing others! And consider this: President Bush made *another* speech where he supported BPL and said it was up to NTIA to figure out how to avoid interference. How come our president and those BPL folks don't know that BPL is a bad idea from the get-go? Anybody with even a basic engineering education can see the problems staring you in the face. I for one don't think the IDEA of BPL is bad. I think the technology for it isn't up to par and warrants more research. The recent deployments only bear that out. 73 Steve, K4YZ |
#96
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Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From: PAMNO (N2EY) Date: 6/27/2004 8:36 PM Central Standard Time Message-id: In article , (Steve Robeson K4CAP) writes: It was the early 70's when Detroit and the others really started slipping. That was the era of the Gremlins, the Mavericks, Pintos and Vegas. Yep. The main reason was simple: Detroit hadn't made the necessary investment in basic R&D. They knew how to make big heavy inefficient cars but not small efficient ones. My point exactly, Jim. We need to move the technology of our space program out of the 70/80's. If we continue to set our sights on LEO, that's all we'll ever do, save for the occassional cutsie-robot pushing sand around and drilling a whopping 6 inches into the soil. THERE was a waste of money. They didn't accomplish anything that on-orbit RADAR and spectral imaging couldn't accomplish. But it looked cute on CNN. 73 Steve, K4YZ |
#98
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(Len Over 21) wrote in message ...
In article , PAMNO (N2EY) writes: I tried, Len. They just don't get it. I'm just a poor dumb old amateur anyway. You've told me time and time again how unqualified I am, how I "live in the past", how I don't know anything about "big time radio" and such, and how you're a "professional in radio". I still work regular hours and then some - I'm not retired like you. I'm not a wordsmith like you. I don't even make up names to call other people in newsgroups like you. I'm only 50 years old. If they won't listen to you, why should they listen to me? Poor Jimmie. Got inferiority complex. Tsk. Jimmie Who much too humble. He do CW. He make schematic and radio. He best kind ham. He post portant numbers bout ham radio every month. Cannot help Jimmie. Jimmie gots to learn, use the force. Mebbe Steve and Dave pump him up. Jimmie not get told he unqualified. Jimmie morseman, superior to all radio of 1930s. Jimmie do good but still gots great depression. Me no understan. He best kind ham. Jimmie see nursie, get meds from Dr. Killgore. Will help. Lose depression, learn hollering and yelling. Keeps nursie going, keeps Heil going. No no no. Steve turn him in for clinical deprishun. Lock Jimmie Who up. Now no one live Whoville cept Horton. BPL make more depress for Jimmie. Not good. Boo hoo. hoo. Temper fry... Maybe Jimmie Who want tempura batter. |
#99
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In article , (Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes: Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth From: PAMNO (N2EY) Date: 6/27/2004 8:36 PM Central Standard Time Message-id: In article , (Steve Robeson K4CAP) writes: It was the early 70's when Detroit and the others really started slipping. That was the era of the Gremlins, the Mavericks, Pintos and Vegas. Yep. The main reason was simple: Detroit hadn't made the necessary investment in basic R&D. They knew how to make big heavy inefficient cars but not small efficient ones. My point exactly, Jim. We need to move the technology of our space program out of the 70/80's. Why? Is science and exploration market-driven? I think not. [Docktor Weiner von Brawn personality of nursie acting up...] 1. The subject title doesn't involve spacecraft, space travel, or von Brawn's PhD dissertation on What To Do About NASA. 2. Von Brawn want unreliable man-rated space stuff with men on board? Not good. Nursie not get to ride in spaceship, only imagines himself hero astronaut. 3. Nursie count all failures of rocket flight. Begin with Peenemunde. Von Brawn must know, was member VfR (Verein fur Raumschfahrt)? Nursie go to White Sands, then Cape Canaveral, see allatime boom-boom there before Mercury. Spectacular. Reliability very hard work. Nursie not do that work. Nursie shout orders MAKE WORK! All pop-to when nursie shout. Nursie big noise. 4. First man on moon almost didn't make it. Neil was in command on the Gemini that had a stuck-open 100-pound (222 Newton) thruster made by Rocketdyne. Nursie ask von Brawn personality what that mean. Nursie goona say I "cut-and-paste" but no, see film copy from Gemini soon after recovery okay, FAST roll-rates two degrees freedom. Neil in "flying bedstead" next, lunar lander trainer. Loses control at about 200 feet, has to punch out (simulator have ejection seat with zero-altitude rocket motor). Was okay but bit tongue in process. Armstrong quit NASA soon after Apollo 11 recovery. Good idea. Stay alive. 5. Space Shuttle Main Engine (SSME) has strap-on computer for thrust, thrust vector controls. Intense vibration, almost impossible to believe levels next to engine. Minneapolis- Honeywell design, make computer. All original parts now obsolete for pin-pin replacements but very reliable computer. Rocketdyne had to work for replacement, difficult, reliability test very costly. Computer have same design architecture now as 30 years ago, basic stuff. SSMEs (3 in each STS) not cause of Challenger or Columbia fatal accidents. Nursie and von Brawn chorus together I "cut-and-paste from web" on that. Not so. Was working at Rocketdyne, touched SSME on test stand at Coca site (very small for 350 Kpounds thrust), was at test firings in blockhouse at Santa Su. (Santa Su be Santa Susannah Field Test Laboratory of Rocketdyne) If we continue to set our sights on LEO, that's all we'll ever do, save for the occassional cutsie-robot pushing sand around and drilling a whopping 6 inches into the soil. THERE was a waste of money. Basic science "waste of money?" Why nursie say that? Ben Franklin quote on such things, "What use is a newborn baby?" Nurse have personality talk to Ben, ask same. Report back. Mars NOT "LEO" (Low Earth Orbit). Nursie or some personality fruitcake if think so. Nursie check almanac get figures for distances. They didn't accomplish anything that on-orbit RADAR and spectral imaging couldn't accomplish. Nursie go to Pasadena, talk to JPL team responsible. Ask questions, get von Brawn personality to present alternate data. Nursie think JPL receptive to suggestion? Think again. JPL security will put nursie outside quick. Fruitcake display. But it looked cute on CNN. Nursie think all space things "show biz?" Nursie more fruitcake. Brits at Mars first, fail in landing. Unknown reason. Yanks next with bouncy balloon lander idea. Works. Both times. Look crazy but science and much testing proved concept viable. Lots of good data gathered by both robot explorers so far. Nursie not understand? TS. Nursie go learn about space, then put keyboard on safe before shooting it off in here. How far to Mars, nursie. Wanna do QSO with Martian? Can use VERY slow morse since two-way time very long. Nursie see almanac, figure out radio wave travel time. Nursie can do math, figure path loss, needed power at Tx, needed sensitive at Rx? Long distances. 1 KW RTTY FSK with dish antenna work okay (calculated 50 years ago by George O. Smith, engineer and author of "Venus Equilateral" story series). Nursie argue with JPL still? Not good. JPL helped do radar imaging of Venus over three decades ago from earth. Very LOW resolution return, hardly worth trouble, only proved possible. Earth to Mars distance close to that. JPL know how to do space things better than nursie. Nursie do post-graduate science study via CNN? Not best. Too bad NASA channel programs cut back a few years ago. Channel may be "defunct" now. [favorite derisive nursie word is "defunct"] Mercury defunct. Gemini defunct. Apollo defunct. Skylab defunct. tsk. All worked. All got data. Basic data not available before. Nursie sneer and smirk at basic science data? Maybe STS soon defunct? So be it. Nursie not help Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, Skylab, or STS (Shuttle Transport System) or any unmanned space mission. Nursie blabber on like Big Expert but not know basics. Big mouth. Defunct brain. Nursie go to Clear Lake (suburb of Houston), take MSFC tour. Sundays best, not need guides. See museum of "defunct" vehicles, capsule, real moon rocks. Get rocks off? Nursie get in argument with NASA folks, sneer, yell at them, diss and curse them, examine Texas hospitality for visiting fruitcakes. Not good. Nursie go argue with Ben Franklin about newborns. Have fun in nursieland with imaginations. Nursie stay out of real world. Temper fry... LHA / WMD |
#100
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