Immagine dell'autore.

Nicholas de Monchaux

Autore di Spacesuit: Fashioning Apollo

3 opere 144 membri 1 recensione

Sull'Autore

Opere di Nicholas de Monchaux

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Utenti

Recensioni

A man on the moon: one of the most iconic photographs in history. But you don't really see the man himself, do you? What you see is the spacesuit he wears. That suit is a wonderment of engineering and chemical design. Nylon, Lycra, Nomex, Neoprene, Mylar, Dacron, Kapton and Teflon made it possible to survive the rigors of the lunar environment but the truth is that men were able to walk around on the lunar surface because women knew how to sew.

When engineers and designers first went about creating a spacesuit they naturally looked at other garments for inhospitable environments - the hard deep-dive suits of the ocean and the pressure garments worn by fighter pilots. There began the two schools of thought: hard or soft? Is the spacesuit clothing that a man wears, or a container for the man within? There were many designs from many companies - the pictures in this book are really wonderful to browse - but, as we know from photos and videos, the soft suit won out.

It wasn't that soft was ultimately the best design. Cloth was prone to ballooning and was more susceptible to corrosives and micrometeors but it was the constraints of the rocket that would launch the mission into orbit that made the final decision. Weight and space in the capsule were really at a premium. Soft suits collapse and weigh less, so they were the final choice. ILC won the bid and they came through for NASA. Oh, that's International Latex Corporation - maker of Playtex bras and girdles. That's correct, women who made lingerie handmade the garments that kept the Apollo astronauts alive in the vacuum of space.

What I find amazing is that an agency that demanded so much redundancy for it's hardware went with a manufacturing process that really hinged on a few individuals. Parts of these suits were sewn on one or two specialized machines and only a few seamstresses had the skill and the knack to get them correct. In a time when all the astronauts, managers and engineers were male, this was a process in the female domain.

Spacesuit: Fashioning Apollo does showcase a great story but it does not utilize a traditional narrative structure. It's a rabbit-warren of a book, each chapter a topic that may or may not discuss the spacesuit directly but all come together in a mosaic to give you the flavor of its genesis. Honestly, I did lose my patience with it a time or two but ultimately I'm glad I stuck it out. It's uncovering facets of the space race story, such as this, that continue to make it interesting even today.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
VictoriaPL | Aug 19, 2012 |

Premi e riconoscimenti

Statistiche

Opere
3
Utenti
144
Popolarità
#143,281
Voto
3.8
Recensioni
1
ISBN
2

Grafici & Tabelle