NASA had a very bad day testing the parachute system for it's new Orion spaceship.
During the July 31st Orion parachute test there was a "slight technical glitch" with the "programmer parachute" that gave the Parachute Test Vehicle (PTV = an Orion analog - same shape & weight) a violent spin and then a nice crash into the ground.
Oops
The programmer parachute is intended to correct the orientation of the re-entering spacecraft as it descends, a necessary operation before the drogue parachutes can be deployed to slow it before the mains are deployed.
Unfortunately during this PTV test-drop problems arose very quickly; as soon as the programmer parachute was deployed, it failed to inflate and therefore did not cause any drag.
This happened as the programmer parachute was being buffeted by turbulence in the wake of the PTV and stabilization parachutes. The PTV was therefore allowed to fall in an uncontrolled manner; basically upside-down.
Continuing to drop the programmer and stabilization parachutes were jettisoned (having not done their job very well) and drogue parachutes were deployed. As the PTV was falling out of control the drogue parachutes were put under immediate and excessive strain and wrapped around the PTV, dynamic pressure causing the drogue to be cut away.
Having suffered some major whiplash the PTV's main landing bag retention system was damaged and also failed. Continuing to fall, the main parachutes were deployed, and almost immediately two were ripped from the vehicle, forcing the PTV to hit the ground with only one parachute open.
There are no details as to what damage was caused by this failed test, but I think we can safely assume the PTV will need more than a little body work
Makes one wonder if human cadavers were used on this particular drop; they often are to establish potential injury data. If they were I wouldn't want to have been the first engineer on the scene
During the July 31st Orion parachute test there was a "slight technical glitch" with the "programmer parachute" that gave the Parachute Test Vehicle (PTV = an Orion analog - same shape & weight) a violent spin and then a nice crash into the ground.
Oops
The programmer parachute is intended to correct the orientation of the re-entering spacecraft as it descends, a necessary operation before the drogue parachutes can be deployed to slow it before the mains are deployed.
Unfortunately during this PTV test-drop problems arose very quickly; as soon as the programmer parachute was deployed, it failed to inflate and therefore did not cause any drag.
This happened as the programmer parachute was being buffeted by turbulence in the wake of the PTV and stabilization parachutes. The PTV was therefore allowed to fall in an uncontrolled manner; basically upside-down.
Continuing to drop the programmer and stabilization parachutes were jettisoned (having not done their job very well) and drogue parachutes were deployed. As the PTV was falling out of control the drogue parachutes were put under immediate and excessive strain and wrapped around the PTV, dynamic pressure causing the drogue to be cut away.
Having suffered some major whiplash the PTV's main landing bag retention system was damaged and also failed. Continuing to fall, the main parachutes were deployed, and almost immediately two were ripped from the vehicle, forcing the PTV to hit the ground with only one parachute open.
There are no details as to what damage was caused by this failed test, but I think we can safely assume the PTV will need more than a little body work
Makes one wonder if human cadavers were used on this particular drop; they often are to establish potential injury data. If they were I wouldn't want to have been the first engineer on the scene
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