NASA’s Next-Generation Spacesuits - A Behind-The-Scenes Look
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- Опубликовано: 27 апр 2024
- NASA has been using the current spacesuits on the International Space Station for decades and they are showing their age. The agency has had issues not only with finding the proper sizes to fit its increasingly diverse astronaut corps, but also with degradation of some suit components. Now NASA is turning to two commercial companies: Axiom Space and Collins Aerospace, a subsidiary of Raytheon Technologies, to build and maintain its new generation of spacesuits. Under the Exploration Extravehicular Activity Services Contract, or xEVAS, NASA is providing Collins and Axiom, along with a number of their industry partners, with up to $3.5 billion through 2034. CNBC got a behind-the-scenes look at the new suit that Collins Aerospace is designing in collaboration with partners ILC Dover and Oceaneering. NASA hopes to use this new suit on the International Space Station by 2026.
Chapters:
00:00 - Intro
02:39 - Dire need
08:00 - The Collins suit
12:48 - Future missions
Produced by: Magdalena Petrova
Supervising Producer: Jeniece Pettitt
Graphics: Christina Locopo, Mallory Brangan
Additional Camera: Andrew Evers
Post-production Support: Katie Tarasov, Erin Black
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NASA’s Next-Generation Spacesuits - A Behind-The-Scenes Look
I know it sounds silly, but I think it’s important for the space suits to look cool and inspiring. Those suits from the 70s are so iconic and have a real life super hero aesthetic. As a kid I remember seeing those suits and being blown away. I hope the new suits have that same effect on younger generations.
forealllllllll bro
I totally agree with you. Its gotta look cool, most of people watching don't give a F if it has all the necessary stuff to help the astronaut and water cooling system and all the technicalities, most people don't understand it, and are just going to look at it from the tv. Not only that but is also important so that astronauts get more visibility.
i agree they look old, and disagree on the effect. we need to get past this 1960's mental block people are stuck on...
the rest of the world has and it's making us...the U.S. look obsolete..
These spacesuits are most likely gonna be decorated with flags, emblems, names and so on once they're done with the functionalities, they'd also alter the suit later on to fit with the gear they'll use, thus giving it a complete look
I'd say give it time
The new ones look fine too.
Worked for Collins Aerospace for 14 years… feeling proud to see the name on the suit
@Shadow Filip The company was called Rockwell Collins which was bought over by Raytheon and renamed to Collins Aerospace…..Do some research!
@Shadow Filip Rockwell Collins was founded in 2001 as a result of another acquisition
I’m guessing you didn’t see any of that 3 billion dollars. Am I right?
Are you from Maharashtra?
Isha G good work. Aap ab kaha kam karte ho?
I really like the Collins design the most by far. This stuff is facinating. I wish we had more things that would focus on the amazing aspects of these space suits. Material science & engineering advancements alongside technology is probably helping improve this field of research and design so much
As impressive as the space vehicles are, it amazes me that the suits don't get the public attention that they deserve. The amount of engineering and jewel-like precision in fabrication required to make so many parts work seamlessly and reliably together in such a small package is genuinely mindblowing and has fascinated me since I was a kid.
Edit: It's disheartening to read some of the absurd replies to this comment. So few people understand how much the R&D from NASA projects, (including suit tech) has benefited them and the rest of society as a whole. And, anybody who believes that the earth is flat, or that we never went to space or the moon shouldn't even be using the technological devices that enable them to post such ignorant garbage on the internet, because according to you, the science that makes that possible isn't real.
I'd blame the education system, except for the fact that I learned from that same system, and I didn't turn out to be a dimwitted imbecile who can't understand simple concepts like "funding for the development of a new space suit design isn't all spent on making one individual suit".
It's really sad that expressing interest in technological development triggers such unwarranted hate and distrust in people, half of which likely wouldn't even be alive today if it weren't for the discoveries and advances in practically every aspect of modern development that derived directly from the publically funded R&D conducted by NASA and fellow aerospace centers, here, and around the world.
To all of you out there who share my appreciation for these kinds of achievements and collaborations, I thank you for all the "likes".🚀❤🤍💙🤓
To all the needlessly obsessed, tin-foil hat-wearing detractors, science deniers, and NASA haters out there, don't bother replying. I'll not be engaging with such idiocy any further. You are a huge part of what's wrong with the world today. You are part of the problem. Enough is enough, I'm turning my notifications off. Congratulations, you just succeeded in ruining one more thing in the world.
Have fun living your lives in fear and ignorance. I pity your children.
A lot of people have a flawed mindset that efforts for going out to space is worthless. These people usually say things like "our tax dollars are being wasted when we could use them for better things", or in the case of private space companies "they're wasting money that could have been used to house and feed the poor" etc etc.
These people don't seem to realise that as humans, we can do multiple things at once...we can do good for the poor AND go to space. Plus, so many technologies made for space end up having a myriad of uses here on earth; the thing is, technology only comes about through a real need, through adversity. In first world countries, there's not as much true hardship to drive innovation, so challenges like space travel is key in pushing people to get educated and bring about progress. I honestly believe that we should focus even MORE on space, so many problems we face today can be alleviated and/or solved by expanding to the rest of our solar system. Heck, even building industry on the moon could mean we could stop mining on earth completely, thus allowing us to reclaim the natural habitats that mining destroys on our planet, as well as reducing pollution in a meaningful way. We all need to look towards the stars to have the brighter future we all want
Just machining these suits and designing them is hard already, but they also have to work under thermal expansion and contraction in space, to account for such an extreme environment is everything but easy
Why do you want to bring attention to this failure? 4.5 billion dollars and no suit to bring attention to yet.
Sir your curiosity and appreciate has impressed us and we'd like to extend you an employment opportunity with NASA and SpaceX as personal assistant to Elon Musk
Problem solving leads to new discoveries! Id much rather if we’re gonna spend money on tech/R&D it’s this rather than war.
Anywho!
Space suits are really hard. Think of them like spaceships in the shape of a person. Joints are incredibly complicated little problems to solve.
Modern suits look a lot less bulky and awkward than Apollo era suits. Amazing that they can provide safe life support in near vacuum including temperature control, oxygen, communication, and reasonable comfort.
And a place to poo also!
siapa yg sapot kamu
kamu yg menyamar dlm akuan mybank2 aku
Excited to see these preparations. Hats off to Team NASA🎉
Where is the OSD (On Screen Display) on the helmet?
Dont you think it would be way cooler if the helmet had a digital display?
Space suits are basically space ships with a human shape, it's amaizing
I'd classify it more as a mobile habitat, than a spaceship tbh.
Right! And its not the journey into space that is important. Its the
friends we meet along the way
@@ProjectRealityV1they usually come with some sort of EVA though
@@frankjames7272Until they probe u 💀
Interesting I thought I read a few years back how nasa is no longer a fan of suits that connect at the hip with the ring thing because of added weight and complexity and instead preferred the Apollo and Russian style with zipper in back. The article mentioned they were looking back at those but also those the astronaut climbs in at the back right behind the life support system/pack like the nasa made prototype shown in this very video. So it’s interesting to see the collins suit is the current hip ring shuttle type.
The later Apollo suits (Apollo 15-17) went to a front zipper and added a waist joint to allow the astronaut to sit in the Lunar Rover.
Well this one has a back flap to probe Uranus
hsha dont be stupid everyone knows laundry money
@@silentmajority8365 i hope that feature fits in the budget
Nasa is racist
Absolutely amazing. Love the design. This is what I genuinely love to it. The major jump in technological advancement and innovation from a years old product to current generation. Unfortunately it’s not yet iron man nanotech but I guess it’ll do til we get to that point.
These suits look awesome. I can’t imagine how much this’ll improve EVA efficiency and ingress/egress.
This was so cool! More videos like this please, of everything new and exciting happening in space and lunar exploration. I can't wait to see Axiom's lunar spacesuit design. It was a very weird choice for NASA to go with Axiom for lunar spacesuits when Collins/ILC are the companies that make the Apollo spacesuits while Axiom is new and focused on private space tourism and their own private space station, so why are they designing the lunar spacesuits not the ISS replacement suits? Weird decisions from NASA I hope they're the right ones.
Axiom got $228 million and Collins just $98 million. And they saying the suits are similar. Uh?
Maybe Axiom is making a better suit. Companies like Collins need some competitive enthusiasm so they don’t become reliant on free government money. Same with NASA, they are slow to do anything, unlike private sector.
@@lazerith840 Tell the NASA that went to the moon in the 60s they are slow to do anything LOL
The private sector still hasn't accomplished that task.
Maybe if people like yourself chose to fund NASA instead relying on the private sector, we wouldn't have this problem.
Can't cut funding for 40 years and expect magic to happen.
@@johnsnow5955 NASA gets tax dollars, so I already am pitching towards funding them. Also it’s because it’s government funded it moves slow. If it was a private corporation it would probably be doing more.
@@lazerith840 hahaha tax dollars don’t pay for anything we are trillions in debt but I do love when the village idiots make that claim.
None of the work NASA has done would have gotten done in the private sector wanna know why? IT ISN’T PROFITABLE
More videos like this! I really enjoy this topic.
How do the gimbals for waist or arm manage to rotate and maintain atmospheric sealing, or do they seal on entry and not move when in enviroment?
Very interesting thank you for covering this area .
Near Uranus
Once we get some of these specific parts made, it’s gonna be much easier to adapt these suits to more complex missions.
Indeed just like everything else when it comes out, people adapt to it, and be much easier to make
man that 4ss is massive
There are some people who have designed exo-skeletons similar to the articulations in Iron Man’s suit.
- can’t we make space suits based around those, since they are more articulated and have more dexterity?
The original suits are iconic but these new ones are long overdue
Getting to test out spacesuits would be a fantastic job!!!
Next mouth (March 2023) SpaceX will do the first Spacewalk of their new EVA Space suit. ALL four astronauts will be testing them at the same time.
@@favesongslist when exactly? it's march
@@partypooper8198 The Polaris Dawn flight to test the EVA suits has been delayed until July.
@@favesongslist figures..
Use a human in a space, Moon or Mars suit under actual environmental conditions they’d be exposed to? Too dangerous on Earth.
Technology has come so far from the original suit, I’m absolutely floored 🤭
Great to see Collins and Axiom pulling through. Imagine going to space only to almost be drowned by a failing space suit 😱
NASA makes the suit for 4 mill. 3.5 billion is the Nordstrom markup.
It's all jokes with you guys
Thanks captain obvious.
Nah. It's all scam
@@farplenorp maybe you folks should design and build a competent space suit for for 4 million, then if the Astronauts survive in them, you would have proved your point.
Otherwise ya'll just mouthing off.
@@enadegheeghaghe6369 I bet SpaceX could do it for a whole lot less than what it costs NASA to do it internally. Turns out that merging these developments with business interests tends to result in more efficiency.
Worth every penny. This will reap rewards for many generations!
3.5B dollar suit! I’d like to see someone wear that to the met gala! That’s some serious drip!
I like the fact that a Spacesuit is literally a little spacestation just for you!
not even close....
i like the fact people believe a suit takes longer to develop than an entire space station.
@@IIISentorIIIIt's pretty much right on the mark..
Give NASA more money.
Space exploration is something that has the potential to uplift our entire civilization.
This video makes it clear that the private sector is the only one making progress here without burning through billions.
Woahhhh nice job Collins! This is awesome!
glad to see this … always blew my mind how the suits never really changed from original
18000 components for the current suit? Jesus!
I had no idea it was this complicated. Also, I thought it was just one space suit for anything in space; space walks, moon walks, or Mars walks.
Yeah, its way more complicated than the laypeople know
Right? That's seriously crazy stuff. I didn't think it was so many components. Not even in the thousands. Absolutely amazing yet terrifying. So much to go wrong.
Every microchip, resister, plug, wire, screw, bolt, nut, fabric panel, yada, yada...... It quickly adds up.
The suit is basically a space craft not a suit. Super complicated bits of kit.
@s k y b o y I don't know about you but I would definitely want an over-engineered suit to protect me in the vacuum of space.
3.5 billion dollars is how much SpaceX is paying to develop the entire Starship program.
Do you actually understand that a space suit is literally a mini flexible starship right? It’s ridiculously hard to get it done properly. Since ones they will do that it’s gonna be the standard for another 50-70y or smth.
@@szymonszczykowski9027 No... no it is not. I don't even know where to begin with that claim. Regardless, SpaceX is also developing an EVA suit which should be ready by July, which is when the Polaris Dawn spacewalk mission is scheduled to go.
@@szymonszczykowski9027 no he doesn’t understand and you don’t either lolol 😂
anything can be done nasa is just burning money in wrong direction
LOL
LOL
LOLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL
We see lot more motion in upper area. But would they need to do different type for a plant landing or moon landing. Also wouldn't the new style of space units be better material to start bases off.
Wow , this cool. NASA need to plan when new apdates already after this updates for space suite :) Never seen new space suits from NASA before
The guy taking about making a machine to make spacesuits very creative that’s what we need creative thinking
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣Covid proof?
Yeah they’ll cover it in surgical masks no problem
Looks more flexible than the old moon suits. But not very much.
It didn’t look to be pressurised.
Every EVA suit looks flexible when its unpressurised here on earth, we will see how it will be in vacum
Well... We shall see once we get back, maybe we will see them fly on *Dear Moon*
Without a "Hard Suit" the air pressure in the suit will fight all movements, even the fingers.
@@fukhue8226 I understand that the suits are pressurised to 4.7 PSI, about the pressure on top of Mt Everest for this reason. To compensate it’s filled with pure oxygen. The low pressure of the suit requires the users to pre breath oxygen for 30 minutes prior to donning, this purges their blood of nitrogen so as not to get the bends. My vision of an ideal suit is a powered flexible exoskeleton made out of a material that mimics muscle and tendons and maintains normal atmospheric pressure and nitrogen/oxygen ratio. The user has a neurolink implant that controls the suits movement, perfectly synchronised with body movements.
Now all someone has to do is build it, someone smarty that I.🤪
Imagine how boundlessly unlimited and technologically advanced we could be without out the constraints of the monetary system.
We don't have unlimited resources. The monetary system is a reflection of that
Wait we don’t have unlimited resources?
Collins suit seems to be a true leap forward regarding overall agility. But it seems to me that the wearer is still depended on help by at least one other person when putting it on. This decade old issue finally needs to be overcome or it will cost lives sooner or later.
With the current known tech IMO you will never have a real space suit that a astronaut can put alone.
how
I love this. Every space agency is literally our future I appreciate the hell out of them!
Nah our planet is our future. This'll be useful in a few thousand years maybe but for now we really should take care of earth.
and broke !
Remember this mission? How does one explain finger holes, in space, in a pressurized space suite?
ruclips.net/video/P2DC5x9jyE4/видео.html
@@SynthwavelLover Uhhh no, space absolutely is our future
Way more resources and room to expand
Earth is just a starting point, that while yes should be taken care of, we should not be squatting in it and not attempting to move forward like a 40 year old in their parent’s basement after a while.
@@SynthwavelLover Space exploration has always made life easier for humans, a lot of technology we have everyday use today came from NASA.
New suit looks amazing
Spending $3.5 billion on space suits is kinda like buying a shirt that costs more than a brand-new Mercedes
I always seem to forget that spacesuits don't have to be as robust as submarines. If the vacuum of space is 0 pressure and the normal human pressure is 1 atmosphere then the suits only have to hold a difference of 1 atmosphere. All the space accidents in movies changed my perception.
The development of spacesuits is much more complicated than I initially imagined.
Its basically a mini-spaceship.
@@ToneyCrimson True
@@ToneyCrimson do you know what a space ship is ?
It doesn't justify a billion dollars
@@presleymeck When it's a matter of life & death, more than a billion is justified.
I hope this happens it would be great to see maybe a similar space suit when we go to Mars in over 10 years
Niga they can’t even get 2 the moon
Meh, so much time and money wasted. Just do what China and Russia does and steal the tech after western try hards waste their time and money.
10, more like 200
you wont know of any Mars manned or womanned mission in under the amount of likes this comment of yours gets, unless you are somehow necessary for its happening, they won't tell you until they have went thrice and returned, same as moon.
NASA was for pedestrian launches mainly even though it is a military shell agency, but there will likely be some sort of conflict or another so this will not be that relevant due to distracting long suffering and discomfort-ability.
Robots are good enough for barren radiation soaked wastelands.
I'm curious...... how exactly does the space suit work in the Vacuum of space?
Small gripe is that at 13:49 you had a rendering of someone using a laptop outside on presumably mars when it would die the moment u took it outside since pretty much all screens (especially lcd) would die in a vacuum.
How do you know that it’s an LCD display?
It's crazy that most of the tech we have today, cars, spacecraft, planes, tanks.. were all built in the past century. All the modern century added was the digital technology.
And they got that from aliens
Why is that crazy? It’s only 2023. Mankind wasn’t created just 23 years ago. Of course we use things designed from the last century. We’re still at the beginning of the following millennium. That digital technology…extremely significant. It created smart phones, navigation and safety systems for our vehicles, etc…, as well as vastly increased both the size and speed of the internet.
@@silentmajority8365 what are you talking about?
That digital technology is not to be underestimated. A lot of advance medical equipment, AI, logistics, simulations etc. knowledge is greatly advanced because of it.
@@KTK-o Medicine maybe advanced, but we still don't have compound V
The Apollo lunar suits had a lifespan of about 27 hours due to the sharp dust from the regolith getting everywhere and tearing the suits up as the astronauts moved around. I hope that has been improved upon in the new suits.
I'd assume that's why they're developing a separate set of suits for the Artemis missions while the one in the video is meant for space walks on the ISS
The Nixon phone call was better then than the audio in the Virgin Galactic. They should revive that old technology.
Believe me they have
One of the things they did was to wire an external circuit to counter the negative charge of said regolith all over the suit
When NASA says they are lacking funds, you know how expensive things really are.
Great info.
They need to standardized the space suits so they can be used in any spacecraft going to ISS and for space walks.
That's literally whta they're doing lol. Collins and Axiom will have to respect standards set by nasa for use on the ISS and beyond
The EVA suits would be unecessarily bulky for use en route.
Break the suit down into modules. The one custom fit part would be the actual environmental suit the space-meat would be wearing. Not to mention much lighter to send up. The rest would be standardized hardware and be repairable onsite. Smaller parts could also be make onsite. Use that 3D printer(s) that's up there NOW.
Just let SpaceX do it.
@@xploration1437 SpaceX have already done it. They'll be showcasing their EVA suits in July 2023 with the Polaris Dawn mission, with 1 doing a spacewalk in it & having the rest of the crew (3) in them in a depressurised Crew Dragon.
Designing a proper "normal suit" is going to be key to survival in space outside of our magnetic field.
How much would a Moonsuit differ from a Marssuit or Spacesuit?
Because I know that an Earthsuit is very different from any of the previously mentioned.
I'm pretty sure you are joking but I will reply anyway, a "moonsuit" is exactly like a spacesuit, the moon has no atmosphere. A "Marssuit" would be almost like a spacesuit but wouldn't need to be as strong and bulky, because Mars has a atmosphere but would still be more bulky than a "Earthsuit".
Now I know what I want for Christmas!
Wow now the astronauts can touch rocks with more dexterity
For those of you guys wondering why they cost *so* much, it's because spacesuits are essentially tiny little spaceships. They have to hold pressure, protect our squishy little bodies from the vacuum of space, keep us from freezing or boiling, allow us to see and move around, allow us to connect to and power tools, allow us to breathe, and literally allow us to fly in space without any tethering. All this RnD just to build a few suits ends up costing a ton of money.
I bet if spacex give this contract a try they can achieve it and cut cost in half😒
@@Rmi_brandito
They could probably do it for a tenth or less. NASA isn't s space program. It's a jobs program.
@@Rmi_brandito 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@leestewart72 A jobs program that has a helicopter flying around Mars and a telescope in deep space that can see to the beginnings of the galaxy. Thats the most space related jobs program I’ve ever heard of
@@teamtoken
The telescope was more than $9 billion over budget, and 15 years late.
Those will be perfect for floating around the space station
Wow!
Nice diving suit! Just the fact that underwater there is pressure pushing in on the suit and in the space the air inside is pushing out. So a suit being able to work in both polarities is AMAZING :)
40iq comment
@@nosredep7873 ;D
@@nosredep7873 Please start doing math and estimate the forces on a spacesuit at approximately 3 yards of fabric with virtually zero pressure outside the suit and 10 psi inside the suit. I estimate 27 square foot of exposed suit surface area x 144 square inches per foot is about 3,888 square inches at ten psi pressure differential is about 38 thousand pounds of total force pushing outward . have You ever seen this force pushing outward on a suit during a spacewalk?
@@ramusoder5411 not to mention...temperatures
7:18 Wow, this is almost never done with government contracting. When a company wins the contract, they used to keep everything proprietary and closed, so that no new competitor can ever submit competing bids. (Such as with military contracting.)
The suits kind of remind me of the first diving suits man made. Wonder what's it will be in 100-300 years.
I can see the SpaceX influence with the dark accents and streamlined look.
Is the design similar to that of the first spacesuits with the big bubble heads really the best solution? Or is aesthetics in mind?
Isn't the big bubble head so the pressure is equalized while giving the most peripheral vision?
The Collins suit looks great! I hope it can be tested on ISS sooner than 2026 :) How about adding a GoPro mount on the helmet?
There is a plan to add external cameras to the helmet so the mission controllers can see what the astronaut sees and even if the helmet fogs, someone can guide them over the radio.
@@RealRyanFlynn They should start decades ago. A lot of incident caught on camera since the beginning of CCTV.
In harsh environment like working on ISS, 100% they should get cam to monitor their safety.
Hello I'm curious as to how a space suit helmet can be filled with water
Was this suit pressurized during this demonstration? That definitely changes mobility . Completely understandable to only demonstrate as a concept but not a true comparison or proof of concept otherwise.
For the cost, this better give him Iron man powers to bring him back to earth
15,000 components in the suit? That’s INSANE!
Think of it less as a suit and more a literal space ship. Because, that's what it is. Space is hard.
@@EchoesDistantAnd basically pointless to explore.
We are getting closer like really, really close of having refine futuristic model of technology
Since these news programs NEVER mention that NASA only gets 0.5% of the federal budget, I will take this time to point it out.
New suits need to be designed for manufacturing not only here on Earth, but easily in space or on another planet.
They did talk about that with a company designing a 3D printed suit, and given its for extraterrestrial crew that's them covered
lol yea we cant even grow plants in space im sure a next generation, space suit factory will be EZPZ....
I had no idea that the current suits had a water circulating as part of the suits function, that was surprising.
Space is very very cold Waters is circulated through the suits and heated to keep the astronauts warm out of space walks
@@wildlifewarrior2670 No, it's actually the opposite. Space is a complete vacuum so there's no air that your body can get cooled by, there's nothing for your body heat to transfer to. The only way body heat can dissipate is through thermal radiation which is very slow. The water is there to keep your body cool, otherwise your own body heat would build up faster than it could radiate away and you'd be cooked by your own body heat.
@@wildlifewarrior2670 just to add, space is extremely cold and extremely hot at the same time, all depends if you are on the shade or not.
I don't think that is a feature of current EVA suits alone, water/coolant circulation system should exist since the Apollo Moon suits, perhaps even earlier.
Thank God for Space X moving this industry forward.
Lmao, leeching off billions of the taxpayers as usual. People are hopeless and pathetic.
These spacesuits aren't built by SpaceX.
I wonder if we will ever get to a point where sci-fi spacesuit designs will become a reality. Or is it just not possible for spacesuits to be anything other than the bulky pressurized behemoths we are used to?
Sci-Fi tends to be all form and no function.
On green screen all is possible. Good tax payers give 3.5b :))😂
For Mars perhaps some decades in the future but the Moon and in space no, not in the future I can personally predict, there's just no way to escape the fact that you need to keep 1 atmosphere of pressure inside the space suit and it needs to be tick and strong enough, to not burst by the inside pressure and also stop micro meteorites, dangerous as bullets, not to say you need to somehow keep the astronaut body at a regular temperature, or him/her will cook, in space and the Moon, in shade you are more or less at -200ºc and in the sun light, at more or less +200ºc and you can be in both states at the same time, part in the shade and part in the sun light, this is a huge discrepancy on temp the suit materials need to be crazy strong, all of this factors don't help in making a thin suit.
I would love to see the cost breakdown. 😅
What's stopping you from doing a simple web search?
@@muzikgod That would be me
100% stolen money
@@studentcopyofburgerking8108Stop right there cost breakdown googling scum!
Charging the taxpayer like it’s hospital bill, I bet spacex can satisfy the contract requirements while cutting cost in half.
Definitely needs more improvement but looks good so far!
Thats what I thought too . 🙄
1:35 *Spends $420.1M*
"NASA had a lack of funding"
I like it really cool and not scary or overwhelming looking
The more I learn about space travel the more I realize how little I actually know about it.
Astronaut suits have had static buildup issues for decades. Could they add something to the suits to use that static electricity to repel dust gently ?
They are indeed working on such powered anti static systems. the designs are just not final yet. we'll know more when the suits get updated for use on the moon rather than orbit
@@soleenzo893 thank you.
To my understanding, this is the MOST expensive part of the new suit contract, and the one causing the most delays (the suit delays will delay the next moon landing, not the SLS or hopefully SpaceX's lander). The old suits worked FINE for the LEO mission requirements of the last 40 years - they simply were old...and the same exact design could have been re-used for ISS EVAs. The big challenge is lunar regolith, and that's why they needed to redesign the suits in the first place (ok, better mobility was slightly more useful as well, but not critical). However, Apollo 15's record lunar EVA time, ended up with the suits having multiple punctures and rips, due to the regolith...and that was 18 hours of use. NASA's new requirements for these suits are 100 EVA hours, which is requiring the anti-dust system which is the #1 contributor to the rapid degradation of the suit while on lunar EVA. The new suits will probably work for thousands of hours at 450km earth LEO.
@@dansiegel995 Apollo 17 spent the longest time not 15.
@@gregnulik1975 Hey Greg, this is currently being developed - learn more here ruclips.net/video/0k9wIsKKgqo/видео.html
Was hoping they would mention the SpaceX suits for comparison
Nice underwater swim suit. I am definitely going to buy it.
It's really incredible when you learn more about our efforts in space how the majority of it all has honestly been weekend garage DIYers with about the bare minimum technology to help them at the time. As much money as people think is put into this stuff and to be fair it is a lot of money, it's still not nearly enough for these geniuses to do what they do at any given time in a truly efficient way.
So futuristic. I can’t believe how far the human race has come when it comes to space travel.
For real? I hoped we would be way further? But as things currently stand, space travel will be nowhere even in 100 years. Governments are so corrupt you can just not finance any missions or outposts on some death planet like Mars or even the moon.
Not far, we still gain too little, because of political conflicts.........
It’s all fake
@@itsresouling4117 LOL of course it is fake. There is no space travel for humans. I’m just here breaking balls seeing who actually believes this silliness.
@@itsresouling4117: Doofus comment, we have crap CGI now, but you think that was well done enough to fake space travel. Get out of here with that idiocy and take it to 4Chan where it belongs, oof.
Deberian aprovechar y ponerlo propulsores en caso de emergencia poder utilizarlo para moverse en el espacio.
"lack of funding" Good one.
Awesome NASA keep going 👏
@@whatapp149 uuuuuu, what do you want me to say?
😂
Not bad, would love to see a sleeker more solid suit. These are great for space walking on the iss but idk how it’s gonna hold if we get to the moon and find hazards like sharp rocks
bro, a sharp rock it literally the last of their worries. really shows how little anyone in these comments knows about space and it's dangers to life.
It look so good!! so where can i buy this?
*Looking forward to buy it*
SpaceX suits look super.
Don't think that's capable for space walk, but guess they have plenty on their hands for another misley suit
@@ThisNoName but at the moment they are also making their own private eva suits.
Diving suits
This is not something they spacex even comes close to compete with lol!!!! Get your informations very right!
@@sfguzmani lol!! 😅
I always felt they need a auxiliary unit to follow astronauts like a drone that can help in providing oxygen and fuel etc
honestly a proper space functional drone could be more useful then an astronaut in a space suit. it depends on the situation, but a drone could have superior dexterity then an astronaut in a suit.
@@speedy01247 i agree. I forgot the name of the movie maybe it’s just Mars but they had a drone dog which was multifunctional but I’m thinking add it to a platform as well so you could provide emergency resources
yea this wouldn’t work for several reasons
- im guessing for the drone you’re talking about mars, so you’d need a very fast spinning propeller, if you want to bring along a life support system the propeller would have to go nuts
- any servicing to be done on the iss can really only be done by human shaped beings, and a robot human would be much more expensive then just a human in a space suit
- robot dog could technically work if it could be developed on another planets, (would be way too heavy to send via rocket) but we’re well over 100 years out from that
@@clayel1 no actually the idea of a flying drone like that isn’t on my mind. It’s a bad use case.
@@clayel1 you could build the dog with a 3D printer which probably half of the things there would be
Can't wait to see it underwater
They said it in Apollo 13
"How do you go to bathroom in space" and may I add "space suit" when it's supposed to be used in excess of 10 hours....? Which would include hydration.
And then while in the spacesuit, you got tearing eyes for some reason, next you discover there is no way to clean your eyes and that you can see almost nothing, do almost nothing. I have this every day, being almost completely paralyzed.
or if your butt itchy.
A windshield wiper for your eyes like the headlights of old Mercs.
Good lord 3.5 billion dollars!! Jesus what that made of...🤯🤯🤯
Your taxes
3.5bn for two suits through 2034
balloon material we recycled
Even the last two powerball winners combined couldnt afford this
Deception
Where would you make such an expensive suite
THIS IS SO SICK 💖💖
I am also looking forward to seeing SpaceX's new EVA suit tested in Space hopefully soon(July 2023) on the first Polaris Dawn mission, on an updated Dragon Capsule, to fly Astronauts to space walk. It will be the farthest human mission from Earth since the final Apollo 17 Moon mission in Dec 1972.
The last phrase is just false. Stop spreading misinformation.
@@vinialves7062 It isn't false, for LEO Gemini 11 holds the altitude record of 1371km. Polaris Dawn is aiming for 1400km. The only flights farther than that were the Apollo moon missions. No shuttle launch has been above 621km and the highest crewed Soyuz missions were 475km. So if Polaris Dawn hits the orbit they are aiming for they will set an altitude record for an LEO flight and be farther from earth than anyone has been since Apollo.
@@andycanfixit Exactly TY, Vini Alves appears very anti SpaceX, also having an EVA suit in development.
theres a reason we dont go that high, at 1000 km you’re getting closer to the van allen belts, which you definitely cannot stay in for awhile
@@clayel1 The plan is to only be there for a short while for them to get the experiment data they are looking for, so I don't think they plan to be there for very long.
Giving astronauts the ability to build their own space suits would be amazing .
Anything is better than wasting 3.5 billion on a frigging space suit. What's the spacecraft gonna cost 20 trillion? Nasa needs more competition asap.
@@mcmarkmarkson7115 Up to 3.5 bullion by 2034. It's not like they're spending this for one suit, it's for the development of multiple different ones over a decade.
@@mcmarkmarkson7115 NASA’s budget isn’t even $30 billion
@@hydromic2518 So the suit is over 10% of the entire Nasa budget
@@mcmarkmarkson7115 no because it’s payed over a period of time iirc. It only gets a small bit of the budget each year. I might be wrong tho
It has been a dream of mine to be an astronaught. Hopefully they make becoming an astronaught a much more easier process as time goes on.