Although it is mechanically possible to build a space suit with a rotating helmet I am not aware of it ever being done and it has never been very practical to try. The helmet would have to be effectively clamped to the wearer's head in order to be rotated usefully (and uncomfortably) and that contact would most certainly chafe very uncomfortably. However the required interface to make one rotatable would increase the weight by around 5 pounds and would probably be identical to the rotating wrist cuffs, just scaled up to the helmet flange diameter. It has proven far more useful and comfortable for the wearer to provide ample internal space both for ventilation space as well as the space to turn the head inside. To provide the desired increased visibility, large visors have been used on EVA helmets and on pressure suits an extreme example would be these older pressure suits http://www.astronautix.com/graphics/t/tomatost.jpg which simply had a transparent bubble and completely free head movement. The current Shuttle Suit and the new I-Suit have similar bubble helmets for within the vehicle activities and tough helmets for EVA as did Apollo. EVA helmets are big hard helmets with large visors instead for several reasons, all of them are a compromise between visibility and protection from the environment. EVA suits have to provide protection from not just pressure but also solar radiation, micrometeoroids, thermal variations of -250 to +270F (-170 to +120C) and they also have to carry multiple visors that can be pulled down and back up depending upon lighting conditions. On the alien space suit helmets, http://ufoseries.com/character/rooftop2.jpg as you can see they are very close fitting and have a very narrow visor. It would be not too illogical to expect that these should rotate with the head despite the above mentioned issues, (although they do not in the show). It could be done but again would be terribly uncomfortable and would chafe the wearer. The alien suits also have the additional issue of being liquid filled. The liquid, near-equal in density to the alien body tissues would also be incompressible, there so that the alien's body is suspended in the liquid and can withstand the forces of acceleration to and from FTL speeds. The liquid's incompressibility also either limits mobility because the suit has to have a constant volume or increases complexity with an accumulator to compensate for volume changes in the rest of the suit. Most of these issues of course weren't addressed on the show. Now nodding the head up and down in a real suit would be complicated by a helmet that grasps the head to turn so that motion probably would be a function of the suit below the rotating collar. For that motion, the helmet and rotating collar would move probably by flexing a reinforced accordion joint in front and behind (but not all the way around). It would be restrained and pivot on points at the shoulder line on either side. One of the big issues with a space suit is that in a vacuum it wants to inflate like a balloon so it has numerous structures and mechanisms to hold it in shape and yet still permit flexibility. Those mechanisms make the suits nearly as cumbersome with equalized pressure as they are in a vacuum not to mention the weight. I know, TMI, sorry, just trying to be complete. The short answer is "no." S Date: Wed, 15 Sep 2004 16:20:56 -0000 From: "Anthony Appleyard" <[hidden email]> Subject: Reason for the shoulder apron on alien spacesuits? >Has anyone designed a real spacesuit or full >sealed pressure suit where the helmet could rotate? |
A fixed liquid-filled helmet big enough for the head to rotate freely
inside, would contain an unwieldy weight of the liquid. The helmet would have to fit the head, and rotate. Alien technology would be advanced enough to make a rotating helmet without much extra weight of mechanism. Fixed helmets where the head cannot rotate, are known in the real world :: USA astronauts call this nuisance "alligator head". |
In reply to this post by Shawn Kelly
Yes, there have been numerous examples of tight fitting helmets on pressure and space suits, a good example is the Project Mercury helmet http://grin.hq.nasa.gov/IMAGES/SMALL/GPN-2000-001000.jpg which were big helmets but full of stuff and fitted snugly to the astronaut's head. I don't remember the term "alligator head" though, seems suitable. I'd imagine they would be rather uncomfortable to have to wear for any length of time. The guys in the Mercury suits could nod up and down freely when their suits were unpressurized and even turn side to side just a little due to the flexibility of the suit-cloth in the neck but even that motion was restricted when the suit was under pressure. It was one of the limitations of the suits that led to the development of the Apollo suits. When pressurized, the helmet and ring would exert force under the skull and chin as these suits did not have real solid retention of the helmet and ring to the rest of the suit, the helmet and ring wanted to pop off. To minimize this, the inner pressure bladder was fairly close fitting too, it helped but the suits were clearly not suitable for longer duration missions like Apollo. For the alien suit, I agree completely. A fluid filled big helmet would have to be tight fitting in order to not weigh 20 pounds itself. If UFO had a mind to be very thoroughly technically accurate I am sure that they would indeed have made the helmet rotate. As it is the apron permitted head and helmet rotation as well as nodding without the great concern for technical accuracy. That extremely real level of technical detail is something we have repeatedly applied to UFO items and vehicles. We usually don't seem to try to criticize the show, its more like just trying to figure out how the stuff could have really been done; sort of an engineering exercise. I think its one of the reasons I like the show still, what was shown wasn't too far out, (like S1999 aliens and hardware were). UFO was always on the ragged edge of possibility and indeed some of the things in UFO now exist. SST and tilt-wing aircraft, aircraft-launched spacecraft, mobile phones, even turbine powered cars (thought they didn't pan out too well). Admittedly a lot of those things were at least on the drawing board in concept when UFO was done but the fact that these show ideas were founded on facts and expected-real-future things just added to the realism and helps the show hold up as well as it does all these years later. So I can forgive the helmet apron. S >Date: Fri, 17 Sep 2004 17:35:25 -0000 >From: "Anthony Appleyard" <[hidden email]> >Subject: Re: Rotating Helmets Reason for the shoulder apron on alien spacesuits? > >A fixed liquid-filled helmet big enough for the head to rotate freely >inside, would contain an unwieldy weight of the liquid. The helmet >would have to fit the head, and rotate. Alien technology would be >advanced enough to make a rotating helmet without much extra weight >of mechanism. > >Fixed helmets where the head cannot rotate, are known in the real >world :: USA astronauts call this nuisance "alligator head". |
--- "Shawn Kelly" <sdkelly@s...> wrote:
> ... For the alien suit, I agree completely. A fluid filled big > helmet would have to be tight fitting in order to not weigh 20 > pounds itself. If UFO had a mind to be very thoroughly technically > accurate I am sure that they would indeed have made the helmet > rotate. I have seen frames in UFO series comics (in Countdown and TV Action) where aliens are drawn with their helmets rotated. > As it is the apron permitted head and helmet rotation as well as > nodding without the great concern for technical accuracy. That is, the _actor_ could nod and rotate his head. The real studio prop dummy spacesuit is one thing; the fictional working spacesuit made by advanced aliens who have had centuries or more to get spacesuit design the best and the most efficient, that the studio prop tries to represent, is another thing. |
I have been notified that Monsters in Motion
[www.monstersinmotion.com] are taking pre-orders for the following: GERRY ANDERSON PRODUCTS: Product updates for September 18 2004 (subject to change Again?) UFO Interceptor with U.F.O. 10/24/2004 UFO Skydiver Diecast 10/24/2004 Eagle Freighter 02/24/2005 Laboratory Eagle 02/24/2005 Shadow Mobile Control May 2005 Shadow Mobile 1 laser Cannon May 2005 Shadow Mobile 2 May 2005 Stingray May 2005 Supercar May 2005 Supercar Spcl Ed May 2005 Fireball Aug 2005 Spectrum Pursuit Vehicle Aug 2005 GERRY ANDERSON PROP REPLICAS Fab 1 October 24 2004 Thunderbird 2 June 2005 Eagle Transporter July 2005 RED DWARF Starbug Electronic Playset October 24 2004 HAMMER FILMS DRACULA 12" FIGURE 11/15/2004 The Shado Mobile Control and studio sized Eagle sound neat. The Lunadude........... |
> I have been notified that Monsters
> in Motion [www.monstersinmotion.com] > are taking pre-orders for the following: Interesting. There is a Mobile called "UFO Spectrum Pursuit Diecast Vehicle": http://www.monstersinmotion.com/catalog/product_info.php/products_id/6 084 (click on the small image to enlarge). Christian |
In reply to this post by lunadude2001 <russell_smith@ntlworld.com>
http://fabgearusa.com will be taking pre-orders on all the new Anderson
items as well - just as soon as the manufacturer confirms pricing and makes images available. Plus, we'll add some exclusive premiums for pre-order customers. Keep watching the website! Thanks Original Message: ----------------- From: lunadude2001 [hidden email] Date: Sat, 18 Sep 2004 07:28:46 -0000 To: [hidden email] Subject: [SHADO] More Product Enterprise UFO Diecasts I have been notified that Monsters in Motion [www.monstersinmotion.com] are taking pre-orders for the following: GERRY ANDERSON PRODUCTS: Product updates for September 18 2004 (subject to change Again?) UFO Interceptor with U.F.O. 10/24/2004 UFO Skydiver Diecast 10/24/2004 Eagle Freighter 02/24/2005 Laboratory Eagle 02/24/2005 Shadow Mobile Control May 2005 Shadow Mobile 1 laser Cannon May 2005 Shadow Mobile 2 May 2005 Stingray May 2005 Supercar May 2005 Supercar Spcl Ed May 2005 Fireball Aug 2005 Spectrum Pursuit Vehicle Aug 2005 GERRY ANDERSON PROP REPLICAS Fab 1 October 24 2004 Thunderbird 2 June 2005 Eagle Transporter July 2005 RED DWARF Starbug Electronic Playset October 24 2004 HAMMER FILMS DRACULA 12" FIGURE 11/15/2004 The Shado Mobile Control and studio sized Eagle sound neat. The Lunadude........... Yahoo! Groups Links -------------------------------------------------------------------- mail2web - Check your email from the web at http://mail2web.com/ . |
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