back to article ISS stuffed with full staff of six

Three more crew members boarded the International Space Station today from a Russian Soyuz capsule, doubling its permanent crew to six for the first time ever. The TMA-15 space capsule carrying flight engineers engineers Roman Romanenko of Russia, Robert Thirsk of Canada, and Frank De Winne of Belgium spent two days in space …

COMMENTS

This topic is closed for new posts.
  1. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Plenty enough

    for a good piss up then?

    Drinks are on me lads.

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Plenty enough addendum

    How could I have missed the "six pack" angle?

  3. Nick L

    They're going to get this thing firing on all cylinders ...

    ... just about in time to de-orbit it with extreme prejudice ....

  4. Al Jones

    Wait until the next Shuttle docks

    Then there'll be 13 people up there - enough for a game of 5-a-side, with subs and a Ref!!!!

    Have none of the previous Russian commanders been from the European part of Russia?

  5. Warhelmet

    Toilets

    Is the ISS toilet issue resolved?

  6. Mike

    Is it just me

    or does the module look a little beat up. Really starting to resemble the old Soviet era technology.

  7. Gene Cash Silver badge

    So... no Brits...

    How does it feel that Canada has astronauts and you don't? *snicker*

  8. Carl

    Escape plan?

    Have they got two Soyuzes docked then? I thought the constraint keeping them at 3 was that a Soyuz only carries 3. Or if they need to evacuate do they leave 3 behind?

  9. Frank

    Pin Ups

    Is that Einstein or Karl Marx I can see on the right hand side of the small pin-up board in the background? Why are all the pin-ups old men? Is this what living in space does to you?!

  10. Daemon ZOGG
    Thumb Up

    ‘ISS stuffed with full staff of six’

    More recycled pee for everyone!! Heyyyyy!

    ... All jokes aside, the ISS crews are doing a kick-ass job up there! I raise a pint of Belgium Ale (my favorite ale) to future Station Commander Frank De Winne to a successful mission.

    A very special thanks to the Russian Space Agency and all of its members for playing a major role in making the ISS a great success!

    Спасибо и удача. (Thank You and Good Luck).

  11. Richard Boyce
    Thumb Down

    Gigantic white elephant

    Carl, this new group of three arrived by Soyuz so, of course, there's now an extra one.

    Gene, how does it feel to have paid part of the tens of billions of $ on this white elephant, while the UK has wisely decided to spend money more effectively. Just think of the space science and exploration of the solar system that could've been accomplished for the same cost as the ISS.

    Assuming that the primary object of the station is to pump money, it's no surprise that the end of construction will mark the beginning of the end for the station.

  12. Mike Flugennock
    Thumb Up

    re: Pin Ups

    If it's the one I think you're talking about, that's Konstantin Tsiolkovskiy, a Russian engineer -- and subsequent legend -- who had by the mid 1920s researched and considered every problem of modern spaceflight, including multi-stage boosters, orbital habitats and pressure suits:

    http://www.astronautix.com/astros/tsivskiy.htm

    Other notables include Yuri Gagarin (of course), and an old Orthodox iconic portrait of the Virgin Mary someplace around there; they're probably in a module in the Russian Zone.

    And, besides, _this_ is more like what space does to you:

    http://www.cinemaisdope.com/news/films/2001/2001_kubrick.jpg

    @ Mike, Friday 29th May 2009 22:24 GMT:

    They're probably in one of the older segments, one of the Russian modules launched in 1998 or '99 and which are based on technology originally intended for the Mir2 program. ISS isn't all one brand-spanking shiny new age; it's actually more like the homebuilt car in that old Johnny Cash song, in terms of component age. Plus, there's the fact that Russian spacecraft, even today, have always looked clunkier and "trashier". Ever seen the Soyuz cockpit? The old Apollo CM was a pimp-ass ride by comparison.

  13. Seán

    Tcha

    Soviet era technology like the space stations, the interplanetary probes and the efficient rocket engines which were designed and shown to work before the USAians stole the ideas. Look up the Venus missions. Thankfully the Russians were involved in the design of the ISS or a lot of people would have been killed by american hubris and incompetence.

    Really if you find yourself brainwashed by propaganda it's your civic duty to find out the truth rather than regurgitate the same sad old dross.

  14. NogginTheNog
    Happy

    @ Gene Cash

    It's called stepping aside and doing our bit to try and increase the number of world famous Canucks. *Must* be into double figures by now, ay? :-D

  15. Anonymous Coward
    Alien

    @Escape plan?

    > Have they got two Soyuzes docked then?

    I guess so. Remember, before this launch there were 3 people on board; they would have had a Soyuz capsule docked in case of emergency. Now they should have 2 capsules - the old one plus the one that was just launched.

  16. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    @Carl - Escape Plan?

    They leave the Europeans behind.

    Again.

  17. Lionel Baden
    Joke

    wires !

    does bluetooth not work in space !!!

This topic is closed for new posts.

Other stories you might like