Henry Spencer quotes:

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  • The Orion capsule uses an escape system quite like that of the Apollo spacecraft in the 1960s and 70s: an 'escape tower' containing a solid-fuel rocket that will pull it up and away from Ares I in a pinch.

  • On the technical side, Apollo 8 was mainly a test flight for the Saturn V and the Apollo spacecraft. The main spacecraft system that needed testing on a real lunar flight was the onboard navigation system.

  • Programming graphics in X is like finding the square root of PI using Roman numerals.

  • Spaceflight, especially in the Mercury spacecraft, clearly wasn't going to be much like flying an airplane.

  • Supplying fuel for a Mars expedition from the lunar surface is often suggested, but it's hard to make it pay off - Moon bases are expensive, and just buying more rockets to launch fuel from Earth is relatively cheap.

  • Sometimes a malfunctioning test setup actually gives the tested system a chance to show what it can do in an unrehearsed emergency. During a test of an Apollo escape system in the 1960s, the escape system successfully got the capsule clear of a malfunctioning test rocket.

  • Those who do not understand Unix are condemned to reinvent it, poorly.

  • Liquid oxygen is one of the cheapest manufactured substances on Earth. In large quantities, it costs pennies per kilogram - cheaper than milk or beer.

  • In 1960-61, a small group of female pilots went through many of the same medical tests as the Mercury astronauts and scored very well on them - in fact, better than some of the astronauts did.

  • In a small spacecraft, it was hard for the other two guys to sleep when the on-duty man was talking to Mission Control regularly.

  • In the long run, it's impossible to make progress without sometimes having setbacks, although people who get lucky on their first attempt sometimes forget this.

  • The Moon may not be quite as appealing as Mars, but it's still a complex and poorly understood world, with many questions still unanswered.

  • The original specifications for Apollo navigation called for the ability to fly a complete mission, including a lunar landing, with no help from Earth - none, not even voice communications.

  • An experienced designer with more freedom to act might have realised that there was just too much optimism in the Ares I concept: that a shuttle SRB was simply too small as a first stage for a rocket carrying the relatively heavy Orion spacecraft.

  • Rocket engines generally are simpler than jet engines, not more complicated.

  • It's true that Apollo 10's lander was overweight. Late in the craft's development, it became clear that its ballooning weight was endangering the whole mission.

  • Technically and financially, it might still make sense to give up on Ares I and simply write off the money spent on it, but politically, that's probably impossible.

  • Past experience, on the shuttle and the Titan rockets, suggests that large multi-segment solid rockets have a probability of failure of 0.5 to 1 per cent.

  • Foul-ups in testing are not uncommon, especially when the test setup is being tried for the first time.

  • If your goal is to change the world, you can't start by doing things the same old way because it sells better.

  • Progress requires setbacks; the only sure way to avoid failure is not to try.

  • Developing expendable rockets is always going to be painful and expensive. Throwing the whole rocket away on each attempt not only costs a lot, it also hampers figuring out just what went wrong because you don't get the rocket back for inspection.

  • The communications delays between Earth and Mars can be half an hour or more, so the people on the ground can't participate minute by minute in Mars surface activities.

  • Sometimes people wonder why aeroplanes are so cheap and rockets are so expensive. Even the most superficial comparison shows one obvious difference: aeroplane engines use outside air to burn their fuel, while rockets have to carry their own oxidisers along.

  • The key virtue of orbital assembly is that it eliminates the tight connection between the size of the expedition and the size of the rockets used to launch it.

  • Claiming that solid rockets are necessary for a heavy-lift launcher is obvious nonsense.

  • Is manned space exploration important? Yes - not least because it simply works much better than sending robots.

  • Not until the space shuttle started flying did NASA concede that some astronauts didn't have to be fast-jet pilots. And at that point, sure enough, women started becoming astronauts.

  • Whether solid rockets are more or less likely to fail than liquid-fuel rockets is debatable. More serious, though, is that when they do fail, it's usually violent and spectacular.

  • One of the headaches of high-tech test programmes is having to debug the test arrangements before you can start debugging the things you're trying to test.

  • Large solid rockets have never been a very good way to build launchers that might have crews on top, especially because of the problems in getting the crew away from a failing launcher.

  • SpaceX does seem to have had a run of bad luck, with its first three launches all failing.

  • Trying to build a spaceship by making an aeroplane fly faster and higher is like trying to build an aeroplane by making locomotives faster and lighter - with a lot of effort, perhaps you could get something that more or less works, but it really isn't the right way to proceed.

  • Solid-fuel rockets can't easily be shut down on command.

  • The Apollo programme of the 1960s had some weight problems, too; in particular, the lunar lander needed some fairly drastic weight-reduction work.

  • A bit of tolerance is worth a megabyte of flamming.

  • Altruism is a fine motive, but if you want results, greed works much better.

  • Belief is no substitute for arithmetic.

  • C++ is the best example of second-system effect since OS/360.

  • If I must be ruled by larcenous bullies, I much prefer that they be located far away. Local bullies know far more about me and my doings than faraway bullies sitting in offices in Washington, and can oppress me far more effectively.

  • If you lie to the compiler, it will get its revenge.

  • MS-DOS isn't dead, it just smells that way.

  • Politics /n/: from 'poly ticks', short for 'many small bloodsucking insects'.

  • To err is human, but to really screw things up requires a design committee of bureaucrats.

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