International Space Station Live space walk | |
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411 User ID: 68166030 United States 02/21/2015 10:52 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Thread: Your next desktop background? "Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves." --William Pitt |
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Anonymous Coward User ID: 68242898 United States 02/21/2015 11:50 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | [link to www.youtube.com (secure)] Watch the wires catching the guy's shirt when he leans forward.. start at 1:10 This pretty much sealed the deal for me. But there's lots of other evidence. NASA is using a combination of footage shot in a zero-G high altitude plane for the more acrobatic maneuvers, and then longer sessions with wires and harnesses (edited out in post-process) |
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Dr. Astro Senior Forum Moderator User ID: 55240075 United States 02/21/2015 11:55 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | [link to www.youtube.com (secure)] Watch the wires catching the guy's shirt when he leans forward.. start at 1:10 This pretty much sealed the deal for me. But there's lots of other evidence. NASA is using a combination of footage shot in a zero-G high altitude plane for the more acrobatic maneuvers, and then longer sessions with wires and harnesses (edited out in post-process) You're an idiot. You can see them floating, hair and all, for WAY more than a zero-g plane could do. I've seen the station in orbit myself, I've seen spacecraft coming and going from the station myself. |
Dr. Astro Senior Forum Moderator User ID: 55240075 United States 02/21/2015 11:56 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Most beautiful thing in orbit I've ever seen. Hope the spacewalk goes off safely. Quoting: Dr. Astro Yep, it's a nice looking unmanned drone/satellite. I doubt people are ever living in it. [link to www.astrophoto.fr] Wrong. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 68242898 United States 02/21/2015 11:57 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | [link to www.youtube.com (secure)] Watch the wires catching the guy's shirt when he leans forward.. start at 1:10 This pretty much sealed the deal for me. But there's lots of other evidence. NASA is using a combination of footage shot in a zero-G high altitude plane for the more acrobatic maneuvers, and then longer sessions with wires and harnesses (edited out in post-process) You're an idiot. You can see them floating, hair and all, for WAY more than a zero-g plane could do. I've seen the station in orbit myself, I've seen spacecraft coming and going from the station myself. uh oh, struck a nerve. Did you even read what I said? I said the longer video sessions are done with wires and harnesses, not zero-G. You can see them pulling up the guy's shirt in that video at 1:10 |
Dr. Astro Senior Forum Moderator User ID: 55240075 United States 02/21/2015 11:58 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | [link to www.youtube.com (secure)] Watch the wires catching the guy's shirt when he leans forward.. start at 1:10 This pretty much sealed the deal for me. But there's lots of other evidence. NASA is using a combination of footage shot in a zero-G high altitude plane for the more acrobatic maneuvers, and then longer sessions with wires and harnesses (edited out in post-process) You're an idiot. You can see them floating, hair and all, for WAY more than a zero-g plane could do. I've seen the station in orbit myself, I've seen spacecraft coming and going from the station myself. uh oh, struck a nerve. Did you even read what I said? I said the longer video sessions are done with wires and harnesses, not zero-G. You can see them pulling up the guy's shirt in that video at 1:10 Wires and harnesses cannot make long hair float for several minutes at a time. It cannot recreate the zero g we see in the video routinely seen on NASA tv. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 68242898 United States 02/21/2015 12:05 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | [link to www.youtube.com (secure)] Watch the wires catching the guy's shirt when he leans forward.. start at 1:10 This pretty much sealed the deal for me. But there's lots of other evidence. NASA is using a combination of footage shot in a zero-G high altitude plane for the more acrobatic maneuvers, and then longer sessions with wires and harnesses (edited out in post-process) You're an idiot. You can see them floating, hair and all, for WAY more than a zero-g plane could do. I've seen the station in orbit myself, I've seen spacecraft coming and going from the station myself. uh oh, struck a nerve. Did you even read what I said? I said the longer video sessions are done with wires and harnesses, not zero-G. You can see them pulling up the guy's shirt in that video at 1:10 Wires and harnesses cannot make long hair float for several minutes at a time. It cannot recreate the zero g we see in the video routinely seen on NASA tv. Floating hair, you mean the ridiculous solid-looking hairstyle perms? Yea they show zero-G clips but they're usually very short.. any unbroken video of sustained acrobatics never last more than a minute or so.. and sometimes you can see starts and stops of zero-G, where suddenly there is turbulence that suddenly pulls objects in a forceful way as the plane is hitting apex of zero-G. It's all exposed in that video... Pretty obvious when it's pointed out. |
Dr. Astro Senior Forum Moderator User ID: 55240075 United States 02/21/2015 12:06 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | ... Quoting: Dr. Astro You're an idiot. You can see them floating, hair and all, for WAY more than a zero-g plane could do. I've seen the station in orbit myself, I've seen spacecraft coming and going from the station myself. uh oh, struck a nerve. Did you even read what I said? I said the longer video sessions are done with wires and harnesses, not zero-G. You can see them pulling up the guy's shirt in that video at 1:10 Wires and harnesses cannot make long hair float for several minutes at a time. It cannot recreate the zero g we see in the video routinely seen on NASA tv. Floating hair, you mean the ridiculous solid-looking hairstyle perms? Not solid looking at all. Floating, but not solid. And no, if you actually watch NASA TV you'll see very prolonged shots. You're ignorant so you only watch the highlight reels with short clips. Suni Williams had some very good prolonged shots when she was station commander. Last Edited by Astromut on 02/21/2015 12:07 PM |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 68242898 United States 02/21/2015 12:08 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | okay, astro specifically at minute 1:30 how do you explain the back of the guy's shirt being pulled up in a manner that is exactly consistent with suspension of wires? Can't wait to hear your explanation. [link to www.youtube.com (secure)] |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 68242898 United States 02/21/2015 12:09 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | ... Quoting: Anonymous Coward 68242898 uh oh, struck a nerve. Did you even read what I said? I said the longer video sessions are done with wires and harnesses, not zero-G. You can see them pulling up the guy's shirt in that video at 1:10 Wires and harnesses cannot make long hair float for several minutes at a time. It cannot recreate the zero g we see in the video routinely seen on NASA tv. Floating hair, you mean the ridiculous solid-looking hairstyle perms? Not solid looking at all. Floating, but not solid. And no, if you actually watch NASA TV you'll see very prolonged shots. You're ignorant so you only watch the highlight reels with short clips. Suni Williams had some very good prolonged shots when she was station commander. Then why don't you post one? |
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Anonymous Coward User ID: 68242898 United States 02/21/2015 12:14 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Not solid looking at all. Floating, but not solid. And no, if you actually watch NASA TV you'll see very prolonged shots. You're ignorant so you only watch the highlight reels with short clips. Suni Williams had some very good prolonged shots when she was station commander. give me a break... this first lady's perm is so obvious it's a joke... you're going to sit there with a straight face and tell people this is hair naturally floating in zero-G ? [link to www.youtube.com (secure)] |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 56845947 United States 02/21/2015 12:16 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Astronaut is connecting wires and in the background some weird glowing things appear and guess what, blue screen and back to mission control... rofl just a coincidence, right? 5min ago. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 4949497 I noticed something like this about a half hour ago. something wrong with the guys glove, and then all of a sudden nothing but a blue screen for about 2 secs, then mission control and stayed there for a good boring ten minutes or so |
Dr. Astro Senior Forum Moderator User ID: 55240075 United States 02/21/2015 12:26 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Not solid looking at all. Floating, but not solid. And no, if you actually watch NASA TV you'll see very prolonged shots. You're ignorant so you only watch the highlight reels with short clips. Suni Williams had some very good prolonged shots when she was station commander. give me a break... this first lady's perm is so obvious it's a joke... you're going to sit there with a straight face and tell people this is hair naturally floating in zero-G ? Yes it is. Now instead of watching 3 minute clips posted by psychopaths on youtube who come on my channel and attack me for tracking ISS, explain how this was filmed; that's too long to be a zero g plane, there's no pullout, just a smooth shot with floating hair (and floating necklace) much finer than the above cherry picked example. That ain't no perm. Last Edited by Astromut on 02/21/2015 12:28 PM |
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Anonymous Coward User ID: 68247921 United States 02/21/2015 01:14 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | okay, astro Quoting: Anonymous Coward 68242898 specifically at minute 1:30 how do you explain the back of the guy's shirt being pulled up in a manner that is exactly consistent with suspension of wires? Can't wait to hear your explanation. [link to www.youtube.com (secure)] still waiting for your explanation, astro |
Dr. Astro Senior Forum Moderator User ID: 55240075 United States 02/21/2015 01:14 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | I don't see stars, and wouldn't really expect to with exposures set this fast to properly expose lit objects like ISS and the astronauts. Even when they're on the night side their headlamps provide illumination and the cameras are set accordingly. |
Dr. Astro Senior Forum Moderator User ID: 55240075 United States 02/21/2015 01:15 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | okay, astro Quoting: Anonymous Coward 68242898 specifically at minute 1:30 how do you explain the back of the guy's shirt being pulled up in a manner that is exactly consistent with suspension of wires? Can't wait to hear your explanation. [link to www.youtube.com (secure)] still waiting for your explanation, astro It's not a harness, he's raising his arm and it's lifting up his shirt as a result. Really? This is the best you can do? Wow. |
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