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Old November 1st 10, 04:26 AM posted to sci.military.naval,rec.aviation.military,rec.aviation.military.naval
frank
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Default Question on ditching an Orion

On Oct 29, 7:49*pm, "dott.Piergiorgio"
wrote:
Il 28/10/2010 17:49, a425couple ha scritto:

Odds and probabilities. That is how most of us make many decisions each
and every day. Yes, every action MIGHT result in disaster. But we still
get out and do things. But we do try to do things in a reasonable manner
to increase the odds of a reasonable outcome. And this is even more
important when something has already gone badly wrong.


IIRC there was experiments on crew survivability during Victorian age,
done putting mannequins (and in these happy pre-PETA days, also sheeps
&c.) on stricken target ships, and counting splinting &c in the
mannequins after the live fire exercise and counting dead/dying sheeps,
the results was substantially the same: splintered mannequin and intact
mannequin together.

Best regards from Italy,
dott. Piergiorgio.


Best was a bear in the B-58 escape capsule.

1. One ****ed off bear
2. Lots of bear shat in the capsule.

We used dummies. Then we used enlisted parachute testers. Then we
certified the system. Go figure. Best was the B-1 bottom bailout (are
you out of your @#$^%@$%&@#$ mind????).