But he'd allegedly be in a hermetically sealed suit for more than twelve hours requiring sublimator cooling at vacuum and other cooling on the way to vacuum. He'd need an umbilical to augment the sublimator. Once low earth vacuum was reached the sublimator could be turned on but that would probably result in an immediate loss of vacuum.
Stop making stuff up. You are just wildly thrashing about now. I showed you two images that you clearly had never seen before. One was an astronaut inside the test chamber- the other was as he was about to enter. Or are you that ignorant of things that you never heard of an airlock???
Here's a quote from Schweikart "
I remember standing at the bottom of the huge altitude test chamber A in Houston-this thing something like one hundred and twenty feet high and eighty feet in diameter [...]
testing and checking out the spacesuit. [....]
Not only did I have all of the systems of the systems in the suit which could fail, and the backpack which could fail, but I had all of the failure modes of the test chamber, which could also kill me"
http://librarun.org/book/51138/371The backpack
didn't fail and it
didn't kill him, ergo, it worked.
Of course, you'll just handwave this away or just ignore it. Again.
I doubt this test can be done in a vacuum chamber on Earth.
Your doubt is based on your ignorance of the test. Doubt and ignorance does not mean that something didn't happen. Again, I have shown you the test images and provided a quotation from the man that carried out the test. A normal person would change their view,
but you aren't normal, are you Mr Baker?If they wanted to simulate real moon surface conditions, they'd have to illuminate the spacesuit with enough light that on the moon brings the surface temperature up to about 240 degrees F.
Which they did (surely you don't believe that they would send an untested suit into space, now do you??). Read the quotation that I linked to, "
...I'm the little thing at the bottom in a cage of heaters, testing and checking out the spacesuit, stepping up and down on the step to put a controlled heat input into the suit"Again, here's the image:
https://archive.org/details/S68-55391 See the cage of heating elements that surrounds him?
Note the date of the image publication: December 1968. Are you going to claim that that image is only available due to you?
By the way, I'm still waiting for your analysis of the document that I showed you here:
Let's see your detailed analysis of this document. With calculations please.
http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19720005423
I'm also waiting for you to acknowledge this:
Have you ever tried to look at the ISS through a small telescope? It's not that hard...transit times are publicly available from a myriad of sources.
www.heavens-above.com