Using diesel portable generator in emergency situations
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Shrooms Trailer Posted by: shroomsmovie
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| Wired Top Stories Updated : Inside Russia's Camp for Cosmonauts photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove In the woods an hour outside Moscow, a sign on the road reads zvyozdny or "star." You are now approaching Star City, home of the Russian space program where cosmonauts have trained since the time of Yuri Gagarin. Clients of Space Adventures who shell out tens of millions of dollars for a trip to the International Space Station can expect to spend up to eight months training here before blastoff. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove Star City cosmonauts and workers, and their families, reside in these apartment buildings. Some 8,000 people live in Star City year round. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove Buses wait outside the entrance to Star City. There is a security booth, and nearby is a kiosk selling cigarettes, snacks, and souvenirs. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove The Cosmonaut House is the main community center in Star City. It has a theater for events, a indoor flea market, and a museum that includes Yuri Gagarin's office and artifacts. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove A sculpture outside the Cosmonaut House represents Gagarin flying effortlessly through a ring that symbolizes earthly limitations. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove This photo collage at the entrance to the Cosmonaut House is just one of many memorials to Yuri Gagarin around Star City. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove This is a replica of the MIR mock-up/trainer inside the Star City space museum. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove Inside the Star City museum is a simulation of the Soyuz vehicle. The two holes lined with bright aluminum are parachute containers that pop open at lower altitudes for a soft landing. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove A MiG monument stands at the air base entrance of Star City. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove Artwork celebrating flight shows the MIR at the center, surrounded by images of planes. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove Richard Garriott, dressed in his flight suit, stands in the stairwell near his one-bedroom apartment in Star City. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove Rostislav Bogdashevsky, the renown Star City psychologist who has been training cosmonauts for more than 45 years, instructs Richard Garriott and Nik Halik with the aid of a translator. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove Rostislav Bogdashevsky conducts psychological training of the cosmonauts inside this room. Note the picture overhead of a smiling Gagarin, one of his former pupils. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove The bare-bones gymnasium in Star City houses exercise equipment, a pool, and a locker room. Space Adventures clients may spend several hours a day in here. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove Gagarin's locker, preserved behind glass in the Star City gym, holds his tennis racket, shoes, and towels. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove The Soyuz TDK 7 showing the habitation chamber atop, and descent module below. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove A peek inside the Soyuz TDK 7. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove Richard Garriott, bottom, and Nik Halik, top, train in the Soyuz TDK 3. Richard Garriott points out: "Note the very close quarters that in real life are even tighter. If you see the green at the bottom of the screen, that is where a door has been cut into the side for easy access. In reality, that is where the parachute compartment sticks into the passenger area. Nik and I are going line by line in the Flight Data Files as the sim progresses. Each line has a time and action to perform and the result we expect. Note that I have a stick in my right hand. When strapped in, especially when in a space suit, it is hard to reach some buttons, so that device is for reaching and pressing buttons that might be hard to reach. Near the right of the screen, you can see the small periscope viewport. At this moment in the sim, our attitude is aligned with Earth. This is likely just after insertion, or just before reentry." photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove This building houses the TsF-18 centrifuge. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove The TsF-18 centrifuge is one of the largest and most advanced in the world. It can simulate the gravitational forces that cosmonauts experience during liftoff and landing—up to nine times as much as Earth's gravity. Space Adventure clients don't endure the full level of the machine's torture—30 gs for unmanned runs—but they are warned to keep their mouths shut at all times, as the extra gs can break their jaws. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove The Hydrolab is an underwater training facility used to simulate a spacewalk outside the International Space Station. The mockup section of the ISS shown here can be lowered by the crane into the tank. Cosmonauts wear Orlan spacesuits as they perform spacewalk maneuvers. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove The Soyuz Café is a private gathering place for cosmonauts and others celebrating special events in Star City. The blue chamber to the side of the lodge is modeled after the Soyuz, except it contains a wine cellar and comfy sofas. photo: Photo: Benedict Redgrove Richard Garriott holds the old Star City planetarium, a handheld device. A sheet of black paper with holes would be slipped into the viewer and held up to the light. Publ.Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2008 04:00:00 GMT Source: Wired.com The Space Tourist Who Wasn't I met Daisuke "Dice-K" Enomoto in Star City, Russia, in August 2006. Enomoto, 37, is slight with tired eyes and a shock of bleach-blond dyed hair. His idea of space travel comes from comic books and Star Wars. He grew up as a self-described otaku, coding his own computer games and dreaming of space—or, at least, space as it was portrayed in Star Wars and manga. His favorite anime show, Gundam, chronicles a future full of giant robots in which humans are abandoning this planet for the stars. "People who live on Earth, their souls is tied up by gravity, you understand?" Enomoto says. "I sympathize with this idea. Maybe in the future people should live in the space." Enomoto applied his programming skills to building Internet companies, making millions. He bought a swanky wraparound penthouse loft overlooking Tokyo's famous electronics district, Akihabara. He tooled around in Porsches and Segways, and threw raves. He redecorated the moon-age pad himself, tricking it out with sinuous white walls modeled after the International Space Station. But life was bearing down on him. He married and divorced, had a couple of kids. One of his former companies, Livedoor, was embroiled in criminal lawsuits over stock and accounting issues. He needed to get away from the money, the demands, the scandal. And what better place to go than space? "I just want to go up there," he says, "and chill." This giddy club kid paid $20 million (the price of a trip to the International Space Station at the time) to Space Adventures. He left behind his sci-fi penthouse and moved into a tiny two-room apartment in Star City to train for his 10-day space trip. He bunked with a Russian translator named Sergei, who stayed up every night shoving wads of newspaper into the window cracks to keep out the freezing winds. Daisuke "Dice-K" Enomoto shows off his official cosmonaut jumpsuit in Star City, Russia, in August 2006. Photo: David Kushner Enomoto displays a couple of toy Gundam robots, an example of the sort of toys he wanted to see if he could assemble in the weightlessness of space. Photo: David Kushner Publ.Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2008 04:00:00 GMT Source: Wired.com Going to Space? First Stop: Eight Months of Grueling Training in Russia's Star City Do you want to be the commander or the engineer? It's exactly the kind of question you'd expect to hear from Richard Garriott, the 47-year-old father of massively multiplayer online gaming. His titles, which have sold more than 100 million copies, let gamers assume the role of magician, warrior, or sci-fi super-soldier. In real life, Garriott goes by the nickname Lord British and dresses up in Elizabethan garb. But on this May afternoon in a cramped classroom northeast of Moscow, Garriott is not playing a game. He's fiddling with a joystick, but he's training for a real-life mission as a cosmonaut. In front of him is a simulation of the control panel of the Soyuz spaceship. "I know you are great computer gamer, so here you go," his instructor jokes in a thick Russian accent as he fires up the videoscreen so Garriott can practice a descent. Welcome to Star City, Russia, the tiny town where cosmonauts have trained since the 1960s. Today, clients of Space Adventures should expect to spend about eight months here (after forking over millions of dollars) to learn the ropes before blastoff. Producer: Annaliza Savage, Editor: Michael Lennon, Camera Operator (Moscow): Benedict Redgrove, Additional Footage: Space Adventures, NASA For more, visit video.wired.com. Centrifuges, spinning chairs, and vomit comets: Wired contributing editor David Kushner describes the grueling training regimen that all cosmonauts (and millionaire clients of Space Adventures) must undergo. Producer: Annaliza Savage, Editor: Michael Lennon, Camera Operator (Moscow): Benedict Redgrove, Additional Footage: Space Adventures, NASA For more, visit video.wired.com. A statue of Gagarin flying through a ring that represents earthly limitations. Photo: Benedict Redgrove Richard Garriott, who bought a trip tto the ISS. Photo: Benedict Redgrove Garriott and fellow trainee Nik Halik (right and center) are running simulations on the Soyuz control panels — even though they won't have any mission-critical responsibilities. Photo: Benedict Redgrove This full-size training version of the Soyuz capsule is used to practice launches and descents. Photo: Benedict Redgrove Publ.Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2008 04:00:00 GMT Source: Wired.com Training for Space: Centrifuges, Spinning Chairs and Vomit Comets Wired contributing editor David Kushner describes the grueling training regimen that all cosmonauts (and millionaire clients of Space Adventures) must undergo. Publ.Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2008 04:00:00 GMT Source: Wired.com |
Using diesel portable generator in emergency situations
![]() |
Shrooms Trailer Posted by: shroomsmovie
Video duration: 114 seconds The gnarliest of gnarl when it comes to "Shrooms!" Hits DVD soon! Don't Miss out! |
