
Here is pilot G training alot less G force than the shuttle launch.... this is 5 G's
Was prolly from when she hit the dome.harddriver wrote: ↑Mon Jul 18, 2022 8:41 pm NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson was on that Soyuz and reported having difficulty breathing as the extreme G-force crushed her lungs. Her crewmate Yi So-yeon — South Korea's first astronaut — was hospitalized afterward for severe pain in her back and neck.
PLX wrote: ↑Mon Jul 18, 2022 9:54 pmWas prolly from when she hit the dome.harddriver wrote: ↑Mon Jul 18, 2022 8:41 pm NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson was on that Soyuz and reported having difficulty breathing as the extreme G-force crushed her lungs. Her crewmate Yi So-yeon — South Korea's first astronaut — was hospitalized afterward for severe pain in her back and neck.
Allegedly.harddriver wrote: ↑Mon Jul 18, 2022 8:41 pm It all seems a bit too obvious after watching the comparison. I needed to correct my statement. I looked it up and they claim the astronauts experience 3 G of force during liftoff.
The pilots first run 2.5 3.0 G and see was losing 60% of her vision with a G suit on.
Even a 2G the pilot has a hard time holding onto the control stick, the actornaut is just writing and lightly holding her pad of paper on the edge of her leg almost like there isn't 3 G's of force driving it into her gut........INTERESTING...................
https://www.space.com/42109-soyuz-launc ... ealth.html
With usual Soyuz landings, astronauts experience no more than 6 G's. This is comparable to the G-force experienced by NASA's first astronauts in the Mercury and Gemini programs. Apollo astronauts experienced about 4 G's on the Saturn V rocket, while astronauts riding in NASA's space shuttles were subjected to only about 3 G's.
The most intense ballistic re-entry of a Soyuz spacecraft happened in 2008, when three Expedition 16 crewmembers experienced more than 8 G's before landing off-course. NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson was on that Soyuz and reported having difficulty breathing as the extreme G-force crushed her lungs. Her crewmate Yi So-yeon — South Korea's first astronaut — was hospitalized afterward for severe pain in her back and neck.
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