Description: In the suit in the inside there is a logo of B.D. and the name of the costume model. Product number. Suit size. All costumes were in flight. This orange costume should always be in the ship in which they get to the ISS International Station. Approximately 2 days in flight before connecting to the station. In training, there are no markings and suits are dirty. In the training center there is a certain number of suits and sizes. Any astronaut can choose a suit . This suit is always in the when lifting into orbit and when descending from orbit. Daniel Burbank In August 2011, he was declared fit for space flight as a flight engineer of the Soyuz TMA-22 spacecraft, which launched on November 14, 2011. Since November 16, Burbank was included in the crew of the ISS-29 flight engineer 5, then on November 21, Daniel became the commander of the long-term crew of the ISS-30. He returned to Earth on the Soyuz TMA-22 spacecraft on April 27, 2012. Designed to keep the astronaut on the water and protect against cooling, wind, rain and snow on the ground. Rescue tool, used in emergency watering or landing of the spacecraft descent vehicle in an uninhabited hard-to-reach place. The overalls, with the exception of gloves, are made as a single unit. A soft helmet made of elastic rubber is attached to the neck of the overalls. The helmet fits tightly around the head, protecting it from hypothermia. The overalls are equipped with a swimming collar, which is attached to the shell of the suit, has a light signal device. When immersed in water, air is transferred from the overalls to the swimming gate, after which the latter is filled. The gate can also be manually filled by pulling up the lacing or by blowing the mouth through the mouthpiece of the blowing valve. The suit is also marked with his initials on the inner tag and has the same number. The suit is intended to keep a cosmonaut afloat, dry and warm upon abnormal landing of the descent module of spacecraft Soyuz. The suit "Forel" (the Russian word for "trout") is an individual rescue device to be used in the event of emergency splashdown, or landing of the descent module in a harsh, inaccessible environment. The suit is designed to keep the cosmonaut afloat and, together with the TZK thermal suit, to protect against hypothermia, wind and rain on solid terrain. Design features. The immersion suit is made as one complete unit excluding the gloves. It is put on via the front opening, like rescue spacesuits and high-altitude suits. The opening is sealed with a rubber tie, and then closed with a zipper. A soft hood made of elastic rubber is attached to the neck of the suit. It fits close to the wearer's head protecting it from hypothermia. The immersion suit is equipped with an inflatable collar, which is attached to the shell of the suit and equipped with an emergency light on the chest. The collar can be inflated manually with the mouth via the mouthpiece connected to the blowing valve. The maximum weight of the suit is 2.950 kg (4.4 pounds US). Its minimum volume in a compactly stored arrangement (without gloves) is 7.5 liters (.26 cubic feet US). The reserve of positive buoyancy with an inflated collar is 40 kg (88 pounds US). Besides the Russian rescue spacesuit Sokol-KV-2 and other stuff, the set of equipment included this immersion suit "Forel", what could be used in case of emergency landing onboard Soyuz.
Price: 4750 USD
Location: Knokke-Heist
End Time: 2023-12-27T10:28:08.000Z
Shipping Cost: 100 USD
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Type: Space Suit
Year: 2011
Space Program: Russian & Soviet Program
Theme: Astronauts & Space Travel
Country/Region of Manufacture: Russian Federation