Thunderbolt
SOC-12
I think I am with Icosahedron on this, unless you are some kind of one man Kimball Kinnison infiltration team sitting on an asteroid for a week, getting in and out of a suit will become as routine as taking a tea break.
Plumbing is only necessary if the suit is to be worn for prolonged periods without access to external disposal systems...
... and I think the biggest difference high tech will make is to significantly reduce the amount of time a person needs to wear a suit, and significantly increase access to external disposal, in terms of both location of units and ease of disrobing.
If in the far future going to the head in space becomes a two minute detour, suit plumbing becomes a low tech anachronism or a special mission fallback.
Icosahedron,
Let's see... off the top of my pointy head... belters, yard workers, riggers, high port freight handlers, naval crews, scout crews, star mercs, PROFOR troopers, crews of emergency response vehicles, various professions on worlds/moons with exotic or no atmospheres, shall I go on?
Not every job can be done from inside a dome or pressurized vehicle cabin. (Although MTU makes great use of telepresence.) There will still be jobs and professions in which people will have to wear vacc suits, p-suits, or something similar for long periods.
For the crew of the Running Boil, the newlyweds heading for McIntyre and the beautiful twin moons of Christine, and that grad student performing a semester's worth of data collection at that mining facility on that outer system moon sure.
There still will be people who must wear suits for extended periods and jobs that require suits be worn for extended periods and the players may find themselves those people doing those jobs.
Regards,
Bill
sounds like you guys are arguing over 3 related but different items
1) skinsuit or "ship dress" only really exposed to vacc for short term even in emergencies etc .... common underdress in low pressure habitats
2) vaccsuit or "work dress" that looks more like the apollo suits .... 3-4 hours use is common. I'd expect this to go over the skinsuit
3) battledress or civilian "hardsuits" armoured harsh environment suits that keep you alive for days at a time. proper military battledress is probably equally suitable for any environment while civilian versions would be design - tailored more for specific environments.
somehow I have this image of the old-fashioned cartoon long underwear with the button-up flap in the back.If they absolutely can't hold it, they go inside, unzip 2-3 zippers, use the commode, wash up, zip up, and go back outside.
Gents,
Having working in and around heavy industrial sites for the last thirty years or so and having worn all sorts of protective clothing ranging from anti-Cs to cold weather clothing to fully pressurized suits complete with breathing air and cooling lines, let's just say I'm having some problem envisioning fully pressurized, fully heated, readily available porta-potties wherever and whenever a vacc-suited worker needs them.
Hell, even the engine rooms aboard my last ship lacked commodes and we weren't worried about maintaining an atmosphere. During general quarters we had to put an empty resin can in the escape trunk, line it with a garbage bag, and place a roll of toilet tissue next to it and that was aboard a ship designed in the 70s.
Some roustabout on the North Slope rig can waddle to a nearby porta-pottie much easier than a vacc-suited strip miner on an airless moon can pop into an airlock, wait for it to cycle, and begin to work all the zippers.
As I've written before, I don't see this being a problem with "casual" vacc-suit wearers, but there are professions for which the issue is rather serious. For instance, I can see belters paying close attention to their diets while out prospecting.
Maybe it's because I recently re-read Laporte's History of Sh*t that I'm hung up on this topic. Then again it may be the fact that I'm anal retentive.
Regards,
Bill
Gents,
Having working in and around heavy industrial sites for the last thirty years or so and having worn all sorts of protective clothing ranging from anti-Cs to cold weather clothing to fully pressurized suits complete with breathing air and cooling lines, let's just say I'm having some problem envisioning fully pressurized, fully heated, readily available porta-potties wherever and whenever a vacc-suited worker needs them.
<snip>
Maybe it's because I recently re-read Laporte's History of Sh*t that I'm hung up on this topic. Then again it may be the fact that I'm anal retentive.
Regards,
Bill
Surely true spacers could hold in their number-twoes for that long...?