I had no idea Russias contributions to the ISS were cramped and crappy. I kind of thought they would be on par with everyone elses or even better given their extensive experience with space stations.
Also, a guy who is in charge of reforming the Russian space program says Russia needs a goal to work towards and mentions a lunar base as a possible goal.
"The industry is excessively large," he pointed out. "In our country, there are several large concerns that simultaneously produce similar products: control systems, launch systems, space satellites, engines. Inside the country, we cannot generate sufficient demand for the industry ourselves, it is working at about half of its capacity, and we also cannot control quality, with such a wide range of products it is impossible to control everything.
I am sorry if this comes out wrong, but the naivité of Westerners when it comes to post-soviet/post-communist realities never ceases to amaze me![]()
hobbsyoyo said:Well at least now the Russian government sees the problem. Part of their solution is to cull the industry of excess capacity and unneeded engineers while bringing in new talent. We'll just have to see if they can pull that off though.
"unneeded engineers" rofl
Read the article brah. They wanna cull the ranks from 250,000 to like 150-170,000.
Though I was kind of stumped on how they can cull the ranks and bring in fresh talent at the same time.
Um, fire 100,000 non-producers and hire 20,000 real engineers?
250k - 100k + 20k = 170k
If it really is as overstaffed as it is, why can't they just cut out the bad ones and keep the good ones? Why cut and hire?
Cause you want young people, to help your program forward into the next decades, instead of keeping 50yos who grew up in the Soviet era and are not going to be innovating during their lifetime.
Cause you want young people, to help your program forward into the next decades, instead of keeping 50yos who grew up in the Soviet era and are not going to be innovating during their lifetime.
Um, fire 100,000 non-producers and hire 20,000 real engineers?
250k - 100k + 20k = 170k
This is not a case of Russia lacking brains, it's a case of having a wholly inadequate organization and resources available to sustain so massive a space programme.
Well long stays aren't useless as they lesson the need for crew rotations. Plus, they can still use the ISS for different kinds of zero g research besides endurance trials.