- Scott Carpenter
-
I don't know. I'm still warm and still perspiring, but not really uncomfortable. I would like to—I would like to nail this suit temperature problem down. It—for all practical purposes, it's uncontrollable as far as I can see.
- CAPCOM
-
Roger. Understand. You might have to wait a few more minutes before this takes effect. You are on No. 6. Is that right?
- CAPCOM
-
Roger. Systems reports that your suit temperature has dropped 2 degrees over station, if that's any encouragement to you.
- Scott Carpenter
-
Yes, I have. However, the food has crumbled badly; and I hate to open the package any more for fear of getting crumbs all over the capsule. I can verify that eating bite-size food as we packaged for this flight is no problem at all. Even the crumbly foods are eaten with no, with no problem.
Expand selection up Contract selection down Close - Scott Carpenter
-
I had taken four swallows at approximately this time last orbit. As soon as I get the suit temperature pegged a little bit, I'll open the visor and have some more water. Over.
- Scott Carpenter
-
For the record now—
Expand selection down Contract selection up - Scott Carpenter
-
One of the labels for a fuse switch has slipped out, and sideways, and has tied the adjoining fuse switch together with it. This happened to emergency-main and reserve-deploy fuse switches.
- Scott Carpenter
-
I caged the gyros. They are too critical. I will try and navigate on the dark side without the gyros.
- Scott Carpenter
-
The fuse switch should be glued in better so that turning off one fuse does not turn off the adjoining one.
- Scott Carpenter
-
Oh yes. There is the xylose pill. It didn't melt. All the rest of the stuff in here did melt.
- Scott Carpenter
-
Okay. Xylose pill being consumed at 02 41 35. The rest of the food is pretty much of a mess. Can't stand this cabin temperature.
- Scott Carpenter
-
Roger, George. My control mode is manual. The gyros are caged, maneuver is off. Fuel is 45 and 64 [percent], a little ahead of schedule. Oxygen reads 82-100 [percent]. Steam vent temperature in the suit is dropping slightly. It's a little below 70 [degrees]. Cabin is 4.6 [psia]. Suit temperature has dropped to about 71 [degrees] now. All the power is good, and here is a blood pressure. Over.
- Scott Carpenter
-
I did have the visor open a short time ago for the xylose pill. All of the rest of the food that I have aboard has either crumbled or melted. It's unusable in its present state so I think the xylose pill will constitute my last zero g meal. However, the first one, before the food crumbled, was quite easy. It's no problem to eat this bite-size food—in a weightless state. I also drank some water at that time, which was no problem.
- CAPCOM
-
Roger. I take it, from what you said then, that you have confirmed that your faceplate is closed for the decision on the third orbit.
- Scott Carpenter
-
That is correct. My faceplate is closed. Also, what is the trend of my cabin pressure on the ground? Over.
- CAPCOM
-
We are checking on your request there, Scott. Could you hit that button again? We lost your EKG.
- CAPCOM
-
No, we lost the EKG. Possibly you could press on those sensors. Okay, Surgeon informs me that the EKG is now returning. Your other question, cabin pressure is staying at 5.1 [psia] approximately.
- CAPCOM
-
Negative on that. It's gone from 5.8 [psia] at launch to approximately 5.1 [psia] in very, very gradual descending trend.
- CAPCOM
-
Do you have any specific comments on your balloon experiments; for example, the best color contrast with the
- CAPCOM
-
Roger. For your information, the second sunrise should be expected in approximately 3 to 4 minutes.
Spoken on May 24, 1962, 3:20 p.m. UTC (62 years, 5 months ago). Link to this transcript range is: Tweet