NASA Orion Splashdown Safety Tests Completed
DevotedSkeptic sends this news from NASA:
"The 18,000-pound test article that mimics the size and weight of NASA's Orion spacecraft crew module recently completed a final series of water impact tests in the Hydro Impact Basin at the agency's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va. The campaign of swing and vertical drops simulated various water landing scenarios to account for different velocities, parachute deployments, entry angles, wave heights and wind conditions the spacecraft may encounter when landing in the Pacific Ocean. The next round of water impact testing is scheduled to begin in late 2013 using a full-sized model that was built to validate the flight vehicle's production processes and tools."
Why is it that USA space tech prefers water splashdowns instead of dry land like the Russians and Chinese?
"Softer landings" doesn't quite cut it as a reason, for at the speed of the impact, water is just as hard as terra firma. Then there's the risk of crew drowning and/or craft loss thru sinking. That doesn't occur in dry land.
The Apollo Command Module was not "uncontrolled" on reentry. Its center of gravity was intentionally offset from the spacecraft's centerline. This gave it a semi-gliding (admittedly steep but not non-existent) capability. Thus they could control the direction of the reentry aerodynamically by using thrusters to rotate the spacecraft and so control the direction of "glide". There was a lot more capability to that Apollo-Saturn stack than is visible or well known!