Orbiter for the kids!

Keatah

Active member
Joined
Apr 14, 2008
Messages
2,218
Reaction score
2
Points
38
Well me and my girlfriend hosted "International Space Day - Moon Mission Expedition One" for the kids on the block.

First we set up the garage like a mission control thing. With cardboard dividers and stuff, none of the "equipment" had to work, because we wouldn't be playing with that. More for ambiance. We had some old computers and scopes and stuff laying around. So it looked good. Then we went into the living room for pre-flight briefing and some flying lessons - like how airplanes work, and how the propeller pulls the plane through the air, and how the wings lift it into the sky. And how the pilot controls the controls.. We had the livingroom decorated, again, with cardboard and whiteboard and stuff like that.

We all flew a short airplane ride in our X-Plane simpit - To get from home to the spaceport. Once at the spaceport we had astronaut food from the planetarium for snacks and stuff. The frosting in the toothpaste tubes was a hit! We had a mission briefing and cartoons and breaktime. We then went downstairs to the Orbiter simpit. Now remember, we had the whole house plastered up with that white construction paper and posterboard. Decorated with important-looking Nasa emblems and plenty of classic space photos like the shuttle, and buzz lightyear and spacecamp. you know some real stuff, some kiddie stuff.

We had a 5 minute mission briefing and a few more minutes of instructional class. Like what we might find on the moon when we got there. And how to use the eva kits we handed out.

We flew a very simplified and time-compressed mock mission to the moon and upon arrival there we all got out of the ship and went to our basecamp. On the flight out every kid got to sit up front and roll the ship and see a view of the earth rapidly receding, and the moon looming ahead big-time. We had a bunch of MFD's going and borrowed some from the networked x-plane sim too, via iPads. I'm certain none of it was accurate, but it looked cool! I had to take the back panel off the simpit and "expand it" with plastic from the UPS store that was throwing out remodeling waste. We also built "space seats" from more hoolahoops and more tarps. Thus making it a transport ship instead of a two seater. We landed at base and crawled through the access tubes made again from hoolahoops and yard tarps. Cardboard Jetways and hallways are cool!! We had another "briefing" and then went outside to explore the surface. The yard was decorated all over with black garbage bags and tarps and sand and a still projection of the earth on a humongus white sheet painted black, just so. We did Saturn and a comet too, sure it was unreal, but the kiddies loved it!! We strung a few LED lights on impossibly thin wires to simulate some stars. Like throwies more or less. We had a real celestron set up in the back too, but the kids were more interested in riding around in their battery powered 4x4's like moonbuggies.

What a blast! We had given each kid an EVA-kit consisting of a camera, some pens and papers, a 6-page space-a-ship pilot's manual complete with a flight plan and log and orbital operations procedures, some silver painted zip-loc baggies and plastic sandbox shovels, and a GoldenGuide to Astronomy. We made sure it all fit in a good sized lunchbox. The cameras were "space administration" equipment on loan and had to be returned at the end of the mission.

We did a treasure hunt NASA style. We hid some "relics" from aliens on the mock lunar surface. Like an old calculator circuit board. A platter from a hard disk. Power module "batteries", a pc case. A few boxes with a flashing LED that could not be opened till they got back to the lab, some real moonrocks from the sauna that would break apart as soon as you dropped them. That sort of thing. And we made what looked like a derelict spacecraft, Just a triangled pre-fab house roof panel we pulled from the construction dumpster - made to look like winged spacecraft all buried. Just the wing sticking 2 meters out of the ground. That's all. But man did it seem real to the kids alright. The mission briefing made it seem like a real space-a-ship was buried!! I wired up my old black and white portable jvc tv set as a "scanner", I made a "screensaver" that would show an outline of the buried spacecraft with a pic microcontroller and dying laptop. You could turn the knob and it would show different wireframe drawings. Now that laptop's innards is serving as a digital picture frame of a sort. I got it wired to the big screen and it has a new wired ethernet cable to the home network. The scanner was big, and bulky and hard to carry, on purpose!

It was neat, the kids collected the stuff for later analysis. They took pictures of the relics like crime-scene investigators! And they "radioed back to base" when they found the equipment bay / pc case asking for help and transport digging it up. We had supper on the moonbase after eva.

We did much of the eva at evening with the sun going down, We camped out on the moon and made the return trip home the next day. We returned early in the morning before sun-rise. What a cool 1-night vacation!

And each kid got a certificate like you get when you go to NASA's website and put your name on those cd's that get bolted to a REAL space probe like the mars rovers.

Aside from the simpits, everything cost like $200.00 for supplies and paint and tape. Much of everything was built from stuff found in the neighborhood trash. And the eva kits were cheap. We had enough of last-year's pocket digital cameras to provide one for everybody. We wrapped them in black electrical tape hiding all the controls except for on/off and the shutter button. A space camera has to be simple and easy to use.

I figure, since we were getting an expansion and some remodeling done and weren't living there for the month, we might as well do something cool for a change. The mounds of dirt from the backhoe were absolutely thrilling for a lunar surface! Especially when painted grey. All this tape and fabric and plastic lent a spacey feeling to the whole set-up. It wasn't durable though. This was one-off fun day! But I wouldn't want to re-build the moon again in the back yard.
 
Last edited:
Amazing, sounds like a lot of fun, and hard work. Thats some imaginatation you have there!

N.
 
Excellent ideas ! Well done ! :thumbup:
 
That's the stuff that guarantees some of the next generation will aspire to be pilots and astronauts! Great to see these things still being organised :3

In today's age where millions of youth spend their teens and young adult life meddling in Facebook scandals, Space Camps like these are a crucial necessity :)
 
Haha, thats fantastic!

It was my eight year old brother that asked me to download Orbiter for him, I had no idea what it was when he asked me... :)
 
I just added in a few more details, you might wanna re-read the original posting.. But really, It was fun building it. And when your main building supplies are white and black trash bags, yard tarps, plastic framework from hoolahoops, silver, white, and black tape, and large posterboard you can really do a lot without spending a lot. We got 68 of the hoops from a school sale that was just getting new gym equipment. They threw them out for $10.00 because they had kinks and were no longer round. Just the thing from which to build a crawl way tunnel from the basement to the lunar surface. The kids think it's real because they ain't seen anything like it before, just so different.

I forgot to add, and this was my favorite, An umbrella from the dollar-store sprayed silver served as the base radar dish. I taped my red bicycle flashing "beacon" to the handle and bolted the other end to a gallon paint can full of cement or something and just put it on the patio. Thankfully there was no wind otherwise it would have gotten blown down I'm sure. This antenna had to work all evening long. I used my old RadioShack Globe Patrol shortwave radio to simulate communications equipment in the space-tent. I still have it from when I built it in 1979! The earth was projected with my old slide projector. And when the kids turned the "radar assembly" to the earth image I played with the S/W radio controls. I put together a bunch of bogus audio clips from mission control and played them back as a looping .mp3 file. It all sounded very cool and hacked together, but that's what a real moonbase would be, stuff everywhere. Get enough electronic crap gathered in one spot and it looks like a real lab or workstation. None of it has to do anything or really work. Old ham radio stuff is perfect! If the kids wanted to call home or talk to mommy or daddy or each other they could just use the special space cell phones or my old walkie talkies and personal radio communicator things. The walkie talkies worked anytime, but they couldn't call home. As long as the antenna was pointed at the earth, the cellphones would "work". But they had to go into the base tent to make the call. Part of the fun was discovering what worked and what didn't.

I must say again that black or white or silver tape changes the appearance of everything, we must have used 30 rolls of the stuff.

We did a real-life emergency on base. We made a scare with the halloween fog machine, we turned it on and popped a balloon (out of sight) and BAM!! Instant do-it-yourself real-life air leak!! We had to find the repair kit, and seal the breach, and the mission continued. I made the alarm sound with my cellphone klaxxon ringer. And it was realistic enough. Especially slick was the repair kit my lady put together, it was a shoebox with working supplies in it, it had real masking tape (easy to tear), and wal-mart bags and paper patches, no scissors required. It had a picture of the sun and happy clouds blowing wind on it. I bet NASA could save big bux by including one of these on every future lunar base.

The mission documentation had a full intense and precise schedule for the day and was an official looking insert for the 6-page pilot's handbook. I did that itinerary on my old tractor-feed dot-matrix printer, with alternating white and green lines on the paper. Representing times in GMT, military digital numbers and an analog clock face. Very official not-to-be-messed-with-looking.

1:00pm was McDonalds and spaceport fly in - cross country in Cessna 172 in 15 minutes!
2:00 spaceport check in and eva kit handouts.
2:38 playtime
4:00 Orbiter simulator time and ride to the moon.
5:10 base arrival and check in. More mission briefings.
6:00 playtime and snacks
6:19 go out and play and look for the artifacts
8:08 more surveying and using the big scanner to look underground
8:40 set up the radar dish antenna to call home, more time outside, lab time.
10:17 show and tell time, write in your log books, settle in for the night time.
10:45 emergency air breach that interrupts everything.
11:02 back to more observing and teaching stuff, tv time, drawing, story time, free-time, Q & A, whatever.
12:00 back in the space tent for bunk time.
12:22am some free time & lights out + spooky stuff on the moon at night stories told by us and the neighbors over speakerphone.
--discontinuity--
8:00am packup your stuff and get space snacks and secure the base. Load the ship with the HEAVY scanner and HEAVIER junked pc frame, And other useless equipment.
9:16 Orbiter sim for the ride back to the home space port.
10:14 x-plane sim for ride back to the airport.
10:30 the mission is done!
11:00 debriefing and awards, the emergency response team got an award, the little explorers finding artifacts got certificates of authenticity for their finds, the communications setup team got recognition. That sort of thing. We had those plastic airline wings to give out. We put everything in their eva kits to take home. Rock samples and calculator parts went home too. Clipped to the itinerary and pilot's manual was a cd with their pictures.

Many of these lunar activities need to happen in the evening just before sundown. So you get the right effect with minimal prop-building. How else would the flashing base lights and throwies add to the ambiance?

The point of orbitersim was to show how things look at different altitudes and distances. And see what it might be like to control a spacecraft, how it is different from aircraft. And x-plane was to show how a real airplane can fly.

Cleanup was real easy, we just pulled everything down and put it in a heaping pile in the driveway till the dumpster got delivered. Much of it was garbage to begin with. Besides, you only go to the moon once!



Note: (((Now that I took apart the orbiter simpit, I'll probably combine it, somehow with the x-plane simpit. There isn't going to be room for two. Have one for both sims. Not resembling any one specific craft, just a generic one, but with all the controls and anunciators and switches doing something. Taking apart a 104 key keyboard gives you 104 switches to set up and play with! The way I like to do simpits is fill them with screens, use car seats, use woofers for rumbling engines, and make them spacious and totally carpeted and enclosed. You wanna have room for eating McDonalds in there. The ultimate getaway without going anywhere, orbit the gas giants with moody music and some red wine.))) :love: yeah!!
 
The orbiter part and simpit parts was just a just a 1 hour thing. Much of the fun came in the lunar surface activities and the schedule, which we tried to adhere to strictly at first and then made it more and more lax as the day progressed. Less specific, more free time, that sort of thing.

My hope is that some REAL astronaut pulls out the plastic lunchbox eva kit when doing a press interview 30 years from now or something!

We got the idea for ISD from some hi-res graphic I had on my old Apple II .. It was a picture of a kid in a pink spacesuit, with a plastic shovel, making sandcastles on the moon.
 
You really are an amazing person to do all of this for kids. Not to mention your skill and imagination.
You and your girlfriend deserve..something... like some sort of award :)
I wish you had been my dad.
I agree. :)
 
You really are an amazing person to do all of this for kids. Not to mention your skill and imagination.
You and your girlfriend deserve..something... like some sort of award :)

I agree. :)

Well then.. I'll just need to print me up one of those "Name on the spaceprobe" awards certs.

Meantime while it is printing here is one of my favorite pics of all-time, aside from the ones I make myself. This is the Ultimate Sandbox! From Michael Whelan. Much of his paintings are on the covers of sci-fi paperbacks. And it gave me the whole idea. Strange, I had this since the Apple II days, but first now figured out what to do with it.
michael whelan_sf_the ultimate sandbox.jpg
 
Last edited:
You wanna have room for eating McDonalds in there. The ultimate getaway without going anywhere, orbit the gas giants with moody music and some red wine.)))

Can I come?:)

Wish I had the room to build one, I probably wouldn't come out

N.
 
Can I come?:)

Wish I had the room to build one, I probably wouldn't come out

N.

Well you could commandeer the garage and get an old rusty car. Chop off the back end and shorten up the front end. Put all the computer stuff in the front. And speakers in the back. Fieros are good for this. You can fit a shortened fiero and a real car in the same garage, usually. Just tell the lady you are rebuilding it like a classic custom car. replace the windows with lcd screens or make them stand off a little further out. Tell her that your putting in a back-up camera and want good visibility.
:thumbup:
 
Thats uncanny, the garage already has a car like that...

N.
 
Back
Top