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Siegfried Hansen, 90; Space Suit Pioneer

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Siegfried Hansen, an electrical engineer and inveterate tinkerer who 50 years ago pioneered the hard space suit only now being used in NASA missions, died of pneumonia June 28 at a convalescent home in West Los Angeles. He was 90.

In the 1950s, Hansen headed a Litton Industries team devoted to improving the vacuum tube, a key component of electronic devices from radar to the early television. The vacuum tube had many flaws, and Litton was keen to build a better one.

For the record:

12:00 a.m. Aug. 1, 2002 For The Record
Los Angeles Times Thursday August 01, 2002 Home Edition Main News Part A Page 2 National Desk 10 inches; 381 words Type of Material: Correction
Air Force historian--A July 14 obituary of space suit pioneer Siegfried Hansen misspelled the name of Doug Lantry, historian at the U.S. Air Force Museum at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio.
*

In Hansen’s view, the way to improve the vacuum tube was to modify and test it from the inside--a brilliant, impossible feat. No one could survive in the airless atmosphere of a vacuum.

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Litton commissioned a vacuum chamber large enough for a man to maneuver in. Hansen and his colleagues then designed a suit to be worn inside the chamber that mimicked the atmospheric conditions conducive to human life.

The suit, dubbed the Mark I, weighed 50 pounds and looked like a Buck Rogers fantasy. It had a rigid torso of aluminum, puffy rubberized appendages, ribbed joints and a helmet as square and ungainly as a comic book robot.

More important than its appearance, though, was its function: Unlike previous pressure suits, it maintained constant volume and geometry, which allowed the occupant to breathe inside the vacuum and to move with enough dexterity to handle a screw driver or power drill.

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As transistor technology rendered the vacuum tube obsolete, Hansen’s ingenious suit appeared headed for the same obscurity.

“Luckily, this suit at Litton happened to be reaching antiquity at about the same time as the birth of the space age,” said Gary L. Harris, a space suit designer and historian in St. Cloud, Fla., near Cape Canaveral.

“That’s what saved it from being put on the scrap heap. It had all the attributes of an extravehicular space suit.”

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He called Hansen “the father of the EVA,” the extravehicular activity suit made expressly to sustain humans as they work outside a spacecraft above the Earth’s atmosphere.

Hansen was born in San Francisco, where his father ran a bakery and ice cream store.

He majored in electrical engineering at the University of Washington in Seattle, where he met his wife, Gwendolyn. They were married in 1939.

During World War II, Hansen lived in London and helped design early radar systems. After the war, he moved to Schenectady, N.Y., to work on vacuum tubes for General Electric, and helped GE develop the picture tube. He owned what may have been the first television in Schenectady.

In 1946, he moved to California to join Hughes Aircraft. He often tested new radar equipment with the company’s eccentric founder, Howard Hughes, as the test pilot.

Although visionary in many respects, Hughes resisted efforts to channel more resources into advanced electronics.

His reluctance spurred the departure of Charles B. Thornton, Hugh W. Jamieson and Roy L. Ash, who in 1953 became partners in a small microwave tube company in San Carlos owned by Charles Litton. They moved operations to Beverly Hills and hired scientists like Hansen, with the intention of concentrating on space research.

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Hansen, Litton’s director of research, set to work in 1954 to develop the manned vacuum chamber. But when he surveyed the existing aviation pressure suits, he found none appropriate to the task before him at Litton. They were too clumsy and lacked mobility.

What he came up with, in 1955, was a hybrid of hard and soft materials that provided strength and flexibility. A key feature was the jointed ribbing that allowed the wearer to bend his arms a full 90 degrees.

Hansen was the first person to test the suit inside the chamber. The risks were considerable. There was no air inside the 15-by-9-foot chamber, described by one observer as “just one big pot of nothing.” Any failure in the suit could mean unconsciousness in seconds and death in minutes.

Hansen put on the contraption over long red underwear and breathed almost pure oxygen through a connecting hose. Doctors monitored his respiration, heart beat and blood pressure through special attachments.

He would begin the experiments by dropping two feathers, which fell like lumps of lead. Then he would light a vacuum tube to prove the absence of air.

When an interviewer observing an early demonstration asked him how it felt inside, Hansen just shrugged it off. “He was not a very outward person,” said his son, Gordon, a Brentwood electrical engineer. “He was the kind of person who didn’t say anything unless absolutely necessary.”

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The Air Force quickly recognized that the suit had other uses.

“In the mid-’50s, the prospect of space travel was becoming real,” said Doug Langtry, historian at the Air Force Museum at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio. “The Air Force was interested, not in vacuum tubes, but in keeping people alive up there.”

The Air Force helped fund experiments at Litton in the late 1950s. Fearing public ridicule and the disapproval of the Eisenhower administration, however, it prohibited anyone involved in the project from using the words “space suit.” The suit was called a “manipulator station.”

Then the Russians launched Sputnik in October 1957. That event so transformed the climate for space exploration in the U.S. that, by December, Hansen was modeling the suit on the cover of Look magazine.

He remained at Litton until 1959, when he returned to Hughes to work on space chambers. He retired in the late 1970s, but continued as a consultant for another decade.

When he wasn’t working or sailing, Hansen was inventing gadgets. He built an automatic frankfurter roaster, a stereo binocular microscope for removing his sons’ splinters, and a reminder device, a clock loaded with punch cards that popped up at crucial times.”Inventive ability cannot be acquired if you are not born with it,” Hansen, who held hundreds of patents, once told an interviewer. “It is not a science, but one of the creative arts.”

Hansen was not unusual in the somewhat circuitous route that led him to the space suit.

Space suit design was not a subject taught in school, so its innovators were people like Russell Colley, a thwarted dress designer who went to work for rubber maker B.F. Goodrich in the 1930s.

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In collaboration with barnstorming aviator Wiley Post, he fashioned a soft-bodied, high-altitude pressure suit that became the model for those later used in the Mercury flights. The aviation pressure suits that were the forebears of the space suit were made by people who designed bras and girdles.

Soft suits that evolved from Colley’s designs have dominated the U.S. space program because they are lighter and take up less room than the bulkier hard suit.

Hansen “rejected all the soft fabric technology” in favor of the greater durability and mobility offered by a hard suit, said Harris, the Florida space suit designer and historian. But the Litton hard suit was never used in space missions.

Nearly half a century later, the search for a better space suit continues. For the first time, NASA has turned to a suit with a hard upper torso for space shuttle astronauts. Conceptually, it owes much to Hansen, whose vision preceded the space program by years.

“That’s how futuristic Hansen was,” Harris said. “[His] ideas are still ahead of us. “

Hansen’s wife of 58 years died in 1997. In addition to his son Gordon, he is survived by sons Burton of Key West, Fla., Norman of Kennewick, Wash., and Warren of Redmond, Wash.; nine grandchildren; and seven great-grandchildren.

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