 
          
          
            
              
                | Figure from the Apollo
                    14 Press Kit, showing the astronaut on the right
                    signalling that he is getting cooling via the BSLSS
                    connection from his buddy on the left. (More
                    detailed schematic below) | 
            
          
          
         
        
        
        
        
        1. Summary
        
        The BSLSS (described below) was a set of hoses and connectors
        that allowed a crew to share cooling water in the event that one
        of the PLSSs failed.  By sharing cooling water with his
        partner, the astronaut with the failed PLSS could operate his
        Oxygen Purge System in low-flow and get about twice the useful
        life available in the high-flow mode.  The OPS/BSLSS
        combination gave the two astronauts about 75 minutes to reach
        safety of the LM cabin.
        
        A BSLSS was first flown on Apollo 14.  Interestingly, with
        the exception of Charlie Duke, none of the Apollo 14 - 17
        astronauts who participated in ALSJ mission reviews remembered
        that the BSLSS was designed to share cooling water, rather than
        oxygen.
        
        
Jack Schmitt, from a 
conversation
          during the Apollo 17 ALSJ mission review: "It rings a very
          faint bell that we had something called a Buddy SLSS; and the
          fact that neither of us remembers much about it shows how much
          we felt we'd need it!"
        
        Another reason was undoubtedly that fact that the BSLSS donning
        and doffing procedures were simple.  When asked during the
        Apollo 16 ALSJ mission review if he and John had done much
        training on "disconnects and reconnects in the field", 
Charlie
          answered:
        
        
"Not a lot.  But we'd done
          it enough.  It was a simple procedure.  We could
          have done that with no
          problem."
        
        
        And, in response to a December 2008 question about any training
        he and Al Shepard might have done for an emergency return to the
        LM using the BSLSS, Ed Mitchell wrote:
        
        
"Frankly, we never trained on
          that emergency at all.  We knew we had it (meaning the
          BSLSS) and looked at the equipment, but that was the extent of
          it."
        
        
        2. Background
        
          The Apollo 11 and 12 crews stayed close to the LM. 
          During the Apollo 11 EVA, neither crewmember went more than 60
          meters from the LM.  On Apollo 12, the crew was prepared
          to travel as much as a kilometer from the LM to reach the
          Surveyor III spacecraft had they landed off target.  In
          the event of a sudden and complete failure of one of the
          PLSSs, the Oxygen Purge System (OPS) mounted on top of the
          failed PLSS could provide  both CO2 purging and cooling
          for about 39 minutes in the high-flow mode. The Apollo 12 site
          is relatively level and the crew would have been able to run
          back at a speed of roughly 3 km/hr.  Depending on how far
          they were from the LM, they would have been back in 20 minutes
          or less, giving them at least 19 minutes - and an unused OPS -
          for getting back in the cabin.  (At the time Section 4.4 of Apollo 17
          Final Lunar Surface Procedures was written, 13 minutes were
          allocated for Emergency LM Ingress.)
        
        Similarly, the Apollo 13 crew planned to land at Fra Mauro,
          at the same location where Apollo 14 later landed. 
          During the second EVA, they intended to make a traverse to the
          rim of Cone Crater, a trip that would take them about 1250
          meters from the LM.  Because of the need to make their
          way around craters along the route, a more realistic travel
          distance was about 1400 meters.  At 3 km/hr, at the end
          of a 1.4-km, 28-minute trip back to the LM, they would have
          had roughly 11 minutes of time remaining on one of the OPSs
          and could use the second OPS for ingress.
        In the weeks before Apollo 12, NASA began to take a closer look
        at the needs of the Apollo 16-20 crews, who would have the Lunar
        Roving vehicle and would make drives of up to 8
        kilometers.  In the event that one of the two PLSSs failed
        completely, the crew could be faced with a drive of up to an
        hour back to the LM. Use of the two OPSs succesively in
        high-flow would get them back to the  LM with only about 18
        minutes remaining on the second OPS.  In principle, that
        would have allowed an Emergency LM Ingress, but with an
        uncomfortably thin margin.
        
        At a 10 October 1969 meeting of the Manned Space Flight
        Management Council, "Major Milestones were reached for extending
        astronauts' staytime on the moon and increasing their mobility
        for the Apollo 16 - 20 missions.  Modification of the A7L
        spacesuit incorporating improved waist mobility were authorized,
        and letter contract authority for the portable life support
        system/secondary life support system was approved."
        
        Increased waist mobility would allow the astronauts to sit on
        the Rover and would improve running speed.  Increased
        capacity of the PLSSs would allow 8-hour EVA.  We have not
        been able to locate details of an advanced Secondary Life
        Support System (SSSS) that was under consideration. 
        However, in a 3 November 1969 letter to James McDivitt, then
        Manager of the Apollo Spacecraft Program, "Christopher C. Kraft,
        Jr., MSC Director of Flight Operations, suggested that an
        in-house review re-evaluate the Apollo secondary life support
        system, because of its complexity and cost of development, and,
        at the same time re-examine the possibilities of an expanded
        oxygen purge system using identical concepts."  The Buddy
        Secondary Life Supoort System was an effective, relatively
        inexpensive result of the re-evaluation.
        
        
        From a 
conversation
        with Dave Scott during the mission review conducted for the ALSJ
        during 1992-3:
        
        
Scott - "Well, I think (the
          BSLSS was) probably an evolution from the SCUBA (Self-Contained
          Underwater
          Breathing
          Apparatus)
work
          we did. As you probably know, everybody was trained in scuba.
          We went to the Navy's Underwater Demolition School and got all
          that training, with two tanks, not one tank. So we stayed down
          a long time, which was a lot of fun. Another nice element of
          what we were taught."
          
          "In SCUBA, you are trained that, if you lose your mouthpiece
          or oxygen, you breath on your buddy's oxygen. So I would say,
          off the top of my head, that when we get into on-the-Moon
          exercises, you think about the buddy system and you think
          about breathing underwater, and you think, 'Gee, if my oxygen
          goes out, I'll tap into my buddy's oxygen. Because that's
          already demonstrated and that works out very well. That may
          have been the evolution. I thought it was obviously a good
          idea. Before we were assigned the Rover, we had the longer
          duration, seven-hour PLSS, so we were going to be able to go
          much further than 14 (who had a four-hour PLSS capability,
          with margins), even if we only had a MET, which would mean
          that the buddy system would be even more important. And we
          practiced it, and I think it was a great idea." 
        
        The fact that, twenty years after Apollo, Dave mistakenly
        thought the BLSS was used to share oxygen, rather than cooling
        water, is irrelevant.  The principle is the same.
        
        
        
3. BSLSS Description
        
        
          
Figure I-48 from Volume 1 of the Apollo 14 EMU Handbook
            (Click on the image for a larger version)
          
          
        
        From the  
Apollo 14 EMU
          Handbook, Vol. I:
        
        
2.9.2
Buddy
            Secondary Life Support System
          
          The BSLSS enables two EVA
            crewmen to share the water cooling provided by one of their
            PLSS's following loss of this capability in the other PLSS. The system (fig. 1-48) is made up of six principal components:
          
          a. Two water hoses 8-1/2 feet long and 3/8 inch
              inside diameter, to carry the coolant flow between the
              good PLSS and the
              other crewman;
            
            b. A normal PLSS water
              connector on one end of this double hose;
            
            c. A flow-dividing
              connector on the other end of this double hose consisting
              of an ordinary PLSS water connector coupled with a receptacle to accept a
              PLSS water connector;
            
            d. A 4-1/2-foot restraint
              tether with hooks for attachment to the PGA LM restraint
              loops;
            
            e. A thermal sheath the
              length of the hoses with tether breakouts 2 feet from each
              end;
            
            f. A thermal pouch for
              stowage of the assembly on the PLSS during EVA and in the
              LM cabin during non-EVA periods.
          
         
        
        During the Apollo 14 EVAs, the BSLSS bag was stowed on the
        Modular Equipment Transporter (MET) and, during the Apollo 15-17
        traverses, it was hung from the back of one of the Rover seats.
        
        
        

          
          
            
              
                | Detail
                    from AS15-85-11470,
                    showing the BSLSS bag hanging from the back of Jim
                    Irwin's Rover seat.  (Click on the image for a
                    larger version.) | 
            
          
          
        
        
        4.  BSLSS Donning and Activation
        
        
        
        
        
          BSLSS pages from Charlie
              Duke's flown EVA-1 Cuff Checklist.
              Images courtesy Ron Shelton, South Carolina State Museum.
          
          
          The procedures given in the Apollo 14, 15, and 17 cuff
          checklists are nearly identical to these, differing only in
          that  the words "Good PLSS on RH side" in Item 2 on the
          first of the two pages does not appear in the Apollo 14
          version.  Clearly, use of the BSLSS required that the
          astronaut with the good PLSS be on his buddy's right.