April 2008[edit]

The craft is described as being "99 m³ in interior space" and have "pressurized (100 m³ total)"

Can't have a bigger pressurized volume bigger than the ship itself. Anyone with correct figures?

(Diego bf109 (talk) 01:59, 19 April 2008 (UTC))Reply[reply]

Im guessing two door airlock could cause this. But its just a guess with no idea what i am talking about. --Ssavilam (talk) 16:30, 5 July 2011 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Copyediting[edit]

Clarification needed:

The Salyut program followed this with five more successful launches out of seven more stations.

I think this is saying that seven space stations have been launched to date (By whom? The Soviets? The Russians? The Americans? All nations combined?), and that five of them were Salyuts. But it’s not clear at all.

Heritage of Salyut is still in use on the International Space Station.

What does this mean? Maybe the author was trying to say that the ISS incorporates technologies that were developed during the Salyut program. It could also mean that the ISS is built out of Salyut parts, or a number of other interpretations. Nate Silva (talk) 19:55, 15 September 2017 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Notice Salyut program is a wikilink; if you click on it, you will read about the Soviet Salyut program. There were a total of eight Salyut stations; six were launched and manned successfully; two were launch failures. Two of the six were military. These were all strictly Soviet-operated (before the fall of the Soviet Union) prior to the advent of the ISS; no international cooperation existed at that time (the Apollo-Soyuz project notwithstanding). There will be no more Salyuts launched. The US had its own program, Skylab which launched a single station which was used by three sequential (sortie) crews.
"Heritage of Salyut" refers to Mir-2 which became one of the ISS modules. — Preceding unsigned comment added by JustinTime55 (talkcontribs) 20:15, 15 September 2017 (UTC)Reply[reply]

GA Review[edit]

This review is transcluded from Talk:Salyut 1/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: Forbes72 (talk · contribs) 19:35, 16 October 2020 (UTC)Reply[reply]


I'll look this over. Article seems a little short on text/sources, but I'll have a better idea after a more careful reading. 〈 Forbes72 | Talk 〉 19:35, 16 October 2020 (UTC)Reply[reply]

This article is coming along, but there's a lot of work to get this up to GA standards.

Captions

Infobox

Leade

Background

Construction and operational history

Specifications

Visiting spacecraft and crews

Reentry of Salyut 1

References

Copyright issues

Ongoing changes

Conclusion

@Soumya-8974: I generally think the content in this page needs significant expansion to be broad in its coverage. Current article is closer to B class than a GA. The list above includes my best effort at finding some of the places that would benefit from expansion. This is intended to give some specific suggestions on where you can add depth to the article, not a comprehensive checklist of everything necessary. The article is developing, but I don't think it's close to GA status yet. 〈 Forbes72 | Talk 〉 00:58, 19 October 2020 (UTC)Reply[reply]