Everyone should relax.
We built PCSAT-2 that was also deployed on the outside of ISS back in 2006. The requirements for any kind of such EVA hardware are clearly spelled out by NASA since they (and anyone who thinks about it) realizes that carrying ANYTHING by hand or on a tether in ZERO G is going to get banged around like an ape with a suitcase.
It is naïve to assume otherwise.
So PCSAT-2 (and I assume Arissat) was built to be kicked, banged, hit, dropped, stepped on, and even whizzed on (ISS water releases). The forces were specified to include the 300lb impact of the astronauts foot (man and suit) anywhere and everywhere on the object.
The live video proved how realistic these design requirements are.
So relax. What you saw is man working in space. Like making sausage, it ain't pretty... but its what the laws of physics require when heavy objects float.
ArissSat was designed for this environment and apparently it survived just fine.
Bob, WB4APR
-----Original Message----- Sent: Wednesday, August 03, 2011 6:05 PM Subject: [amsat-bb] THE ROUGH TREATMENT OF ARISSAT-1
.. [BS...] Someone's ASS should be on the line for the rough treatment of this "project"... As far as I'M concerned...they sent out INEXPERIENCED rookies to deploy something that... was still important to US and the university that built the pressure experiment onboard. What if these cosmonauts DID destroy it? What if it had to be brought back to Earth? Who would have paid for it? Or would it have been a loss for the contributors involved?