NASA space sex experiments
Some entertaining but probably bogus revelations about top-secret NASA space sex experiments.
In his book titled Living in Space, the late G Harry Stine, a former NASA technician, wrote that agency staff at the Marshall Space Flight Centre in Huntsville, Alabama, had used a buoyancy tank that simulated low-gravity conditions to test the possibilities of having weightless sex.
"It was possible but difficult, and was made easier when a third person assisted by holding one of the others in place," The Sunday Times quoted him, as saying.
In another book, Pierre Kohler, a French scientific writer, claimed that NASA had tested 20 positions by computer simulation and then arranged for the two people to try the best 10 in zero gravity conditions.
According to him, only four were possible to reach without ‘mechanical assistance,’ while an elastic belt and an inflatable tunnel, like an open-ended sleeping bag, were needed for the other six.
"One of the principal findings was that the classic so-called missionary position, which is so easy on earth when gravity pushes one downwards, is simply not possible," wrote Kohler.
I'll keep that in mind.