The first spacewalk using an Orlan suit took place on December 20, 1977, on the
Soviet space station Salyut 6, during the
Soyuz 26 mission.
Yuri Romanenko and
Georgi Grechko tested the Orlan-D space suit. The Orlan-DM was used for the first time on August 2, 1985, by the cosmonauts
Vladimir Dzhanibekov and
Viktor Savinykh of
Salyut 7. The Orlan space suits were used for spacewalks on the Salyut stations, but for
Mir they were replaced by the Orlan-DMA and Orlan-M suits: The Orlan-DMA was used for the first time in November 1988, by the cosmonaut
Musa Manarov from the
Mir space station. The Orlan-M continued in use on Mir from 1997 until the end of the station's operational life and is now used on the
International Space Station. Orlan space suits have been used by Russian, American, European, Canadian and Chinese astronauts. On February 3, 2006, a retired Orlan fitted with a radio transmitter, dubbed
SuitSat-1, was launched into orbit from the International Space Station. In April 2004, China imported 13 Orlan spacesuits from Russia: Three for EVA, two for airlock training, four for neutral buoyancy tank training, four for testing the EVA support system on the Shenzhou spacecraft. Various components on the EVA suits and airlock training suits, including electrical and communication equipments, were designed and manufactured by China. In Chinese, Orlan spacesuits are referred by the literal translation of , Haiying. () On 27 September 2008,
Liu Boming wore one of the Orlan suits in order to assist
Zhai Zhigang during the space walk portion of
Shenzhou 7 mission. In June 2009, the latest computerized Orlan-MK version was tested during a five-hour spacewalk to install new equipment on the International Space Station. The new suit's main improvement is the replacement of the radio-telemetry equipment in the Portable Life Support System backpack which contains a mini-computer. This computer processes data from the spacesuit's various systems and provides a malfunction warning. It then outlines a contingency plan which is displayed on an LCD screen on the right chest part of the spacesuit. In September 2020, it was announced that Zvezda had started manufacturing space suits for Indian astronauts, part of the
Gaganyaan crewed mission, four of which had begun training at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Russia in 2019. == Design ==