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Pavel Vladimirovich Vinogradov

 Total EVAs:  7
 Total EVA time:  38h 30m

No. Date Together with Time Main tasks and notes
 1  22.08.1997  A. Soloviyov  3h 16m
Inspection of Spektr, repairing of cables
 2  20.10.1997  A. Soloviyov  6h 38m
Replace of Spektr/Mir hatch
 3  03.11.1997  A. Soloviyov  6h 04m
Demounting Kristall solar cell on Kvant1 module
 4  06.11.1997  A. Soloviyov  6h 17m
Installation new solar cell on Kvant1 module
 5  08.01.1998  A. Soloviyov  3h 06m
Recovery of experiments, inspection hatch Kvant2
 6  01.06.2006  J. Williams  6h 31m
Installing a new hydrogen vent valve on the hull of the Zvezda Service Module to bypass a similar valve that is clogged.
 7  19.04.2013  R. Romanenko  6h 38m
They installed the Obstanovka plasma wave experiment. They then removed a container from the Russian experiment Biorisk.

Russia and the U.S. define EVA differently. Russian cosmonauts are said to perform EVA any time they are in vacuum in a space suit. A U.S. astronaut must have at least his head outside his spacecraft before he is said to perform an EVA.
In this table, we apply the Russian definition to Russian EVAs, and the U.S. definition to U.S.EVAs.