Repairs push shuttle launch to late Feb.
Cape Canaveral, Fla. (UPI) Jan 7, 2011 Ongoing investigations and repair of cracks on the fuel tank of the space shuttle Discovery will push a possible launch to late February, NASA officials said. Workers at Kennedy Space Center in Florida are reinforcing 32 structural support beams, called stringers, on the tank's midsection, Florida Today reported Friday. An additional 63 stringers may get similar support, but shuttle program managers say they won't make that decision until engineers confirm the changes won't produce any unintended consequences. NASA says the shuttle won't be ready in time for the next available launch window of Feb. 3-10, and the next opportunity would be Feb. 27 to March 6. "That first window in February is no longer available based on the amount of work that's left to be done and testing they would like to complete," said Kyle Herring, a shuttle program spokesman at Johnson Space Center in Houston. Discovery's 11-day mission to deliver equipment to the International Space Station is one of two or three planned this year before the shuttle fleet is retired. Endeavour is scheduled to fly April 1, and if additional funding is found, Atlantis would fly the final mission, possibly in late June.
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Shuttles' successes, failures discussed Orlando, Fla. (UPI) Jan 6, 2011 The space shuttle enabled scientific discovery and expanded human access to space, but failed to make spaceflight routine and inexpensive, space experts say. That combination of success and a failed, unrealistic promise was discussed by a panel of experts examining the shuttle's legacy as it enters a final year of missions near the 30th anniversary of the first launch, Florida Today rep ... read more |
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