NASA'S Space Shuttle Processing Status Report: S06-014

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April 28, 2006

Katherine Trinidad
Headquarters, Washington
(202) 358-7239

Jessica Rye 
Kennedy Space Center, Fla. 
(321) 867-2468 

STATUS REPORT: S06-014

NASA'S SPACE SHUTTLE PROCESSING STATUS REPORT: S06-014

NASA's space shuttle fleet is housed and processed at Kennedy Space 
Center, Fla.

Mission: STS-121 - 18th ISS Flight (ULF1.1) - Multi-Purpose Logistics 
Module
Vehicle: Discovery (OV-103)
Location: Orbiter Processing Facility Bay 3
Launch Date: Launch Planning Window July 1-19, 2006
Launch Pad: 39B
Crew: Lindsey, Kelly, Sellers, Fossum, Nowak, Wilson and Reiter
Inclination/Orbit Altitude: 51.6 degrees/122 nautical miles

Technicians continue closing out areas of Discovery before it is moved 
to the Vehicle Assembly Building on May 12. The payload bay doors 
were closed on Wednesday for the final time prior to flight. 

Last week, technicians removed the space shuttle main engine in 
position No. 2 and replaced it with a new one. Engine leak checks 
were successfully completed on Tuesday. Interface verification tests 
were completed for sensors No. 1 and 2 on the new orbiter boom sensor 
system. 

Mission: STS-115 - 19th ISS Flight (12A) - P3/P4 Solar Arrays
Vehicle: Atlantis (OV-104)
Location: Orbiter Processing Facility Bay 1
Launch Date: No earlier than Aug. 28, 2006
Launch Pad: 39B
Crew: Jett, Ferguson, Tanner, Burbank, MacLean and Stefanyshyn-Piper
Inclination/Orbit Altitude: 51.6 degrees/122 nautical miles

Technicians are performing powered-up system testing on Atlantis for 
its mission to the International Space Station. Technicians continue 
installing tires on the shuttle's main landing gear. 

Work continues on the alignment of the manipulator positioning 
mechanisms. The positioning mechanisms are the pedestals that hold 
the orbiter boom sensor system in place in the payload bay while the 
boom is not in use. Thermal protection system tile, blanket and gap 
filler work is ongoing. 

Endeavour (OV-105)

Powered-up system testing continues on Endeavour in Orbiter Processing 
Facility Bay 2 following an extensive modification period. 
Technicians completed ammonia system leak and functional testing on 
Wednesday and Thursday. 

Technicians worked on external airlock fluid line connections late 
last week and will begin leak checks today. 

External Tank  

In the Vehicle Assembly Building, final thermal protection system foam 
application was completed last week on the aft end of the tank 
following the change-out of the four liquid hydrogen engine cut-off 
sensors. On Monday, crane operators lifted the tank from a horizontal 
position on the transporter and placed it between the twin solid 
rocket boosters already stacked in High Bay 3 of the Vehicle Assembly 
Building. 

The Space Shuttle Program management decided Thursday to fly the 
ice/frost ramps in their current configuration. The rationale for 
doing so was based on several factors. The past ramp performance, 
although not desirable, was acceptable. Proposed ramp design changes 
could introduce more uncertainty instead of reducing the known risk. 
New cameras will allow us better insight into the current ramps 
performance which will help in the redesign effort. Flying the 
current ice/frost ramps limits the design changes on the tank, which 
has already undergone a significant redesign with the removal of the 
protuberance air load (PAL) ramp. Shuttle engineers will have a 
better environment to gather data by flying with only one aerodynamic 
change to the tank. 

For previous space shuttle processing status reports, visit: 

www.nasa.gov/shuttle 

	
-end-



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