NASA Selects Vibration Test Capability Contractor

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Aug. 20, 2007

Beth Dickey/Melissa Mathews
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-2087/1272
beth.dickey-1@xxxxxxxx, melissa.mathews-1@xxxxxxxx

Sallie Keith
Glenn Research Center, Cleveland
216-433-5795
sallie.keith@xxxxxxxx

CONTRACT RELEASE: C07-37

NASA SELECTS VIBRATION TEST CAPABILITY CONTRACTOR

WASHINGTON - NASA has selected Benham Constructors LLC of Oklahoma 
City to receive a contract to design, build and commission a 
vibration and acoustic test capability that will support development 
of the Orion crew exploration vehicle. Orion will carry astronauts to 
the International Space Station and back to the moon in the next 
decade.

The capability will be developed in the Space Power Facility at Plum 
Brook Station, Sandusky, Ohio, which is operated by NASA's Glenn 
Research Center in Cleveland. This procurement specifically addresses 
the vibration and acoustic capability that will supplement the test 
capabilities currently existing at the Space Power Facility.

The contract is valued at $51.4 million. Benham Constructors LLC will 
provide all labor and materials to construct the vibration and 
acoustic test capability, which will include a mechanical vibration 
facility, a reverberant acoustic test facility and a high-speed data 
acquisition system. 

NASA selected Benham Constructors LLC for the cost-plus-incentive fee 
contract on a competitive basis. The design, build and commission 
portion of the contract has an 18-month period of performance with an 
additional six-month period of technical support. 

The environmental tests will demonstrate the ability of Orion hardware 
to meet specified performance requirements in simulated conditions, 
such as those experienced during launch, in orbit and during 
re-entry. Thermal, acoustic, mechanical vibration and electromagnetic 
compatibility tests will be conducted during Orion qualification. The 
launch abort system, crew module, service module and spacecraft 
adapter will be tested. 

The Space Power Facility contains the world's largest thermal vacuum 
chamber, which measures 100 feet in diameter by 122 feet high. The 
facility can simulate in-space conditions, such as low vacuum 
environments and temperature extremes. 

The new test capability at the Space Power Facility also will support 
future NASA Constellation Program testing. The Constellation Program 
is developing spacecraft and other systems to support NASA's 
exploration missions to the moon, Mars and other destinations in the 
solar system.

For information about NASA's Constellation Program, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/constellation

For more information about Glenn's Space Power Facility, visit:

http://facilities.grc.nasa.gov/spf/

	
-end-



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