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Discoverys Main Tank Arrives At The Cape

The Pegasus barge carrying space shuttle external tank ET-119 approaches Port Canaveral in Florida just a few hours before docking at nearby Kennedy Space Center. Credit: NASA/KSC
by Staff Writers
Cape Canaveral FL (SPX) March 1, 2006
Shuttle Discovery's main fuel tank arrived by barge at NASA's Kennedy Space Center on Wednesday afternoon, after leaving its assembly facility in Michoud, La., last Saturday.

NASA officials said at a briefing Tuesday they are looking tentatively at a liftoff of Discovery on May 10, although engineers are continuing to test shuttle components - particularly the foam insulation on Tank ET-119, which remains a concern.

During the briefing, shuttle program manager Wayne Hale reviewed the steps NASA has taken to make the vehicle's orange external fuel tank safe to fly on the next return-to-flight mission. These included eliminating the Protuberance Air Load ramp, where a large piece of foam came loose during Discovery's launch last July.

"The thing that is going to pace getting Discovery off the ground is not work at (Kennedy)," Hale said, "but it is the engineering analysis and tests that go toward proving that this launch vehicle is safe to fly."

Launch director Michael Leinbach said the team at the space center was eager to receive the shuttle's fuel tank. "The two solid rocket boosters are fully mated and are going through closeouts now, so the boosters are going to be ready for the tank after it goes through standalone processing in the Vehicle Assembly Building," he said. "We're just really glad to get another piece of flight hardware here, and we'll be one step closer to launch."

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Foam Issues Still Dog Shuttle Launch
Cape Canaveral FL (SPX) Feb 28, 2006
Potential problems with the insulating foam covering the main fuel tank continue to occupy a great deal of time for and attention by NASA�s space shuttle mission managers enough so that the orbiter�s prospects for launch during its window in May remain uncertain.







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