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NASA Extends Thiokol Shuttle Booster Contract Through May 2007

The Shuttle's Reusable Solid Rocket Motor (RSRM) is the largest solid motor ever flown and the first designed for reuse. At burnout the shuttle has reached an altitude of 24 nautical miles and a velocity of more than 3,000 mph. After the propellant is depleted, the Solid Rocket Boosters, which house the motors, separate from the shuttle's orbiter and land in the ocean to be recovered and disassembled with the motors returned to Thiokol. At Thiokol, the cases are cleaned, inspected and reassembled for propellant casting, and a new nozzle and igniter are installed. The motor's steel case components can be used as many as 20 times.

Huntsville - Jul 09, 2002
NASA has extended to May 2007 its six-and-a-half-year $2.4 billion contract with ATK Thiokol Propulsion in Brigham City, Utah, for the production and refurbishment of 70 Reusable Solid Rocket Motors for the Space Shuttle Program.

Under the modified contract, Thiokol will produce and refurbish 35 Reusable Solid Rocket Motor flight sets (70 motors) and three flight support motors. The modification adds $429 million to the contract.

The contract, issued in October 1998, is the sixth in a series of contracts for the design, development, production and refurbishment of Solid Rocket Motors for the Space Shuttle Program and represents a continuing relationship between NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., and Thiokol. Marshall is home to the Space Shuttle's Reusable Solid Rocket Motor Project Office.

At launch, the three Space Shuttle Main Engines and the two Reusable Solid Rocket Motors provide enough thrust to lift the 4.5-million-pound shuttle vehicle -- the propellant weighs 3.5 million pounds -- into orbit.

The Shuttle's Reusable Solid Rocket Motor (RSRM) is the largest solid motor ever flown and the first designed for reuse. Each motor consists of four segments lined with 1.1 million pounds of solid fuel propellant. The forward segment holds an igniter.

Two motors, each producing an average thrust of 2.6 million pounds during their 124-second burn, are used on each space shuttle flight. At burnout the shuttle has reached an altitude of 24 nautical miles and a velocity of more than 3,000 mph. After the propellant is depleted, the Solid Rocket Boosters, which house the motors, separate from the shuttle's orbiter and land in the ocean.

The Solid Rocket Boosters are recovered and disassembled and the motors are returned to Thiokol. At Thiokol, the cases are cleaned, inspected and reassembled for propellant casting, and a new nozzle and igniter are installed. The motor's steel case components can be used as many as 20 times.

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Stennis Fires Up SMEs As Shuttle RTF Gathers Steam
Stennis Space Center MS (SPX) Jul 21, 2004
On July 16, engineers at NASA's Stennis Space Center in Mississippi successfully tested one of the Main Engines that will carry the next Space Shuttle into orbit. The engine will be shipped to NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida for installation on Space Shuttle Discovery, the next Shuttle slated for flight. The Return to Flight mission, designated STS-114, will launch no earlier than next March to the International Space Station.







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