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Cape Canaveral FL (SPX) Sep 06, 2006 During this morning's status briefing from Kennedy Space Center in Florida, Space Shuttle Program Director Wayne Hale said that the mission management team had a really good review. "We as a management team need to meet everyday on a regular schedule to make sure we have properly reviewed the entire launch system." Leroy Cain, Launch Integration Manager said, "We had a good weather briefing, we are working no issues and the vehicle is in really good shape." "The countdown is going extremely well, we are not tracking any problems," said Shuttle Launch Director Mike Leinbach. "We will just deal with the weather and if we get the RSS back before the weather that's just fine or we'll just wait for it to pass." "We are not tracking any issues on the vehicle or the ground side to prevent us from tanking tomorrow." Launch Weather Officer Kathy Winters reported that afternoon thunderstorms are expected today. "We are a little more concerned about launch day then we were yesterday. It is a little more moist and so we are going to bump up our numbers from 10% to a 30% chance of KSC weather prohibiting launch." The forecast for a 24 to 48 hour period if the launch is delayed remains the same at a 30% chance of weather violation. This afternoon at Launch Pad 39B, the rotating service structure will move away from the shuttle and Atlantis will stand ready for liftoff. The countdown officially began at 8 a.m. Sunday, at the T-43 hour mark, which includes over 30 hours of built-in hold time prior to a targeted 12:29 p.m. launch on Wednesday. The launch time is the middle point in the launch window that extends for 10 minutes. Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Related Links Shuttle and Stations at NASA Space Shuttle News at Space-Travel.Com Space Shuttle News at Space-Travel.Com
![]() ![]() With the return of the Space Shuttle Discovery in July from its crucial safety redesign flight, leading Experimental Mechanics Journal Strain examines the causes of the crash involving the space shuttle Columbia in 2003. |
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