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More NASA Officials Say Shuttle Not Safe

 
 
Reply Sat 1 Jul, 2006 09:36 am
What I find astonishing is the statement by the NASA Manager. If the foam breaks off of the shuttle, the crew will discover it after lift off. The crew then can take refuged in the space station until a second shuttle can be sent to rescue them. Any guarantee the foam won't fall off the second shuttle? Could we have two shuttle crews taking refuge in the space station until a Russian shuttle can rescue all of them?---BBB

More NASA Officials Say Shuttle Not Safe
Agency Rejects Request For Safety Documents
June 30, 2006

Key NASA officials who oversee the agency said they don't believe the shuttle is safe for launch, according to a Local 6 News report.

E-mails sent to NASA's administrator from the agency's inspector general's office obtained by the Orlando Sentinel said they didn't believe shuttle Discovery should launch without more work to prevent foam insulation from breaking off the external fuel tank.

NASA already had a "no go" for flight from the agency's top safety official and chief engineer. However, NASA managers went ahead and gave the "go for launch" for Saturday.

Meanwhile, NASA declined Thursday to release documents from a critical safety meeting where managers debated whether to go forward with the shuttle launch.

Local 6 News partner Florida Today and The Associated Press asked the agency to release records from the Flight Readiness Review meetings under the Freedom of Information Act. The records outline the safety issues raised during the June 16-17 meetings at Kennedy Space Center.

'The question that we have at this point is that last year, NASA was able to release the documents that were used during their flight readiness review -- which is the meeting where the decision is made to go forward with launch," Florida Today's John Kelly said. "This year they have decided in the face of the same request to deny release of the records."

The newspaper immediately appealed the decision to NASA Administrator Mike Griffin. AP is assessing the situation.

Liftoff is scheduled for 3:49 p.m. Saturday.
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
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Reply Mon 3 Jul, 2006 09:38 am
BBB
It would be criminal negligence and disregard of crew safety by NASA to launch the shuttle. A new large crack in the fuel tank was discovered today. They also discovered pieces of the foam on the ground that fell during the shut down and start up overnight. The current shuttle flight should be cancelled. All shuttles should be grounded. They are too old with too many problems to be operational. That would leave only the Russians to supply and rotate the crew of the space station.

BBB
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
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Reply Mon 3 Jul, 2006 09:55 am
Shuttle foam crack puts launch in doubt
Shuttle foam crack puts launch in doubt
By MIKE SCHNEIDER, Associated Press Writer
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.

Inspectors found a 5-inch-long crack in the foam insulation covering the shuttle Discovery's external fuel tank, and NASA managers were deciding Monday whether to call off the scheduled Fourth of July launch.

The crack was spotted during an overnight inspection. NASA had scrubbed launch plans Saturday and Sunday because of poor weather and had removed fuel from the tank.

NASA found the crack, which was an eighth- to quarter-inch wide, in the foam on a bracket about two-thirds of the way up on the side of the external fuel tank facing the orbiter. That location would make it easy to hit the shuttle if a piece of foam came off. Officials were trying to determine whether it could be fixed for a Tuesday liftoff.

"We don't know if it's a problem or not," NASA spokesman George Diller said Monday.

Marion LaNasa Jr., a spokesman for Lockheed Martin Space Systems Co., which makes the tank, said he didn't know if foam had ever fallen from that area during previous launches.

If NASA decides to go ahead with the launch Tuesday, it would be the first manned launch by the United States on the nation's birthday, and only the second liftoff of a space shuttle since the 2003 Columbia disaster.

Concerns about cracks in the fuel tank's foam insulation have dogged the program since Columbia exploded over Texas on Feb. 1, 2003. A chunk of flyaway foam had damaged Columbia's wing during liftoff, allowing superheated gas to penetrate the shuttle when it re-entered the atmosphere.

NASA tried to fix the problem before trying another launch, but more foam broke off Discovery's redesigned tank last July, barely missing the shuttle.

NASA Administrator Michael Griffin decided the shuttle should go into orbit despite the concerns of two top agency managers who wanted additional repairs to the foam insulation.

The mission for Discovery's crew this time is to test shuttle-inspection techniques, deliver supplies to the international space station and drop off German astronaut Thomas Reiter for a six-month stay.

The weather forecast for a Tuesday liftoff was better than it was on Sunday or Monday, with a 40 percent chance that storms at launch time would prevent liftoff, said U.S. Air Force 1st Lt. Kaleb Nordgren, a shuttle weather forecaster. NASA planned to make launch attempts on Tuesday and on Wednesday if necessary.
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