Gears on Space Shuttle's Brakes Were Installed Backward
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Tuesday, March 23, 2004
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. To prevent another catastrophe, NASA
will replace braking mechanisms on all its space shuttles after
discovering some of the gears were installed backward.
Shuttle program manager Bill Parsons said Monday he had launched
an investigation into why the rudder speed brake gears, all old
original parts in the shuttle tails, were never inspected in more
than two decades of flight. If one of the improperly installed
gears had been in a high-stress position, it probably would have
led to the destruction of the spacecraft at touchdown, he said.
"Bottom line is, it was not good," Parsons said.
The rudder speed brake is used to guide and slow the shuttle as
it comes in for a landing. If even one of the four sets of gears
that operate the mechanism jams, then the spacecraft could not land
safely.
As it turns out, the reversed gears found recently in Discovery
were in the least stress-prone position and never failed. But one
of the replacement gears, a spare set that was also installed
backward, would have ended up in a much more high-stress location
in the tail.
All the rudder speed brake gears in NASA's inventory, dating as
far back as the 1970s, are being X-rayed to see whether they were
properly built, and to look for rust and microcracks, already
spotted on some gears.
Parsons said new or refurbished gears should be installed in
time for shuttle flights to resume next March, after a two-year
grounding following the Columbia tragedy. The extra work might put
NASA a week or two behind, but "I think we'll be able to make that
up," he said.
Discovery will fly first because the work is further along.
Atlantis must be ready to quickly go to the Discovery crew's rescue
at the international space station, however, if need be during an
emergency.
The installation problem surfaced late last year and prompted
NASA to delay the next shuttle flight from fall 2004 to spring
2005.
"Because of the way these gears go together, you can actually
make a mistake and put them in incorrectly, and there was not a
good process back in the timeframe" to catch mistakes, Parsons
said.
He said the maker of the rudder speed brake mechanisms, Hamilton
Sundstrand in Rockford, Ill., now had better quality control.
Call the Plumber
At the same time, NASA is inspecting the plumbing in each of its
three remaining shuttles. The hoses in question are also original
parts, and some are starting to leak, Parsons said.
"As we deal with aging vehicle kind of issues, we will find
other things along these lines as well, I'm sure," he said.
Parsons said engineers were making good progress on the
inspection booms and wing-repair kits that will be required on all
future shuttle flights.
Columbia was destroyed and its seven astronauts were killed
during re-entry last year because of a hole in the left wing caused
by a piece of insulating foam that broke free at liftoff.
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