Discovery Shuttle Astronauts Practice for April Launch
Discovery's astronauts boarded their spaceship at Kennedy
Space Center's Launch Pad 39A Friday as NASA stepped through a practice
countdown for the planned April 5 launch of the first of only four remaining
International Space Station assembly-and-outfitting missions before shuttle
fleet retirement late this year.
Mission commander Alan Poindexter led a crew of seven out of the Operations
& Checkout Building in the KSC Industrial Area earlier this morning and all
boarded NASA's silver "Astro-Van" for a 30-minute
trip out to the pad. The astronauts had donned full-pressure launch-and-entry
suits prior to departure for a launch-day
dress rehearsal.
With 150 to 200 engineers staffing Firing Room 4 of the Launch Control Center,
the astronauts and the launch team are marching through all the same countdown
preparations they will do on April 5, with one notable exception: the shuttle's
15-story external tank is not fueled with more than a half-million-gallons of supercold liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen.
The crew includes pilot James Dutton and five mission specialists: Clay
Anderson, Rick Mastracchio, Dorothy Metcalf-Lindenburger, Stephanie Wilson and Naoko Yamazaki of Japan
Aerospace Exploration Agency.
Dutton, Metcalf-Lindenburger and Yamazaki all will be
making their first flight
into space. Wilson is a veteran shuttle robot arm operator. Mastracchio is a veteran spacewalker and Anderson served a
long-duration tour on the station his first flight.
Bit of trivia: Anderson is the only astronaut ever to read down from space the
names of every town and hamlet in his home state of Nebraska.
Another: The commander's father, John Poindexter, was National Security Advisor
in the Reagan Administration. First in his class in the U.S. Naval Academy in
1958, John Poindexter graduated with former astronaut Bruce McCandless.
McCandless is the subject in one of the most iconic
pictures in the 30-year history
of the shuttle program, the astronaut flying the Manned Maneuvering Unit
against the blackness of space.
The two-day practice countdown picked up early Thursday and concluded at 11
a.m. with a simulated main engine shutdown at T-Minus 4 seconds.
The astronauts then performed an emergency drill. They practiced a rapid egress
from the vehicle, cross the Orbiter Access Arm on the 195-foot level of the
launch tower and then climb into the metal baskets that would whisk them down a
1,200-foot slide-wire in an emergency.
They did not, however, hit the metal bar that would send their baskets scooting
down the slidewire at a top speed of about 55 mph to
an emergency bunker on the western perimeter of the pad area.
The Terminal Countdown Demonstration Test is the last major training exercise
at KSC for shuttle crews prior to launch.
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