Stuck Knob Puts Shuttle Atlantis in Tight Spot

Stuck Knob Puts Shuttle Atlantis in Tight Spot
Workers prepare to remove the hoist from Atlantis that was used to separate it from the Shuttle Carrier Aircraft, or SCA, which returned it to Kennedy from California on June 3, 2009 after a ferry flight that ended its STS-125 mission to the Hubble Space Telescope. (Image credit: NASA/Jack Pfaller.)

CAPE CANAVERAL - NASA nextweek will try to free a knob stuck between the dashboard and a cockpit windowon shuttle Atlantis - a problem that some fear could trigger lengthy launchdelays or even an early retirement for the orbiter.

But NASA shuttle programofficials effectively are saying, "Not so fast."

"I think it's tooearly to know whether it's a big deal or not," said Kyle Herring, aspokesman for NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston.

"This is just kind ofa new issue, and there's a lot of creativity, I'd say, that engineers have, andthey'll probably exhaust every option that they have to try to free it,"he said. "It's a little premature to say that an orbiter is finishedflying because of this."

Here's the situation:

A notched rotary knob froma lighting bracket somehow got wedged between the orbiter's cockpit instrumentpanel and one of six forward windows during NASA's fifth and finalHubble Space Telescope mission in May. The knob is designed to mount a worklight to a bracket.

Flying "as-is" isnot an option. NASA cannot adequately evaluate the structural integrity of thewindow with the knob wedged against it.

Dry ice was applied to itin an attempt to shrink the knob enough to retrieve it. That didn't work, soengineers are examining options that include drilling or cutting it out."Your primary goal is not to damage the window," Herring said.

"There may be otherways to get around changing it out," he said. "But until they getthere, it's hard to tell how the schedule will play out. So whether that wouldbe an impact to a November flight is" to be determined.

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Aerospace Journalist

Todd Halvoron is a veteran aerospace journalist based in Titusville, Florida who covered NASA and the U.S. space program for 27 years with Florida Today. His coverage for Florida Today also appeared in USA Today, Space.com and 80 other newspapers across the United States. Todd earned a bachelor's degree in English literature, journalism and fiction from the University of Cincinnati and also served as Florida Today's Kennedy Space Center Bureau Chief during his tenure at Florida Today. Halvorson has been an independent aerospace journalist since 2013.