CAPE CANAVERAL - Shuttle
Discovery is headed back to the Vehicle
Assembly Building,
where a new set of booster rockets and external fuel tank are waiting.
The crawler-transporter
moved its first few inches on the pad at 6:44 a.m., beginning a journey that
will last at least six-and-a-half hours.
Rollback was to start around 2 a.m., but delays finalizing engineering
paperwork held up those plans.
In the VAB over the next
couple of weeks, Discovery will be mated with a new fuel tank outfitted with a
heater designed to prevent ice from forming.
Ice and insulating foam,
like the piece that caused a deadly breach in Columbia's wing, are the most common sources
of dangerous debris that can come off the tank and boosters during launch.
Tests reveal that, without
the new heater, ice buildup on a pipeline outside the tank could be a problem
as it is filled with supercold rocket propellants.
On Wednesday, workers
tested Discovery's auxiliary power units, which run the hydraulic system that
helps steer the orbiter. The test showed no signs of problems, KSC officials
said.
Inspections of the ship's
landing-gear also found no problems. A small crack on sister ship Atlantis
prompted the checkup.
Unlike Atlantis,
"inspections at this point show there are no indications of any cracks in
that area," NASA spokeswoman Jessica Rye said.
Discovery rolled out to pad
39B on April 6. If all goes as planned, the shuttle will roll out to the pad
again in mid-June. NASA officials hope it will fly during a launch window that
opens July 13.
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Fixing NASA: Complete Coverage of Space Shuttle Return to Flight