Space Station Astronauts Tackle Third Spacewalk to Fix Cooling System

Space Station Astronauts Tackle Third Spacewalk to Fix Cooling System
NASA astronaut Tracy Caldwell Dyson is seen through the helmet camera of crewmate Douglas Wheelock during the third repair spacewalk to fix the space station's ailing cooling system on Aug. 16, 2010. (Image credit: NASA TV)

This story was updated at 8:46 a.m. ET.

Two spacewalking astronauts ventured outside the International Space Station Monday on another big repair job to install a vital new pump and restore their ailing cooling system back to full strength for the first time in two weeks.

The space station's cooling system has been running at half strength since July 31, when an electrical short shut down one of two pumps that move liquid ammonia through the system. The failure forced astronauts to turn off some experiments and systems, as well as leave others without backups, in order to prevent the station from overheating.

Monday's spacewalk began at 6:20 a.m. EDT (1020 GMT), about 35 minutes ahead of time, NASA spokesperson Rob Navias said during televised commentary.

The astronauts swiftly tackled their first chore: removing the new pump from a spare parts platform on the station's exterior.

"You know, when you're on the [spare parts platform] looking down at the Earth like this, it's like extreme hang gliding," Caldwell Dyson said.

"Come on now, bolt," Wheelock said as he freed the stuck bolt. "Turning! Sweet!"

Space station managers hope Wheelock and Caldwell Dyson will be able to completely hook up the new pump during Monday's spacewalk. The astronauts removed the faulty ammonia pump over two previous spacewalks (on Aug. 7 and Aug. 11) and are expected to install to perform a fourth spacewalk to move the disabled pump to its final storage location.

Mike Suffredini, NASA's space station program manager, said Monday's spacewalk — or extravehicular activity in NASA parlance — would go as long as possible to complete as much work as possible.

"The EVA will be as long as the consumables will allow," Suffredini said last week. "We'll take all the time we can get because we won't be done."

There are two main cooling system loops — Loop A and Loop B. The failed pump is in Loop A, while the other cooling loop remains operational. It was delivered to the space station in 2002, but wasn't activated until 2006.

NASA is broadcasting the International Space Station spacewalk repair on NASA TV. Click here for space station mission updates and SPACE.com's NASA TV feed.

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