Space shuttles may fly till 2040
NASA's
announcement that
its fleet of space shuttles have been grounded due to wiring problems comes just shortly
after Dana Rohrabacher, Chairman of the US House of Representatives Science Committee,
stated that "NASA officials were planning to upgrade and operate a government-owned
Space Shuttle for another 40 years."
A US General Accounting Office report says the shuttle's prototype replacement,
the X-33, will not meet its "original cost, schedule, and performance
objectives".
The current shuttles, operated by the US Government, are supposed to be replaced
by cheaper, commercial space planes based on the X-33, starting in 2006. NASA
hope this
will cut the cost of delivering objects to space from $44,000 per kilogram (2.2 pounds)
using the Space Shuttle to $2,200.
The X-33 project is primarily for sub orbital
flights. The X-34 will test engines
and structures and the X-37 will be used for final space flight
tests.
Plan "is not working"
However, Mr.
Rohrabacher said: "The GAO's report confirms what we've
suspected for some time: that this administration's approach to developing next-generation
reusable launch vehicles (RLV) isn't working.
"Instead of building on the Defense Department's successful strategy of
'build a little, test a little', the administration put all its technology eggs in one
fragile basket and then told it to start flying."
He blamed President Bill Clinton for moving the RLV development from the US
Defense Department, "which had successfully developed the DC-X", to NASA. The
DC-X was later abandoned.
He also said that NASA's
efforts were then under funded
"by paying for only
one copy of one experimental design that was supposed to knock down all the technology
barriers to building a highly-challenging, single-stage-to-orbit
RLV."
Mr. Rohrabacher pointed out that no successful X-program has involved only one
aircraft design but instead relied on early and frequent flights of multiple copies of
competing designs which incrementally "expand the envelope."
The trouble with the X-33 means the shuttle program
may fly for longer, but
the shuttles have their own immediate difficulties to overcome.
Short circuits
Wiring problems mean they will not carry out further missions until mid-October
at the earliest, NASA said on Saturday. Inspectors are now painstakingly checking the
problematic wiring on each orbiter.
The last shuttle to fly was Columbia in July and it came within one
short-circuit of a first-ever, emergency abort. The close call resulted from power
failures to two of the computers controlling Columbia's three main engines.
![[ image: The Columbia launch in July encountered numerous delays]](_440006_launch1ap300.jpg) |
| The Columbia launch in July encountered numerous delays |
That led to electrical inspections on the entire shuttle fleet, and technicians
have discovered enough problems, including faulty insulation and frayed wires, that
mission managers have decided not to schedule any more flights until the work is complete.
NASA said damage had been found inside each orbiter, something unexpected until
Columbia's troublesome lift-off. So far, inspectors have found 38 electrical defects on
shuttle Endeavour and 26 aboard shuttle Discovery. Comprehensive inspections of Columbia,
the oldest shuttle in the fleet, and Atlantis will begin later this month.
![[ image: Fuel leaks added to the problems caused by faulty wiring]](_440006_nozzle150.jpg) |
| Fuel leaks added to the problems caused by faulty wiring |
"Our focus is to be absolutely certain that we do our very best to find,
fix and prevent any recurrence of this problem," said Ron
Dittemore, NASA's shuttle program
manager.
NASA said many of the electrical defects were caused over the years as
technicians worked inside the shuttles, often stepping on wires or inadvertently nicking
them.
The US space agency said it was revising service procedures in light of the
discoveries.