NASA Schedules Space Walks to Fix ISS Pumps; Orbital Sciences Launch Delayed
The ISS has been operating at partial capacity after a coolant pump malfunctioned last week. NASA has now announced the repair mission: "NASA currently plans for two Expedition 38 astronauts to venture outside the space station Dec. 21, 23, and 25. NASA astronauts Rick Mastracchio and Mike Hopkins will remove a pump module that has a failed valve. They will replace it with an existing spare that is stored on an external stowage platform. The pump is associated with one of the station's two external cooling loops, which circulate ammonia outside the station to keep both internal and external equipment cool. Each of the three spacewalks will begin at 7:10 a.m. and is scheduled to last six and a half hours. NASA TV coverage will begin at 6:15 a.m."
NASA TV will be airing a preview of the space walks at 3 p.m. EST. As a result of the coolant pump malfunction and the repairs, NASA has also delayed the launch of Orbital Sciences' cargo resupply mission until at least mid-January.
"Roger your plan to go EVA and replace Alpha-Echo three-five unit prior to failure."
How dangerous is a space walk compared to, for example, a 100m depth scuba dive?
i.e.: If it wasn't so very expensive to send things up there, could space walking become a "leisure" activity?
I heard about this on NPR this morning. The astronauts were saying they think they can finish it in two space walks instead of three and hopefully have the day off on Christmas.
Some people die at 25 and aren't buried until 75. -Benjamin Franklin
This is *not* the first time they've had issues with one of these pumps. Apparently they are failing much faster than expected so the spares already in orbit are running very low.
Perhaps the Orbital Sciences launch is being delayed to add some additional pumps to its cargo.
I wonder what the problem is..
Pumps made by the lowest cost bidder? :-)
Also, isn't there a Canadian robot up there that is suppose to do this stuff?
It gets Christmas and Boxing Day off. :-)
The first was a mechanical pump failure. They stopped using it before it tore itself apart. In this case it's a valve that controls the ammonia flow into the boilers. Mechanically it seems fine. It's actually controlling just fine except that it believes the ammonia is offset by about 30 degrees. In other words, the current flow is what the flow should be if the ammonia were actually 30 degrees warmer or cooler (forget which) it is.
Unlike the previous failure with no shuttle it will never make it back to determine what the issue really is and they'll just toss it into the atmosphere.
Someone who needs a mechanic to do a water pump should not be questioning the competence of those working in space.
They could put it on Dragon CRS 3.
Bruce Perens.
They should better use some other coolant that is not as toxic as ammonia so heat exchangers are not needed. I propose propylenglycol or, better, Russian Vodka. Then, all the radiator panels outside would be fully passive and require no external pumps.
No, they can't. The dragon doesn't even come close to having the capacity needed to bring something like this down. I'm a fan of SpaceX but to think it's a drip in replacement for everything is naive.