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Jacques van Oene
August 2nd 05, 04:10 AM
Monday, August 1, 2005 - 7 p.m. CDT
Mission Control Center, Houston, Texas

STS-114 MCC Status Report #13

STS-114 mission managers Monday gave the go-ahead for astronauts to remove
two protruding gap fillers in Discovery's heat shield during a Wednesday
space walk. Soichi Noguchi and Steve Robinson will attempt to simply pull
the thin fabric fillers from between tiles in the forward area of the
orbiter's underside. If the pull method is unsuccessful, the two will have
tools to cut the material flush with the surface.

Spacewalk experts presented a plan to mission managers in Monday's Mission
Management Team meeting. Space Shuttle Deputy Program Manager Wayne Hale, in
a Monday afternoon briefing, said that with the level of uncertainty
involved in flying a reentry with protruding gap fillers it was an easy
decision to move ahead with a well-understood process for removing them.

Early Monday, Robinson and Noguchi replaced a 600-pound gyroscope on the
International Space Station, leaving the orbiting laboratory with a complete
functional set of four. Called control moment gyros, or CMGs, the 600-pound
devices maintain the Station's orientation in space, the way it is pointed
and which part faces the Earth as it orbits the planet.

The 7-hour, 14-minute spacewalk began at 3:42 a.m CDT. After leaving the
Discovery airlock, Noguchi and Robinson made their way hand-over-hand to the
Station's Z1 Truss, atop the Unity Node where the four CMGs are housed.
There Noguchi, of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, attached himself
to a foot platform at the end of the Station's Canadarm2, operated by
Discovery Pilot Jim Kelly and Mission Specialist Wendy Lawrence.

Coached and monitored by Mission Specialist Andy Thomas on Discovery's aft
flight deck, the spacewalkers removed CMG-1, which had failed in June 2002.
Noguchi held it as the arm took him back to the rear of Discovery's cargo
bay, where he and Robinson, who had moved back on his own, temporarily
stowed it. They then took the new CMG from its cradle, and Noguchi held it
while the arm moved him back to the Z1 Truss.

There he and Robinson installed it in the space vacated by the failed
device. That completed, flight controllers began the hours-long process of
checking out the new CMG-1 and spinning it up to its 6,600 rpm operating
speed.

On the mission's first spacewalk on Saturday, Noguchi and Robinson had
rerouted CMG-2's power supply. A faulty circuit breaker had interrupted that
power supply in March. The two spacewalks leave the Station with four
functioning CMG's. The station can hold its attitude on two, but more will
be required as it grows.

Discovery Commander Eileen Collins and Mission Specialist Charlie Camarda,
along with the Station's Commander Sergei Krikalev and NASA Science Officer
John Phillips, worked Monday on transferring cargo to and from the Station.
The 3,768 pounds of up-bound cargo from the Multi-Purpose Logistics Module
Raffaello, which came to the Station in Discovery's cargo bay and then was
attached to a docking port on the Unity Node, has been transferred to the
Station. Work continues to stow it and to reload Raffaello with equipment
and trash to be returned to Earth.

The next STS-114 mission status report will be issued Tuesday morning, or
earlier if events warrant.


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Jacques :-)

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