Sunday, November 23, 2008

950a 11/23 Update: Urine processor repair attempt; EVA-4 replanned

=================================

CBS NEWS STS-126 STATUS REPORT: 56
Posted: 9:50 AM, 11/23/08

By William Harwood
CBS News Space Analyst

Changes and additions:

   SR-54 (11/22/08): Spacewalk ends
   SR-55 (11/22/08): Urine processor repair attempt on tap; samples collected; extra day not envisioned
   SR-56 (11/23/08): Urine processor repair attempt; Monday spacewalk replanned

=================================

9:50 AM, 11/23/08, Update: Repair work planned for stalled urine processor; Monday spacewalk replanned

Space station commander Mike Fincke and Endeavour astronaut Don Pettit will attempt repairs today that may resolve on-going problems with the station's newly installed urine recycling equipment. The rest of the shuttle crew, meanwhile, will enjoy a half-day off this morning before making preparations for a fourth and final spacewalk Monday by astronauts Stephen Bowen and Robert "Shane" Kimbrough.

Fincke, shuttle commander Christopher Ferguson and pilot Eric Boe will participate in round-robin network interviews beginning at 4:05 p.m. followed by NASA's daily mission status briefing at 4:30 p.m.

One of the major goals of Endeavour's mission was to deliver, install and activate a new water recovery system designed to convert condensate and urine into potable water for drinking, meal preparation, personal hygiene and oxygen generation. An operational recycling system is required before NASA can boost station crew size from three to six next May, a long-awaited milestone in the lab's evolution.

The installation went smoothly, but engineers have been troubleshooting potentially serious problems with the urine processor assembly. After about two hours of operation, the motor powering a centrifuge in the UPA's vacuum distillation sub-assembly shuts down, apparently because of thermal expansion that causes a speed sensor to come in contact with the centrifuge.

The astronauts managed to coax a urine sample through the system Saturday by running it for about an hour and 45 minutes at a time. That sample, and a condensate sample, will be returned to Earth aboard Endeavour for a detailed chemical analysis.

It's a bit confusing as to what engineers believe is actually causing the UPA problem. Flight director Ginger Kerrick said late Saturday that telemetry indicates the problem occurs because of thermal expansion that causes a speed sensor to come in contact with the centrifuge after the system warms up. That causes the motor to work harder and draw more current, triggering a shut down.

One possible solution, she said, was to remove the vibration dampers the centrifuge is mounted on. By "hard mounting" the unit to its shelf in the water recovery system rack, engineers believe they can eliminate a frequency mode that contributes to the problem. How that relates to thermal expansion, however, is not clear.

In any case, Fincke and Pettit plan to remove the vibration dampers today starting around 12:55 p.m. Once the unit is locked down on its shelf, flight controllers then will carry out additional tests to determine if that resolved the problem.

"Yesterday, we successfully collected the first set of samples from the water recovery system, so that was a big milestone," Flight Director Brian Smith said early today. "That accomplishment is sometimes overshadowed by the attention being received to the urine processing assembly that we're still having some trouble with. So it should be noted we had a very successful run of the water processing assembly and we were able to collect our samples."

Smith then added that "the water processing assembly did experience an issue and it did go into a shutdown mode. We're looking into that. This may not prove to be that significant a problem, but we're going to play close attention to it."

Whether Smith was referring to a new problem with a different part of the system or reprising the UPA trouble was not immediately known. The NASA commentator interviewing Smith in mission control did not follow up and no additional details were immediately available.

As for the UPA repair, Smith said the work to lock down the distillation sub-assembly is relatively straight forward.

"Mike is going to execute a maintenance procedure we developed that's essentially going to change the way the distillation assembly is mounted inside the rack," Smith said. "The distillation assembly slides in on a shelf. This shelf is mounted into the rack and the way it's mounted is where we focused our attention. It's current mounting scheme contains some dampers and we're going to remove some of those dampers and re-attach the shelf to the rack. We call that a hard mount, it'll be mounted in a much more rigid way than it was originally. The theory being that that will change the vibrations that occur while the centrifuge is running and if we can change the characterization of those vibrations, we may be able to prevent what we believe is some physical interference with that centrifuge as it spins."

Along with collecting testable samples of reprocessed urine and condensate from the water recovery system, the astronauts also plan to hook up, activate and collect samples from a new potable water dispenser. The water recovery system racks, a new toilet and the potable water dispenser are all connected to a common water bus in the Destiny lab module.

The astronauts plan to hook up the potable water dispenser after the final spacewalk Monday.

"We have met the original goal for this mission with the samples that we collected yesterday," Smith said. "But all along, we have been challenged to hook up the potable water dispenser and collect some samples associated with that. So we are still on track to do that. The crew's got some more work to do to continue hooking up the potable water dispenser and then we will do another run of the water processing assembly and be able to generate the samples. So we've got a plan that will accomplish that before the hatch is closed and that's what we spent some of tonight doing, figuring out where some of those activities are going to go.

"We talked to the crew for quite a while before they went to bed last night about what they experienced when they started the routing procedure for the hoses associated with the potable water dispenser and based on their feedback, we think the remaining routing that needs to be done is going to be a little more complicated and a little more intrusive to some systems we're going to need for EVA-4. So we made the decision to postpone the continuation of that routing work for the potable water dispenser until after EVA-4 is done. Even with that postponement, we still have time to get it hooked up, run some water through it, collect our samples and we've got margin in case we experience a problem."

Bowen and Kimbrough plan to spend six-and-a-half hours outside the station Monday to complete the cleaning and lubrication of the lab's damaged right-side solar array rotary joint; to prepare the Japanese Kibo module for attachment of an external experiment platform next year; to install GPS antennas on the module; and to lubricate the station's left-side rotary joint.

Work to finish up the starboard alpha rotary joint servicing includes installation of a final bearing assembly and the cleaning and lubrication of a 30-degree segment of bearing races on the 10-foot-wide drive gear. In one bit of added work, problems with the retraction of a berthing latch needed next year to lock down the Kibo experiment platform will be manually retracted by one of the astronauts.

"The fourth spacewalk has changed a little bit from what we envisioned it to be pre flight," Smith said. "The first thing we need to get taken care of is the remaining work on the starboard solar alpha rotary joint. This is the work that wasn't completed on EVA-3. We left covers 17 and 18 off on the starboard SARJ. We had pulled trundle bearing three out. So on EVA-4, we need to go back to that location, clean the area, install a new trundle bearing assembly number three and then lubricate, reinstall the covers and then we'll be complete with the starboard SARJ work.

"Also added onto EVA-4 is a new task," he said. "The other day, our colleagues in the Japanese control center were checking out the exposed facility berthing mechanism (on the Kibo lab module). One of the structural latches deployed as planned but did not retract and that's an issue on assembly mission 2J/A. The exposed facility is going to be brought up by the shuttle and it's going to be berthed using this mechanism. That latch needs to be retracted before the start of that operation. So we have added in a new task to have the crew member, who was already going to be in that vicinity installing a cover over that mechanism, use his pistol grip tool ... to drive a bolt that will retract that latch manually."

Here is an updated timeline of today's activity (in EST and mission elapsed time; includes revision I of the NASA television schedule):

EST........DD...HH...MM...EVENT

08:55 AM...08...13...00...Crew wakeup
10:40 AM...08...14...45...ISS daily planning conference
11:05 AM...08...15...10...Flight director conference
12:05 PM...08...16...10...Crew off duty time begins
12:55 PM...08...17...00...Urine system maintenance (Fincke/Pettit)
04:05 PM...08...20...10...Crew meal
04:05 PM...08...20...10...CBS News/ABC News/NBC News interviews
04:30 PM...08...20...35...Mission status briefing on NASA TV
05:05 PM...08...21...10...Cargo transfers resume
05:20 PM...08...21...25...Spacesuit swap
05:25 PM...08...21...30...SAFER jet backpack checkout
06:05 PM...08...22...10...Equipment lock preps
06:50 PM...08...22...55...Tools configured
08:50 PM...09...00...55...EVA-4: Procedures review
09:50 PM...09...01...55...Evening planning conference
11:20 PM...09...03...25...EVA-4: Nitrogen purge protocol

11/24/08
12:05 AM...09...04...10...EVA-4: Airlock depress to 10.2 psi
12:25 AM...09...04...30...ISS crew sleep begins
12:55 AM...09...05...00...STS crew sleep begins
01:00 AM...09...05...05...Flight day 10 highlights
07:30 AM...09...11...35...Flight director update
08:30 AM...09...12...35...HD flight day 10 highlights
08:55 AM...09...13...00...Crew wakeup

=================================

Quick-Launch Web Links:

CBS News STS-126 Status Reports:
http://www.cbsnews.com/network/news/space/current.html

CBS News STS-126 Quick-Look Page:
http://www.cbsnews.com/network/news/space/currentglance.html

NASA ISS Expeditions Page:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/expeditions/index.html

NASA Shuttle Web: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/shuttle/index.html
NASA Station Web: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/station/index.html
Spaceflight Now: http://spaceflightnow.com/index.html
GoogleSatTrack: http://www.lizard-tail.com/isana/tracking/

=================================




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Union leader reorganizing

Every morning, Mary Moultrie walks into a King Street office and faces the black-and-white images of her famous past. The photographs that line the walls tell a story of one of the most troubled times in recent Charleston history: picketing workers in white uniforms, thousands of people marching down Calhoun Street, petite women tussling with police officers. The photographs won't let her forget. They remind her why she's here.



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WASHINGTON â€" The Supreme Court could hand President-elect Barack Obama a delicate problem in the coming days: what to do with a suspected al-Qaida sleeper agent who is the only person detained in this country as an enemy combatant. Ali al-Marri has been held in virtual isolation in the Charleston Naval Consolidated Brig for nearly 5 1/2 years. He is challenging President George W. Bush's authority to subject a legal resident of the United States to indefinite military detention without being charged or tried.

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Union leader reorganizing

Every morning, Mary Moultrie walks into a King Street office and faces the black-and-white images of her famous past. The photographs that line the walls tell a story of one of the most troubled times in recent Charleston history: picketing workers in white uniforms, thousands of people marching down Calhoun Street, petite women tussling with police officers. The photographs won't let her forget. They remind her why she's here.

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Defense lifts Tigers over Cavaliers

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. â€" There's no such thing as an ugly win. Just ask Clemson interim head coach Dabo Swinney. In a game that might have set back offensive football a decade, the Tigers made just enough plays with the ball to beat Virginia, 13-3, on Saturday before a bundled-up crowd of 51,979 at Scott Stadium. The Tigers, who had a losing record just a month ago, are 6-5 and need to beat South Carolina in the season finale next week in Death Valley to become bowl eligible for the 10th consecutive year.

Defense lifts Tigers over Cavaliers

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. â€" There's no such thing as an ugly win. Just ask Clemson interim head coach Dabo Swinney. In a game that might have set back offensive football a decade, the Tigers made just enough plays with the ball to beat Virginia, 13-3, on Saturday before a bundled-up crowd of 51,979 at Scott Stadium. The Tigers, who had a losing record just a month ago, are 6-5 and need to beat South Carolina in the season finale next week in Death Valley to become bowl eligible for the 10th consecutive year.

Gators speed past Bulldogs

GAINESVILLE, Fla. â€" The Citadel football team practiced last Thursday night at Johnson Hagood Stadium with the sound cranked up loud, hoping to prepare for The Swamp. The Bulldogs learned Saturday in a 70-19 loss to third-ranked Florida that there is no replicating The Swamp, the sound of 90,374 rabid fans or the speed of the Gators who play there. "It didn't compare to the real thing," said Bulldogs running back Asheton Jordan. "Didn't come close."

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Agriculture Department plans non-traditional media approach

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1100p 11/22 Update: Urine processor repair attempt on tap Sunday

=================================

CBS NEWS STS-126 STATUS REPORT: 55
Posted: 11:00 PM, 11/22/08

By William Harwood
CBS News Space Analyst

Changes and additions:

   SR-53 (11/22/08): Astronauts told to wrap up spacewalk; one trundle bearing left for EVA-4
   SR-54 (11/22/08): Spacewalk ends
   SR-55 (11/22/08): Urine processor repair attempt on tap; samples collected; extra day not envisioned

=================================

11:00 PM, 11/22/08, Update: Urine processor repair attempt on tap; water samples collected; extra day not envisioned

Engineers troubleshooting problems with a centrifuge in the distillation assembly of hardware designed to convert urine into potable water aboard the international space station believe a relatively simple fix might resolve the trouble. Station commander Mike Fincke will attempt a repair job Sunday, removing vibration dampers from the centrifuge and locking the unit in place. In so doing, engineers believe, thermal expansion after the unit runs and warms up will no longer cause a specific sensor to interfere with the spinning centrifuge.

"The experts on the ground have been meeting throughout the day," lead Flight Director Ginger Kerrick told reporters late Saturday. "They believe we have isolated the source of the problem to the way the centrifuge is mounted in the distillation assembly. It is on isolators and they believe that that is a contributer to the signals that they're seeing that caused the UPA to shut down.

"Their proposal is to remove those isolators and hard mount the distillation assembly. So folks are working on that procedure right now, it'll be scheduled on Mike Fincke tomorrow and we think it's going to be about two hours long. And after that, we will send some commands to it, they're working on that procedure as well, and we'll see if that solves the problem."

The urine processing assembly is a critical component in hardware delivered by the shuttle Endeavour that is designed to convert urine and condensate into potable water. The recycling system is required for NASA to boost station crew size from three to six next May.

The part of the system that processes condensate has been working relatively well, but the UPA has suffered a string of start-up glitches, the most significant being the shut down of the centrifuge in the vacuum distillation assembly after running for about two hours.

Analysis of telemetry led engineers to suspect a thermally induced interference between a speed sensor and the centrifuge that causes the motor to slow down and draw more current than expected.

The centrifuge is mounted on dampers to reduce vibrations and sound as it rotates. Engineers believe the dampers are "possibly allowing the (distillation assembly) to set itself up at a frequency that ultimately causes it to shift around, allowing one of the centrifuge speed sensors to come in contact with the spinning centrifuge," Kerrick said later.

That, in turn, causes the motor to work harder and draw more current, triggering a shut down.

"There is a thermally induced physical interference that seems to be occurring at the exact same time in the processing," Kerrick said at the briefing. "It's also aggravated by the fact that this system is on the isolators. They think that hard mounting this device will resolve the issue."

Even with the on-again, off-again behavior of the UPA, the astronauts successfully collected the first samples of processed water today for return to Earth aboard Endeavour. The objective was a sample comprised of 30 percent processed urine and 70 percent processed condensate. What they got was 90 percent condensate and 10 percent processed urine. But Kerrick said that was sufficient for engineers on the ground to evaluate the system's performance.

With samples in hand, and with work to install a potable water dispenser on track, Kerrck said it does not appear the Endeavour astronauts will need an additional docked day at the station.

But she confirmed there are no spare centrifuge units on the ground and the hardware aboard the station must be coaxed into normal, or near normal, operation to permit the planned boost to six full-time crew members next May. She said engineers are studying options for supporting an expanded crew if Sunday's repair attempt fails and the processor can only be operated for short periods between cool downs.

"There is a second way we can run the urine processor," Kerrick sad. "Right now, it fails after about two hours of running. We may be able to run it for about an hour and 45 minutes and process urine that way, that's how we got the initial 10 percent versus 90 percent distribution of urine to condensate we have right now. So that is an option. It requires a different set of procedures for cooling down and starting up and folks are working on those as well. So if this hardware fix doesn't work, there is a potential for us to process more urine during the mission using that technique."

As for supporting six crew members with that technique, "those numbers have not been crunched yet," she said.

"We did ask that today, because if this is as good as it's going to get, we do need to be able to answer that question. Fortunately, we have at least until (the next shuttle visit in February) to answer that question. Folks will definitely be going off and studying that."

NASA requires 90 days of testing and analysis before the new system can be declared operational. What impact a lengthy startup delay might have on plans to boost station crew size next spring is not yet known.

While the astronauts inside the space station spent the day Saturday working with the water processing gear and moving equipment to and from the shuttle, astronauts Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper and Stephen Bowen were carrying out a spacewalk to wrap up servicing of the station's right-side solar array rotary joint.

Over the course of three spacewalks this week, the astronauts have been methodically cleaning and lubricating the joint's 10-foot-wide drive gear and replacing trundle bearings to reduce friction and vibration. One of the three bearing races on the gear has suffered extensive erosion because of a lubrication breakdown. By cleaning off metallic debris, installing new bearings and lubricating the races, engineers hope to be able to resume occasional sun-tracking to improve power generation.

Going into Saturday's spacewalk six trundle bearing assemblies remained to be installed. Stefanyshyn-Piper and Bowen managed to replace five of them and left the drive gear with 330 degrees of its bearing races cleaned and lubricated. Lead spacewalk officer John Ray said the remaining 30 degrees, and installation of the final trundle bearing assembly, will be shoehorned into a fourth and final spacewalk Monday.

"I would say the crew executed as perfect and EVA as I've ever seen," Ray sad. "I mean everything went really well, they were right on top of their game right out the door and they just stayed at a very steady, even pace and they got everything we had planned on for the EVA and a little bit more.

"They were getting very close at the end to getting to the point they could finish up the starboard SARJ, but they weren't quite going to make it. We could see that coming and the day was getting pretty long. So although the suits were doing really well and the crew was doing really well, we decided to go ahead and call it a day. We've got plenty of time on EVA-4 to go out and finish up the starboard SARJ."

=================================

Quick-Launch Web Links:

CBS News STS-126 Status Reports:
http://www.cbsnews.com/network/news/space/current.html

CBS News STS-126 Quick-Look Page:
http://www.cbsnews.com/network/news/space/currentglance.html

NASA ISS Expeditions Page:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/expeditions/index.html

NASA Shuttle Web: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/shuttle/index.html
NASA Station Web: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/station/index.html
Spaceflight Now: http://spaceflightnow.com/index.html
GoogleSatTrack: http://www.lizard-tail.com/isana/tracking/

=================================




8p 11/22 Update: EVA ends

=================================

CBS NEWS STS-126 STATUS REPORT: 54
Posted: 8:00 PM, 11/22/08

By William Harwood
CBS News Space Analyst

Changes and additions:

   SR-50 (11/22/08): Spacewalk begins; urine processor troubleshooting continues
   SR-51 (11/22/08): Cleaning goes smoothly in initial stages of EVA
   SR-52 (11/22/08): Two trundle bearings installed; astronauts ahead of schedule at halfway point
   SR-53 (11/22/08): Astronauts told to wrap up spacewalk; one trundle bearing left for EVA-4
   SR-54 (11/22/08): Spacewalk ends

=================================

8:00 PM, 11/22/08, Update: Spacewalk ends

Astronauts Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper and Stephen Bowen closed out a grueling six-hour 57-minute spacewalk at 7:58 p.m. today, repressurizing the space station's Quest airlock module. Five of six bearing assemblies wee replaced on the station's right-side solar array rotary joint and the sixth will be installed during a final EVA Monday.

This was the 117th spacewalk devoted to station assembly and maintenance since construction began in 1998 and the third of four for the shuttle Endeavour's crew. Total station assembly spacewalk time now stands at 739 hours and 23 minutes while the Endeavour crew's total climbs to 20 hours and 34 minutes.

This was the third EVA in a row for Stefanyshyn-Piper and the fifth of her career. With today's excursion, her personal EVA total stands at 33 hours and 42 minutes, moving her up to No. 25 on the list of most experienced spacewalkers.

"Let me just congratulate both of you," shuttle commander Christopher Ferguson radioed from the other side of the airlock hatch. "For what could possibly be Heide's last EVA, I knew Steve was going to have to push her in the airlock but I didn't know it was going to happen until you both got in! So welcome back both of you, great job."

=================================

Quick-Launch Web Links:

CBS News STS-126 Status Reports:
http://www.cbsnews.com/network/news/space/current.html

CBS News STS-126 Quick-Look Page:
http://www.cbsnews.com/network/news/space/currentglance.html

NASA ISS Expeditions Page:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/expeditions/index.html

NASA Shuttle Web: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/shuttle/index.html
NASA Station Web: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/station/index.html
Spaceflight Now: http://spaceflightnow.com/index.html
GoogleSatTrack: http://www.lizard-tail.com/isana/tracking/

=================================




725p 11/22 Update: Final bearing work deferred to 4th EVA

=================================

CBS NEWS STS-126 STATUS REPORT: 53
Posted: 7:25 PM, 11/22/08

By William Harwood
CBS News Space Analyst

Changes and additions:

   SR-50 (11/22/08): Spacewalk begins; urine processor troubleshooting continues
   SR-51 (11/22/08): Cleaning goes smoothly in initial stages of EVA
   SR-52 (11/22/08): Two trundle bearings installed; astronauts ahead of schedule at halfway point
   SR-53 (11/22/08): Astronauts told to wrap up spacewalk; one trundle bearing left for EVA-4

=================================

7:25 PM, 11/22/08, Update: Astronauts told to wrap up spacewalk; one trundle bearing left for EVA-4

Spacewalkers Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper and Stephen Bowen are in the final stages of a grueling spacewalk to clean and lubricate the space station's right-side solar array rotary joint. They had hoped to install six trundle bearings today to complete a three-spacewalk overhaul. But with the spacewalk closing in on the seven-hour mark, flight controllers told the astronauts to defer installation of the final bearing assembly and re-attachment of a final few thermal covers to a fourth spacewalk Monday.

"We don't think we're going to be able to complete this starboard SARJ activity and get in before seven (hours and) 30 (minutes)," mission control radioed around 7 p.m. "It's not worth going past seven-thirty to try to press that. We've got time available on EVA-4, we've got a good (grease) gun sharing plan to complete the SARJ work on EVA-4 and if we get Heide to start packing her bag now, we estimate that she'll have (an elapsed time) of seven hours. So that's what we would like to do. Next step for her would be to start packing bags."

"OK, no problem, Houston," spacewalk coordinator Robert "Shane" Kimbrough replied from the shuttle Endeavour.

"And we really appreciate how hard you all are working. I know it's painful to call it quits like that, but we think it's the right thing to do."

Stefanyshyn-Piper had removed the final trundle bearing assembly when mission control told the crew to start cleaning up. The final bearing assembly will be installed Monday. A two-orbit "auto-track" test to rotate the right-side solar alpha rotary joint and measure vibration levels and drive motor currents will be rescheduled. The test had been planned for early Sunday, but it now likely will move to early Tuesday. Engineers do not want to rotate the massive joint until the lubrication and bearing replacement work is complete.

Inside the space station, meanwhile, flight engineer Sandra Magnus reported collecting initial water samples from the lab's new recycling equipment, presumably from processed condensate. Engineers are continuing to assess problems with a centrifuge motor in the system's urine processing system.

Specialists now suspect a sensor in a distillation unit is physically interfering with the centrifuge motor when extended operation causes thermal expansion. It is not yet clear what can be done to fix the problem or whether it might be possible to obtain water samples by operating the unit for shorter periods and then allowing cool down.

=================================

Quick-Launch Web Links:

CBS News STS-126 Status Reports:
http://www.cbsnews.com/network/news/space/current.html

CBS News STS-126 Quick-Look Page:
http://www.cbsnews.com/network/news/space/currentglance.html

NASA ISS Expeditions Page:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/expeditions/index.html

NASA Shuttle Web: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/shuttle/index.html
NASA Station Web: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/station/index.html
Spaceflight Now: http://spaceflightnow.com/index.html
GoogleSatTrack: http://www.lizard-tail.com/isana/tracking/

=================================




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