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Conference 7.286::space

Title:Space Exploration
Notice:Shuttle launch schedules, see Note 6
Moderator:PRAGMA::GRIFFIN
Created:Mon Feb 17 1986
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:974
Total number of notes:18843

844.0. "STS-57 (Endeavour) - EURECA, SpaceHab" by PRAGMA::GRIFFIN (Dave Griffin) Mon Jan 25 1993 09:45

This note is reserved for the STS-57 mission.
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844.1KSC Shuttle Status Report - 01/22/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Jan 25 1993 09:4632
              SPACE SHUTTLE WEEKLY STATUS SUMMARY
                   Friday, January 22, 1993

George H. Diller
Kennedy Space Center
 
                            STS-57

STS-57 ENDEAVOUR

IN WORK:

- preparations to open payload bay doors
- ordnance safing
- preparations for hypergolic deservicing
- tile waterproofing for next mission
- installation of window covers
- dump of flight data recorders



STS-57 ENDEAVOUR WORK SCHEDULED:

- open payload bay doors
- post flight mechanical inspections
- waste containment system functional check
- drag chute hardware removal
- wheel and tire removal
- TACAN post-flight checkout
- preparations for DXS and IUS airborne support equipment removal


844.2Crew ListTROOA::SKLEINNulli SecundusTue Jan 26 1993 18:4917
	The crew list is as follows:

	STS 57	- Endeavour (4) 
		- SPACEHAB-1; EURECA-1R;
		- Commander: Ron Grabe (4)
		- Pilot: Brian Duffy (2)
		- PC/MS1: David Low (3)
		- FE/MS2: Nancy Sherlock
		- MS3: Janice Voss
		- MS4: Peter Wisoff


	Sherlock, Voss and Wisoff are rookies from class of 1990. The rest
	are all veterans. This will be Endeavour's fourth mission.

	Susan
844.3KSC Shuttle Status Report - 01/29/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Feb 01 1993 16:1545
              SPACE SHUTTLE WEEKLY STATUS SUMMARY
                   Friday, January 29, 1993

George H. Diller
Kennedy Space Center
 
                        STS-57

Vehicle: OV-105/Endeavour              Location: OPF Bay 1
Primary payload: Spacehab/EURECA 1-R   Crew size: 6
Orbital altitude: 287.5 sm             Inclination: 28.45 degrees
Mission duration: 6 days 23 hours
Launch timeframe:  NET April 28
Landing site/timeframe: KSC  May 5

IN STS-57 WORK:

- nose landing gear hydraulic leak checks
- fuel cell checkout
- payload bay door inspections
- radiator functional checks
- main propulsion system leak and functional checks
- thruster inspections

STS-57 WORK COMPLETED:

- removal of DXS from payload bay
- removal of IUS airborne support equipment from payload bay
- removal of drag chute hardware
- payload bay door radiatior inspections

STS-57 ENDEAVOUR WORK SCHEDULED:

- hypergolic system deservicing
- main engine removal
- install wheels and tires
- TACAN system testing
- S-Band air-to-ground system testing
- radar altimeter testing
- forward reaction control system functional checks
- OMS/RCS electrical checks
- auxilary power unit leak checks
- air data system functional check


844.4KSC Shuttle Status Report - 02/05/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Feb 08 1993 17:5556
              SPACE SHUTTLE WEEKLY STATUS SUMMARY
                   Friday, February 5, 1993

George H. Diller
Kennedy Space Center
 
                             STS-57

Vehicle: OV-105/Endeavour              Location: OPF Bay 1
Primary payload: Spacehab/EURECA 1-R   Crew size: 6
Orbital altitude: 287.5 sm             Inclination: 28.45 degrees
Mission duration: 7 days 23 hours
Launch timeframe:  NET April 28
Landing site/timeframe: KSC  May 6


STS-57 IN WORK:

- main engine removal
- preparations for ammonia boiler servicing
- fuel cell testing
- forward reaction control system functional testing
- waste management system drain and flush
- waste containment system functional test
- tile water proofing
- air data system functional testing


STS-57 ENDEAVOUR IN WORK continued:

- TACAN testing
- window polishing
- structural inspections
- Ku-band antenna inspections


STS-57 WORK COMPLETED:

- installation of wheels and tires
- checks of nose landing gear hydraulics
- installation of Spacehab into CITE stand in O&C


STS-57 WORK SCHEDULED:

- Spacehab CITE testing
- orbiter power system validations
- testing of flight control hydraulics
- installation of Spacehab water lines
- installation of remote manipulator arm
- OMS pod functional tests
- payload bay door latch installation
- heads up display system testing
- Ku-band radar testing
- tire pressure checks

844.5KSC Shuttle Status Report - 02/12/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Feb 15 1993 09:5058
              SPACE SHUTTLE WEEKLY STATUS SUMMARY
                   Friday, February 12, 1993

George H. Diller
Kennedy Space Center
 
                           STS-57

Vehicle: OV-105/Endeavour              Location: OPF Bay 1
Primary payload: Spacehab/EURECA 1-R   Crew size: 6
Orbital altitude: 287.5 sm             Inclination: 28.45 degrees
Mission duration: 7 days 23 hours
Launch timeframe:  NET April 28
Landing site/timeframe: KSC  May 6


STS-57 IN WORK:

- remote manipulator arm installation
- configuring payload bay for Spacehab
- install Spacehab water lines
- hydraulic system inspections
- tile water proofing
- preparations for fuel cell removal
- Spacehab electrical testing in the O&C Building


STS-57 WORK COMPLETED:

- main engine removal
- installation of wheels and tires
- checks of nose landing gear hydraulics
- fuel cell testing
- forward reaction control system functional test
- TACAN testing
- waste management system drain and flush
- waste containment functional test
- tile water proofing
- orbiter power system validations
- Ku-band antenna inspections
- air data system functional testing
- OMS pod functional tests
- payload bay door latch installation
- heads up display system testing
- Ku-band radar testing
- tire pressure checks


STS-57 WORK SCHEDULED:

- installation of drag chute mortar and retractor
- ammonia boiler servicing
- replace thruster R1R
- install Spacehab tunnel adapter
- potable water servicing
- external tank door latch pull test


844.6KSC Shuttle Status Report - 02/19/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Feb 22 1993 19:5743
               SPACE SHUTTLE WEEKLY STATUS SUMMARY
                   Friday, February 19, 1993

George H. Diller
Kennedy Space Center
407/867-2468
 
                        STS-57

Vehicle: OV-105/Endeavour              Location: OPF Bay 1
Primary payload: Spacehab/EURECA 1-R   Crew size: 6
Orbital altitude: 287.5 sm             Inclination: 28.45 degrees
Mission duration: 7 days 23 hours
Launch timeframe:  NET April 28
Landing site/timeframe: KSC  May 6


STS-57 IN WORK:

- OMS pod functional testing
- mid-body closeouts
- tile repair
- water spray boiler servicing
- preparations in payload bay for Spacehab installation
- Spacehab electrical testing in the O&C Building
- stacking solid rocket boosters in VAB High Bay 3


STS-57 WORK COMPLETED:

- main propulsion system electrical checkout
- remote manipulator arm electrical connections


STS-57 WORK SCHEDULED:

- ammonia boiler servicing on Monday
- tunnel adapter installation next week
- auxiliary power unit lube oil servicing next week
- Spacehab installation on March 1



844.7KSC Shuttle Status Report - 02/26/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinTue Mar 02 1993 13:2352
               SPACE SHUTTLE WEEKLY STATUS SUMMARY
                   Friday, February 26, 1993

George H. Diller
Kennedy Space Center
 
                          STS-57

Vehicle: OV-105/Endeavour              Mission: STS-57
Current Location: OPF Bay 1            Orbital altitude: 287.5 sm
Primary payload: Spacehab/EURECA 1-R   Inclination: 28.45 degrees
Launch timeframe: NET April 28         Nominal landing site: KSC
Mission duration: 7 days 23 hours      Crew Size: 6


STS-57 IN WORK:

- installation of orbiter Spacehab water heaters
- leak checks of orbiter Spacehab coolant lines
- potable water servicing
- Ku-band antenna testing
- radar altimeter troubleshooting
- bulb seal repair
- power control assembly fuse inspections
- stacking solid rocket boosters in VAB High Bay 3


STS-57 WORK COMPLETED:

- elevon and rudder speed brake closeouts
- ammonia boiler servicing
- Spacehab tunnel adapter installation
- OMS/RCS flight control functional test
- remote manipulator system functional test


STS-57 ENDEAVOUR WORK SCHEDULED:

- install Spacehab into canister on Tuesday
- transport Spacehab to OPF and install on Wednesday
- auxiliary power unit #1 lube oil servicing
- auxiliary power unit #1/#2 controller testing
- OMS/RCS electrical redundancy checks
- potable water system leak check
- MSBLS system testing
- reinstall radar altimeters
- radar altimeter testing
- star tracker door testing
- remote manipulator arm elbow and wrist heater testing
- tile waterproofing


844.10KSC Shuttle Status Report - 03/05/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Mar 08 1993 10:0223
              SPACE SHUTTLE WEEKLY STATUS REPORT
                      Friday, March 5, 1993

Mitch Varnes
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
 
                            STS-57

VEHICLE: OV-105/ Orbiter Endeavour                MISSION: STS-57
Current location: Orbiter Processing Facility

STS-57 IN-WORK:

- Electrical connections between Spacehab and orbiter.
- Aft compartment closeouts.
- Testing of main landing gear.


STS-57 WORK COMPLETED:

- Mechanical installation of Spacehab into orbiter's payload bay.


844.11KSC Shuttle Status Report - 03/12/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Mar 15 1993 10:2936
              SPACE SHUTTLE WEEKLY STATUS SUMMARY
                   Friday, March 12, 1993

George H. Diller
Kennedy Space Center
 
                         STS-57

Vehicle: OV-105/Endeavour              Mission: STS-57
Current Location: OPF Bay 1            Orbital altitude: 287.5 sm
Primary payload: Spacehab/EURECA 1-R   Inclination: 28.45 degrees
Launch timeframe: NET April 28         Nominal landing site: KSC
Mission duration: 7 days 23 hours      Crew Size: 6


STS-57 IN WORK:

- Spacehab Interface Verification Test (IVT)
- crew hatch functional check
- electrical interface checks between external tank and solid
  rocket boosters in VAB Bay 3


STS-57 WORK COMPLETED:

- installed Spacehab-1
- auxiliary power unit lube oil servicing



STS-57 ENDEAVOUR WORK SCHEDULED:

- Crew Equipment Interface Test (CEIT) on Saturday
- begin Spacehab closeouts next week
- begin closeouts of orbiter mid-body next week

844.12KSC Shuttle Status Report - 03/15/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinWed Mar 17 1993 09:1417
                          SPACE SHUTTLE DAILY STATUS
                            Monday, March 15, 1993
George H. Diller
Kennedy Space Center

 
                            STS-57

SPECIAL TOPICS:

(STS-57)

     In OPF Bay 1, the astronauts completed the Crew Equipment
Interface Test (CEIT) for Endeavour on Saturday.  The payload bay
doors are scheduled to be closed on Thursday.  Rollover to the
VAB is currently planned to occur on March 25.

844.13KSC Shuttle Status Report - 03/16/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinWed Mar 17 1993 09:1617
                 SPACE SHUTTLE DAILY STATUS
                  Tuesday, March 16, 1993

George H. Diller
Kennedy Space Center

 
                             STS-57
SPECIAL TOPICS:

(STS-57)


     The external tank/solid rocket booster stack is being relocated today to
VAB High Bay 1 to permit planned modifcation work to begin in High Bay 3.


844.14KSC Shuttle Status Report - 03/23/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinThu Mar 25 1993 18:3716
                SPACE SHUTTLE DAILY STATUS REPORT
                     Tuesday, March 23, 1993

George H. Diller
Kennedy Space Center
 
                            STS-57

SPECIAL TOPICS:

     In OPF Bay 1, Endevour's weight and center of gravity determination is in
work and the orbiter will be placed on the transporter tonight.  Rollover to
the Vehicle Assembly Building is scheduled for approximately 12 Noon Wednesday.



844.15KSC Shuttle Status Report - 03/24/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinThu Mar 25 1993 18:3916
                SPACE SHUTTLE DAILY STATUS REPORT
                    Wednesday, March 24, 1993

Mitch Varnes
NASA Kennedy Space Center
 
                             STS-57
OTHER BUSINESS:

STS-57/SPACEHAB                               OV-105/Endeavour

Endeavour was transported to the Vehicle Assembly Building at about 9 a.m.
today.  Mating of the orbiter with its tank and boosters is planned to begin
late this afternoon.


844.16KSC Shuttle Status Report - 03/26/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Mar 29 1993 11:4236
                SPACE SHUTTLE WEEKLY STATUS SUMMARY
                    Friday, March 26, 1993
George H. Diller
Kennedy Space Center
 
                           STS-57

Vehicle: OV-105/Endeavour              Mission Number: STS-57
Current location: OPF Bay 1            Orbital altitude: 287.5 sm
Payloads: Spacehab-1/EURECA 1-R        Inclination: 28.45 degrees
Launch timeframe: NET May 10           Nominal Landing Site: KSC
Mission duration: 8 days               Crew Size: 6


IN WORK:

- umbilical connections between orbiter and external tank
- connecting tail service masts to orbiter

WORK SCHEDULED:

- power up Shuttle stack on Monday night
- Shuttle Interface Test (SIT) Tuesday and Wednesday


WORK COMPLETED:

- rollover to Vehicle Assembly Building completed on Wednesday morning
- mated orbiter to external tank/solid rocket booster stack on Wednesday night


ISSUES AND CONCERNS: Because of turbo pump availability and the recent STS-55
check valve issue, Endeavour was moved to the Vehicle Assembly Building without
main engines.  They will be installed later at the launch pad.


844.17KSC Shuttle Status Report - 04/02/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Apr 05 1993 19:1031
       KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                      Friday, April 2, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham
407-867-2468 (fax 867-2692)
 
                             STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt.: 250 nm
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Vehicle Assembly Building      Crew Size: 6
Mission Duration: 7days/23 hours       Target KSC Landing: May 26
Target Launch Date: May 18


IN WORK TODAY:
*  Shuttle interface test
*  T-0 umbilical closeouts and leak checks and cavity purge
*  Reposition body flap and rudder speed brake

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  SRB hydraulic tests
*  Begin main engine installation April 12
*  Rollout to pad 39-B targeted for NET April 19

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Electrical mates between orbiter and external tank
*  Hydraulic circulation and sampling
*  Liquid oxygen monoball closeouts
 

844.18KSC Shuttle Status Report - 04/05/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Apr 05 1993 19:1130
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                      Monday, April 5, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                               STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt.: 250 nm
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Vehicle Assembly Building      Crew Size: 6
Mission Duration: 7days/23 hours       Target KSC Landing: May 26
Target Launch Date: May 18


IN WORK TODAY:
*  Shuttle interface test
*  T-0 umbilical closeouts and leak checks and cavity purge
*  Reposition body flap and rudder speed brake

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  SRB hydraulic tests
*  Begin main engine installation April 12
*  Rollout to pad 39-B targeted for NET April 19

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Electrical mates between orbiter and external tank
*  Hydraulic circulation and sampling
*  Liquid oxygen monoball closeouts

844.19KSC Shuttle Status Report - 04/09/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Apr 12 1993 10:3230
     KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE PROCESSING REPORT
                      Friday, April 9, 1993

Mitch Varnes

 
                     STS-57

Mission: STS-57/SPACEHAB-1/EURECA-retrieval
Vehicle: OV-105/Endeavour
Location: Vehicle Assembly Building
Mission Duration: 7 days, 23 hours
Targeted Launch Date: May 18

IN-WORK TODAY:

* Hydraulic tests of the Solid Rocket Boosters

WORK SCHEDULED:

* Begin main engine installation on April 16
* Rollout to Launch Pad 39-B targeted for April 22

WORK COMPLETED:

* Shuttle interface test
* External tank separation cameras installed
* Main Propulsion System interface inspections
* T-0 leak checks

844.20KSC Shuttle Status Report - 04/12/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinTue Apr 13 1993 09:5132
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                     Monday, April 12, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                            STS-57


Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval Orbital Alt.: 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Vehicle Assembly Building       Crew Size: 6
Mission Duration: 7days/23 hours       Target KSC Landing: May 26
Target Launch Date: May 18


IN WORK TODAY:
*  Shuttle interface test
*  External tank foaming operations

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  SRB hydraulic closeouts
*  Begin main engine installation April 16
*  Rollout to pad 39-B targeted for NET April 21

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Main engine interface inspections
*  T-0 umbilical closeouts, leak checks and cavity purge
*  Reposition body flap and rudder speed brake



844.21KSC Shuttle Status Report - 04/13/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinWed Apr 14 1993 11:1430
          KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                     Tuesday, April 13, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                             STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval Orbital Alt.: 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Vehicle Assembly Building       Crew Size: 6
Mission Duration: 7days/23 hours       Target KSC Landing: May 26
Target Launch Date: NET May 18


IN WORK TODAY:
*  Shuttle interface test
*  External tank foaming operations
*  Pre-rollout inspections

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  SRB hydraulic closeouts
*  Begin main engine installation April 16
*  Rollout to pad 39-B targeted for NET April 22

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Main engine interface inspections
*  T-0 umbilical closeouts, leak checks and cavity purge


844.22KSC Shuttle Status Report - 04/21/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Apr 26 1993 11:4930
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                    Wednesday, April 21, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                                STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval Orbital Alt.: 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Vehicle Assembly Building       Crew Size: 6
Mission Duration: 7days/23 hours       Target KSC Landing: May 27
Target Launch Date: May 19


IN WORK TODAY:
*  Heat shield installation

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Aft securing for rollout
*  Rollout to pad 39-B targeted for Monday, April 26

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Installation of main engines
*  Hydraulic fluid circulation and sample tests
*  Orbiter hydraulic operations
*  Hold down post ordnance closeouts


 
844.23KSC Shuttle Status Report - 04/27/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinWed Apr 28 1993 11:3330
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                     Tuesday, April 27, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                         STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval Orbital Alt.: 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Vehicle Assembly Building       Crew Size: 6
Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours     Target KSC Landing: June 11
Target Launch Date/Time: June 3, 6:13 p.m.

IN WORK TODAY:
*  Platform retraction
*  Position crawler transporter for rollout

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Rollout to pad 39-B (First motion targeted for 8 a.m.,
   Wednesday, April 28)
*  Launch pad validations
*  Terminal Countdown Demonstration Test (T-0 set for 11 a.m.,
   Friday, May 7)

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Main engine securing
*  Aft securing for rollout

 
844.24KSC Shuttle Status Report - 04/29/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon May 03 1993 11:5536
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                    Thursday, April 29, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham
407-867-2468 (fax 867-2692)

 
                            STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval Orbital Alt.: 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105       Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B    Crew Size: 6
Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours     Target KSC Landing: June 11
Target Launch Date/Time: June 3, 6:13 p.m.


IN WORK TODAY:
*  Launch pad validations
*  Open payload bay doors
*  Inertial measurement unit calibrations
*  Main engine securing
*  Heat shield removal

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Mate orbital mid-body umbilical unit
*  Install SHOOT payload
*  Preparations to replace fuel turbo pump on main engine # 1
   (The pump is being replaced due to the potential for cracking
   in the turbine inlet sheet metal.)

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Rollout to pad 39-B. First motion occurred at 7:22 a.m. today.
   The vehicle was hard down on the pad at about 2:00 p.m.
*  Rotate service structure around vehicle

 
844.25KSC Shuttle Status Report - 05/05/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinThu May 06 1993 15:3340
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                     Wednesday, May 5, 1993

KSC Contact: Mitch Varnes
407-867-2468 (fax 867-2692)

 
                         STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval Orbital Alt.: 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours     Target KSC Landing: June 11
Target Launch Date/Time: June 3, 6:13 p.m.


IN WORK TODAY:
*  Preparations to install replacement fuel turbo pump onto main
engine #1
*  Preparations for loading of pre-launch onboard propellants
*  Main engine insulation foaming operations

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Installation of new turbo pump on  main engine # 1 is set to
begin late today.  The replacement unit should be completely in-
stalled and torqued to launch specifications by Friday.  Leak
checks are set for Saturday.  The pump is being replaced due to
the potential for cracking in the turbine inlet sheet metal.
*  Loading of hypergolic fuels scheduled for early next week
*  Terminal Countdown Demonstration Test set for May 13-14
*  Removal of 3D Microgravity Accelerometer experiment from
Spacehab is scheduled for tomorrow.  Vertical access equipment
(MVAK) will be installed today.  The experiment is being removed
and replaced due to concerns of the customer.

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Fuel pump removed from main engine #1
*  Forward/aft reaction control system fuel regulator flow test

 
844.26KSC Shuttle Status Report - 05/10/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinTue May 11 1993 14:0234
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                                Monday, May 10, 1993

KSC Contact: Mitch Varnes
407-867-2468 (fax 867-2692)

 
                            STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval Orbital Alt.: 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours         Target KSC Landing: June 11
Target Launch Date/Time: June 3, 6:13 p.m.


IN WORK TODAY:
*  Securing of main engine #1 replacement turbo pump
*  Preparations for loading of pre-launch onboard propellants
*  Main engine insulation foaming operations
*  Inspections of oxygen feedline bracket

WORK SCHEDULED:

*  Terminal Countdown Demonstration Test set for May 13-14
*  STS-57 astronauts to arrive at KSC at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Mechanical hook-up of main engine #1 replacement turbo pump
*  Inspections of external tank/orbiter aft strut connections
*  Inspections of tail service mast T-0 connections

 
844.27KSC Shuttle Status Report - 05/18/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinFri May 21 1993 10:2335
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                      Tuesday, May 18, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                           STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Target Launch Date/Window: June 3, 6:17 - 7:28 p.m.
Target KSC Landing Date/Time: June 11, 5:14 p.m.
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)

IN WORK TODAY:
*  Pad cleared for hypergolic fuel loading operations through
   Wednesday morning

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Auxiliary power unit leak checks
*  Engine number 1 heat shield installation
*  Helium signature test
*  Launch Readiness Review (Wednesday)
*  Flight Readiness Review (Friday)

WORK COMPLETED:
*  X-rays and borescope checks of main propulsion system
   (additional inspections may be scheduled at a later date)
*  Orbiter/external tank umbilical foaming operations
*  Close payload bay doors


 
844.28KSC Shuttle Status Report - 05/19/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinFri May 21 1993 10:2433
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                     Wednesday, May 19, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham         407-867-2468 (fax 867-2692)

 
                            STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Target Launch Date/Window: June 3, 6:17 - 7:28 p.m.
Target KSC Landing Date/Time: June 11, 5:14 p.m.
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)

IN WORK TODAY:
*  Continue analysis of flexible joints in main propulsion system
*  Auxiliary power unit leak checks
*  Main engine number 1 high pressure fuel pump leak checks
*  Open payload bay doors
*  Launch Readiness Review

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Main engine number 1 heatshield installation
*  Helium signature test
*  Main engine number 1 flight control checks
*  Flight Readiness Review (Friday)
*  Begin aft compartment closeouts

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Hypergolic fuel and oxidizer loading operations

 
844.29KSC Shuttle Status Report - 05/20/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinFri May 21 1993 10:2434
         KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                      Thursday, May 20, 1993

 KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                            STS-57

 Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
 Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
 Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
 Target Launch Date/Window: June 3, 6:17 - 7:28 p.m.
 Target KSC Landing Date/Time: June 11, 5:14 p.m.
 Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)

 IN WORK TODAY:
 * Continue analysis of flexible joints in main propulsion system
 * Main engine number 1 heatshield installation
 * Install and checkout extravehicular mobility units (Spacesuits)
 * Spacehab late stowage demonstration

 WORK SCHEDULED:
 *  Helium signature test
 *  Main engine number 1 flight control checks
 *  Flight Readiness Review (Friday)
 *  Begin aft compartment closeouts

 WORK COMPLETED:
 *  Main engine number 1 high pressure fuel pump leak checks
 *  Open payload bay doors
 *  Auxiliary power unit leak checks
 *  Launch Readiness Review

 
844.30KSC Shuttle Status Report - 05/24/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinWed May 26 1993 10:1834
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                      Monday, May 24, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                            STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Target Launch Date/Window: June 3, 6:17 - 7:28 p.m.
Target KSC Landing Date/Time: June 11, 5:14 p.m.
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)

IN WORK TODAY:
*  Aft engine compartment closeouts
*  Continue analysis of flexible joints in main propulsion system
*  Preparations for hypergolic pressurization
*  Launch countdown preparations

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Ordnance installation
*  Pressurization of hypergolic fuel tanks
*  External tank purges

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Flight Readiness Review
*  Spacehab late stowage demonstration
*  Helium signature test and hypergolic purges
*  Main engine number 1 flight control checks and heatshield
   installation

 
844.31KSC Shuttle Status Report - 05/25/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinWed May 26 1993 10:1835
      KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                      Tuesday, May 25, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                           STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Target Launch Date/Window: June 3, 6:17 - 7:28 p.m.
Target KSC Landing Date/Time: June 11, 5:14 p.m.
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)

IN WORK TODAY:

*  Pad cleared of all non-essential personnel
*  Pressurization of hypergolic fuel and oxidizer tanks
*  Ordnance installation
*  Aft engine compartment closeouts
*  Continue analysis of flexible joints in main propulsion system
*  Launch countdown preparations

WORK SCHEDULED:

*  External tank purges
*  Final ordnance installation

WORK COMPLETED:

*  Helium signature test
*  Hypergolic line purges

 
844.32STS-57 prelaunch element set JSC-001PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinWed May 26 1993 10:2525
STS-57
1 57001U          93154.98251631  .00033000  00000-0  25200-3 0    12
2 57001  28.4515  73.2955 0050372  47.5745 312.9054 15.45740961    28

Satellite: STS-57
Catalog number: 57001
Epoch time:      93154.98251631   =    (03 JUN 93   23:34:49.40 UTC)
Element set:     001
Inclination:       28.4515 deg
RA of node:        73.2955 deg           Space Shuttle Flight STS-57
Eccentricity:     .0050372              Prelaunch Element set JSC-001
Arg of perigee:    47.5745 deg          Launch:  03 JUN 93  22:17 UTC
Mean anomaly:     312.9054 deg
Mean motion:   15.45740961 rev/day              G. L. Carman
Decay rate:     3.3000e-04 rev/day~2      NASA Johnson Space Center
Epoch rev:               2
Checksum:              270

*** NOTE:  Since STS-57 is the EURECA retrieval flight, there will be
           several orbit adjust burns during the rendezvous sequence.
           These elements are based on the planned nominal post OMS-2
           burn vector and are valid only until the NC1 burn on orbit 4.

G.L.CARMAN
844.33STS-57 Press Kit availablePRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinWed May 26 1993 11:198
The first edition of the STS-57 press kit is available.  No graphics yet.

    pragma::public:[nasa]sts-57.ps

34 information packed pages.


- dave
844.34SKYLAB::FISHERViolence is the last refuge of the incompetentFri May 28 1993 10:375
The launch has been delayed a couple weeks because an inspection stamp was
discovered on a spring in one of the turbopumps in such a location as might
weaken the spring.  They are going to replace the pump with one from Discovery.

Burns
844.35KSC Shuttle Status Report - 05/27/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinTue Jun 01 1993 14:0045
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                     Thursday, May 27, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                            STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Target Launch Date/Window: June 3, 6:17 - 7:28 p.m.
Target KSC Landing Date/Time: June 11, 5:14 p.m.
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)


NOTE: The concern still exists regarding a spring in the high pressure oxidizer
turbopump on Endeavour's main engine number 2 that has a misplaced inspection
stamp (penetration verification stamp).  Mission managers are discussing
whether or not the misplaced stamp could reduce the strength of the spring
which is designed to keep the turbopump's ball bearings in place and reduce
vibration.  A decision to replace the pump or to fly as is, has not come forth
at this time.  Work at KSC continues toward a launch on June 3.


IN WORK TODAY:
*  Aft engine compartment closeouts
*  External tank purges
*  Launch countdown preparations
*  SHOOT payload health checks

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Install aft compartment doors
*  Final ordnance installation
*  Countdown begins 11:00 a.m. EDT Monday
*  Crew arrival set for 3:30 p.m. EDT Monday
*  Final servicing of the SHOOT payload with liquid helium
*  Close payload bay doors for flight (Tuesday)

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Mass memory unit loads
*  Hypergolic fuel tank pressurization


 
844.36Launch Advisory - DelayPRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinTue Jun 01 1993 14:0136
Ed Campion                                May 27, 1993
Headquarters, Washington, D.C.            6:00 p.m. EDT

Bruce Buckingham
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.

LAUNCH ADVISORY - JUNE 3 LAUNCH OF ENDEAVOUR POSTPONED

     NASA managers have decided to changeout Space Shuttle Endeavour's #2 main
engine liquid oxygen turbopump because of an issue which was raised with a part
on the pump.  The decision to remove and replace the pump will move the launch
of Endeavour on Shuttle Mission STS-57, originally scheduled for June 3, to
sometime around mid-June.  A firm launch date will be set after the replacement
pump has been installed and checked out.

     The specific issue with the turbopump is with one of two springs which are
designed to keep the pump's ball bearings in place and in their proper
positions.  During inspection of the pump, engineers discovered evidence of an
inspection etch mark in a high-stress region of the spring.  While there is
data which indicates the spring will work as designed, NASA managers decided to
replace the unit since they could not firmly determine that the pump would
operate in a safe manner.  If a spring were to fail, the rotor position may not
be held accurately and the potential exists for higher vibration.

     Springs are etched for a variety of reasons.  They are marked to document
individual serial numbers, to verify that materials penetration inspections
have been complete, and/or to note that the part has been used in ground test
operations.  The misplaced etch mark on Endeavour's engine was a penetration
verification stamp.

     The pumps on the main engines to be used on the upcoming flights of Space
Shuttle Discovery (STS-51/July 1993) and Space Shuttle Columbia (STS-58/Sept.
1993) will be examined as part of their pre-launch processing.

- end -
   
844.37KSC Shuttle Status Report - 05/28/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinTue Jun 01 1993 14:0241
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                      Friday, May 28, 1993

KSC Contact: Lisa Malone

 
                            STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Target Launch Date/Window: mid-June
Landing site:  KSC
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)


NOTE: A decision was made last night to replace the high pressure
oxidizer turbopump on Endeavour's main engine number 2. Officials
could not conclusively determine whether the misplaced inspection
stamp on an internal spring could reduce its strength. The spring
is designed to keep the turbopump's ball bearings in place and
reduce vibration.
     Also last night, officials determined the most probable
cause for the loud noise and vibration in Endeavour's aft com-
partment last month. Tests conducted at the manufacturing plant
proved that a loud noise and vibration could be caused by the
ball strut tie-rod assembly, inside the 17-inch liquid hydrogen
line.

IN WORK TODAY:
*  Removal of heat shields around No. 2 main engine
*  Preparations to remove oxidizer turbopump
*  Backing out of launch countdown preparations

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Removal of oxidizer pump next week

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Conditioned liquid oxygen portion of the external tank

 
844.38KSC Shuttle Status Report - 06/01/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinTue Jun 01 1993 14:0331
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                      Tuesday, June 1, 1993

KSC Contact: Mitch Varnes


 
                            STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Target Launch Date/Window: Late in third week of June
Target KSC Landing Date/Time: TBD
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)


IN WORK TODAY:
*  Pressurization checks of Reaction Control System and Orbital Maneuvering
   System
*  Preparations for removing and replacing high pressure oxidizer
   turbopump (HIPOTP) from main engine #2

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Removal and replacement of suspect HIPOTP on Thursday

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Heat shields removed from main engine No. 2
*  External tank purged

 
844.39Updated Press KitPRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinWed Jun 02 1993 10:068
Final version of the STS-57 press kit is now available.  It includes
the mission logo and a cutaway drawing of SpaceHab.   35 pages and counting.
I also cleaned up a couple of formatting snafus.

Same place as before:  pragma::public:[nasa]sts-57.ps


- dave
844.40EURECA element set?WIZZER::TRAVELLJohn T, UK VMS System SupportWed Jun 02 1993 19:3410
It just occurred to me that since this mission (whenever it flies) is planned to
retrieve EURECA, they have to go to wherever EURECA is... That is, unless EURECA
is still mobile, and is having it's orbit adjusted to make it easier to catch...

  Bearing this in mind, does anyone have an element set for EURECA. This would
allow calculation of where the mission will have to park Endeavour to be able to
reach out and grab hold... If they launch before I return from vacation, I might
still get a chance to see Endeavour in orbit...

	John Travell.
844.41AUSSIE::GARSONnouveau pauvreThu Jun 03 1993 09:1011
re .40
    
>That is, unless EURECA is still mobile, and is having its orbit adjusted to
>make it easier to catch...
    
    From memory from reading the press kit no mention is made of EURECA
    adjusting its orbit - or let me clarify that, the orbit was supposed to
    be adjusted "several weeks before launch". Due to the late postponement
    of the launch EURECA should already have adjusted its orbit. Unless it
    will move back up to 500km, any elset that you have now for it should
    remain valid, modulo further delays in the launch schedule.
844.42KSC Shuttle Status Report - 06/02/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinThu Jun 03 1993 10:1031
      KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                     Wednesday, June 2, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                            STS-57
Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Target Launch Date/Window: Late in third week of June
Target KSC Landing Date/Time: TBD
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)


IN WORK TODAY:
*  Operations to remove and replace high pressure oxidizer
   turbopump (HPOTP) on main engine #2
*  Pressurization checks and trickle purge of Reaction Control
   System and Orbital Maneuvering System

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Hypergolic depressurization
*  Secure newly installed HPOTP
*  Engine and HPOTP leak checks

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Installed engine locks
*  Microwave landing system tests

 
844.43KSC Shuttle Status Report - 06/04/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Jun 07 1993 10:4430
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                      Friday, June 4, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham       407-867-2468 (fax 867-2692)
-----------------------------------------------------------------
 
                         STS-57
Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Target Launch Date/Window: Around the third weekend of June
Target KSC Landing Date/Time: TBD
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)

IN WORK TODAY:
*  Secure new high pressure oxidizer turbopump (HPOTP) to main
   engine 2
*  Pressurization checks and trickle purge of Reaction Control
   System and Orbital Maneuvering System

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Engine and HPOTP leak checks
*  Helium Signature test

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Bolted HPOTP to main engine 2
*  Re-position body flap and main engines 1 and 3
*  HPOTP powerhead checks

 
844.44KSC Shuttle Status Report - 06/07/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinWed Jun 09 1993 10:2931
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                      Monday, June 7, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham       407-867-2468 (fax 867-2692)
-----------------------------------------------------------------
 
                      STS-57
Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Launch Date/Window: June 20 at 9:37 a.m. EDT
Expected KSC Landing Date: June 28
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)

IN WORK TODAY:
*  Secure new high pressure oxidizer turbopump (HPOTP) to main
   engine 2
*  Reaction control system helium tank pressurization
*  Pressurization checks and trickle purge of Reaction Control
   System and Orbital Maneuvering System

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Engine leak checks
*  Engine 2 heatshield installation
*  Helium Signature test

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Preliminary HPOTP leak checks
*  HPOTP torque checks on main engine 2

 
844.45KSC Shuttle Status Report - 06/08/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinWed Jun 09 1993 10:2940
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                        Tuesday, June 8, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham
-----------------------------------------------------------------
 
                         STS-57
Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Launch Date/Window: June 20, 9:37 - 10:48 a.m. EDT
Expected KSC Landing Date/Time: June 28, 8:34 a.m.
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)

NOTE: Yesterday NASA set June 20 as the new date for the STS-57 Shuttle
mission.  The countdown is scheduled to begin at 2:30 a.m.  June 17.  The
decision follows the completion of work to remove and replace the liquid oxygen
turbopump from Endeavour's number
two engine.

IN WORK TODAY:
*  Secure new high pressure oxidizer turbopump (HPOTP) to main
   engine 2
*  Reaction control system helium tank pressurization
*  Pressurization checks and trickle purge of Reaction Control
   System and Orbital Maneuvering System

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  HPOTP leak checks (Wednesday)
*  Engine 2 heatshield installation
*  Helium Signature test
*  Flight readiness test
*  Launch countdown preparations
*  Final helium service of SHOOT payload

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Preliminary HPOTP leak checks
*  HPOTP torque checks on main engine 2

 
844.46KSC Shuttle Status Report - 06/11/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Jun 14 1993 10:3732
      KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                      Friday, June 11, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                            STS-57 
Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Launch Date/Window: June 20, 9:37 - 10:48 a.m. EDT
Expected KSC Landing Date/Time: June 28, 8:34 a.m.
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)

IN WORK TODAY:
*  Helium Signature test
*  Launch countdown preparations
*  Begin aft compartment closeouts

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Flight readiness test (Saturday)
*  External tank purges (Monday)
*  Ordnance installation (Tuesday)
*  Countdown set to begin 2:30 a.m. June 17
*  Crew scheduled to arrive at KSC 3:30 p.m. June 17

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Preparations for helium signature test
*  Engine 2 heatshield installation


 
844.47KSC Shuttle Status Report - 06/15/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinThu Jun 17 1993 09:5031
       KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                     Tuesday, June 15, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                            STS-57                            -

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Launch Date/Window: June 20, 9:38 - 10:49 a.m. EDT
Expected KSC Landing Date/Time: June 28, 8:34 a.m.
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)

IN WORK TODAY:
*  Launch countdown preparations
*  Ordnance installation (Pad clear at 4:00 p.m.)
*  Aft compartment closeouts

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Final SHOOT servicing (Wednesday)
*  Countdown set to begin 2:30 a.m. June 17
*  Crew scheduled to arrive at KSC 3:30 p.m. June 17

WORK COMPLETED:
*  External tank purges
*  Flight readiness test


 
844.48KSC Shuttle Status Report - 06/16/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinThu Jun 17 1993 09:5132
       KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
                    Wednesday, June 16, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                           STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Launch Date/Window: June 20, 9:38 - 10:49 a.m. EDT
Expected KSC Landing Date/Time: June 28, 8:33 a.m.
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)

IN WORK TODAY:
*  Launch countdown preparations
*  Final SHOOT servicing
*  Aft confidence test

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  Countdown set to begin 2:30 a.m. Thursday
*  Crew scheduled to arrive at KSC 3:30 p.m. Thursday
*  Close payload bay doors for flight (Thursday)
*  Spacehab late stowage operations (Friday/Saturday)

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Final ordnance installation
*  Aft compartment closeouts
*  Basic payload closeouts

 
844.49KSC Shuttle Status Report - 06/18/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinSat Jun 19 1993 15:5241
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
          Launch Minus 2 Days -- Friday, June 18, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

 
                          STS-57
Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Launch Date/Window: June 20, 9:38 - 10:49 a.m. EDT
Expected KSC Landing Date/Time: June 28, 8:33 a.m.
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/23 hours (if cryogenics allow)

NOTE: Work crews are preparing to enter the aft engine compartment this
afternoon to check for high concentrations of helium in the main propulsion
system.  The inspections should last no more than a few hours and are not
expected to impact launch on Sunday. Some scheduled events will be delayed a
few hours to accommodate the extra work.  At this time the countdown clock is
at T-19 hours and holding and will begin counting again at 2:30 p.m. today.
The six member crew arrived at KSC at about 3:45 p.m. yesterday.  Crew members
for this mission are: Commander Ron Grabe, Pilot Brian Duffy, and Mission
Specialists David Low, Nancy Sherlock, Jeff Wisoff and Janice Voss.

IN WORK TODAY:
*  Access set-ups to enter aft engine compartment this afternoon
*  Late stowage set-ups for SPACEHAB
*  Final stowage of mid-deck and flight deck supplies & payloads

WORK SCHEDULED:
*  SPACEHAB late stowage operations (late Friday/Saturday)
*  Rotate service structure to launch position (Saturday)

WORK COMPLETED:
*  Countdown began at 2:30 a.m. Thursday
*  Crew arrived at 3:45 p.m. Thursday
*  Load reactants into onboard cryogenic tanks
*  Close payload bay doors for flight
*  Final SHOOT servicing and payload bay closeouts

 
844.50KSC Shuttle Status Report - 06/19/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinSat Jun 19 1993 15:5269
        KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
         Launch Minus 1 Days -- Saturday, June 19, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham


 
                           STS-57

Mission: STS-57/Spacehab/EURECA-Retrieval  Orbital Alt. 287 miles
Vehicle: Endeavour/OV-105                 Inclination: 28 degrees
Location: Pad 39-B                        Crew Size: 6
Launch Date/Window: June 20, 9:38 - 10:49 a.m. EDT
Expected KSC Landing Date/Time: June 28, 8:33 a.m.
Expected Mission Duration: 7 days/22 hours/46 minutes


     Work continues on schedule today for launch of Endeavour
tomorrow at the opening of the 71 minute window at 9:38 a.m. EDT.
Yesterday crews entered the aft engine compartment to check on
higher than expected concentrations of helium around the main
propulsion system. Inspections revealed no problems and the aft
doors were replaced early this morning.

     No other issues or concerns are being worked today.

     The rotating service structure was retracted late this morn-
ing with first motion at 11:26 a.m.

     Workers are now in the processing of making final stowage of
flight crew equipment and mid-deck experiments.

     The weather forecast for tomorrow's launch is very favorable
with only a 10 percent chance of launch criteria violation. This
slight concern is primarily due to the possibility of rain in the
vehicle's flight path.

     The countdown clock today is at T-11 hours and holding and
will begin counting again at 7:13 p.m. today.

+---------------------------------------------------------------+ 
|                    MISSION STS-57 CREW                        |
+---------------------------------------------------------------+

Commander (CDR) Ron Grabe
Pilot (PLT) Brian Duffy
Payload Commander (MS1) David Low
Mission Specialist (MS2) Nancy Sherlock
Mission Specialist (MS3) Jeff Wisoff
Mission Specialist (MS4) Janice Voss



+---------------------------------------------------------------+
|          SUMMARY OF STS-57 LAUNCH DAY CREW ACTIVITIES         |
+---------------------------------------------------------------+

(Sunday)
3:03 a.m.      Wake up
3:33 a.m.      Breakfast
4:03 a.m.      Free Time
5:28 a.m.      Weather briefing (CDR, PLT, MS2)
5:28 a.m.      Don flight equipment (MS1, MS3, MS4)
5:38 a.m.      Don flight equipment (CDR, PLT, MS2)
6:00 a.m.      Depart for launch pad 39-B
6:30 a.m.      Arrive at white room and begin ingress
7:53 a.m.      Close crew hatch
9:38 a.m.      Launch (June 20, 1993)

844.51STS-57 prelaunch element set JSC-001 (includes EURECA target vector) PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinSat Jun 19 1993 15:56113
STS-57
1 57001U          93154.98251631  .00033000  00000-0  25200-3 0    12
2 57001  28.4515  73.2955 0050372  47.5745 312.9054 15.45740961    28

Satellite: STS-57
Catalog number: 57001
Epoch time:      93154.98251631   =    (03 JUN 93   23:34:49.40 UTC)
Element set:     001
Inclination:       28.4515 deg
RA of node:        73.2955 deg           Space Shuttle Flight STS-57
Eccentricity:     .0050372              Prelaunch Element set JSC-001
Arg of perigee:    47.5745 deg          Launch:  03 JUN 93  22:17 UTC
Mean anomaly:     312.9054 deg
Mean motion:   15.45740961 rev/day              G. L. Carman
Decay rate:     3.3000e-04 rev/day~2      NASA Johnson Space Center
Epoch rev:               2
Checksum:              270

*** NOTE:  Since STS-57 is the EURECA retrieval flight, there will be
           several orbit adjust burns during the rendezvous sequence.
           These elements are based on the planned nominal post OMS-2
           burn vector and are valid only until the NC1 burn on orbit 4.

G.L.CARMAN



                                  STS-57
                         PREDICTED STATE VECTORS
                           ON ORBIT OPERATIONS
                 (Posted 06/17/93 by Roger Simpson)

NOTE***THESE VECTORS WILL BE UPDATED POST OMS-2***

The following vectors for the flight of STS-57 are provided by NASA
Johnson Space Center, Flight Design and Dynamics Division for use in
ground track plotting programs.  The first vector represents the
trajectory of Endeavour during on orbit operations, after the OMS-2
maneuver.  The second vector represents the trajectory of Eureca prior to
rendezvous.  The vectors assume an on time launch.


Lift off Time : 1993/171/13:37:00.000
Lift off Date : 06/20/93

                              ORBITER VECTOR

Vector Time (GMT) : 171/14:21:08.115
Vector Time (MET) : 000/00:44:08.115
Orbit Count : 001
Weight : 236043.0 LBS
Drag Coefficient : 2.00
Drag Area : 2750.0 SQ FT

     M50 Elements                           Keplerian Elements
-----------------------                 --------------------------
X    =   -20851813.9  FT                A          = 3680.1307 NM
Y    =    -2002522.8  FT                E          =  0.003969
Z    =    -8073305.8  FT                I  (M50)   =  28.30084 DEG
Xdot =   5216.222871  FT/S              Wp (M50)   =  49.33453 DEG
Ydot = -23188.707524  FT/S              RAAN (M50) = 319.78141 DEG
Zdot =  -7720.727544  FT/S            / N (True)   = 179.99997 DEG
                           Anomalies  \ M (Mean)   = 179.99997 DEG

                                        Ha         = 250.801   NM
                                        Hp         = 215.054   NM

                              TARGET VECTOR

Vector Time (GMT) : 171/13:37:00.000
Vector Time (MET) : 000/00:00:00.000
Orbit Count : 001
Weight :   8900.0 LBS
Drag Coefficient : 2.00
Drag Area :  305.0 SQ FT

     M50 Elements                           Keplerian Elements
-----------------------                 --------------------------
X    =   -14422281.1  FT                A          = 3705.6253 NM
Y    =    17120389.7  FT                E          =  0.001988
Z    =     1993581.2  FT                I  (M50)   =  28.31776 DEG
Xdot = -17613.609963  FT/S              Wp (M50)   = 147.98486 DEG
Ydot = -13455.049742  FT/S              RAAN (M50) = 319.62405 DEG
Zdot = -11671.529726  FT/S            / N (True)   =  21.23735 DEG
                           Anomalies  \ M (Mean)   =  21.15496 DEG

                                        Ha         = 260.627   NM
                                        Hp         = 253.521   NM


Mean of 1950 (M50)   : Inertial, right-handed Cartesian system whose
Coordinate System      origin is the center of the earth.  The epoch
                       is the beginning of the Besselian year 1950.
                       X axis: Mean vernal equinox of epoch
                       Z axis: Earth's mean rotational axis of epoch
                       Y axis: Completes right-hand system
A:    Semi-major axis
E:    Eccentricity                         N:    True anomaly
I:    Inclination                          M:    Mean anomaly
Wp:   Argument of perigee                  Ha:   Height of apogee
RAAN: Right ascension of ascending node    Hp:   Height of perigee



Questions regarding these postings may be addressed to Roger Simpson,
Mail Code DM4, L.  B. J.  Space Center, Houston, Texas 77058,
Telephone (713) 483-1928.

Dear Customer,  we are in the process of reviewing the contents of
this product and are interested in determining if it fits your needs.
If you use these state vectors, please drop us a postcard and
let us know what we can do to improve your use of this product.
844.52NASA Select Schedule availablePRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinSat Jun 19 1993 16:004
pragma::public:[nasa]sts-57.nasa_select


- dave
844.53Scrub #1 (Sunday)PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Jun 21 1993 01:056
    The first launch attempt was scrubbed due to bad weather and rangee
    safety problems.   NASA announced that they will attempt a launch again
    Monday morning around 9AM  (I'm sure they gave the exact time, but I
    don't have it nearby).
    
    - dave
844.54STS-57 Launch Statement June 21, 1993 PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Jun 21 1993 14:0019
The Space Shuttle Endeavour rocketed into partly cloudly Florida skies at 8:07
a.m.  CDT this morning.  This is the fourth flight for Endeavour and the 56th
flight of the Space Shuttle system.  Endeavour was launched from KSC's
pad 39-B.  No technical problems were worked throughout the duration of the
terminal countdown phase.  Liftoff was about 22 seconds late, however, due to a
Range Safety hold as a stray aircraft intruded or was about to intrude into
restricted airspace.

     Endeavour had been scheduled for launch yesterday but the launch was
scrubbed at T-5 minutes due to low clouds and rain near the Shuttle Landing
Facility and concern for weather at all three available Transatlantic abort
sites.

     Endeavour is scheduled to land back at KSC on Tuesday June 29 at about
8:03 a.m.

Mission status reports are usually issued 6 to 12 hours after launch and
updated on a regular basis.  Those reports will be posted shortly after they
are received.
844.55MCC Status Reports #1,2PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinTue Jun 22 1993 10:1866
Mission Control Center
STS-57 Status Report #1

Monday, June 21, 1993, Noon CDT

The Space Shuttle Endeavour's main engines roared to life this morning at 8:07
a.m.  Houston time to start chasing the European Retrievable Carrier in low
Earth orbit.

The ascent portion of the flight went smoothly with a near perfect trip to
orbit for the six-member crew.  Once in space, the crew quickly went about
setting up Endeavour for the mission.  Mission Specialists Janice Voss and
David Low successfully activated the SpaceHab module and will begin work with
some of the experiments housed in the middeck augmentation module later today.

Also today, Endeaour will perform the first in a series of burns to rendezvous
with the EURECA satellite.  The final rendezvous and grapple of the science
satellite will occur on Thursday morning.  A four-hour spacewalk by Mission
Specialists Low and Jeff Wisoff is set for Friday morning.

Currently, Endeavour is in a 252 by 212 n.m. orbit and is operating without any
major anomalies.


---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MISSION CONTROL CENTER
STS-57 Status Report #2


Monday, June 21, 1993, 5 p.m.  CDT

The STS 57 crew is off to a good start on its first work day in space.  At
10:25 a.m.  CDT, Payload Commander David Low reported that the crew was
pressing ahead with Spacehab activation.  Spacehab is a pressurized module that
quadruples the workspace for crew-tended space experiments.  By increasing
access to space for these experiments, NASA is supporting the commerical
development of space so that private sector researchers can test and evaluate
processing techniques in the microgravity environment.

Low and fellow crewmembers Janice Voss, Jeff Wisoff, Brian Duffy and Ron Grabe
entered the module at 11:41 a.m.  CDT then went to work turning on the
experiments carried in the Spacehab. Meanwhile, Nancy Sherlock powered on and
checked out the teleprinter and fax machines on Endeavour.

The Spacehab module occupies about one-third of Endeavour's payload bay.  The
pressurized module is connected to the Shuttle's mid-deck by the standard
tunnel adapter used on Spacelab missions.  The module can hold a mixed
complement of microgravity experiments housed in either locker-size spaces or
in larger Spacelab-type racks.

Experiments underway on STS-57 include materials processing, life sciences
studies, and an investigation of key components for a space station water
reclamation and management system.  The crew provided status information to
ground controllers who responded that all the experiments were performing as
expected.

Mission Commander Ron Grabe fired Endeavour's small reaction control system
jets this afternoon for the first in a series of maneuvers to raise Endeavour's
orbit, allowing Endeavour to catch up to the European Retrievable Carrier, or
EURECA, a 10,000- pound research platform that will be plucked from orbit on
Thursday using Endeavour's robot arm.  EURECA will be latched down in the aft
section of Endeavour's cargo bay for the return to Earth.

Endeavour circles the Earth every 93 minutes in an elliptical orbit of 252 by
215 nautical miles.
844.56MCC Status Reports #3-5PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinWed Jun 23 1993 18:33126
MISSION CONTROL CENTER
STS-57 Status Report #3

Tuesday, June 22, 1993, 6 a.m. CDT

As Endeavour continues closing at a rate of 171 nautical miles per orbit on the
European Retrievable Carrier satellite it will retrieve Thursday, the crew's
attention on its first full day in orbit is being directed toward the
experiments in the Spacehab module.  Early this morning, Mission Specialist
Nancy Sherlock turned on the Bioserve Pilot Laboratory in the Spacehab,
laboratory equipment designed for use in growing bacteria specimens.  The
bacteria to be studied on the flight include a plant root bacteria that is
beneficial to agriculture and another variety that is used in pharmaceutical
manufacturing.  Other Spacehab experiments in work today include the Liquid
Encapsulated Melt Zone experiment, a study of growing highly pure crystals via
a "floating zone" method that takes advantage of weightlessness to allow the
crystals to be grown without being in a container.

Other activities for the crew this morning included flipping their spacecraft
end over end for a test run with the Superfluid Helium On-Orbit Transfer
experiment which is mounted on a platform in the cargo bay.  SHOOT studies a
technology that may one day be used to refill satellite-mounted telescopes with
liquid helium, used for cooling of some instruments.  For the experiment,
superfluid helium, the coldest substance know to man at almost absolute zero or
minus 459 degrees Fahrenheit, is transferred between two tanks.  For a first
run of the experiment, Commander Ron Grabe steered Endeavour through a series
of somersaults, the fastest ones taking about two minutes to complete, and then
fired the shuttle's steering jets to accelerate Endeavour slightly.  The flips
and engine firings are designed to slosh the helium in the SHOOT tanks so
engineers on the ground can study the effect.  Endeavour will perform two more
engine firings during the next few days for similar studies.

Highlights of the crew's afternoon will include a checkout of Endeavour's
mechanical arm that will be used Thursday by Payload Commander David Low to
grasp EURECA; an engine firing that will align Endeavour in an orbit exactly
below EURECA and adjust the rate it is catching up to the satellite; and
continued work with the 13 various experiments carried in the Spacehab.

The crew was awakened at 12:37 a.m. central today to the song "Sitting on Top
of the World," performed by Les Paul and Mary Ford.

Endeavour is about 4,000 nautical miles behind EURECA in an orbit with a high
point of 252 nautical miles and a low point of 216 nautical miles.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MISSION CONTROL CENTER
STS-57 Status Report #4

Tuesday, June 22, 1993, 3:30 p.m.  CDT

The Endeavour crew wraps up a busy work day in space when their sleep period
begins at 4:37 p.m.CDT.

The crew received a telephone call from President Clinton at 11:45 a.m.  CDT
today.  The President congratulated the STS-57 astronauts for their work thus
far on the mission and thanked them for their educational contributions to the
nation's school children.  The Endeavour crew contacted students at Mitchell
Elementary School in Houston on the Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment.

The second transfer of liquid helium today was successful between the two
containers on the Superfluid Helium On-Orbit Transfer experiment, or SHOOT,
which is mounted on a platform in the cargo bay.  SHOOT studies a technology
that may one day be used to refill satellite-mounted telescopes with liquid
helium, used for cooling of some instruments.

David Low and Nancy Sherlock checked out Endeavour's mechanical arm that Low
will use on Thursday to grasp the EURECA science platform.  Low put the arm
through the moves he will use during the grapple and berthing of EURECA.
Sherlock practiced the maneuvers she will perform with the robot arm on Friday
when the arm will serve as a work platform for testing procedures during a
planned spacewalk by Low and Jeff Wisoff.

At 12:49 p.m.  CDT, Grabe fired selected reaction control system jets, the
small steering thrusters on Endeavour, to align Endeavour in an orbit exactly
below EURECA and adjust the rate it is catching up to the satellite.  Endeavour
is now in an orbit with a high point of 253 nautical miles and a low point of
217 nautical miles.  Catching up to EURECA at a rate of 185 nautical miles
every 93 minutes, Endeavour is now 2,964 nautical miles behind EURECA.

Both Endeavour and its Spacehab payload are performing very well allowing the
crew to concentrate its attention on the 22 experiments on mission STS-57 and
the planned course corrections to rendezvous with EURECA.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MISSION CONTROL CENTER
STS-57 Status Report #5

Wednesday, June 23, 1993, 5 a.m. CDT


Endeavour's crew worked with a host of secondary experiments this morning as
their spacecraft drew ever nearer to one of the the main objectives of the
mission -- tomorrow's capture of the European Retrievable Carrier satellite.

Today's activities so far have included more operations with the Superfluid
Helium On-Orbit Transfer experiment in the cargo bay; an evaluation of
soldering in weightlessness by Pilot Brian Duffy; continued work with crystal
growth, materials processing and biological experiments in the Spacehab module;
and the activation of several student-devised experiments in the cargo bay.

Early this morning, experimenters at NASA's Goddard Spaceflight Center in
Greenbelt, Md., successfully completed a third run of the SHOOT experiment, and
Endeavour's Commander Ron Grabe fired the shuttle's steering jets so the
experimenters could guage the effects of the disturbance on their equipment.  A
second, similiar engine firing is planned later today as well as more SHOOT
runs.  SHOOT studies technology that may one day lead to a method of refilling
satellites in orbit with liquid helium, used for cooling various science
instruments.

Duffy's soldering work is part of an evaluation of maintenance equipment that
may be used on the space station.  Duffy began by soldering several electrical
connections together at a special workbench in the Spacehab. Next, he'll
evaluate removing solder from several electrical connections.

Later today, Grabe will fire Endeavour's large orbital maneuvering engines at
around 12:10 p.m. central to continue refining Endeavour's closing on EURECA,
and a second engine firing also may be performed later in the day to prepare
for tomorrow's rendezvous.  Endeavour is now about 1,300 nautical miles behind
EURECA, moving closer by about 195 nautical miles with each 93-minute long
orbit.

The crew was awakened at 12:37 a.m. central today by the song "The Smurfs,"
played to them by Mission Control in honor of Mission Specialist Nancy
Sherlock, whose nickname among the astronaut corps is "Smurf."
844.57MCC Status Report #6PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinThu Jun 24 1993 10:4743
MISSION CONTROL CENTER
STS-57 Status Report #6

Wednesday, June 23, 1993, 3:30 p.m. CDT

The STS-57 crew completed its third work day in space this afternoon.  Mission
Commander Ron Grabe completed a pair of jet firings this afternoon to bring
Endeavour closer to the EURECA satellite for Thursday's early morning
retrieval.  The first maneuver at 12:08 p.m. helped Endeavour move closer to
EURECA and the second maneuver at 12:55 p.m. brought the Shuttle into a
co-elliptic orbit with EURECA--so that both spacecraft are precisely the same
distance apart in their separate orbits around Earth. Endeavour is now 291
nautical miles behind EURECA, closing in at 32 nautical miles per 94-minute
orbit.

David Low and Jeff Wisoff with assistance from Brian Duffy checked out the
space suits that Low and Wisoff will wear on Friday during a spacewalk to test
tools and procedures that may be used during the Hubble Space Telescope repair
mission later this year.  The suit checks went well and both suits are fully
ready for the spacewalk.

The Spacehab module work was completed for today at 2 p.m.  CDT. The soldering
experiment conducted by Brian Duffy at a special workbench in the Spacehab
included soldering several electrical connections onto a printed circuit board
and removing the solder from some electrical connections.

Nancy Sherlock reported getting excellent photography of the Bahama Islands for
the CAN-DO project, a student experiment mounted in canisters in the cargo bay.
Students in the Charleston County School District, South Carolina, assembled
the experiment that features a camera to take more than a thousand photos of
Earth for studies of the environment.  A second part of the experiment studies
the effects of space on hundreds of different materials.

The space station experiment, Environmental Control and Life Support System
Flight experiment, has a partial clog in the unibed filter.  The experiment
tests components of the water recycling system under development for the space
station.  An inflight maintenance procedure performed by David Low did not
unclog the filter.  Experiment managers plan to evaluate the situation further
while letting this first half of the experiment continue to run in the hope
that some data may be gathered from partial operation.  The second half of the
experiment is scheduled for Saturday.

 
844.58STS-57 vectors (day 2)PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinThu Jun 24 1993 10:49126
Endeavour is within a few hundred feet of EURECA as I type...

STS-57 element set JSC-011

STS-57
1 22684U 93 37  A 93174.80070494  .00001585  00000-0  31158-4 0   116
2 22684  28.4590 297.8224 0005255 184.0141 176.0458 15.31427478   364

Satellite: STS-57
Catalog number: 22684
Epoch time:      93174.80070494   =    (23 JUN 93   19:13:00.90 UTC)
Element set:     011
Inclination:       28.4590 deg
RA of node:       297.8224 deg           Space Shuttle Flight STS-57
Eccentricity:     .0005255              Keplerian Element set JSC-011
Arg of perigee:   184.0141 deg          from NASA flight Day 3 vector
Mean anomaly:     176.0458 deg
Mean motion:   15.31427478 rev/day              G. L. Carman
Decay rate:      1.585e-05 rev/day~2      NASA Johnson Space Center
Epoch rev:              36
Checksum:              300

G.L.CARMAN




                                  STS-57
                        FLIGHT DAY 2 STATE VECTORS
                           ON ORBIT OPERATIONS
                 (Posted 06/22/93 by Roger Simpson)


The following vectors for the flight of STS-57 are provided by NASA
Johnson Space Center, Flight Design and Dynamics Division for use in
ground track plotting programs.  The first vector represents the
trajectory of Endeavour during on orbit operations.  The second vector
represents the trajectory of Eureca prior to rendezvous.

                                ***NOTE***
THE FOLLOWING IS THE SCHEDULE TO BE USED TO UPDATE THE ORBITER VECTOR
BEING POSTED ON THE JSC PAO BULLETIN BOARD:

FLIGHT DAY 3:  Wednesday, 2000 GMT, 3:00 p.m. CDT
FLIGHT DAY 4:  Thursday, 1600 GMT, 11:00 a.m. CDT (POST RENDEZVOUS)
FLIGHT DAY 5:  FRIDAY, 2000 GMT, 3:00 p.m. CDT (Last Vector before Deorb)



Lift off Time : 1993/172/13:07:21.953
Lift off Date : 06/21/93

                              ORBITER VECTOR

Vector Time (GMT) : 173/18:00:00.000
Vector Time (MET) : 001/04:52:38.047
Orbit Count : 019
Weight : 238283.0 LBS
Drag Coefficient : 2.00
Drag Area : 2750.0 SQ FT

     M50 Elements                           Keplerian Elements
-----------------------                 --------------------------
X    =   -14360123.3  FT                A          = 3682.0413 NM
Y    =   -13662556.2  FT                E          =  0.004259
Z    =   -10523753.0  FT                I  (M50)   =  28.24456 DEG
Xdot =  16626.475407  FT/S              Wp (M50)   =  54.42324 DEG
Ydot = -18607.136815  FT/S              RAAN (M50) = 304.81720 DEG
Zdot =   1625.577968  FT/S            / N (True)   = 223.30440 DEG
                           Anomalies  \ M (Mean)   = 223.63991 DEG

                                        Ha         = 253.350   NM
                                        Hp         = 218.073   NM

The following is a preliminary maneuver plan for the Orbiter prior to
Eureca rendezvous:
                                               POST BURN
MNVR     MET IGN       DVX     DVY     DVZ     HA     HP
 1    001/20:15:48    3.60    0.00    0.00   253.2  220.2
 2    001/21:49:12    3.60    0.00    0.00   253.2  222.2
 3    002/04:01:52   52.50    0.00    0.00   254.8  252.2
 4    002/18:25:28    4.23    0.00    0.00   254.9  254.3
 5    002/19:12:30    2.71    0.00    0.00   255.8  254.9
 6    002/22:20:43    3.03   -0.15    0.00   257.7  254.9
 7    003/01:00:00    GRAPPLE

                  TARGET VECTOR (NEXT UPDATE WEDNESDAY)

Vector Time (GMT) : 172/16:07:21.953
Vector Time (MET) : 000/03:00:00.000
Orbit Count : 4953
Weight :   8900.0 LBS
Drag Coefficient : 1.40 (Cd)
Drag Area :  305.0 SQ FT

     M50 Elements                           Keplerian Elements
-----------------------                 --------------------------
X    =    -2575284.8  FT                A          = 3704.7291 NM
Y    =    21307418.3  FT                E          =  0.001884
Z    =     6648045.2  FT                I  (M50)   =  28.28354 DEG
Xdot = -23274.938175  FT/S              Wp (M50)   = 131.89307 DEG
Ydot =     87.337678  FT/S              RAAN (M50) = 312.03794 DEG
Zdot =  -9269.859068  FT/S            / N (True)   =   9.46570 DEG
                           Anomalies  \ M (Mean)   =   9.43024 DEG

                                        Ha         = 260.547   NM
                                        Hp         = 253.717   NM


Mean of 1950 (M50)   : Inertial, right-handed Cartesian system whose
Coordinate System      origin is the center of the earth.  The epoch
                       is the beginning of the Besselian year 1950.
                       X axis: Mean vernal equinox of epoch
                       Z axis: Earth's mean rotational axis of epoch
                       Y axis: Completes right-hand system
A:    Semi-major axis
E:    Eccentricity                         N:    True anomaly
I:    Inclination                          M:    Mean anomaly
Wp:   Argument of perigee                  Ha:   Height of apogee
RAAN: Right ascension of ascending node    Hp:   Height of perigee



Questions regarding these postings may be addressed to Roger Simpson,
Mail Code DM4, L.  B. J.  Space Center, Houston, Texas 77058,
Telephone (713) 483-1928.
844.59KSC Shuttle Status Report - 06/23/93PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinThu Jun 24 1993 15:5124
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT
Wednesday, June 23, 1993

KSC Contact: Bruce Buckingham

-
-----------------------------STS-57------------------------------

MISSION: STS-57/SPACEHAB/EURECA-Retrieval
VEHICLE: Endeavour/OV-105
LOCATION: Orbit (Flight Day 3)
ORBITAL ALTITUDE: 291 x 250 statute miles
INCLINATION: 28 degrees
LAUNCH DATE/TIME: June 21, 9:07.22 a.m. EDT
EXPECTED KSC LANDING DATE/TIME: June 29, 8:09 a.m. EDT
EXPECTED MISSION DURATION: 7 days/23 hours/2 minutes
CREW: Commander Ron Grabe; Pilot Brian Duffy; Mission Specialists
      David Low, Nancy Sherlock, Jeff Wisoff and Janice Voss

NOTE: The solid rocket boosters have arrived at Hangar AF. Disas-
sembly and flight analysis will begin today. Preliminary inspec-
tions show no peculiarities following flight.

-
844.60MCC Status Reports #7,8; Latest vectorPRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinThu Jun 24 1993 20:26159
MISSION CONTROL CENTER
STS-57 Status Report #7

Thursday, June 24, 1993, 5 a.m. CDT

Endeavour is on course with all activities proceeding as planned to recapture
the European Retrievable Carrier, or EURECA, at about 8:27 a.m. central time
today.

The next milestone in the process of intercepting EURECA will be an engine
firing by Endeavour, called the Terminal Interception burn, or TI burn, at
about 6:27 a.m.  Performed when Endeavour is eight nautical miles directly
behind EURECA, the TI burn will begin the last phase of the rendezvous with the
European satellite.  About an hour after that burn, Endeavour's Commander Ron
Grabe will take manual control of the shuttle's flight controls for the
approach to EURECA. Payload Commander David Low will then use the shuttle's
mechanical arm to capture the satellite and tuck it into the cargo bay for the
trip home.

EURECA controllers in Darmstadt, Germany, are ready for the retrieval, and the
next milestone for them will come during the final phase of Endeavour's
approach when they remotely command the satellite's solar panels to fold up.
Following that, they will command its two antennas to retract as well.

Endeavour's crew was awakened at midnight Houston time to the 1974 tune
"Rendezvous'" performed by The Hudson Brothers. At 5 a.m.  CDT, Endeavour was
25 nautical miles behind EURECA and closing slowly.  A course correction burn
is next up for the shuttle, scheduled for 5:29 a.m.  CDT.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------


MISSION CONTROL CENTER
STS-57 Status Report #8


Thursday, June 24, 1993, 3:30 p.m. CDT
  Endeavour's crew captured and stowed the EURECA satellite at 11:36 a.m.  CDT
today when the payload retention latches and keel latch locked down onto the
special berthing platform in the aft cargo bay.

The European Retrievable Carrier's two solar panels retracted and latched into
place as planned.  But, EURECA ground controllers could not get the two radio
antennas completely into position for a positive latch indication.  The number
one antenna was about four degrees from complete retraction and the number two
antenna was two degrees from its stowed position.  After an additional attempt
to drive both latch motors in the primary and redundant modes, payload
controllers and the Mission Control team decided to berth the satellite with
the antennas unlatched.  The remotely operated electrical umbilical was locked
into place at 11:42 a.m.  CDT. The umbilical supplies electricty from
Endeavour's fuel cells to the EURECA satellite's thermal control units to keep
instrument temperatures at the proper levels.

The EURECA payload controllers and Mission Control teams are refining three
options to latch down the two EURECA antennas.  The first option calls for the
two spacewalking astronauts, David Low and Jeff Wisoff, to manually hold down
the antenna booms while EURECA controllers send computer commands to drive the
latches closed.  The second option has the spacewalkers removing the two
antennas from the satellite and stowing them inside Endeavour's crew cabin at
the end of the spacewalk.  The third option would have the astronauts tie down
the antenna booms to the main satellite structure.

During the crew's sleep period tonight, the Planning Team will refine the
details of the three options for a final decision before the spacewalk begins
at 8 a.m.  CDT Friday.

Janice Voss wrapped up the Spacehab module experiments for Thursday a few
minutes after 2 p.m.  CDT.

Endeavour's circles the Earth every 94 minutes in a near-circular orbit with a
high point of 260 nautical miles and a low point of 255 nautical miles.


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

STS-57 element set GSFC-014 (orbit 49)

STS-57
1 22684U 93 37  A 93175.64821865 0.00000990  00000-0  30148-4 0   145
2 22684  28.4591 292.0278 0005299 194.1335 165.9112 15.29165967   493

Satellite: STS-57
Catalog number: 22684
Epoch time:      93175.64821865         (24 JUN 93   15:33:26.09 UTC)
Element set:     GSFC-014
Inclination:       28.4591 deg
RA of node:       292.0278 deg          Space Shuttle Flight STS-57
Eccentricity:    0.0005299                  Keplerian Elements
Arg of perigee:   194.1335 deg
Mean anomaly:     165.9112 deg
Mean motion:   15.29165967 rev/day      Semi-major Axis: 6856.4363 Km
Decay rate:       0.99E-05 rev/day*2    Apogee  Alt:        481.68 Km
Epoch rev:              49              Perigee Alt:        474.42 Km


NOTE - This element set is based on NORAD element set # 014.
       The spacecraft has been propagated to the next ascending
       node, and the orbit number has been adjusted to bring it
       into agreement with the NASA numbering convention.

R.A. Parise, Goddard Space Flight Center

G.L.CARMAN

                                  STS-57
                        FLIGHT DAY 4 STATE VECTORS
                           ON ORBIT OPERATIONS
                 (Posted 06/24/93 by Roger Simpson)


The following vector for the flight of STS-57 is provided by NASA Johnson
Space Center, Flight Design and Dynamics Division for use in ground track
plotting programs.  The vector represents the trajectory of Endeavour
during on orbit operations after the rendezvous with Eureca.

                                ***NOTE***
THE FOLLOWING IS THE SCHEDULE TO BE USED TO UPDATE THE ORBITER VECTOR
BEING POSTED ON THE JSC PAO BULLETIN BOARD:

FLIGHT DAY 5:  FRIDAY, 2000 GMT, 3:00 p.m. CDT
FLIGHT DAY 8:  MONDAY, 1400 GMT, 9:00 a.m. CDT


Lift off Time : 1993/172/13:07:21.953
Lift off Date : 06/21/93

Vector Time (GMT) : 175/18:47:21.953
Vector Time (MET) : 003/05:40:00.000
Orbit Count : 051
Weight : 243584.0 LBS
Drag Coefficient : 2.00
Drag Area : 2750.0 SQ FT

     M50 Elements                           Keplerian Elements
-----------------------                 --------------------------
X    =    14493930.9  FT                A          = 3705.2990 NM
Y    =   -16708000.7  FT                E          =  0.001032
Z    =     4101483.1  FT                I  (M50)   =  28.24192 DEG
Xdot =  15598.841162  FT/S              Wp (M50)   =  61.18081 DEG
Ydot =  16235.131015  FT/S              RAAN (M50) = 290.74579 DEG
Zdot =  10924.454241  FT/S            / N (True)   = 321.48173 DEG
                           Anomalies  \ M (Mean)   = 321.55535 DEG

                                        Ha         = 259.876   NM
                                        Hp         = 254.590   NM


Mean of 1950 (M50)   : Inertial, right-handed Cartesian system whose
Coordinate System      origin is the center of the earth.  The epoch
                       is the beginning of the Besselian year 1950.
                       X axis: Mean vernal equinox of epoch
                       Z axis: Earth's mean rotational axis of epoch
                       Y axis: Completes right-hand system
A:    Semi-major axis
E:    Eccentricity                         N:    True anomaly
I:    Inclination                          M:    Mean anomaly
Wp:   Argument of perigee                  Ha:   Height of apogee
RAAN: Right ascension of ascending node    Hp:   Height of perigee

844.61STAR::HUGHESLess zooty, more dustedFri Jun 25 1993 11:527
    The two EVA astronauts openned the outer hatch a little after 9am EDT
    this morning. I didn't watch long enough to find out which option they
    were going to try for certain, but the dialog suggested they were going
    to hold the antennas in place while ground control activated the
    latches.
    
    gary
844.62SKYLAB::FISHERViolence is the last refuge of the incompetentFri Jun 25 1993 13:284
Clarinet reported they would first try to retract them as Gary said, and if that
failed strap them down with bungee cords.

Burns
844.63STAR::HUGHESLess zooty, more dustedFri Jun 25 1993 14:504
    And if that doesn't work, use The Force (i.e. duct tape... it has a
    light side and a dark side, and it holds the universe together)
    
    gary
844.64SKYLAB::FISHERViolence is the last refuge of the incompetentFri Jun 25 1993 15:414
They got them both latched back using the first procedure (ground control +
astronaut pushing).

Burns
844.65MCC Status Reports #9-12 (Friday, Saturday)PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Jun 28 1993 16:02154
MISSION CONTROL CENTER
STS-57 Status Report #9

Friday, June 25, 1993, 5 a.m. CDT

Preparations for a space walk planned to start at 8:02 a.m. central time today
have been progressing smoothly aboard Endeavour.

Astronauts David Low and Jeff Wisoff will spend about 40 minutes of their five
hours outside working to secure two antennas on the European Retrievable
Carrier satellite retrieved by the shuttle yesterday.  Remote commands during
the retrieval to retract the antennas did not fold them fully, against the
EURECA satellite.  Standing on a platform at the end of the shuttle's robot
arm, Low will push each antenna to the fully folded position so that latches
can be remotely closed to hold them secure during Endeavour's return to Earth.
If the latches won't close, then the space walkers will lash the antennas in
place with straps carried aboard Endeavour.

After the antennas are secured, the remaining four hours of space walking will
be spent as planned prior to the flight.  Low and Wisoff will perform
evaluations of moving and aligning large objects while standing at the end of
Endeavour's robot arm, evaluate how well a space walker must be restrained to
perform work such as tightening a bolt, and evaluate general mobility.

During the space walk, Mission Specialist Nancy Sherlock will control
Endeavour's mechanical arm from the aft cockpit.  Low and Wisoff began
breathing pure oxygen inside their spacesuits four hours before the spacewalk,
purging nitrogen from their bodies to prevent a condition commonly called the
bends.  Upcoming activities include the beginning of depressurizing Endeavour's
airlock about 7:42 a.m. central; the EURECA antenna securing to start at about
8:57 a.m.; and the conclusion of the space walk about 1:02 p.m.

The crew was awakened at 12:07 a.m. central today by the Dire Straits' song
"Walk of Life," played by Mission Control in honor of the upcoming space walk.

Early this morning, Commander Ron Grabe fired Endeavour's large orbital
maneuvering system engines to drop the low point of the shuttle's orbit by
about 45 nautical miles and enhance the landing opportunities that will be
available at the end of the mission.  Endeavour is now in an orbit with a high
point of 256 nautical miles and a low point of 210 nautical miles, circling
Earth each 93 minutes.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Mission Control Center
STS-57 Status Report #10

Friday, June 25, 1993, 4:30 p.m. CDT


The European Retrievable Carrier's dual antennas are safely latched against the
science satellite following a spacewalk by Mission Specialists David Low and
Jeff Wisoff.

At the beginning of the five-hour, 50-minute extravehicular activity, David Low
mounted an foot restraint on the end of Endeavour's robotic arm.  Mission
Specialist Nancy Sherlock then positioned the arm so Low could gently push the
arms against EURECA's latch mechanisms.  Payload controllers then drove the
latches to secure each antenna.

Following the EURECA work, Low and Wisoff performed several procedures for an
abbreviated EVA Detailed Test Objective. Activities associated with each of the
areas of investigation -- mass handling, mass fine alignment and high torque --
were completed with both EVA crewmen taking turns on the robot arm.  Low and
Wisoff wrapped up their spacewalk and returned to Endeavour's airlock shortly
before 3 p.m.  Central.

The STS-57 crew will end their fifth day in space with an eight-hour sleep
period, beginning at 4:37 p.m.  Central.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MISSION CONTROL STATUS REPORT
STS-57 Status Report #11

Saturday, June 26, 1993, 5 a.m. CDT


With a primary objective of their flight -- the retrieval of the EURECA
satellite -- completed, Endeavour's crew will turn its attention back to the
host of experiments aboard the shuttle and in the Spacehab module.

The crew was awakened at 1:07 a.m. after eight and a half hours of sleep for
the sixth day of the flight to the song "Holiday" performed by Madonna, played
to suggest the crew take some time to celebrate the success of their mission.

Activities today for the crew will include work with crystal growth, spacecraft
technology and biological experiments in the Spacehab. Among the experiments
will be an evaluation of maintenance equipment, including an oscilloscope and
electrical test meter, that may be used on Space Station Freedom.

In addition, the crew will run an experiment in transferring fluids in
weightlessness without creating bubbles in the fluid.  The experiment, called
the Fluid Aquisition and Resupply Experiment, or FARE, studies filters and
processes that may lead to methods of refueling spacecraft in orbit and
transfers water between two foot-diameter transparent tanks on Endeavour's
middeck.  During some tranfers, Endeavour's steering jets will be fired to
observe the disturbance created by them to the process.

As an evaluation of one activity that may be required for a shuttle to spend
long periods docked at the space station, Pilot Brian Duffy will turn off one
of Endeavour's three electricity-generating fuel cells today.  The fuel cell
will be restarted in two days.

At about 12:22 p.m. central today, Commander Ron Grabe and Payload Commander
David Low will be interviewed by the Cable News Network about their flight.
Endeavour is in a 256 by 209 nautical mile orbit, circling Earth each 93
minutes.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MISSION CONTROL STATUS REPORT
STS-57 Status Report #12

Saturday June 26, 1993, 2 p.m. CDT
  The Endeavour crew completed flight day six activities about 1:30 p.m.  CDT
today.  Saturday's work focused on several experiments in the Spacehab module
and one experiment carried in the middeck.

The diagnostic equipment portion of the Tools and Diagnostics System experiment
was performed by Nancy Sherlock. Using electronics test instruments including
an oscilloscope and electrical test meter, Sherlock conducted tests on a mock
printed circuit board and communicated with ground controllers via computer
messages on suggested repair procedures and their results.

Brian Duffy and Jeff Wisoff worked on several test setups of the Fluid
Acquisition and Resupply Experiment, or FARE, which evaluates techniques that
could be used to develop methods of refueling spacecraft in orbit.  By
transferring water between two transparent tanks on Endeavour's middeck,
engineers can evaluate how the fluids behave while the shuttle's steering jets
are fired for small maneuvers.

Janice Voss worked on the Liquid Encapsulated Melt Zone, or LEMZ, experiment
which uses a process called floating zone crystal growth.  The low- gravity
conditions of space flight permit large crystals to be grown without touching a
container.  This particular experiment uses a liquid to surround the indium
bismuth material as it is melted, then solidified into crystal form.
Researchers expect to produce large single indium crystals that may pave the
way for use of the LEMZ hardware to test materials of commercial interest on
future missions.  If processes can be refined to commercially produce large,
pure crystals such as gallium arsenide, they could contribute to the next
generation of high-speed computer, optics and sensor systems.

The test calling for shutting down one of Endeavour's fuel cells was terminated
when the hydrogen reactant valve would not close.  Fuel cell number three was
restarted without incident and is performing normally.  Flight controllers are
evaluating whether to try the test again later in the mission.  The study is
designed to expand the electrical generation engineers' knowledge of fuel cell
performance when turned off and then back on while in space.  At least three
tests on separate shuttle flights are planned in preparation for prolonged
shuttle stays at the space station when a fuel cell would need to be
temporarily turned off.

Endeavour continues to perform well, allowing the crew to dedicate its work
days to the Spacehab module experiments.
844.66MCC Status Reports #13-15 (Sunday, Monday)PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Jun 28 1993 16:04129
MISSION CONTROL CENTER
STS-57 Status Report #13

Sunday, June 27, 1993, 5 a.m. CDT

Endeavour's crew continues to work on experiments in the Spacehab module and
the shuttle's lower deck that includes studies of body posture, the spacecraft
environment, crystal growth, metal alloys, wastewater recycling and the
behaviour of fluids.

The crew was awakened at 11:37 p.m.  CDT last night to begin their seventh day
aboard to the song "I Got You," performed by James Brown, a favorite tune of
Payload Commander David Low.

Included in the day's work will be a second day of test runs of the Fluid
Aquisition and Resupply Experiment by Mission Specialist Jeff Wisoff. FARE, in
the shuttle's middeck, consists of two transparent tanks linked by a series of
filters and special plumbing, studies technology for transferring fluid from
one container to another with a minimum of bubbling in weightlessness.  Fluids
and gas do not naturally separate in weightlessness as they do in Earth's
gravity when fluid collecting at the bottom of a contaner and the air above.
FARE's technology may one day lead to a method for refueling spacecraft in
orbit.

Other experiments later today will include a study of an astronaut's body
posture in orbit.  In weightlessness, the spine lengthens and other changes
take place which result in a unique posture.  The study will photograph and
videotape crew members floating in a relaxed position, and is hoped to provide
assistance in improving the design of future spacecraft to make them as
comfortable and habitable as possible.  For the same reasons, the crew will
evaluate lighting conditions and noise levels on the shuttle and in the
Spacehab today.

Endeavour remains in excellent mechanical health in an orbit of 256 by 209
nautical mile orbit circling Earth each 93 minutes.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

STS-57 Status Report #14

MISSION CONTROL CENTER
Sunday June 27, 1993, 2 p.m. CDT

The STS-57 crew put in another busy day of science and hardware testing today
as it wrapped up a full work week in space.

Ron Grabe, Brian Duffy and Janice Voss participated in the Neutral Body
Position study.  Flight surgeons have noted on previous flights that the body's
basic posture changes while in microgravity.  This postural change, sometimes
called the "zero-g crouch," is in addition to the one- to two-inch lengthening
of the spine during space missions.  To better document this phenomenon over
the duration of a space mission, still and video photography of crew members in
a relaxed position are taken early and late in the mission.  Researchers will
include these findings in the specifications for design of future spacecraft to
make work stations and living areas efficient and more comfortable for
astronauts.

Jeff Wisoff worked on several more run-throughs of the Fluid Acquisition and
Resupply Experiment, called FARE, in Endeavour's middeck.  This test transfers
water between two see-through containers with the goal of making the transfer
cycle without causing bubbles in the water.  Experiment investigators hope to
use the results to develop refueling systems for orbiting satellites.

Nancy Sherlock stepped through the electronics procedures portion of the Human
Factors Assessment this morning.  She set up a work platform then hooked up a
notebook computer and went through a simulated computer procedure for a space
station propulsion system.  These studies rely on the astronauts' feedback for
planning future, longer-duration missions.  Since crew members will
increasingly rely on computer procedures instead of paper documents for
maintenance and operations of spacecraft and experiment equipment, it is
important to make the equipment and the procedures as easy to use as possible.

Sherlock and Duffy also completed some preparatory steps for a possible in-
flight maintenance procedure on the Environmental Flight Experiment called EFE,
a test of water recycling hardware being developed for a space station.
Sherlock and Duffy removed 27 screws from the top panel of the experiment
fixture, leaving eight screws to hold the panel in place.  Should a decision be
made to perform the repair procedure, a designated crew member would try to
remove a clog in the experiment's fluid line.

Endeavour continues to perform nearly flawlessly as it circles the Earth every
93 minutes in an elliptical orbit of 256 by 208 nautical miles.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MISSION CONTROL CENTER
STS-57 Status Report #15

Monday, June 28, 1993, 5 a.m. CDT


Endeavour's crew this morning checked the controls the shuttle will use to
return to Earth, worked to unclog a line in a water recycling experiment, and
planned to speak with reporters about their flight in an early morning press
conference.

Mission Specialist Nancy Sherlock performed an impromptu plumbing job on the
Environmental Control Systems Flight Experiment, a study of wastewater
purification equipment that may be used aboard future spacecraft.  EFE uses a
mixture of water and potassium idodide to simulate wastewater.  The solution is
pumped through a series of filters to purify it.  During the flight,
experimenters have seen a reduced flow of water through the device and opted to
perform the maintenance procedure.

Sherlock loosened a fitting on one water line inside the experiment, wrapped
the loose fitting with an absorbent diaper, and, using a laptop computer
onboard, turned a pump on the experiment into reverse for about 20 minutes in
an attempt to flush out the clog.  Sherlock then retightened the fitting and
put the experiment back into normal operation for ground experimenters, who
will now spend about an hour and a half watching it run to see if the clog has
been cleared.

Meanwhile, Commander Ron Grabe and Pilot Brian Duffy found everything in order
during a standard check of Endeavour's flight controls and cockpit displays
performed in preparation for the trip home.  A test firing of the shuttle's
steering jets is scheduled later.  Endeavour is currently set to touchdown at
7:44 a.m.  CDT Tuesday at Florida's Kennedy Space Center. However, enough
supplies and electricity are available onboard to add another day in orbit to
the flight, and shuttle managers will consider that option when they meet later
this moring.

A second opportunity for landing Tuesday at Kennedy would mean a 9:24 a.m.
touchdown.  For Tuesday's first opportunity, Endeavour would fire its engines
at 6:34 a.m. to begin its descent.  For the later landing, Endeavour's engines
would fire at 8:14 a.m.

The crew was awakened at 10:37 p.m.  Sunday for their eighth day in orbit to
Perry Como's "Catch a Falling Star." Endeavour is in a 256 by 208 nautical mile
orbit, completing a circle of Earth every 93 minutes, 21 seconds.
844.67PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Jun 28 1993 16:0812
Endeavour is coming home tomorrow.  The EFE experiment was not repaired so
they essentially don't have much to stay up for (other than the spectacular
views --  wow!).

NASA Select was an extra-special treat for this flight.  During the crew
sleep time (which is essentially prime-time here on the U.S. east coast),
they downlinked video from the payload bay cameras.   Dust storms off of
Saudia Arabia, thunderstorms at night over Africa, brush fires in
Australia...  what a job.


- dave
844.68MCC Status Report #16PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinMon Jun 28 1993 16:1041
MISSION CONTROL CENTER
STS-57 Status Report #16

Monday, June 27, 1993, 9 a.m. CDT

Endeavour's crew this morning checked the equipment the shuttle will use for
tomorrow's Florida landing; attempted a repair of a water recycling experiment;
and spoke to reporters about their flight in a 6:37 a.m.  CDT press conference.

Endeavour is currently set to touchdown at 7:44 a.m. central Tuesday at
Florida's Kennedy Space Center. A second opportunity for a landing tomorrow at
Kennedy would mean a 9:24 a.m. touchdown.  For tomorrow's early opportunity,
Endeavour would fire its engines at 6:34 a.m. to begin its descent.  For the
later landing, Endeavour's engines would fire at 8:14 a.m.

Mission Specialist Nancy Sherlock devoted most of her day to an impromptu
plumbing job on the Environmental Control Systems Flight Experiment, or EFE, a
study of wastewater purification equipment that may be used aboard future
spacecraft.  EFE uses a mixture of water and potassium idodide to simulate
wastewater.  The solution is pumped through a series of filters to purify it.
However, experimenters have seen a reduced flow of water through the device.

Sherlock loosened a fitting on one water line inside the experiment, wrapped
the loose fitting with an absorbent diaper, and, using a laptop computer
onboard, turned a pump on the experiment into reverse for about 20 minutes in
an attempt to flush out the clog.  Sherlock then retightened the fitting and
put the experiment back into normal operation for ground experimenters.
However, as the experiment was powered up, Sherlock spotted a leak from the
fitting.  Rather than dissassemble the equipment again, flight controllers
opted to stop the work due to the limited time left for the crew's other
priorities.

Meanwhile, Commander Ron Grabe and Pilot Brian Duffy found everything in order
during standard checks of Endeavour's flight controls, cockpit displays and
steering jets performed in preparation for the trip home.  Endeavour is in
excellent condition for tomorrow's landing.

The remainder of the day will be devoted to powering down and packing up the
experiments on board in preparation for the return.  Endeavour is in a 256 by
208 nautical mile orbit, completing a circle of Earth every 93 minutes, 21
seconds.
844.69Landing waved off for todaySKYLAB::FISHERCarp Diem : Seize the fish!Tue Jun 29 1993 12:257
The landing scheduled for this morning has been waved off until tomorrow due to
weather at KSC.  Tomorrow, there are two opportunities to land at KSC (first at
7:59 EDT, I think), and then two more at EAFB.  For some reason, there were no
opportunities today at EAFB.  Perhaps the physical opportunities were too early
(still dark?).

Burns
844.70PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinTue Jun 29 1993 14:569
I'm pretty sure there were 2 Edwards "opportunities", but they were not in
consideration except for emergency purposes.   Endeavour had plenty of
consumables for an extra day in orbit (they were planning on running
a full extra day anyway), so if KSC wasn't O.K., no big deal.  I guess it
is cheaper to keep it up an extra day vs. transporting it from California.

The fun stops tomorrow. They come home -- one place or the other.

- dave
844.71SKYLAB::FISHERCarp Diem : Seize the fish!Tue Jun 29 1993 15:353
That makes a lot more sense, Dave.

Burns
844.72MCC Status Reports #17,18PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinTue Jun 29 1993 16:4473
ISSION CONTROL CENTER
STS-57 Status Report #17

Monday, June 28, 1993, 3 p.m. CDT

Endeavour's six-member crew went to sleep a few minutes after 2 p.m.  CDT today
after completing their eighth work day in space.  Earlier today, Ron Grabe and
Brian Duffy checked the equipment the shuttle will use for tomorrow's Florida
landing.  Nancy Sherlock, aided by Janice Voss, attempted a repair of a water
recycling experiment.  The entire crew spoke to reporters about their flight in
a 6:37 a.m.  CDT press conference.

Endeavour is currently set to touch down at 7:45 a.m. central Tuesday at
Florida's Kennedy Space Center. A second opportunity for a landing tomorrow at
Kennedy would mean a 9:23 a.m. touchdown.  For tomorrow's early opportunity,
Endeavour would fire its engines at 6:39 a.m. to begin its descent.  For the
later landing, Endeavour's engines would fire at 8:19 a.m.

The Spaceflight Meterology Group's latest weather forecast remains the same for
Tuesday morning.  The Planning Team and Entry Team flight controllers will
monitor weather conditions leading up to Endeavour's scheduled landing time.
Curent predictions are generally favorable with a possibility of low clouds and
rain showers within 30 miles of KSC's runway 33 at the first landing
opportunity, and a chance of rising winds at the time of the second
opportunity.

Meanwhile, Commander Ron Grabe and Pilot Brian Duffy found everything in order
during standard checks of Endeavour's flight controls, cockpit displays and
steering jets performed in preparation for the trip home.  Endeavour is in
excellent condition for tomorrow's landing.

The STS-57 crew will wake up at 10:07 p.m.  CDT tonight to begin their final
steps in powering down and packing up the experiments on board in preparation
for their Tuesday landing.  Endeavour is in a 256 by 208 nautical mile orbit,
completing a circle of Earth every 93 minutes.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MISSION CONTROL CENTER
STS-57 Status Report #18

Tuesday, June 29, 1993, 5 a.m. CDT


Endeavour's cargo bay doors have been shut and all preparations for a planned
7:44 a.m.  CDT landing at Kennedy Space Center's Runway 33 are proceeding
smoothly.

For a 7:44 a.m.  Florida touchdown, Endeavour will fire its engines at 6:34
a.m. to begin its descent.  The current weather forecast for Kennedy calls for
favorable weather, but there is a chance of rainshowers in the vicinity of the
landing site.  Flight controllers will continue to monitor the weather and
receive updated forecasts as the morning progresses.

If needed, a second opportunity also exists at KSC, beginning with an engine
firing by Endeavour at 8:14 a.m. and leading to a 9:23 a.m. touchdown on Runway
33.  Opportunities also exist for a landing at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.,
a backup landing site, but they are not under consideration by flight
controllers as an option today.

After a 6:34 a.m. deorbit burn, Endeavour would enter the atmosphere at about
7:13 a.m. when it reaches an altitude of about 75 miles.  Its approach to
Florida will take it across the coast of northern Baja California at about 7:24
a.m. and continuing above northern Mexico to cross the western Texas border at
about 7:26 a.m.  It will cross Texas in less than four minutes, traveling
through the central part of the state and passing north of Marfa, south of San
Angelo and south of Waco before crossing the Louisiana border about 7:30 a.m.
After passing almost directly above Alexandria, La., Endeavour will move off
the coast and over the Gulf midway between New Orleans and Mobile, Al., at
about 7:32 a.m.  At about 7:36 a.m., still traveling four times the speed of
sound, Endeavour will cross the Florida coast north of Tampa. It will go
subsonic at it passes north of Orlando at about 7:40 a.m. and then perform a
right 232-degree turn above Kennedy as it makes a final approach for touchdown.
844.73PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinWed Jun 30 1993 09:217
First attempt at KSC was waived off.  Second attempt looks questionable
(line of thunderstorms will have just moved off).

No Edwards attempts today either.  They have 2 days of consumables still
on board.

- dave
844.74SKYLAB::FISHERCarp Diem : Fish the DayWed Jun 30 1993 11:253
They have waved off till Thursday.

Burns
844.75MCC Status Reports #19,20PRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinThu Jul 01 1993 10:4162
STS-57 Status Report #19


Tuesday, June 29, 1993, 4:30 p.m. CDT

The STS-57 crew went to sleep at 2:07 p.m.  CDT today after unfavorable weather
conditions at Florida's Kennedy Space Center canceled their landing plans.

Low clouds at the Shuttle Landing Facility and possible showers in the Kennedy
area required that today's landing be delayed until Wednesday.

The Shuttle crew completed their deorbit and landing backout procedures, gave
status reports on some middeck payloads, and prepared the vehicle for an
overnight stay in space.

Endeavour's crew will wake up at 10:07 p.m.  CDT tonight to begin final
preparations for a Wednesday landing.  The first landing opportunity is to
Kennedy Space Center with a deorbit engine firing at 5:48 a.m.  CDT and landing
on runway 33 at 6:59 a.m.  CDT.

Should weather prove unsuitable for a KSC landing, two back-up landings are
available at Edwards Air Force Base in California. The first opportunity calls
for a deorbit burn at 7:17 a.m.  CDT with landing at 8:28 a.m.  CDT.

Endeavour continues to perform well as it orbits Earth every 93 minutes in an
elliptical orbit of 257 by 208 nautical miles.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MISSION CONTROL CENTER
STS-57 Status Report #20


Wednesday, June 30, 1993, 3 p.m. CDT

The Endeavour crew is spending another day in orbit after Wednesday's landing
at the Kennedy Space Center was delayed for a second consecutive day to
Thursday. Low clouds and the possibility of rain showers in the vicinity of the
Shuttle landing facility have prevented Endeavour's landing so far.

During their shortened work day, the crew set up the bicycle ergometer and
monitoring equipment for an experiment investigating aerobic exercise as a
countermeasure to the dizziness astronauts sometimes experience upon returning
to Earth's gravity.  The study compares readings from various body systems as
the astronaut exercises vigorously on the stationary bicycle.  Measurements
from exercise performed pre-flight, on the third flight day, the day before
landing, and post-flight are compared to help determine if aerobic exercise
could be used as an effective countermeasure against the physiological effects
of weightlessness during longer duration space missions.

Thursday's landing at Kennedy Space Center is scheduled at 7:52 a.m.  CDT,
requiring Endeavour's orbital maneuvering systems engines to fire at 6:41 a.m.
CDT to bring Endeavour back into the Earth's atmosphere.  Should weather be
unfavorable at KSC, landing would occur at Edwards Air Force Base, California
at 9:21 a.m.  CDT. The deorbit engine firing would occur at 8:10 a.m.  CDT for
the California landing.

Endeavour's systems continue to function well as the Orbiter circles the Earth
every 93 minutes in a 256 by 208 nautical mile orbit.

-end-
 
844.76Endeavour safely lands at KSCPRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinThu Jul 01 1993 10:435
A beautiful landing today at KSC runway 33.

When I left for work they were safing the orbiter.

- dave
844.77STS-57 LANDING STATEMENTPRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinWed Jul 07 1993 10:4914
STS-57 LANDING STATEMENT
July 1, 1993


After an extended mission, Space Shuttle Endeavour successfully landed at the
Kennedy Space at 8:52 a.m.  EDT. The landing concluded Endeavour's STS-57
mission which retrieved the EURECA satellite and conducted experiments in the
Spacehab module.  The post-flight press briefing for this mission is scheduled
for July 13 at 3:00 p.m.  EDT.

Endeavour's main gear touched down at 7:52:16 a.m.  CDT. Nose gear touchdown
occurred at 7:52:34 a.m. with wheel stop at 7:53:23.  Total mission elapsed
time for STS-57 was 9 days, 23 hours, 46 minutes, and 1 second.

844.78EURECA Back on EarthCXDOCS::J_BUTLERE pur, si muove...Wed Jul 14 1993 18:1663
European Space Agency
Press Information Note No. 17-93
Paris, France					1 July 1993

EURECA BROUGHT BACK TO EARTH

EURECA, the European Space Agency's largest and reusable satellite, 
landed on Thursday 1 July at 14h52 CEST [Central European Summer Time] 
on the Space Shuttle Endeavour at Kennedy Space Center (USA).

After almost 11 months in near-Earth space providing pristine microgravity 
conditions for a record duration of almost seven months, EURECA has 
fulfilled its task and satisfied the expectations of the scientists involved 
in this programme.  Its safe return to Earth brings to an end of a series of 
complex orbital operations planned and carried out jointly by ESA and NASA.

One prerequisite for EURECA's return to Earth was reaching rendez-vous 
and retrieval orbit at a lower altitude.  As its orbit had by the end of May 
1993 decayed (through natural air drag) from the initial mission altitude of 
508 km to about 490 km, a precision descent to the phase-repeating rendez-vous 
orbit around 476 km altitude was required.

The EURECA Operations Control Centre at ESOC, Darmstadt, was in 
charge of planning and executing the orbital manoeuvres.  Three burns, one 
each on 20, 24 May and 8 June, were carried out and brought about perfect 
conditions for EURECA's retrieval.

The spacecraft was however not idle during the waiting period that followed: 
its payload operations programme was resumed and continued successfully 
until 14 June, when most of the instruments had to be deactivated to allow 
for propellant leak closeout test to proceed until retrieval.  On this very 
last day of general payload operations the WATCH instrument, while scanning 
the sky for cosmic X-ray sources, detected and located a strong 10-second 
single-peak burst of a previously unknown gamma-ray source (GRB930614).

In view of its recent success, the WATCH instrument was activated for a final 
observation opportunity on 21 June 1993, the day of Endeavour's launch.  
ESA's Inter-Orbit Communications experiment (IOC) was used until a few 
hours before retrieval, to augment the EURECA data recovery and 
command.

Space Shuttle Endeavour was following closely the orbital manoeuvre plan 
that put it in pursuit of EURECA, and achieved orbital catch-up and rendez-
vous three days later on 24 June 1993 when, at 1553h CEST, the Shuttle's 
robot arm firmly engaged with EURECA's grapple pin.

Before this decisive event, EURECA had been shifted to optimal grappling 
attitude and its two huge solar arrays were retracted, reducing its physical 
dimensions from a span of almost 20 meters to a compact 4.5 meters.

EURECA's multi-disciplinary complement of 15 active and 3 passive 
payloads allowed a total of 71 experiments to be carried out; some of them 
stretched over several months, with many involving multiple runs.  These 
intensive experiment activities yielded a wealth of data and products, 
catering for the engineering and scientific interests of 29 European institutes 
and research centres.

The results of scientific evaluation of the experiments, particularly those in 
the microgravity disciplines (the prime purpose of the mission), will be 
presented during a dedicated EURECA Day, to be held on 18 July 1994 as 
part of the COSPAR conference planned for then in Hamburg, Germany.

844.79Errant command to STS-57 mission caused short circuit and minor power failureSKYLAB::FISHERCarp Diem : Fish the DayWed Aug 04 1993 15:4851
Article 1124 of clari.tw.science:
Xref: jac.nuo.dec.com clari.tw.space:581 clari.tw.science:1124
clari.news.gov.agency:912 clari.local.texas:6665 clari.news.top:4957
From: [email protected] (UPI)
Newsgroups:
clari.tw.space,clari.tw.science,clari.news.gov.agency,clari.local.texas,clari.ne
ws.top
Subject: Erroneous shuttle command prompts safety review

	HOUSTON (UPI) -- NASA officials are looking into how a wrong command
was sent to the space shuttle Endeavour during its June 21-July 1
flight, causing sparks and a brief power loss on board the craft.
	None of the six astronauts aboard was hurt and the $1.8 billion
spacecraft was undamaged. But the incident spurred Johnson Space Center
officials to convene a meeting of a safety advisory board that will
issue recommendations next week for avoiding future problems, the
Houston Post reported Wednesday.
	``While the particular incident itself wasn't so terribly serious,
the process hiccup that was there...could be extremely serious,'' said
Lee Briscoe, lead flight director at JSC.
	The incident happened when the controller -- one of 17 certified by
NASA to supervise shuttle mechanical systems in orbit -- improvised an
electrical test that was not thoroughly reviewed by co-workers in
Mission Control.
	Randy Stone, assistant director for shuttle mission operations, said
the controller sent two commands without a reset command to separate
them. The commands caused a short circuit that could have burned wires
or disabled part of the shuttle.
	``I'm sure there were some local sparks at a contact, but it was out
in the (cargo) bay in a vacuum,'' Stone said. ``It wasn't in an area you
could see.''
	The controller was testing one of the shuttle's three main power
units when power was lost to a vent door, a cooling fan inside a bank of
experiments and possibly smaller systems, Stone said.
	Power was restored to the vent door within 10 minutes, and the
cooling fan was fixed by astronauts the next morning, Stone said.
	NASA officials did not release the name of the flight controller. He
remains certified and ``will probably be much better'' because of his
mistake, Stone said.
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844.80EURECA SymposiumCXDOCS::J_BUTLERE pur, si muove...Sun Apr 10 1994 10:2668
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: sci.space.news
Subject: EURECA symposium at ESTEC [ESA Release 05-94]
Date: 8 Apr 1994 11:40:27 -0700
Organization: European Space Agency
Sender: [email protected]
 
Press Information Note Nr.05-94
Paris, 8 April 1994
 
EURECA symposium at ESTEC
 
Following the successful mission in space and return to Earth
of ESA's EURECA (EUropean REtrievable CArrier (*)), the
project team, the operations team and representatives of the
industrial consortium that built the spacecraft will present the
technical and operational achievements of this mission during
a three-day symposium at ESA/ESTEC in Noordwijk, the
Netherlands, on 27-29 April 1994.
 
The symposium will also be an opportunity to highlight the
numerous scientific accomplishments of the mission and to
present the first results of the many post-flight investigations
still under way at various laboratories and companies
throughout Europe.
 
Media representatives are welcome to attend the opening
session of the Symposium on Wednesday 27 April with the
following programme:
09:00  Registration in Conference Centre (Newton
       Conference Room)
       Collection of badges and conference kitsd
 
10:30  Opening of Symposium
       Opening addresses
 
10:45- Session A
13:00  EURECA: Objectives, implementation,results
       a. The EURECA programme objectives
       b. EURECA from an industry point of view
       c. The EURECA mission, its operations concept and
       d. Highlights of the EURECA deploy and
          retrieve missions
       e. EURECA scientific results: an overview
       -  Questions and Answers
 
13:00  Lunch
 
Media representatives intending to attend the opening session
of the symposium are kindly requested to complete the
attached form and return it (preferably by fax) to:
 
 
 
 
ESA/ESTEC Public Relations Office
Keplerlaan 1
NL-2200-AG-NOORDWIJK
(The Netherlands)
 
Tel: + 31 1719 83006
Fax: + 31 1719 17400
 
(*) Deployed by Space Shuttle Atlantis (mission STS-46) on
2 August 1992, the EURECA platform was retrieved after 11
months of successful operation in orbit on 24 June 1993 and
returned to Earth on 1 July 1993 by Space Shuttle Endeavour
(mission STS- 57).