Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

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kdahm
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by kdahm »

Nightwatch2 wrote: Wed Aug 07, 2024 2:23 am Apparently a month to update the software in the capsule?

The resupply mission with the astronauts’ change of clothes reached orbit but failed to refire to make the rendezvous.

When it rains……

Getting to be quite the FUBAR
Cygnus docked Tuesday morning. Had two different anomalies, a late entry to a burn sequence and a low pressure warning on a sensor that caused two burns not to light. NASA made some quick adjustments and it was brought back on schedule.

Cygnus is Northrup Grumman, not ULA or Boeing.
Rocket J Squrriel
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by Rocket J Squrriel »

kdahm wrote: Wed Aug 07, 2024 3:45 am
Nightwatch2 wrote: Wed Aug 07, 2024 2:23 am Apparently a month to update the software in the capsule?

The resupply mission with the astronauts’ change of clothes reached orbit but failed to refire to make the rendezvous.

When it rains……

Getting to be quite the FUBAR
Cygnus docked Tuesday morning. Had two different anomalies, a late entry to a burn sequence and a low pressure warning on a sensor that caused two burns not to light. NASA made some quick adjustments and it was brought back on schedule.

Cygnus is Northrup Grumman, not ULA or Boeing.
Helps that they have had multiple successful flights and that its unmanned.
Nightwatch2
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by Nightwatch2 »

kdahm wrote: Wed Aug 07, 2024 3:45 am
Nightwatch2 wrote: Wed Aug 07, 2024 2:23 am Apparently a month to update the software in the capsule?

The resupply mission with the astronauts’ change of clothes reached orbit but failed to refire to make the rendezvous.

When it rains……

Getting to be quite the FUBAR
Cygnus docked Tuesday morning. Had two different anomalies, a late entry to a burn sequence and a low pressure warning on a sensor that caused two burns not to light. NASA made some quick adjustments and it was brought back on schedule.

Cygnus is Northrup Grumman, not ULA or Boeing.
Good they got that sorted out

I knew it wasn’t Boeing and was NG. Just noting the cascading of events
brovane
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by brovane »

Summary of conf call today. Boeing was not present at the conf call. It was just NASA.


Roundup of today's
@NASA
Teleconference about
@Space_Station Operations and
@BoeingSpace's Starliner CFT mission:
Crew-9
- NASA has set up the Crew-9 Dragon to have the flexibility to launch with 2 astronauts, and return with 4 in Feb 2025; SpaceX Suits for Butch & Suni are ready, SpaceX Seats for Butch & Suni are ready.
- However, the Crew-9 contingency has not been “formally” enabled yet.
- Steve Stich would not say which 2 astronauts would not fly on Crew-9 at this time.
- They have another contingency to allow 3 crew members on the Crew-8 cargo pallet if they need to undock Starliner autonomously prior to the arrival of Crew-9 - which would leave Butch & Suni without their spacecraft accessible as a Safe Haven.

Starliner CFT
- Ken Bowersox and Dana Weigel would not say which vehicle for Butch & Suni's return they’re leaning towards right now as “it could change drastically” over time.
- NASA could certify Starliner for operational crewed missions without bringing Butch & Suni back onboard the vehicle, pending data reviews of the thruster/helium issues.
- The Starliner software is the same whether crewed or uncrewed. What needs to be updated is a “specific set of mission parameters”. NASA calls those Mission Data Loads.

July SpaceX Task Order
- The SpaceX Task Order in July was for a contingency where Tracy Caldwell Dyson would return on Dragon, and not Soyuz MS-25. Similar to Frank Rubio & Soyuz MS-22.

Fleet Management
- Crew-9’s Falcon Booster is now going to be flying on a Starlink mission prior to Crew-9, because of the 1 month slip.
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jemhouston
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by jemhouston »

Got it from this source, https://pjmedia.com/vodkapundit/2024/08 ... a-n4931419

NASA has delayed the next Dragon Crew mission from Aug. 18 to Sept. 24 to give Boeing the four weeks it needs to update Starliner's software. For reasons still unknown, Starliner launched with a version of the automated flight software unable to detach from the ISS without any crew on board. It is an ISS requirement that every vessel attached to the ISS be able to detach without a crew in case some freakish circumstance requires a vessel to be jettisoned.

Well, we might have reached that freakish circumstance — due to a capsule that NASA launched with known thruster issues. And they launched the damn thing without the required control software installed.
That makes sense.
Poohbah
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by Poohbah »

Orbital Death Jenga is an awesome name for a band...
Johnnie Lyle
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by Johnnie Lyle »

Poohbah wrote: Wed Aug 07, 2024 10:47 pm Orbital Death Jenga is an awesome name for a band...
Didn’t they open for Darmok and Jallad at Tanagra in ’91?
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jemhouston
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by jemhouston »

Johnnie Lyle wrote: Wed Aug 07, 2024 11:44 pm
Poohbah wrote: Wed Aug 07, 2024 10:47 pm Orbital Death Jenga is an awesome name for a band...
Didn’t they open for Darmok and Jallad at Tanagra in ’91?
They opened for Event in Tunguska in 1908.
Micael
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by Micael »

They’re saying now that the crew members may be stuck on the ISS until February. This is going well.
kdahm
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by kdahm »

Micael wrote: Thu Aug 08, 2024 5:23 pm They’re saying now that the crew members may be stuck on the ISS until February. This is going well.
The whole idea of the long stay is that the next Crew Dragon only launches with two, and the crew members substitute for the missing two until the rotation is finished normally. Instead of, you know, going ahead and using the capability of launching with four and landing with six.

Best comment on Ars Technica -

"They (Suni and Butch) really shouldn't have selected the short term car park."
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jemhouston
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by jemhouston »

Johnnie I'm going to disagree with you on you being overly harsh. You're being too nice. What is needed is meanest Poohbah and ruthless Senior Chief.

Boeing's new president is going to be based in Seattle, not VA. He's going to need to clean house.


Federal Government needs reforming.
Rocket J Squrriel
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by Rocket J Squrriel »

Guess what? Boeing is also flubbing up the uprated SLS 1B. Its the SLS but with a more powerful second stage(the EUS) and since its taller, it has to have its own launch tower built.

Per NASA Watch and NASA's OID
“Quality control issues at Michoud are largely due to the lack of a sufficient number of trained and experienced aerospace workers at Boeing. To mitigate these challenges, Boeing provides training and work orders to its employees. Considering the significant quality control deficiencies at Michoud, we found these efforts to be inadequate. For example, during our visit to Michoud in April 2023, we observed a liquid oxygen fuel tank dome—a critical component of the SLS Core Stage 3—segregated and pending disposition on whether and how it can safely be used going forward due to welds that did not meet NASA specifications.

According to NASA officials, the welding issues arose due to Boeing’s inexperienced technicians and inadequate work order planning and supervision. The lack of a trained and qualified workforce increases the risk that Boeing will continue to manufacture parts and components that do not adhere to NASA requirements and industry standards.

We project SLS Block 1B costs will reach approximately $5.7 billion before the system is scheduled to launch in 2028. This is $700 million more than NASA’s 2023 Agency Baseline Commitment, which established a cost and schedule baseline at nearly $5 billion. EUS development accounts for more than half of this cost, which we estimate will increase from an initial cost of $962 million in 2017 to nearly $2.8 billion through 2028.

Boeing’s delivery of the EUS to NASA has also been delayed from February 2021 to April 2027, and when combined with other factors, suggests the September 2028 Artemis IV launch date could be delayed as well. Factors contributing to these cost increases and schedule delays include redirection of EUS funds to the core stage during Artemis I production, changing Artemis mission assignments, maintaining an extended workforce 7 years more than planned, manufacturing issues, and supply chain challenges.”
Nik_SpeakerToCats
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by Nik_SpeakerToCats »

Can Boeing 'Do a Hubble' and up-load patched soft-ware ?
Or send, on next supply ship, a modded board ??

After all, it now only needs the separation and descent stuff...

If I was feeling really cynical, I'd wonder if some-one at NASA has uttered 'TSB,NFC'.
Literally, stepped aside and allowed Boeing to paint their benighted coracle Starliner into a corner...
:twisted: :twisted: :twisted:
Micael
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by Micael »

NEWS: For unknown reasons, Boeing had removed Starliner’s autonomous undocking feature from its flight software code – Now, Boeing wants to push a software update to its crippled spacecraft, but NASA fears it could brick one of the two crewed-vehicle docking ports on the ISS.
Straker
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by Straker »

Rocket J Squrriel wrote: Thu Aug 08, 2024 10:29 pm Guess what? Boeing is also flubbing up the uprated SLS 1B. Its the SLS but with a more powerful second stage(the EUS) and since its taller, it has to have its own launch tower built.
I really don't want to give Boeing any wriggle room here but a lot of the decision to move the production line and the resultant quality control issues that are causing a lot of the delay on the EUS are down to the various political interests in congress trying to spread pork-barrel spending across there constituencies. NASA didn't want the two upper stage solution stating it would increase costs for little gain but was tied into it by congressional funding mandates.

Likewise my reading of the whole SLS programme and some of its key decisions e.g. re-using space shuttle derived components is a lesson in political interference driving NASA spending to an insane degree.

My current thoughts of the insanity going on are more directed towards the logic of NASA contracting Space X to use Starship that will dock at the proposed Lunar Gateway and transfer astronauts to the surface but at the same time stating that Starship would be too dangerous to attach to the far larger ISS due to the vessels larger size...

I can see a fully commercial space station with limited NASA involvement being potentially the next "western" permanent space habitat. China will carry on having its programme and potentially be the only game in town for space stations for a few years.
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jemhouston
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by jemhouston »

Poohbah wrote: Sat Aug 03, 2024 5:35 pm
jemhouston wrote: Sat Aug 03, 2024 5:03 pm
brovane wrote: Sat Aug 03, 2024 3:07 pm Apparently somebody at Boeing thought it was a good decision to take this fight public. NASA is probably not amused.

https://x.com/SciGuySpace/status/181953 ... 60593.1040
Whoever came up with needs to have the following done to them:

1. Locked in a dark room.

2. Music piped in: Polka, badly played bagpipes, and songs voted in by the board.

3. Tribbles drop on them.
HOLLABACK GIRL ON WAR EMERGENCY POWER!
I found this in Instapundit.

Image
Nathan45
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by Nathan45 »

They should do invention exchanges so they can evaluate their mental health as well.
MikeKozlowski
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by MikeKozlowski »

jemhouston wrote: Mon Aug 12, 2024 7:27 pm
Poohbah wrote: Sat Aug 03, 2024 5:35 pm
jemhouston wrote: Sat Aug 03, 2024 5:03 pm

Whoever came up with needs to have the following done to them:

1. Locked in a dark room.

2. Music piped in: Polka, badly played bagpipes, and songs voted in by the board.

3. Tribbles drop on them.
HOLLABACK GIRL ON WAR EMERGENCY POWER!
I found this in Instapundit.

Image
Push the button, Frank.

Mike
Micael
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by Micael »

NASA is about to make its most important safety decision in nearly a generation
Three Starliner mission managers had key roles on Columbia's ill-fated final flight.

by Stephen Clark - Aug 12, 2024 3:35pm CET
240

Boeing's Starliner spacecraft, seen docked at the International Space Station through the window of a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft.
NASA
As soon as this week, NASA officials will make perhaps the agency's most consequential safety decision in human spaceflight in 21 years.

NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams are nearly 10 weeks into a test flight that was originally set to last a little more than one week. The two retired US Navy test pilots were the first people to fly into orbit on Boeing's Starliner spacecraft when it launched on June 5. Now, NASA officials aren't sure Starliner is safe enough to bring the astronauts home.

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Three of the managers at the center of the pending decision, Ken Bowersox and Steve Stich from NASA and Boeing's LeRoy Cain, either had key roles in the ill-fated final flight of Space Shuttle Columbia in 2003 or felt the consequences of the accident.

At that time, officials misjudged the risk. Seven astronauts died, and the Space Shuttle Columbia was destroyed as it reentered the atmosphere over Texas. Bowersox, Stich, and Cain weren't the people making the call on the health of Columbia's heat shield in 2003, but they had front-row seats to the consequences.

Bowersox was an astronaut on the International Space Station when NASA lost Columbia. He and his crewmates were waiting to hitch a ride home on the next Space Shuttle mission, which was delayed two-and-a-half years in the wake of the Columbia accident. Instead, Bowersox's crew came back to Earth later that year on a Russian Soyuz capsule. After retiring from the astronaut corps, Bowersox worked at SpaceX and is now the head of NASA's spaceflight operations directorate.

Stich and Cain were NASA flight directors in 2003, and they remain well-respected in human spaceflight circles. Stich is now the manager of NASA's commercial crew program, and Cain is now a Boeing employee and chair of the company's Starliner mission director. For the ongoing Starliner mission, Bowersox, Stich, and Cain are in the decision-making chain.

All three joined NASA in the late 1980s, soon after the Challenger accident. They have seen NASA attempt to reshape its safety culture after both of NASA's fatal Space Shuttle tragedies. After Challenger, NASA's astronaut office had a more central role in safety decisions, and the agency made efforts to listen to dissent from engineers. Still, human flaws are inescapable, and NASA's culture was unable to alleviate them during Columbia's last flight in 2003.

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NASA knew launching a Space Shuttle in cold weather reduced the safety margin on its solid rocket boosters, which led to the Challenger accident. And shuttle managers knew foam routinely fell off the external fuel tank. In a near-miss, one of these foam fragments hit a shuttle booster but didn't damage it, just two flights prior to Columbia's STS-107 mission.

"I have wondered if some in management roles today that were here when we lost Challenger and Columbia remember that in both of those tragedies, there were those that were not comfortable proceeding," Milt Heflin, a retired NASA flight director who spent 47 years at the agency, wrote in an email to Ars. "Today, those memories are still around."

"I suspect Stich and Cain are paying attention to the right stuff," Heflin wrote.

The question facing NASA's leadership today? Should the two astronauts return to Earth from the International Space Station in Boeing's Starliner spacecraft, with its history of thruster failures and helium leaks, or should they come home on a SpaceX Dragon capsule?

Under normal conditions, the first option is the choice everyone at NASA would like to make. It would be least disruptive to operations at the space station and would potentially maintain a clearer future for Boeing's Starliner program, which NASA would like to become operational for regular crew rotation flights to the station.

But some people at NASA aren't convinced this is the right call. Engineers still don't fully understand why five of the Starliner spacecraft's thrusters overheated and lost power as the capsule approached the space station for docking in June. Four of these five control jets are now back in action with near-normal performance, but managers would like to be sure the same thrusters—and maybe more—won't fail again as Starliner departs the station and heads for reentry.

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The decision chain

A week and a half ago, this dissent in the halls of NASA caused managers to delay a high-level meeting to review the spacecraft's readiness to come home with Wilmore and Williams. NASA senior leaders would like to build unanimity among engineering teams before committing the astronauts to flying back to Earth on Boeing's crew capsule.

The latter option—to bring the Starliner astronauts home on a different spacecraft—is an alternative that was, at least on its face, unavailable to managers of the Space Shuttle program at the time of the Columbia accident. If Starliner comes back without its crew, this would almost certainly lead to debate within NASA about whether to require Boeing to complete yet another Starliner test flight before clearing the spacecraft for operational missions, as NASA cleared SpaceX to do in 2020.

Despite the pitfalls, many people at NASA believe this is the safer choice, although Boeing says it is confident in the Starliner spacecraft's ability to return the crew to Earth.

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But ultimately, it's NASA's call. The lives of two government employees are in the balance, and taxpayers paid Boeing for most of the Starliner spacecraft's development costs. So far, NASA and Boeing have committed at least $6.7 billion to the program.


Enlarge / Ken Bowersox, head of NASA's spaceflight operations directorate, chairs a flight-readiness review before a SpaceX crew launch to the International Space Station in August 2023.
NASA/Kim Shiflett
Officials believe they understand the cause of the helium leaks and have a plan to manage them on the flight back to Earth. But there are still uncertainties about the thrusters.

In a press briefing last week, Stich said NASA is making progress on a plan with SpaceX to return Wilmore and Williams on a Dragon spacecraft. Recent tests of a Starliner thruster at White Sands, New Mexico, produced some surprising results and left engineers still lacking an understanding of the fundamental cause of the overheating thrusters on Starliner in orbit. The majority view is that the overheating comes from rapid pulses of thrusters inside insulated doghouse-shaped propulsion pods on Starliner's service module.

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Inspections of the thruster tested at White Sands showed bulging in a Teflon seal in an oxidizer valve known as a "poppet," which could restrict the flow of nitrogen tetroxide propellant. The thrusters consume the nitrogen tetroxide and mix it with hydrazine fuel for combustion. Despite the tests, however, engineers still don't understand precisely why the bulging is occurring and whether it will manifest on Starliner's flight back to Earth.

This discovery "upped the level of discomfort" among managers responsible for the Starliner test flight, Stich said.

While engineers continue assessing the thruster situation, NASA delayed the launch of the next SpaceX crew mission more than a month, to no earlier than September 24. This bought some extra time for NASA, although Stich said he would like the agency to make a decision by mid-August. That means a decision will likely come this week. Deciding now would allow time for SpaceX to reconfigure the internal cabin of the Dragon spacecraft for two astronauts rather than the normal complement of four crew members.

The scenario here would involve the Starliner astronauts staying at the space station until February, when the next SpaceX crew is slated to depart and come home. Wilmore and Williams would become fully integrated members of the station's long-term crew, taking the seats of two astronauts currently training to launch next month on SpaceX's Dragon.

If NASA goes this way, the Starliner spacecraft must undock from the space station without any astronauts aboard before the launch of the SpaceX crew mission next month. It will also take time for NASA and Boeing to update parameters in Starliner's flight software to enable an unpiloted undocking and reentry.

Questions about the end game for the Starliner test flight began circulating more widely at the end of July, when the thruster tests at White Sands proved inconclusive. In the weeks prior to the thruster tests, NASA and Boeing engineers worked on developing "flight rationale" to show that Starliner was acceptably safe to return home with Wilmore and Williams, despite the thruster problems and helium leaks.

"Good flight rationale describes the set of information that manifestly shows the part, subsystem, or operation will perform as required with requisite safety margins intact," wrote Wayne Hale, a retired NASA flight director, on his blog last week. "Alternatively, poor flight rationale includes unproven assumptions, incomplete testing, or analysis that contains flaws.

"Unfortunately, in the real world of spaceflight, there is seldom perfect flight rationale," Hale continued. "Sometimes there is good flight rationale. More often the rationale proposed for a flight contains ambiguities. Someone must exercise judgement to determine whether the flight rationale is adequate or not."

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Last week, a meeting of key engineers at NASA known as the "Program Control Board" ended with no agreement on flight rationale for Starliner to return to Earth with its two-person crew.

"We heard from a lot of folks that had concerns," Bowersox said. "We heard enough voices that the decision was not clear at the Program Control Board."


Enlarge / Steve Stich, manager of NASA's commercial crew program, inside the launch control center at Kennedy Space Center in May 2020.
Based on all that, Stich said the chances have increased that Starliner will come home without its crew, and Wilmore and Williams will instead return with SpaceX.

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The Starliner decision will come down to senior leaders at NASA Headquarters. Normally, Bowersox, who chairs NASA's flight readiness review, would make the final call. He will hear briefings from NASA's engineering and safety teams, program managers, and representatives of the astronauts themselves. If officials present differing opinions to Bowersox, as they would have if the readiness review was held last week, the decision could go to NASA's most senior civil servant, Jim Free, or to NASA Administrator Bill Nelson, a former Florida senator who flew on the shuttle mission immediately preceding the Challenger accident.

"I chair that review, we'll poll everybody, see where we are," Bowersox said at a press conference Wednesday. "I'll state what my position is at that time. If we have dissenting voices out of that meeting, then it can go to the associate administrator, and if there's a desire to go even further, it can go to the administrator."

Last week, Nelson told Ars he has confidence in NASA's decision. "I especially have confidence since I have the final decision."

Familiar faces

The people in decision-making positions on the Starliner mission were all at NASA at the time of the Columbia accident.

Stich was a flight director on Columbia's final mission. He manned one of three shifts of flight control teams monitoring Columbia's activities in orbit on its 16-day research flight. NASA engineers, analyzing imagery from the Columbia's launch on January 16, 2003, discovered that a suitcase-sized piece of insulating foam fell from the shuttle's external fuel tank and struck a portion of the orbiter's left wing.

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Engineers didn't know the damage a piece of relatively light foam could do to the shuttle's head shield when it struck the wing at more than 500 mph. Efforts to use spy satellites to take a picture of Columbia's heat shield were quashed by NASA management. At the time, NASA managers believed there was no way to rescue the crew, even if they found the heat shield catastrophically damaged.

NASA's flight directors, responsible for the minute-by-minute operation of Space Shuttle missions, got the decision on what to do about Columbia from higher-ups at NASA. Stich emailed Rick Husband, Columbia's commander, a week into the mission to inform him of the foam strike. "Experts have reviewed the high-speed photography, and there is no concern for RCC (Reinforced Carbon Carbon) or tile damage," Stich wrote. "We have seen this same phenomenon on several other flights, and there is absolutely no concern for entry."

Stich wrote that his reason for emailing Husband about the problem was to make the crew aware of it during an upcoming press conference. "This item is not even worth mentioning other than wanting to make sure that you are not surprised by it in a question from a reporter."

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LeRoy Cain, now at Boeing, was the flight director on console in mission control at NASA's Johnson Space Center during Columbia's reentry on February 1, 2003. In real-time, over the course of about 10 minutes, Cain received updates from his team suggesting a cascading series of sensor failures on the shuttle, all clustered in Columbia's left wing. Then, mission control lost contact with the shuttle and its crew.

In an interview with Ars earlier this year, before the launch of the Starliner spacecraft, Cain said he would not hesitate to voice concerns about Starliner's safety. He is the top Boeing official in charge of day-to-day Starliner mission operations. "I would stand up and say we're not ready, and here's why," Cain said.

Cain presumably concurs with Boeing's official position that Starliner is capable of safely coming back to Earth with its two-person crew.


Enlarge / LeRoy Cain, Boeing's Starliner mission director and a former NASA flight director, during a mission simulation in 2019.
NASA/Frank Michaux
Bowersox was flying more than 200 miles above the planet, in command of the International Space Station. The grounding of NASA's Space Shuttle fleet after the loss of Columbia forced his crew to return home in a Soyuz capsule. And it was a wild ride. The capsule suffered a technical malfunction during reentry, causing its guidance system to revert to a steeper so-called "ballistic" descent, subjecting Bowersox's crew to higher-than-normal g-forces. They touched down nearly 300 miles short of their intended landing zone in Kazakhstan.

Known unknowns

There's one important distinction between NASA's decision about what to do with the Starliner spacecraft and the agency's mulling of the situation with Columbia more than 21 years ago.

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Back then, the people in charge of the shuttle program weren't aware of the damage to the leading edge of Columbia's left wing. All of the data coming back from the shuttle showed it to be in excellent shape for reentry and landing. Today, managers know there are problems with Starliner.

"They frankly were fairly clueless on Columbia or certainly didn’t give it the same level of scrutiny, as they never thought foam shedding was an issue," a former NASA astronaut told Ars. "Also, on this one, Boeing is confident there isn’t a big issue with crew returning safely on Starliner, yet some within NASA certainly don’t feel that way."

Starliner's Reaction Control System (RCS) thrusters also had problems on an unpiloted test flight in 2022, and software problems caused Starliner's first test flight in 2019 to end prematurely. This "checkered history" could easily lead to some at NASA not having 100 percent confidence in the vehicle, the former astronaut said. "So there are some dissenters because there can be."

Scott Hubbard, a former director of NASA's Ames Research Center and a member of the Columbia Accident Investigation Board, said the "dearth of information" about the 10-inch hole in the shuttle's left wing led to a bad decision.

"In the current case with Starliner, much is known about the RCS (and) helium leaks, albeit not the root cause," Hubbard told Ars. "Based on public information, there are some tests of the valves which indicate that in an extreme case, there could be failures of the RCS system, which would be catastrophic."

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Once the Starliner test flight is over, one way or another, Hubbard urged NASA and Boeing to revisit their decision to launch the spacecraft with a known helium leak. The craft's service module ended up leaking in five places. "Was the decision well-supported, or did someone have 'launch fever?'" Hubbard said.



Stephen Clark / Stephen Clark is a space reporter at Ars Technica, covering private space companies and the world’s space agencies. Stephen writes about the nexus of technology, science, policy, and business on and off the planet.
warshipadmin
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Re: Starliner now in orbit "into August"....

Post by warshipadmin »

reddit photos of the thruster assermbly on the spaceship vs what they are testing. Also some detailed observations https://www.reddit.com/r/Starliner/comm ... /#lightbox

I'd add that testing a thruster in isolation in an atmosphere will have very different cooling characteristics than a bunch of them stuffed together in a vacuum.
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