This week marked the end of the Orbiter Endeavour, which I find to be a spectacular spacecraft. She has served her country brilliantly. Her landing got me thinking about this: Would she have been built if Challenger did not get destroyed in 1986? This is a question that has been on my mind for sometime.
Since the spares were already usd up, there was no chance that a repacement for Columbia could have been considered, irrespective of George W Bush's administration's decision to close down shuttle operations.
Quote from: Phillip Clark on 06/05/2011 11:01 amSince the spares were already usd up, there was no chance that a repacement for Columbia could have been considered, irrespective of George W Bush's administration's decision to close down shuttle operations.Didn't they again consider upgrading Enterprise?
This left Columbia, Challenger, Discovery and Atlantis as the four-shuttle fleet with a further orbiter being on the "wanted but unfunded" list. It was only after the loss of Challenger that a further orbiter was authorised, using the spares which were already available as its basis.Since the spares were already usd up, there was no chance that a repacement for Columbia could have been considered, irrespective of George W Bush's administration's decision to close down shuttle operations.
So, regardless of which orbiter was destroyed in the first accident, I think Endeavour was a fore-gone conclusion.
FWIW, in that period of time ("Post-Challenger") Rockwell was given a little bit of money to start a second set of structural spares, but that project (money) ended very quickly with little or no hardware to show for it.
I have all of the 1st 25 missions on DVD and it is EXTREMELY interesting to watch the world and the media "turn" on the program. It is almost like it started around STS-9 when they had the nozzle issue. VERY interesting to watch the flip and to see how their reporting changed.
But you gotta wonder how the program would have been with large budgets and no accidents......i can only think, WOW!
What really hurt the program was a photo that ran in at least two of the three big news weekly magazines, Time and Newsweek, that showed a shuttle on the back of a 747 SCA missing a lot of tiles. (I have included a photo, but it is not the one that appeared in the magazines and a lot of newspapers.). I cannot remember if it was shipped that way or if they fell off during flight.
So alot of the new densified tiles had not yet been installed when they ferried Columbia from Edwards to KSC. So they had to complete the tile installation process in the OPF which lead to record long first stay in OPF.
Thanks for the info. I imagine that after that incident, NASA regretted shipping the orbiter like that. It was a major publicity hit for them, because the photo (not the one I included, but a better one that really showed the missing tiles quite well) appeared in articles with titles like "America's flying boondoggle." If there had been no photo, I doubt that there would have been as many articles.
Though there was discussion and some sentiment in Congress even before Challenger's accident for a fifth Orbiter, nothing came from that, other than the knowledge that there were some spare structural elements available that would provide a "head start" on building an additional Orbiter, as I recall. She was, as has been noted, built as a replacement vehicle after the loss of Challenger.
NASA knew what they were doing. They were already catching flack for schedule delays and overruns. They were faced with the choice of moving back the delivery and publicly missing another date or shipping on time but with the missing tiles. They obviuosly chose the latter.
These are close ups. But at the time there was one really famous photo that hit all the print media. It was an in-flight picture.
I always wondered how feasible it would have been to utilize any structural spares to repair a damaged orbiter. The Rudder/speed break and payload bay doors stand out as easy fixes if you needed to replace them. But anything liable to cause severe damage, would probably result in the orbiter not coming back (unless you have something like the main gear failing at wheel stop, resulting in severe damage to the crew compartment...or something like that, or if by some miracle Columbia managed to limp home with a mangled wing on STS-107).
While alternate realities may be fun for some to speculate on what could have/would have happened, it was the capabilities of the orbiter that allowed Hubble to be fixed.As for structural spares, yes Endeavour was partially constructed from some. Just recently, we scrapped some additional spares which were designated to OV-106 or could have been used in the event of damage from landing or whatever reason (within reasonalbe limits). On STS-9, the issue was with the APU GG injector stem and issue with corrosion. They were chromised in a subsequent mod and have performed exceptionally ever since.