Tuesday, December 26, 2000

STS-70 (Discovery)

 1995-035A


In early 1995 STS-70 was scheduled to fly after the first Mir docking mission. Its main task was deployment of a TDRS comsat. When the STS-71 mission was delayed because the launch of the Russian Spektr module to Mir slipped, STS-70 was moved ahead in the queue.

STS-70 carried the first flight of an improved `Block I' Space Shuttle Main Engine. SSME 2036, in main engine no. 1 position, contained a new liquid oxidizer turbopump, a new two-duct powerhead, and a new heat exchanger. The revised design eliminated a large number of welds and was intended to improve safety margins.

A week before the scheduled launch, NASA was alarmed to discover that woodpeckers were pecking at the Shuttle's External Tank, leaving significant holes in its insulation which had to be patched. It was decided to roll back Discovery to the VAB for repairs and fly the mission after STS-71.

On-board experiments for this mission included the Commercial Protein Crystal Growth Facility for growing interferon, the BRIC-4 canister carrying tobacco hormworm for hormone and muscle development studies, BRIC-5 carrying daylily plant cells, and NIH experiments using rats. The Space Tissue Loss B experiment used Medaka fish eggs to study the effects of microgravity on the growth of embryos.

The middeck experiment complement also included a set of military experiments including the HERCULES geolocation camera.

The countdown on Jul 13 was trouble free until a halt was called at T-31s to reset a malfunctioning range safety destruct receiver on the ET. The count resumed after only 55s, leading to a launch at 1341:55 UTC. The Block I engine performed well and Discovery entered orbit eight minutes later. TDRS-G was deployed from the IUS tilt table later the same day, as Discovery passed over the Pacific.

After a week of minor experiments on-orbit, Discovery prepared to return to Florida. After a one day waveoff due to weather, OV-103 landed at KSC on Jul 22.


STS-70 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1995 May 3  1305  Rollover to VAB  
1995 May 6  Mate to ET/SRB 
1995 May 11  0637  Rollout to LC39B 
1995 Jun 8  0430  Rollback to VAB3 
1995 Jun 15   Rollout to LC39B 
1995 Jul 13  1341:55  Launch 
 1343:58  SRB sep 
 1350:26  MECO  88.24 73 x 302 x 28.5 (OMS dV) 
 1350:45  ET sep  88.22 67 x 291 x 28.5 
 1421:50  OMS-2 circ 68m/s  90.56 301 x 302 x 28.5 
 1424:13  OMS-2 cutoff 
 1511:15 PLBD open 
 1954:55  TDRS/IUS-26 deploy 
 1955:46  RCS sep 7s 
 1958  tilt table lower 
 2006:45  Tilt table stowed 
 2009:46  OMS 3 L sep 34s  90.85 299 x 333 x 28.5 
1995 Jul 14  1430   90.86 299 x 333 x 28.5 
 1910:41  OMS 4 R 32s Lower orbit 90.55 286 x 315 x 28.5 
1995 Jul 20  0833  RCS hot fire 
1995 Jul 21  0818:35  PLBD close 
 1236:58  PLBD open  90.52 286 x 313 x 28.5 
1995 Jul 22  0648:04  PLBD closed  90.52 285 x 314 x 28.5 
 1100:12  OMS DO 176.6s 104m/s 
 1103:09  OMS DO cutoff  86.99 -63 x 313 x 28.5 
 1130:41  Entry interface 122 km 
 1202:02  MGTD KSC RW33 
 1202:03  Drag chute 
 1202:09  NGTD 
 1202:35  Drag chute sep 
 1203:04  Wheels stop 
 1545  Roll to OPF/1 

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