NASA's Space Shuttle Program Successfully Conducts Final Motor
Test In Utah
The final tests on a re-usable solid rocket motor for the
Space Shuttle program were conduced Thursday at a NASA facility in
Pomontory, Utah. The flight support motor, or FSM-17, burned for
approximately 123 seconds -- the same time each reusable solid
rocket motor burns during an actual space shuttle launch.
Preliminary indications show all test objectives were met. After
final test data are analyzed, results for each objective will be
published in a NASA report.
ATK Launch Systems, a unit of Alliant Techsystems Inc., in
Promontory, north of Salt Lake City, manufactures and tests the
solid rocket motors.
The test - the 52nd conducted for NASA by ATK - marks the
closure of a test program that has spanned more than three decades.
The first test was in July 1977. The ATK-built motors have
successfully launched the space shuttle into orbit 129 times.
"(Thursday's) test was a great deal more than the successful
conclusion to a series of highly successful NASA/ATK-sponsored
static tests that began more than three decades ago," said David
Beaman, Reusable Solid Rocket Booster project manager at NASA's
Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. The project, part
of the Space Shuttle Propulsion Office, is responsible for motor
design, development, manufacturing, assembly, testing and flight
performance.
"These tests have built a base of engineering knowledge that
continued engineering development of the reusable solid rocket
motor system and the continued safe and successful launch of space
shuttles," Beaman said. "They have provided an engineering model
and lessons learned for additional applications in future launch
systems."
The final test was conducted to ensure the safe flight of the
four remaining space shuttle missions. A total of 43 design
objectives were measured through 258 instrument channels during the
two-minute static firing. The flight motor tested represents motors
that will be used for all remaining space shuttle launches.
The space shuttle's reusable solid rocket motor is the largest
solid rocket motor ever flown, the only one rated for human flight
and the first designed for reuse. Each shuttle launch requires the
boost of two reusable solid rocket motors to lift the
4.5-million-pound shuttle vehicle.
During space shuttle flights, solid rocket motors provide 80
percent of the thrust during the first two minutes of flight. Each
motor, the primary component of the shuttle's twin solid rocket
boosters, generates an average thrust of 2.6 million pounds and is
just over 126 feet long and 12 feet in diameter.