Transportation stand for crewed Artemis mission delivered

(NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center/Facebook)

HUNTSVILLE — Another step for the nation’s return to the moon has been taken by the Marshall Space Flight Center.

A transportation stand arrived this week from the Kennedy Space Center aboard NASA’s Pegasus barge. It was used to transport the launch vehicle stage adapter (LVSA) of the Space Launch System rocket for Artemis I.

The nearly 28-foot-tall LVSA is a cone-shaped element that connects the rocket’s core stage and the interim cryogenic propulsion stage. It also partially covers the in-space stage’s RL10 engine.

It is produced and manufactured at Marshall by Teledyne Brown Engineering, the LVSA lead contractor.

The transportation stand is one of two at Marshall and will be used as teams continue to manufacture the LVSA for Artemis III.

NASA and Teledyne Brown Engineering use the stands to maneuver the LVSA hardware from facility to facility, across the facility, and to apply the thermal protection system.

After unloading the transportation stand from Pegasus, teams at Marshall will load the Artemis III LVSA hardware onto the stand to transport it to the facility where the thermal protection system spray foam will be applied by hand.

NASA and Teledyne Brown have already completed applying the thermal protection system spray foam to the LVSA for Artemis II.

Recent in Space

NASA adds new mission to Artemis campaign

NASA is accelerating its Artemis campaign, adding a new mission in 2027 and committing to at least one lunar surface landing every year beginning in 2028. The update on Friday […]

A new report from Air & Space Forces Magazine says U.S. Space Command is offering “significant relocation bonuses” to civilian employees willing to move to Huntsville as the headquarters transitions […]

Next Post

New kid on the Redstone block – Space Development Agency

Bud McLaughlin January 14, 2023