STS-26 (26)
- DISCOVERY (7)
- Pad
39-B (7)
- 26th Shuttle mission
- 7th Flight OV-103
- Frederick H. Hauck (3), Commander
- Richard
O. Covey (2), Pilot
- John
M. Lounge (2), Mission Specialist 1
- George
D. Nelson (3), Mission Specialist 2
- David
C. Hilmers (2), Mission Specialist 3
Milestones:
- OPF
- Oct. 30, 1986
- VAB
- June 21, 1988
- PAD
- July 4, 1988
Payload:
- TDRS-C,PVTOS,PCG,IRCFE,ARC,IFE,MLE,PPE,ELRAD,ASDF,SSIP(x2),OASIS-I
Mission Objectives:
- Click
here for Press Kit
Click
here for Additional Info on STS-26
-
Launch:
- September 29, 1988,11:37:00
a.m. EDT. Launch delayed one hour, 38 minutes to replace fuses
in cooling system of two of crew's flight pressure suits,
and due to lighter than expected upper atmospheric winds.
Suit repairs successful and countdown continued after waiver
of wind condition constraint. Launch Weight: 254,606 lbs.
Orbit:
- Altitude: 203nm
- Inclination: 28.5degrees
- Orbits: 64
- Duration: Four days, one hour, zero minutes, 11 seconds.
- Distance: 1,680,000 miles
Hardware:
- SRB:
BI-029
- SRM: 360L001
- ET
: 28/LWT-21
- MLP
: 2
- SSME-1:
SN-2019
- SSME-2:
SN-2022
- SSME-3:
SN-2028
Landing:
- October 3, 1988,
9:37:11 a.m. PDT, Runway 17, Edwards
Air Force Base, Calif. Rollout distance: 7,451 feet.
Rollout time: 49 seconds. Orbiter
returned to KSC Oct. 8,1988. Landing
Weight: 194,184 lbs.
Mission Highlights:
- Primary payload, NASA
Tracking and Data Relay Satellite-3 (TDRS-3)
attached to an Inertial
Upper Stage (IUS),
became second TDRS
deployed. After deployment, IUS propelled
satellite to geosynchronous orbit. Secondary payloads:
Physical Vapor Transport of Organic Solids (PVTOS);
Protein Crystal Growth (PCG); Infrared Communications Flight
Experiment (IRCFE); Aggregation of Red Blood Cells (ARC); isoelectric
Focusing Experiment (IFE); Mesoscale Lightning Experiment
(MLE); Phase Partitioning Experiment (PPE); Earth-Limb
Radiance Experiment (ELRAD); Automated Directional
Solidification Furnace (ADSF)
and two Shuttle Student Involvement Program (SSIP)
experiments. Orbiter Experiments Autonomous Supporting Instrumentation
System-I (OASIS-I) recorded variety of environmental
measurements during various inflight phases of orbiter. Ku-band
antenna in payload bay deployed; however, dish antenna
command and actual telemetry did not correspond. Also, orbiter
cabin Flash Evaporator System iced up, raising crew cabin
temperature to mid-80s.
-
Back
To Dick Covey's Missions
This
page hosted by
Get your own Free Home Page