RoundupReads 40 Years Ago: Preparations Continue for Columbia’s Return to Space on STS-2

40 Years Ago: Preparations Continue for Columbia’s Return to Space on STS-2

by John Uri | 2021-09-13

Following the Aug. 31, 1981 rollout of Space Shuttle Columbia to Launch Pad 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the program targeted Oct. 9 as the launch date for STS-2, the second flight of the reusable spacecraft. The launch teams and astronauts Joe H. Engle and Richard H. Truly completed a countdown demonstration test, and the shuttle’s external tank successfully passed a practice tanking test. However, a spill of corrosive oxidizer during fueling resulted in hundreds of heat shield tiles coming loose from the orbiter’s nose. The required repair work resulted in a delay of the launch to early November. Flight controllers in the Mission Control Center (MCC) at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston completed the final long-duration simulation of the mission.

Left: STS-2 backup astronauts Henry W. “Hank” Hartsfield, left, and Thomas K. “TK” Mattingly during emergency egress training at Launch Pad 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Right: STS-2 astronauts Joe H. Engle, left, and Richard H. Truly at Kennedy for the countdown demonstration test. Credits: NASA

Left: STS-2 backup astronauts Henry W. “Hank” Hartsfield, left, and Thomas K. “TK” Mattingly during emergency egress training at Launch Pad 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Right: STS-2 astronauts Joe H. Engle, left, and Richard H. Truly at Kennedy for the countdown demonstration test. Credits: NASA

The day Columbia arrived at its launch pad, controllers in the MCC at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston began the second and final long-duration simulation of the STS-2 mission. The three-day simulation rehearsed the first 56 hours of the flight. Following the arrival of Columbia at Launch Pad 39A, technicians at Kennedy completed the Pad Validation Test to ensure the shuttle’s configuration did not change during the rollout and to verify the connections between the pad, the vehicle, and the mobile launch platform.

On Sept. 2, STS-2 backup astronauts Thomas K. “TK” Mattingly and Henry W. “Hank” Hartsfield participated in emergency egress training at Launch Pad 39A, receiving a demonstration of the slide wire escape system and driving the armored personnel carriers that would be used to evacuate the crew in the event of a launch pad emergency. On Sept. 9, launch control teams in Firing Room 1 of Kennedy’s Launch Control Center carried out a “dry” countdown demonstration test, meaning the external tank was not filled with cryogenic propellants. Engle and Truly participated in the final few hours of the test, as they would on launch day, including donning their pressure suits and climbing into Columbia’s cockpit. The test ended with a simulated main engine ignition.

On Sept. 15, engineers loaded the shuttle’s external tank with super-cold liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen. No damage to the tank’s foam insulation occurred — an improvement from the aftermath of a similar test prior to the STS-1 mission.

Left: At Kennedy, STS-2 astronauts Richard H. Truly, left, and Joe H. Engle suit up for the countdown demonstration test. Middle: Truly, left, and Engle leave the White Room at Launch Pad 39A after the conclusion of the countdown demonstration test. Right: Truly, left, and Engle talk to reporters at Launch Pad 39A following the countdown demonstration test. Credits: NASALeft: At Kennedy, STS-2 astronauts Richard H. Truly, left, and Joe H. Engle suit up for the countdown demonstration test. Middle: Truly, left, and Engle leave the White Room at Launch Pad 39A after the conclusion of the countdown demonstration test. Right: Truly, left, and Engle talk to reporters at Launch Pad 39A following the countdown demonstration test. Credits: NASA

During fueling of Columbia’s starboard forward reaction control system on Sept. 22, about three gallons of highly corrosive nitrogen tetroxide oxidizer spilled onto the outside of the vehicle’s nose. The oxidizer seeped between the tiles of the thermal protection system, essentially melting the glue that held them in place. Approximately 360 tiles either fell off on their own or needed to be removed to clean the area of any residual oxidizer. This process, as well as the reattachment of new tiles, resulted in the planned launch date slipping to Nov. 4.

Left: Columbia on Launch Pad 39A at Kennedy in Florida. Right: Missing thermal protection system tiles resulting from a spill of nitrogen tetroxide during fueling operations of the forward reaction control system. Credits: NASA

Left: Columbia on Launch Pad 39A at Kennedy in Florida. Right: Missing thermal protection system tiles resulting from a spill of nitrogen tetroxide during fueling operations of the forward reaction control system. Credits: NASA

To be continued …

World events in September 1981:

  • Sept. 4 – Beyoncé Knowles is born in Houston.
  • Sept. 7 – “The People’s Court” debuts in syndication.
  • Sept. 12 – “The Smurfs,” an animated cartoon series by Hanna-Barbera, debuts on NBC.
  • Sept. 14 – “Entertainment Tonight” premieres in syndication.
  • Sept. 19 – Simon and Garfunkel reunite for a concert in New York’s Central Park.
  • Sept. 21 – Belize (formerly British Honduras) gains independence from the United Kingdom.
  • Sept. 25 – Sandra Day O’Connor is sworn in as the first female U.S. Supreme Court Justice.
  • Sept. 26 – The Boeing 767 airliner makes its first flight in Everett, Washington.
  • Sept. 27 – The French Train à Grande Vitesse high-speed rail makes its first commercial run between Paris and Lyon, reaching a top speed of 156 mph.