Author Topic: The first Space Launch System flight will probably be delayed  (Read 1645 times)

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Online Elderberry

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Planetary.org by Jason Davis  April 26, 2017

It's looking likely that the first flight of NASA's new heavy lift rocket, the Space Launch System, will slip beyond its November 2018 launch date.

The space agency has yet to announce any official schedule changes. But a recent report by NASA's Office of Inspector General, along with dates provided by internal sources, an agency-wide schedule review currently in progress, and welding challenges involving the core stage liquid oxygen tank, all point to a probable delay.

Last year, after our Rocket Road Trip to NASA's southern spaceflight centers, we noted that despite an impressive amount of progress on infrastructure upgrades, the big rocket's launch schedule was razor-thin. Now, following a February tornado that disrupted operations at the Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans, all signs are starting to lean towards a slip.

The situation

On April 13, NASA's Office of Inspector General, or OIG, issued a report on the agency's efforts to send humans beyond low-Earth orbit. According to that report, SLS, Orion and their associated ground systems should be carrying cost margins of 10 to 30 percent, and schedule margins of 30 to 60 days per year.

But in terms of cost margins, SLS and Orion are down to 1 percent, and ground systems are at 3 percent. For schedule, SLS and ground systems have just 30 days of wiggle room, and Orion has already incurred a five-to-ten-month delivery delay on its European-built service module.

NASA previously planned to have the first completed SLS core stage shipped from Michoud to Stennis Space Center in time for an all-up test firing this December. Following the test, the stage would be shipped to Kennedy Space Center by the end of February 2018.

But the OIG says that shipment has been delayed to March or April. When I asked Marshall Space Flight Center officials if the test firing was still on track to happen this year, they said NASA was currently "reviewing the production schedules across the enterprise," and a date for the test-firing would be set thereafter.

Software development is also behind schedule, according to the OIG. Ground systems software won't be ready until May 2018, while SLS and Orion software readiness isn't predicted until June—all roughly about a year's delay from previous estimates.

The SLS mobile launch tower isn't currently scheduled to roll into the Vehicle Assembly Building until July. That will leave about four months for NASA to assemble SLS, complete integrated testing and roll the rocket out to the pad in time for a November 2018 launch.

At the same time, NASA is studying whether or not crew could be added to the first flight, which would push the launch date beyond 2018. But even if the first mission remains uncrewed, at least one schedule provided by internal sources already shows a projected launch date of 2019.

What happened?

The programs' cost and schedule margins seem to have evaporated for the same reasons other major new launch vehicle programs are often delayed: Unexpected issues of varying severity crop up, and over time, these cascade into a full-blown schedule slip.

In Orion's case, it's the European-built service module, which is based on the Automated Transfer Vehicles that carry cargo to the International Space Station. In 2015, engineers and astronauts at NASA's Johnson Space Center noted concern over the design of the ATV's propellant system, which has no failsafe redundancy in the event of a catastrophic leak. (One flight director called the situation "totally unacceptable" for ensuring crew safety.) The module's design was changed, but this led to a five-to-ten-month delivery delay.

At Michoud, Boeing engineers first had to fix a misaligned tower at the Vertical Assembly Center, which created minor delays. Now, a welding anomaly discovered on a core stage liquid oxygen tank test article threatens to delay things further.

"The (SLS) team studied the first weld confidence article and panels, and after testing, some of the welds did not meet NASA’s rigid quality and safety criteria," ageny officials said in a statement.

"Manufacturing of the liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen tank is pushing the state of the art for self-reacting friction stir welding of thicker materials," the statement said. "These tanks must have thicker walls—greater than half an inch thick, than the other parts of the core stage, and NASA has not previously welded tanks at this thickness with self-reacting friction stir welding."

The core stage liquid oxygen tank has thicker welds than the hydrogen tank, which has already been completed. After discovering problems with the oxygen tank confidence welds, Boeing and NASA refined their technical parameters and processes, and test-welded a new oxygen tank barrel and dome section together.

The results looked good, so engineers built a new liquid oxygen qualification tank. That tank shows no sign of leaks, and is now being shipped to Marshall Space Flight Center for structural testing. If the tests go well, construction of the final flight article can begin.

But none of this bodes well for the already tight schedule the program is facing.

More: http://www.planetary.org/blogs/jason-davis/2017/20170424-first-sls-flight-delayed.html

geronl

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Re: The first Space Launch System flight will probably be delayed
« Reply #1 on: April 26, 2017, 01:46:27 pm »
Quote
self-reacting friction stir welding

I'm going to have to look that up

Offline thackney

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Re: The first Space Launch System flight will probably be delayed
« Reply #2 on: April 26, 2017, 02:31:01 pm »
I'm going to have to look that up

 The process consists of a rotating weld pin tool that plasticizes material through friction. The plasticized material is welded by applying a high weld forge force through the weld pin tool against the material during pin tool rotation. The high weld forge force is reacted against an anvil and a stout tool structure. A variation of friction stir welding currently being evaluated is self-reacting friction stir welding. Self-reacting friction stir welding incorporates two opposing shoulders on the crown and root sides of the weld joint. In self-reacting friction stir welding, the weld forge force is reacted against the crown shoulder portion of the weld pin tool by the root shoulder. This eliminates the need for a stout tooling structure to react the high weld forge force required in the typical friction stir weld process. Therefore, the self-reacting feature reduces tooling requirements and, therefore, process implementation costs. This makes the process attractive for aluminum alloy circumferential weld applications.

https://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20030061190.pdf



The Non-self type example would be:


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Online Elderberry

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Re: The first Space Launch System flight will probably be delayed
« Reply #3 on: April 27, 2017, 11:04:40 pm »
https://arstechnica.com/science/2017/04/senior-official-nasa-will-delay-first-flight-of-new-sls-rocket-until-2019/

NASA has decided it must delay the maiden flight of its Space Launch System rocket, presently scheduled for November 2018, until at least early 2019. This decision was widely expected due to several problems with the rocket, Orion spacecraft, and ground launch systems. The delay was confirmed in a letter from a NASA official released Thursday by the US Government Accountability Office.

"We agree with the GAO that maintaining a November 2018 launch readiness date is not in the best interest of the program, and we are in the process of establishing a new target in 2019," wrote William Gerstenmaier, chief of NASA's human spaceflight program. "Caution should be used in referencing the report on the specific technical issues, but the overall conclusions are valid."

The GAO report referenced by Gerstenmaier, NASA Human Space Exploration: Delay Likely for First Exploration Mission, reveals a litany of technical concerns, such as cracking problems in the core stage of the Space Launch System rocket, that have significantly reduced the "margin" in the schedule available to accommodate development delays.

The GAO strongly recommended that NASA publicly acknowledge the likelihood of a delay and give Congress a more reasonable launch readiness date for Exploration Mission-1 (EM-1), the first full-up launch of the SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft. NASA would do this by September 30, Gerstenmaier said. Delaying the first SLS launch further may prove politically painful for NASA. Congress directed NASA to build the SLS rocket in 2010 and wrote a law requiring an initial test flight by the end of 2016. The agency may now miss that deadline by at least three years.

Online Elderberry

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Re: The first Space Launch System flight will probably be delayed
« Reply #4 on: April 27, 2017, 11:22:26 pm »
GAO-17-414: Published: Apr 27, 2017. Publicly Released: Apr 27, 2017.


http://www.gao.gov/assets/690/684360.pdf