The Briefing Room

General Category => Science, Technology and Knowledge => Space => Topic started by: Elderberry on October 30, 2023, 12:21:10 am

Title: The hull of Axiom’s first space station module nears completion
Post by: Elderberry on October 30, 2023, 12:21:10 am
Behind the Black by Robert Zimmerman 10/25/2023

https://behindtheblack.com/behind-the-black/points-of-information/the-hull-of-axioms-first-space-station-module-nears-completion/ (https://behindtheblack.com/behind-the-black/points-of-information/the-hull-of-axioms-first-space-station-module-nears-completion/)

The hull of Axiom’s first space station module is nearing completion, according to officials of the Italian company Thales Alenia Space that is building it.

    “The first module shell is effectively completed,” Jason Aspiotis, Axiom’s director of in-space infrastructure and logistics, said at AIAA’s Ascend conference here on Oct. 23. “A lot of the subsystems that will populate the underlying structure–think about life support systems, avionics, propulsion, [guidance, navigation and control systems], power, communications, all that good stuff–we’re developing in a lab in Houston.” Hab One hatches have also been fabricated, tested and prepared for delivery to Thales Alenia Space to support Hab One pressure testing, the company says.

    The first module is to be shipped to Houston by 2024 for final assembly and integration at Axiom Space’s factory at Ellington Airport. The company plans to launch the Hab One module in 2026.

Based on this news report, Axiom’s schedule has not experienced any further delays since it pushed back the launch from 2024 in June.

The article also says, almost as an aside, that ISS is planned for decommission “in 2031”, which is one year later than any previous report I’ve seen. I suspect this is correct, but is information that NASA really didn’t want revealed to the public as yet, as it had enough trouble convincing its international European and Japanese partners to stay on until 2030. Moreover, there remains serious concerns the older Russian modules themselves might fail before then, based on the number of stress fractures found in their hulls, so admitting NASA hopes to keep the station flying till ’31 will appear questionable at best.
Title: Re: The hull of Axiom’s first space station module nears completion
Post by: Hoodat on October 30, 2023, 12:29:56 am
They named their company after a space station in a Disney movie?  Seriously?