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July 12, 2009 4:30 PM PDT

Shuttle Endeavour grounded by stormy weather

by William Harwood

Stormy weather approaching the Kennedy Space Center on Sunday forced NASA launch managers to order another 24-hour delay for the hard-luck crew of the shuttle Endeavour, their fourth slip since a hydrogen leak derailed an initial launch try in June.

Storms approach the Kennedy Space Center from the west, forcing NASA managers to delay the shuttle Endeavour's launch on a space station assembly mission. The crew will try again Monday.

(Credit: Spaceflightnow.com)

There were no leaks or technical problems of any significance during Sunday's countdown and Endeavour's external tank was loaded with a half-million gallons of rocket fuel without incident.

Commander Mark Polansky and his crew mates began strapping in a few minutes before 4 p.m. EDT, hopeful about finally kicking off a 16-day space station assembly mission.

But as the afternoon wore on, storm cells began pushing in from the west and forecasters predicted thunderstorms or showers within 20 nautical miles of the shuttle's emergency runway. NASA flight rules forbid a launch if forecasters predict rain near the runway a half hour after launch when the crew would have to attempt an emergency landing in the event of an engine failure early in flight.

With a short five-minute window, Launch Director Pete Nickolenko did not have time to wait for improving conditions and with forecasters solidly no-go for launch, he reluctantly called off the countdown during a final hold at the T-minus nine-minute mark.

"Roman, we got the vehicle ready and the weather unfortunately did not cooperate with us today, we had some colliding sea breezes," Nickolenko radioed just after 7 p.m. "We're going to have to declare a scrub for today and try to bring the team back for another attempt tomorrow."

"We understand and we'll be ready," Polansky replied from Endeavour's flight deck.

Endeavour's next launch opportunity comes at 6:51:24 p.m. Monday. Forecasters are predicting a 60 percent chance of acceptable weather Monday and Tuesday.

As it now stands, Endeavour must be off the ground by Tuesday or the flight will be delayed to July 27, after a high-priority Russian Progress resupply mission scheduled for launch July 24.

William Harwood has been covering the U.S. space program full-time since 1984, first as Cape Canaveral bureau chief for United Press International and now as a consultant for CBS News. He has covered more than 115 shuttle missions, every interplanetary flight since Voyager 2's flyby of Neptune, and scores of commercial and military launches. Based at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, Harwood is a devoted amateur astronomer and co-author of "Comm Check: The Final Flight of Shuttle Columbia." You can follow his frequent status updates at the CBSNews.com Space Place, where this story was first published.
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by timber2005 July 12, 2009 5:10 PM PDT
This has been a very unfortunate mission after the successful Hubble repair mission.
I guess the hardest part of the mission is getting off the ground sometimes.

Best of luck to them getting off the ground Monday/Tuesday.
Reply to this comment
by Dr_Zinj July 13, 2009 8:16 AM PDT
Pretty sad that 50 years into the space program we still have such delicate launch vehicles.

Or that we have so few.

Or that they are so inefficient.
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by askgees July 13, 2009 11:40 AM PDT
A hundred billion dollar POS that can't handle the rain???? But some how we're able to drive a 72 pinto in the rain, snow, ice or what ever. NASA is the greatest failure man kind has ever known. Trillions of dollars and we have some nifty moon rocks. We as the tax payers need to put an end to this fiasco. If they wish to d#$k around in space then let then find investors.
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Timely coverage of breaking space news, from shuttle operations and assembly of the International Space Station to planetary exploration, space science, and development of the next generation of manned spacecraft. You can follow Bill Harwood's frequent status updates at the CBSNews.com Space Place.

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