50 SKY SHADES - World aviation news

NASA transports its Mars crew capsule in the belly of a really weird cargo plane

Download: Printable PDF Date: 02 Feb 2016 06:37 (UTC) category:
Publisher:
NASA transports its Mars crew capsule in the belly of a really weird cargo plane - Events / Festivals publisher
Dana Ermolenko
Country: United States Aircraft: Airplanes
Source: The Verge

NASA's Orion capsule — the spacecraft that could one day take humans to Mars — is going on an important flight today. Unfortunately it's not into space. Instead, the main structure of the vehicle is being transported from the Michoud Assembly Facility in Louisiana, where the capsule was built, to Kennedy Space Center in Florida. That's where it will live until it goes on its first uncrewed test flight on top of NASA's next big rocket, the Space Launch System.

The Orion has a special ride to Kennedy called the Super Guppy. It's a giant transport plane NASA uses to lug around big cargo. Shaped like, well, a guppy, the plane is able to carry loads that weigh up to 26 tons in a cargo hold that has up to 39,000 cubic feet of usable space. NASA's Super Guppy was originally used to transport parts needed to form the International Space Space Station; the plane would carry the pieces to the sites they'd eventually launch from. Now, NASA keeps it on hand to carry oversized cargo, and the Orion definitely fits the bill, measuring about 10 feet tall and 16.5 feet in diameter.

View of the packed Orion from inside the Super Guppy cargo hold. (NASA)

To get the Orion inside the hold, the plane actually splits apart. The front nose can swing open and away from the rest of the plane, staying connected through hinges on one side. That hinged nose can open up to an angle of 200 degrees to allow large pieces on board. Once the cargo is loaded, the nose is reattached for flight.

Unfortunately, this is all the flying this particular Orion will do for a couple years. Its first uncrewed test flight on the SLS is slated for late 2018. And after that, it's a little unclear when the Orion will fly again. NASA says it has an "aggressive" internal goal of launching the first crewed test flight in 2021, but the official date is scheduled for no later than 2023. 





Recommended

Texas Department of Public Safety accepts delivery of Bell 407GXi

Bell Textron delivered new Texas Department of Public Safety’s  Bell 407GXi. This delivery comes on the heels of an announcement made during Verticon earlier this year h...

BGS expands fueling partnership with Freebird Airlines ahead of summer 2026 season

Baltic Ground Services, an international provider of ground handling and aircraft fueling services, has expanded its cooperation with Turkish leisure carrier Freebird Airlines across several airports...

AERO 2027 builds on the success of this year’s edition

AERO 2027, taking place from April 14-17, 2027, will feature a further developed concept designed to build on the great success of this year’s event. In 2026, 860 exhibitors from 50 countries to...

ExecuJet MRO Services Australasia expands Falcon 7X heavy maintenance capability in Sydney

ExecuJet MRO Services Australasia is expanding its Falcon maintenance capability in Sydney, with new investments in specialist tooling, training and technical resources to support upcoming Falcon 7X h...

Android Apps development in Riga, Latvia