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MJMANDALAY
09-12-2006, 03:21 PM
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Spacewalking astronauts worried they have may have gummed up a successful job connecting an addition to the international space station Tuesday when a bolt, spring and washer floated free.

Astronaut Joe Tanner was working with the bolt when it sprang loose, floated over the head of Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper and skittered across the 17 1/2-ton box-like truss that they were hooking up.

While the washer went out into space safely, Tanner worried the bolt and spring could get into the truss's wiring and tubing and causing problems.

"Not a good thing," Tanner said. "Let's hope it doesn't end up somewhere in the mechanism.

"I don't see it anywhere."

NASA managers were examining whether the lost bolt would be a problem. Space debris can be dangerous if it punctures space station walls or spacesuits and can jam crucial mechanisms. However, spacewalkers have a long history of losing material in space. In July, Discovery spacewalkers lost a 14-inch-long spatula that floated away.

Mission Control later told the Atlantis crew not to worry: "We don't think it's going to be a problem."

"I just hope that bolt is on its way to Mother Earth right now and not on its way" to a crucial joint in the addition, Tanner replied.

The free-flying bolt marred an otherwise successful and speedy six-hour, 26-minute spacewalk Tuesday morning.Two other spacewalks are planned for later this week.

"You did a phenomenal job and set the bar very high for the rest of the assembly," Pam Melroy radioed from Mission Control when the spacewalk ended late Tuesday morning.

Tanner and Piper zipped through a jam-packed list of arduous but mundane construction tasks, putting NASA ahead of schedule in connecting the addition. With extra time, Mission Control assigned them half a dozen extra jobs of bolt removing and cover unlatching that would have been part of a Thursday spacewalk.

That's when the bolt got lost.

Atlantis astronauts Dan Burbank and Steve MacLean will head into space on Wednesday.

The spacewalk was a first for rookie astronaut Piper, who joined an elite club of female spacewalkers.

Only six other women have participated in 159 U.S. spacewalks, and only one has gone on any of the 118 Russian spacewalks. A major reason for the lack of female spacewalkers is the spacesuit, which isn't designed for small sizes, said Piper, who is 5-foot-10. "If you fit in a suit then the easier it is to work," she said.

Before they started, astronauts MacLean and Jeff Williams, from inside the space lab, used the robotic arm to install the 45-foot addition on the left side of the space station's truss system. Two solar arrays will be unfurled from the truss on Thursday.

The spacewalk started a short time later at 5:17 a.m. EDT. Tanner was first to enter the void of space tethered to the space station, followed by Piper.

"Welcome to the world of EVAs," Tanner told Piper, using the NASA term for spacewalks — extra vehicular activities.

"Aaah. Wonderful," Piper responded.

Tanner and Piper then started connecting wiring and cables to the $372 million truss segment that was moved Monday from space shuttle Atlantis' cargo bay to the space station's robotic arm. Wearing bulky suits and gloves, the spacewalking electricians also installed and disconnected bolts, connected tubes and activated latches — tasks that had to be performed quickly so the electronic components do not get cold.

The team worked briskly, at one point putting themselves so far ahead of the schedule that Mission Control reminded them to take a break.

"The team is working hard to keep up with you guys," Mission Control said.

THE FEZ MAN
09-12-2006, 05:55 PM
eh i have a 5gal bucket full of nuts and bolts that never made it back into some ones car. ill e mail them a few

Hudson
09-13-2006, 04:11 AM
Wait until they get smacked in the face from a glove that is floating out there....I hear we have alot of debris out there!

Cunty McShitballs
09-13-2006, 07:23 AM
Astronaut Joe Tanner was working with the bolt when it sprang loose, floated over the head of Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper and skittered across the 17 1/2-ton box-like truss that they were hooking up.




Ohhhhhhhhhh fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuudddddddddddddge!

WonkaVision
09-13-2006, 11:06 AM
I just read that they lost Another Fucking Bolt...if their craft explodes while re-entering the atmosphere..Im gonna Laff and Laff.

NortonsHeiny
09-13-2006, 11:43 AM
He was so calm about it which really annoyed me. I wanted him to react the way I do when I simply drop my keys on the ground in the rain, "Awww what the FUCK. What I am FUCKING ASSHOLE I cant OPEN A FUCKING DOOR. Fuck me."

sniper
09-13-2006, 12:34 PM
Yup they lost a second bolt. Don't they have interns they can have float out and fetch those fuckers? All the technology nasa has you'd think they'd have some kinda magnet to keep those bolts from flying away... I blame affirmative action.

Hog's Big Ben
09-13-2006, 08:39 PM
spacewalkers have a long history of losing material in space. In July, Discovery spacewalkers lost a 14-inch-long spatula that floated away.


What the fuck? Were they doing some barbecuing?

CM Mark
09-13-2006, 08:45 PM
Well, I guess I'll be the one to say it,GOOD LUCK BROS!!!!

Fendbass22
09-13-2006, 08:59 PM
Ohhhhhhhhhh fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuudddddddddddddge!


Dude, you rule. I love that movie.

THE FEZ MAN
09-13-2006, 09:10 PM
What the fuck? Were they doing some barbecuing?

they were useing that high tech nasa spatula to shove some of the loose insulaton back into the cracks in the tiles.

ya have to love good old afro engineering that nasa is famous for

Cunty McShitballs
09-14-2006, 12:38 PM
Dude, you rule. I love that movie.

I haven't seen it in it's entirety in probably 10 years, but I think I can still quote the entire movie verbatim. It's a classic.